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Alexander Vassiliev

Relevance: 2%      Posted on: August 24, 2015

The so-called Vassiliev Notebooks (actually a series of eight notebooks and some loose pages) contain excerpts from original Russian NKVD/NKGB/MGB documents made by Alexander Vassiliev, a Russian journalist and former KGB officer in 1994 and 1995. In his own handwriting, Vassiliev either summarized or copied excerpts in Russian from these KGB archival documents for The Haunted Wood: Soviet Espionage in America – the Stalin Era (New York: Random House, 1999), a book he would later…

Mr. Justice Eady

Relevance: 2%      Posted on: September 3, 2013

The Judge's Ruling in Vassiliev v Cass The judge in the case, Sir David Eady, a High Court judge in England and Wales, is notable for having presided over many high-profile libel cases. According to The Times of London, he "delivered a series of rulings that have bolstered privacy laws." "He may be just one of more than 100 High Court judges," the newspaper commented, "but Sir David Eady is nonetheless arguably more influential than…

Samuel Roth

Relevance: 2%      Posted on: August 13, 2013

When Alger Hiss first realized that he had known Chambers in the past, he remembered him as a freelance writer named "George Crosley." In testimony before the House Un-American Activities Committee, Chambers denied using the name. At the second trial, however, he said it was possible that he had used it. Why did he change his testimony? The defense had obtained the following affidavit from a New York publisher named Samuel Roth. The defense decided…

FBI Typewriter Forgery

Relevance: 2%      Posted on: August 14, 2013

"Forgery by Typewriter," by Gil Green (The Nation, November 10, 1984) In papers he received as the result of a Freedom of Information Act request, Gil Green, an official of the Communist Party, recently found documentation that the Federal Bureau of Investigation was in the business of forgery by typewriter. Below, Green sets forth his discovery and tells how he came upon it. We follow Green's article with a commentary by William A. Reuben, author of…

Jeff Kisseloff (2004)

Relevance: 2%      Posted on: December 14, 2015

Jeff Kisseloff responds to a biography of Alger Hiss which purports to explain Hiss's alleged lifelong patterns of denial and duplicity. "Distorted Reflections: A Response" by Jeff Kisseloff G. Edward White, Alger Hiss's Looking-Glass Wars: The Covert Life of a Soviet Spy (Oxford University Press, New York: 2004).   If A, then B. In a classic example of logic, you can say, "If it's raining, I will bring my umbrella." But you can't say, "If…

Jeff Kisseloff

Relevance: 2%      Posted on: January 31, 2013

Working For – and With – Alger Hiss Jeff Kisseloff, the managing editor of this site, is the author of three oral history books, Generation on Fire: Voices of Protest from the 1960s, an Oral History; You Must Remember This: An Oral History of Manhattan From the 1890s to World War II; and The Box: An Oral History of Television, 1920-1961. He is a recognized expert on the Hiss-Chambers affair and is the author of…

Fred J. Cook (2000)

Relevance: 1%      Posted on: August 25, 2015

Fred J. Cook's remarkable half-century long career in journalism included live coverage of the Hindenburg disaster in 1937 and the publication of 45 books. After World War II, Cook (1911-2003), who considered himself a conservative, became a prolific investigative reporter known for controversial and hard-hitting exposés of the FBI (The FBI Nobody Knows), McCarthyism (The Nightmare Decade), the CIA, the military-industrial complex, oil companies, and organized crime, among other topics. Cook’s first book, The Unfinished Story…

Krieger and Field (Navasky)

Relevance: 1%      Posted on: August 14, 2013

"Allen Weinstein's Docudrama" by Victor Navasky (The Nation, November 3, 1997) PERJURY: The Hiss-Chambers Case. By Allen Weinstein. Random House. 622 pp. Paper $20. NOTES FROM THE UNDERGROUND: The Whittaker Chambers & Ralph de Toledano Letters, 1949-1960. Introduction by Terry Teachout. Regnery. 342 pp. $24.95. Let's start with the Random House press release, replete with "Praise for 'Perjury'" – a reissue of Allen Weinstein's book on the Hiss-Chambers case. Here is Alfred Kazin twenty years ago,…

Victor S. Navasky (1997)

Relevance: 1%      Posted on: December 14, 2015

Victor Navasky's review in The Nation of the 1997 revised edition of "Perjury" includes new information about Noel Field: "Allen Weinstein's Docudrama" by VICTOR NAVASKY From The Nation, November 3, 1997 PERJURY: The Hiss-Chambers Case. By Allen Weinstein. Random House. 622 pp. Paper $20. NOTES FROM THE UNDERGROUND: The Whittaker Chambers & Ralph de Toledano Letters, 1949-1960. Introduction by Terry Teachout. Regnery. 342 pp. $24.95. Let's start with the Random House press release, replete with "Praise…

A Brief Biography

Relevance: 1%      Posted on: January 29, 2013

Alger Hiss was born on November 11, 1904 in Baltimore, Maryland, the fourth of five children. In 1907, his father, an executive with a dry goods firm, experienced severe financial difficulties and committed suicide, leaving the children to be raised by their mother and aunt. Hiss attended Johns Hopkins University and then Harvard Law School, where he came under the influence of future Supreme Court Justice Felix Frankfurter. He graduated from law school in 1929,…

