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  <title>Chapter 15: Cue the Marx Brothers</title>
  <description>Certainly, this Case was painful for Chambers — bringing him close to prison for perjury, ending the&amp;amp;nbsp;quiet and lucrative life he had enjoyed for years and costing him the only decent and decently paying&amp;amp;nbsp;job he had ever had. All the same, Chambers loved melodrama, and can you imagine any more&amp;amp;nbsp;satisfying melodrama than, on a dark and freezing night, leading two government investigators to a&amp;amp;nbsp;pumpkin vine behind your farmhouse and presenting them with five rolls of camera film containing&amp;amp;nbsp;proof of espionage and treason by the man who personifies the governing class of the country? &amp;amp;nbsp; Further Research: &amp;amp;nbsp; The dramatic, and sometimes almost comic, events of the first week of December 1948 are&amp;amp;nbsp;recounted in 191-207 and 287-93 of Weinstein’s “Perjury,” still the definitive history of this Case. The memoirs of the major participants tell what happened, each somewhat differently from all the&amp;amp;nbsp;others: Bert Andrews’ “A Tragedy of History” at 174-91, Chambers’ “Witness” at 751-60,&amp;amp;nbsp;Nixon’s “Six Crises” at 46-56 and his “RN” at 67-69, and Stripling’s “The Red Plot Against America”&amp;amp;nbsp;at 141-51. The most fascinating discrepancy in the accounts concerns the auto trip that Nixon, Stripling,&amp;amp;nbsp;Bert Andrews and the stenographer Rose Purdy took from Washington to Chambers’ Maryland farm&amp;amp;nbsp;on the afternoon of December 1 to find out ‘what the hell’ had caused Hiss’s lawsuit against Chambers&amp;amp;nbsp;to blow up. Chambers, at 751 of Witness, says that Stripling came to see him — strongly implying that&amp;amp;nbsp;Stripling made the tip alone. Nixon adds himself to the trip. (“Six Crises” at 47, “RN” at 67.) Bert Andrews&amp;amp;nbsp;adds himself as the third member of the trip (at 175). Stripling mentions only himself and Nixon&amp;amp;nbsp;(at 143-44). Why would Chambers want to give the impression that only Stripling came to see him?&amp;amp;nbsp;Why would Chambers want to leave Nixon out of the scene?&amp;amp;nbsp;I don’t see how that would help him or his side. I doubt he would have forgotten about all the others.&amp;amp;nbsp;&amp;amp;nbsp; If you go to YouTube and search for “Pumpkin Papers,” you will find a group of film clips, starting with&amp;amp;nbsp;Nixon’s and Stripling’s press conference and including excerpts from the prior HUAC hearings and&amp;amp;nbsp;later films taken on the courthouse steps during Hiss’s trials. You can find other newsreels (which were&amp;amp;nbsp;shown in movie theaters and were the only form of moving image news before TV) about this case by&amp;amp;nbsp;searching on YouTube for “Alger Hiss” or “Whittaker Chambers.” The same search requests, made on&amp;amp;nbsp;CSPAN’s web page, will yield more newsreels, lengthy films of the August 25 hearing, as well as many&amp;amp;nbsp;interviews and much commentary on this Case. I suspect that this Case, and Chambers in particular,&amp;amp;nbsp;were favorites of Brian Lamb.&amp;amp;nbsp; Questions: Who do you think is the most likely leaker of Chambers’ first bombshell to the&amp;amp;nbsp;Washington Post? Personally, I have no idea; no evidence, no rumors, not even a theory. Do you feel sorry for Pat (“Here we go again!”) Nixon? Do you sympathize with Nixon’s rage at Chambers for not telling him, during the HUAC hearings,&amp;amp;nbsp;that he had proof that Hiss was not only a Communist, but a spy? Can you think of one or more reasons&amp;amp;nbsp;Chambers held back that fact (if it’s a fact)? Chambers gave several reasons, which he gave to the&amp;amp;nbsp;Grand Jury. For them, you will have to listen to the next Podcast. &amp;amp;nbsp; </description>
  <author_name>A Pumpkin Patch, a Typewriter, and Richard Nixon: The Hiss-Chambers Espionage Case</author_name>
  <author_url>https://berresford.libsyn.com/</author_url>
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