A batch of 2,800 declassified documents includes a memo from the CIA to the director of the FBI, dated November 26, 1963, about a call received by the Cambridge News on November 22, the day Kennedy was killed in Dallas, Texas.
The memo from deputy CIA director James Angleton says the caller said that "the Cambridge News reporter should call the American Embassy in London for some big news, and then hung up."
It said the reporter who took the call "is known to them as a sound and loyal person with no security record."
The memo was released by the US National Archives in July but went unreported. It is also among a batch of files declassified in the US yesterday.
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Anna Savva, a current Cambridge News reporter, said today that the paper has no record of the incident.
"We have nothing in our archive we have nobody here who knows the name of the person who took the call," she said.
That is an apparent reference to osteopath Stephen Ward, a key figure in the "Profumo affair," a sex-and-espionage scandal that almost toppled the British government in 1963.
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