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1904
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November
11 - Alger Hiss is born in Baltimore, Maryland.
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1906
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December
15 - Donald Hiss, Alger's younger brother, is born,
also in Baltimore.
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1907
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April
7 - Hiss's father, Charles Alger Hiss, dies in Baltimore.
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1924
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Summer
- Hiss meets Priscilla Harriet Fansler (b. October 13,
1903), a Bryn Mawr graduate, on a student boat trip
to Europe. However, she soon marries Thayer Hobson.
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1926
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June
- Alger Hiss graduates from Johns Hopkins University.
September
- Hiss enters Harvard Law School.
September
19 - Timothy Hobson is born.
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1929
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January
- Priscilla Hobson and Thayer Hobson are divorced.
June
- Hiss graduates from Harvard Law School and is chosen
to be secretary to Supreme Court Justice Oliver Wendell
Holmes. Three years later, Donald Hiss also clerks for
Holmes. They are the only brothers to share this position.
December
11 - Alger Hiss marries Priscilla Fansler Hobson.
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1930
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October
- With his one-year appointment as Holmes's secretary
complete, Hiss joins the law firm of Choate, Hall &
Stewart in Boston, Massachusetts.
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1932
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Spring
- After Priscilla decides to write a book in New York
with her sister-in-law, the Hisses move to Manhattan.
Hiss joins the law firm of Cotton, Franklin, Wright
& Gordon.
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1933
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March
4 - Franklin Delano Roosevelt is inaugurated as
the 32nd President of the United States. The New Deal
begins.
March
- At the urging of his former law professor, Felix Frankfurter,
Hiss joins the Agricultural Adjustment Administration,
and the Hisses move to 3411 O St. in Georgetown. (Donald
Hiss would later become a "New Dealer" as well, working
first in the Labor Department and later, like his brother
Alger, in the State Department.)
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1934
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Spring
- The Hisses move to a top floor walk-up apartment at
2831 28th Street.
July
- Hiss becomes counsel to the Nye Committee of the U.S.
Senate, which is investigating profiteering in the munitions
industry.
December
(or possibly early 1935) - Hiss meets "George Crosley,"
a freelance writer, in connection with Hiss's Nye Committee
work. Hiss helps Crosley with his articles and, after
a friendship is established, with some small loans.
Fourteen years later, Hiss learns Crosley's real name
- Whittaker Chambers.
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1935
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March
6 - Justice Holmes dies. Holmes remains the revered
mentor and moral touchstone for both Alger and Donald
Hiss for the rest of their lives.
Spring
- The Hisses move from 28th Street to 2905 P St., a
three-story home. With the rent paid on the last two
months of the lease on 28th Street, Hiss rents that
apartment to Crosley, who needs a place to stay while
he finishes work on his magazine articles. Before taking
up residence in the 28th Street apartment, the Hisses
allow Crosley, his wife and infant daughter to spend
several days in an upstairs guest room at P Street until
a moving van with the Crosleys' things arrive.
August
- Hiss joins the Justice Department as Special Assistant
to the Solicitor General to write the government's brief
defending the Agricultural Adjustment Administration
(A.A.A.). Its legality is being challenged in court.
Spring
- Hiss lends his old Ford roadster to Crosley.
Fall
or winter - Crosley gives Hiss a bright red oriental
rug in partial payment of his debts.
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1936
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Summer
- In June, the Hisses move to 1245 Thirtieth St. The
next month, Hiss officially turns his old Ford over
to Crosley and signs over the title certificate to the
Cherner Motor Company. Later that summer, Hiss concludes
that Crosley will never pay his loans back. Hiss turns
down another loan request and terminates his friendship
with Crosley.
September
- At the invitation of Assistant Secretary of State
Francis B. Sayre, Hiss joins the Trade Agreements division
of the State Department as Sayre's assistant.
December
- The Hisses move to a larger home on Volta Place.
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1939
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September
1 - In an interview with Assistant Secretary of
State Adolf A. Berle, Jr., Whittaker Chambers names
Hiss and his brother Donald as having been targeted
for possible recruitment by members of the Communist
underground. Chambers tells Berle he left the Communist
Party in 1937.
September
- Hiss becomes assistant to Stanley K. Hornbeck, State
Department Adviser on Political Relations for Far Eastern
Affairs.
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1941
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August
5 - Tony Hiss is born.
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1942
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May
- Chambers gives a written statement to the FBI, with
no mention of espionage. Again, he says he left the
Party in 1937.