New “ALES” Cable

Relevance: 1%      Posted on: November 30, 2015

An annotated translation by Svetlana Chervonnaya of Anatoly Gorsky's March 5, 1945 cable to Moscow, with further information about "ALES" that does not appear in the Venona cables. ("VADIM") MARCH 5, 1945 CABLE TO MOSCOW [1] Translated into English and annotated by Svetlana A. Chervonnaya [2] p. 88 [3] C/c [4] from Vadim from 3/5/45 [5] [He [6]] Wants to be included into the Soviet delegation at the San Francisco conference. However, [he] cannot leave…

Oral History Interviews

Relevance: 1%      Posted on: November 10, 2015

After Alger Hiss died in 1996, an oral history project was created to record the memories of many of his friends and acquaintances. Most of the interviewees were people Alger had spent time with later in life, though there were a few he had known for decades. Several were younger people who had been recruited by friends to read to him as his sight continued to fail. Many of the interviews reveal an extraordinary gift…

Coram Nobis

Relevance: 1%      Posted on: August 26, 2013

Alger Hiss's 1978 coram nobis petition to the federal courts, to overturn his conviction on the grounds of prosecutorial misconduct, revisited the issue of when Whittaker Chambers had left the Communist Party: Was it in 1937 or 1938? This was a crucial distinction in light of evidence dating to 1938 that Chambers produced in late 1948, and then said was proof of espionage committed by Alger Hiss. The coram nobis petition excerpted here, in addition to…

Maxwell Geismar

Relevance: 1%      Posted on: January 31, 2013

On Alger Hiss Maxwell Geismar (1909-1979) was a noted literary critic and biographer. He was the author of a four-volume history of American novelists as well as two biographies, Henry James and the Jacobites (1963) and Mark Twain: An American Prophet (1970). He was also the editor of several literary collections, including those of works by Ring Lardner, Thomas Wolfe and Walt Whitman. This piece on Alger Hiss is excerpted from Geismar's unpublished autobiography, The Memoirs of…

William Reuben, 2002 (I)

Relevance: 1%      Posted on: December 15, 2015

William A. Reuben covered the Hiss appeals and the motion for a new trial in the 1950s. A former national publicity director of the American Civil Liberties Union, Mr. Reuben was the author of The Atom Spy Hoax, The Honorable Mr. Nixon, and The Mark Fein Case. In studying the Hiss case, his travels took him from New York to California to Washington to Moscow, and he obtained thousands of government documents through a Freedom of Information…

David Levin (1997)

Relevance: 1%      Posted on: December 14, 2015

David Levin (1924-1998), the Thomas Jefferson Professor of Arts and Sciences at the University of Virginia, was a leading scholar of American literature and history, a biographer and a poet. He approached the Hiss case skeptically, convinced at first that Alger Hiss was guilty as charged. Levin offers a critical analysis of Sam Tanenhaus's Whittaker Chambers, questioning the way the author accepts Chambers' own story at face value. (This is the third of Levin's three…

Hiss’s Indictment — Illegal?

Relevance: 1%      Posted on: August 25, 2015

"Not Guilty as Charged: A Revised Verdict for Alger Hiss"  By Robert L. Weinberg Whittaker Chambers accused Alger Hiss of having committed espionage, but the 1948 grand jury considering this allegation in 1948 could not charge him with that crime - even if its members believed him guilty of it. There was good reason for that. Doing so would have violated the statute of limitations which was put in place to protect the innocent, not to help the…

Books

Relevance: 1%      Posted on: December 15, 2015

More than 50 years after it began, the Hiss case continues to generate an extraordinary number of books - some scholarly, some openly partisan - that come to very different conclusions both about the evidence and about the trustworthiness of the witnesses and lawyers involved. Browse or jump ahead to the section which interests you: The Hiss Case The Cold War or the McCarthy era Books that mention Alger Hiss or related figures Young Adult Non-Fiction Alger…

Victor S. Navasky (1978)

Relevance: 1%      Posted on: December 13, 2015

The 1978 publication of Allen Weinstein's Perjury: The Hiss-Chambers Case was seen by many members of the press and other reviewers as the final word on the case, a scholarly demonstration that Alger Hiss was guilty as charged. However, when Victor Navasky of The Nation checked Weinstein's sources, he found inconsistencies, historical inaccuracies, and quotes from sources who said that Weinstein had misquoted them. "Allen Weinstein's Perjury: The Case Not Proved Against Alger Hiss" by Victor S. Navasky The…

Walter �38; Miriam Schneir

Relevance: 1%      Posted on: September 3, 2013

"Cables Coming in from the Cold," by Walter Schneir and Miriam Schneir (The Nation, August 21, 1995)  Nearly four years ago, soon after the initial public release by the National Security Agency (NSA) of its long-secret Venona archive--decoded Soviet intelligence messages transmitted by telegraphic cable to and from Moscow during World War II - we predicted in these pages that "historians of the Cold War will be examining these documents...for a long time." We should have…