For the Ware Group in Washington (1935-1938), Chambers couriered documents from federal officials to New York City to Soviet spymasters, the last of whom was
Boris Bykov. During early 1938, Chambers withheld some documents as life insurance as he readied to defect and go into hiding in April 1938. According to Chambers, he put the documents in a manila envelope and asked his wife's nephew
Nathan Levine to hide them (which Levine did, in a
dumbwaiter in a Brooklyn home). In 1939, Chambers came out of hiding and joined
Time magazine, where he worked through 1948. On August 3, 1948, Chambers testified under subpoena before the
House Un-American Activities Committee (HUAC) in Washington, DC, that he had been a Soviet courier in the 1930s. He named former federal officials in the Ware Group cell, including:
John Abt,
Nathan Witt,
Lee Pressman, and
Alger Hiss. On August 5, Hiss appeared before HUAC and denied the allegations. On August 20, Abt, Witt, and Pressman
pled the Fifth, all three under advice of counsel
Harold I. Cammer. On April 27, Chambers asserted on
Meet the Press, then a national radio show, that Hiss had been a
communist; in late September, Hiss filed a slander suit in a federal court in Baltimore against Chambers for making that allegation publicly. ==Events==