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1943
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August
- The Hisses buy a house at 3210 P St.
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1944
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Spring
- Hiss is appointed deputy director of the State Department's
Office of Special Political Affairs. His job is to begin
planning for a world at peace.
August
- Hiss organizes the Dumbarton Oaks Conference which
sets the groundwork for the United Nations.
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1945
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February
- Hiss is a junior member of the U.S. delegation to
the Yalta conference as an adviser to Secretary of State
Edward R. Stettinius, Jr.
March
- Chambers meets with Raymond Murphy, a State Department
security officer. He names Hiss and 26 others as being
affiliated with an underground communist group. Chambers
again says he left the Party in 1937. Chambers repeats
this to the FBI later in the year.
April
12 - F.D.R. dies. Harry S Truman becomes the 33rd
President of the United States. For Alger and Donald
Hiss, Roosevelt was the preeminent world leader of the
20th Century.
April
- At the age of 40, Hiss becomes Director of the Office
of Political Affairs. Shortly thereafter, he serves
as Secretary General of the San Francisco Conference,
which drafts the United Nations Charter. After the conference,
Hiss is chosen to fly the charter to Washington in a
special military airplane for President Truman's signature.
November
- The Rev. John Cronin, an anti-communist Roman Catholic
priest, circulates a report on communists in the government.
The report names Hiss. Its source is Chambers. The United
States Chamber of Commerce asks Cronin to prepare a
similar report for its use. That report is later given
to Rep. Richard M. Nixon after he is elected to the
House of Representatives.
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1946
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March
- Hiss is interviewed by the FBI after reports circulate
that a Congressman may charge that he is a Communist.
August
- Chambers is interviewed again by Raymond Murphy of
the State Department, and again says he left the Party
in 1937. He also denies that any espionage had occurred
among the underground communist group in Washington.
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1947
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February
1 - Hiss leaves the government to become president
of the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace. The
Hisses move to East Eighth Street in New York City.
June
- FBI agents visit Hiss at his home and ask him about
charges that he is a Communist and also ask him if he
knows anyone named Whittaker Chambers. Hiss denies being
a Communist and says he never knew anyone by the name
of Whittaker Chambers.
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1948
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August
3 - Chambers testifies before the House Committee
on Un-American Activities (HUAC) that Hiss was a member
of an underground Communist Party group. He says the
purpose of the group was not espionage and also testifies
that he left the Party in 1937.
August
5 - Hiss appears before HUAC to deny the charge.
He says he would like to meet his accuser. The committee
wants to drop the case, but committee member Nixon and
committee investigator Robert E. Stripling prevail on
the rest to appoint a subcommittee to re-interview Chambers.
Nixon believes that, despite Hiss's denials, they can
show that Hiss knew Chambers.
August
7 - The committee interviews Chambers. Chambers
offers a number of details about the Hisses' lives (some
correct and others incorrect). He also says Hiss never
knew him as Whittaker Chambers, but simply as "Carl."
August
9 - Nixon meets privately with Chambers at the latter's
farm in Westminster, Maryland.
August
11 - Nixon again meets Chambers at the farm. Chambers
shows him a bird book he says he got from Hiss. A couple
of days later, Nixon again goes out to the farm. Nixon
leaks to the press that the committee has information
backing Chambers' side of the story.
August
16 - Hiss appears before HUAC under subpoena. He
asks for the opportunity to meet Chambers face-to-face.
Nixon asks him for details about his life in an attempt
to corroborate Chambers' story. Hiss says he has written
down the name of a man who he thinks might be Chambers.
After a break in the testimony, Hiss reveals the name
of George Crosley and tells the story of his relationship
with him.
August
16 - Harry Dexter White, a former Assistant Secretary
of State in the Roosevelt administration, who is also
accused by Chambers of being a member of the underground,
dies of a heart attack several days after being questioned
by the committee.
August
17 - Hiss is called by a committee member and asked
to appear at the Commodore Hotel in New York. Waiting
for him there are several committee members and Chambers.
Hiss identifies Chambers as Crosley, a name Chambers
denies using. Hiss challenges Chambers to repeat his
charges in public, saying that if he does he will be
sued for libel.
August
25 - In a public hearing that is in essence a staged
event for television cameras, Hiss and Chambers both
testify. This is the first Congressional hearing ever
televised.
August
27 - Chambers appears on Meet the Press and
repeats his charges. Hiss sues him for libel.
August
28 - HUAC issues a report entitled "Hearings Regarding
Communist Espionage in the United States," despite Chambers'
repeated assertions that no espionage occurred.
