Representative Ford. But in this memorandum in that paragraph you say, "He would have to have known the not too obvious fact that Helsinki is an unusual and relatively uncomplicated point of entry to the Soviet Union (one that the Soviets might well choose, for example, if arranging the passage themselves)."

Mr. McVickar. Yes.

Representative Ford. Is there any other port such as Helsinki, in the context you are using it?

Mr. McVickar. I am sorry, I hope I haven't confused the record. Of course, when you are actually talking about a port of entry, Helsinki is not a port of entry. It is a point of departure for the Soviet Union, and you could come in and land at the Moscow airport from Helsinki.

What I think—what I was referring to is a point of departure for the Soviet Union which would then be more likely to be Copenhagen, for example, or Warsaw or Vienna. Helsinki is a frequently used one, but it is way up north and it is——

Mr. Dulles. Wasn't he traveling by boat, however?

Mr. McVickar. He traveled by boat to Helsinki.

Mr. Dulles. That is where the boat went?

Mr. McVickar. That is right.

Mr. Coleman. No; he traveled by boat to Le Havre, France. He then went by boat from there to London but then he flew by plane from London to Helsinki.