September
Nixon writes a letter to John Foster Dulles, the Carnegie
Endowment's chairman of the board, summarizing, as he
sees it, the testimony before HUAC. Nixon says Hiss
committed perjury, although he admits there is no evidence
that Hiss had been a member of the Party. Dulles (who
later becomes Secretary of State during the Eisenhower
administration) circulates the letter to the endowment's
trustees.
October
15 - The Justice Department investigates Chambers'
story and concludes there is no basis for any charges
in the case.
November
4 - Pretrial examinations begin in the libel suit
in Baltimore, Maryland. Chambers is asked to produce
any documents to support his claims. Chambers alludes
for the first time to Hiss supplying documents and says
he read State Department documents at Hiss's home. He
makes reference to specific documents he claims he had
seen 12 years before.
November
17 - Chambers says he went to the home of Nathan
I. Levine, his wife's nephew, and retrieved an envelope
he says he had given Levine to store some 10 years before.
Chambers would testify that inside the envelope were
65 pages of typewritten copies of State Department documents,
four scraps of paper in Hiss's handwriting, two strips
of developed film, three rolls of undeveloped film,
eight pages of handwritten notes (supposedly by Harry
Dexter White), and two other items that have never been
identified. The documents are dated through 1938, months
after the date Chambers has stated under oath that he
left the Communist Party. Chambers hands over the handwritten
notes and the typed documents, but keeps the film.
November
18 - At Hiss's direction, the papers (later called
the Baltimore Documents)
are turned over to the Justice Department.
December
1 - Nixon visits Chambers at his farm. When Chambers
indicates he turned over some material and that there
is more to come, Nixon tells him to save it for the
committee. Chambers places the two rolls of film in
a hollowed-out pumpkin in his yard.
December
2 - HUAC serves a subpoena on Chambers, demanding
he turn over the remaining material to the committee.
Chambers takes committee staffers out to his yard and
gives them the film. Against the orders of the judge
in the libel suit, Chambers also gives HUAC investigators
photostats of the typed and handwritten documents he
had previously submitted to the court. This information
is soon leaked to the press by the committee. Nixon
poses with a stack of documents that is four-feet high.
The number of pages publicly released from the film
is 58 pages.
December
6-15 - Simultaneously, HUAC and a federal grand
jury hear testimony on the case, with HUAC leaking information
that supports Chambers. Nixon refuses the grand jury's
request for the film but misleadingly informs the jurors
that only Alger Hiss could have given this material
to Chambers. Nixon urges the panel not to indict Chambers
for perjury. One of those called before the grand jury
is Henry Julian Wadleigh, an employee in the Trade Agreement
Sections of the State Department. Wadleigh at first
takes the Fifth Amendment, refusing to answer questions
before the grand jury, but later testifies that he gave
documents to Chambers.
December
15 - On its last day of service, the grand jury
indicts Hiss on two counts of perjury, alleging that
he lied when he said he didn't see Chambers after January
1, 1937 and when he said he never turned over any documents
to Chambers. Espionage charges are not pursued because
of the statute of limitations.
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1949
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May
31 - Hiss's first perjury trial opens in New York
before Judge Samuel H. Kaufman. Lloyd Paul Stryker,
a well-regarded criminal defense lawyer, is Hiss's lead
attorney.
July
8 - The trial ends with the jury deadlocked (8-4
for conviction).
November
17 - Hiss's second trial begins before a new judge,
Henry W. Goddard, after Kaufman is removed following
charges by Nixon and others that he favored the defense
in his rulings. Hiss also has a new lead attorney, Claude
B. Cross, of Boston.
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1950
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January
21 - Hiss is convicted on both counts.
January
25 - Hiss is sentenced to five years in prison but
is released on $10,000 bail, pending appeal. The appeal
is based, in part, on a re-examination of the trial
evidence, and also on repeated misconduct by the prosecutor.
(See comments on the appeals strategy by Kenneth
Simon, a Hiss lawyer.) At his sentencing, Hiss
says, "I want only to add that I am confident that in
the future the full facts of how Whittaker Chambers
was able to carry out forgery by typewriter will be
disclosed."
Dec.
7 - Hiss's appeal is denied.
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1951
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January
- A request for a rehearing of the appeal is denied.
March
12 - U.S. Supreme Court denies to hear Hiss's appeal.
March
22 - Hiss goes to prison. Most of his sentence is
served at the Federal Penitentiary in Lewisburg, Pennsylvania,
a medium-security facility 100 miles west of New York
City.
In
prison, Hiss works in a storeroom, plays handball, teaches
several inmates to read, and writes down his innermost
thoughts and feelings in a series of 445 letters he
sends home. (Many excerpts are later published in Tony
Hiss's book, "The View From Alger's Window.")
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1952
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January
24 - Hiss's motion for a new trial is filed.
May
- Whittaker Chambers' autobiography, "Witness,"
is published and becomes an immediate bestseller.
July
22 - Judge Goddard denies the motion for a new trial.
November
- With the election of Dwight D. Eisenhower as the 34th
President of the United States, Richard M. Nixon becomes
vice president.
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1953
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January
30 - The same three-judge appellate panel which
turned down Hiss's original appeal also denies his motion
for a new trial.
June
27 - The Supreme Court declines to review the case.
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1954
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November
27 - Hiss is released from prison, two weeks after
his 50th birthday. He returns home to New York City
and begins to write a book on the case.
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1956
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November
- Eisenhower and Nixon are reelected.
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Hiss
publishes his first book, "In the Court of Public
Opinion," which recapitulates the events of the
Hiss case and puts forward new evidence that has come
to light since his conviction. The book reiterates his
confidence that he will one day be exonerated.
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1960
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November
- John F. Kennedy is elected as 35th President of the
United States, defeating Richard M. Nixon.
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1961
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July
9 - Whittaker Chambers dies. His death is announced
publicly three days later.
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1962
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November
- Richard M. Nixon loses the California gubernatorial
race to G. Pat Brown. At a subsequent bitter press conference
the next day, he says he is retiring from politics,
telling reporters, they "won't have Dick Nixon to kick
around anymore."
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1966
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March
- The Freedom of Information Act is passed. After complaints
that the government is restricting the flow of information,
the act is amended in 1974 (in part because of the Watergate
scandal) to encourage the release of more documents.
Hiss requests government files as they relate to his
case. Eventually, some 40,000 pages of files from the
FBI, Justice Department, State Department and CIA are
released to him.
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1968
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November
- Richard M. Nixon is elected as the 37th President
of the United States.
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1972
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March
- The "Hiss Act" is declared unconstitutional. The act
was specifically passed to deny Hiss his federal pension,
as it prohibited the payment of federal pensions to
anyone convicted of perjury relating to the national
security of the United States. Judge Roger Robb, a Nixon
appointee, says the act is unconstitutional because
it is aimed at a single individual rather than applying
to the citizens of the country.
November
- Richard M. Nixon is elected to a second term.
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August
9 - Richard M. Nixon resigns the presidency under
pressure, avoiding impeachment because of his actions
in the Watergate scandal.
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1975
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August
5 - Hiss is readmitted to the Massachusetts bar
by order of the state's Supreme Judicial Court, which
declares in a unanimous decision that, regardless of
the conviction, he has demonstrated the "moral and intellectual
fitness" required to be an attorney at law. He is the
first lawyer to have been reinstated in Massachusetts.
To read more about this, click
here.
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1978
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July
27 - With funding and attorneys provided by the
National Emergency Civil Liberties Committee, Hiss files
a petition in federal court for a writ of coram
nobis, to overturn the guilty verdict because
of prosecutorial misconduct detailed in the FBI files
released under the Freedom of Information Act.
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1982
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July
15 - The petition is denied by Judge Richard Owen,
who was appointed to the bench by President Richard
M. Nixon.
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1983
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Feb.
16 - The Second Circuit Court of Appeals denies
Hiss's appeal of Owen's decision.
October
11 - The U.S. Supreme court declines to hear the
suit.
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1984
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October
14 - Priscilla Hiss dies in New York City, one day
after her 81st birthday.
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1989
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May
18 - Donald Hiss dies.
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1994
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April
22 - Richard M. Nixon dies in New York City.
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1996
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November
15 - Alger Hiss dies in New York City, four days
after his 92nd birthday.
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1999
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October
- Hiss case grand jury testimony is unsealed after
51 years, by order of Judge Peter K. Leisure, a federal
judge in New York. The ruling offers important new insights
into the Hiss case, showing more instances of Whittaker
Chambers' unreliability as a witness; and misleading
testimony by Richard M. Nixon. The ruling is also groundbreaking
in extending constitutional protections, establishing
for the first time the principle that some cases are
of such overwhelming historic importance that the public's
right to know is stronger than the need for grand jury
secrecy.
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