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Article: 519 of sgi.talk.ratical
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From: dave@ratmandu.esd.sgi.com (dave "who can do? ratmandu!" ratcliffe)
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Subject: How the NYT Dissembles Re: Political Assassinations In The U.S.
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Keywords: All The News Re: US Political Assassinations That ISN'T Fit To Print
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Organization: Silicon Graphics, Inc.
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Date: Fri, 13 Mar 1992 14:38:44 GMT
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Lines: 1756
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Although this article by Jerry Policoff is almost 20 years old, its
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meticulous research, analysis, and documentation--of the underhanded yet
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pervasive way in which the number 1 newspaper of record for the United
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States has consistently practiced deceptive reporting regarding the 3
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most critical political assassinations of the 1960s--recommends it highly
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to readers nearly two decades after its original publication.
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--ratitor
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The political assassinations of the '60s seem to have given rise
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to a most peculiar policy at "The New York Times," a policy that
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maintains that the "official" line is the *only* line. In the
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process the "Times" has subjected its readers to distortion,
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misrepresentation, and outright deception. . . .
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Only "The New York Times" can answer why they have for nine years
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maintained a consistent policy of literary assassination of
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literature and deliberate management of news suggesting that three
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of the greatest crimes of the 20th century may, despite "official"
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findings to the contrary, be yet unsolved.
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But the unassailable fact is that in the process they have acted
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as little less than an unofficial propaganda arm of the Government
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which has maintained so staunchly--and in the face of all evidence
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to the contrary, great and trivial--that assassinations in the
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United States are inevitably the work of lone demented madmen.
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Justice Hugo Black in his concurring opinion in the Supreme Court
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decision favoring "The New York Times" in the case of the Pentagon
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Papers said, "Only a free and unrestrained press can effectively
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expose deception in government. And paramount among the
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responsibilities of a free press is the duty to prevent any part of
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the Government from deceiving the people. . . ."
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Far from preventing deception in the case of political
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assassinations, the "Times" has practiced it, and in the process
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defrauded its readers and violated every ethic of professional and
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objective journalism.
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The following appeared in the October 1972 (# 94) issue of "The Realist:"
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_____________________________________________________________________________
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How All the News About Political Assassinations in the United States
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Has Not Been Fit to Print in "The New York Times"
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by Jerry Policoff
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Since the publication of the Pentagon Papers, "The New York
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Times," America's most prestigious newspaper, has been the recipient
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of what may be an unparalleled stream of tributes and awards for its
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dedication to the principles of a free press and the people's right
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to know.
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Unfortunately the Pentagon Papers represent something of a
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departure--if that is, in fact, what they are--for the paper whose
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image of its role was described by Gay Talese in his critically
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acclaimed biography of the "Times," "The Kingdom and the Power," as
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the "responsible spokesman for the system."[1] For the "Times"
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often places secondary importance upon its responsibility to inform
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the public when that responsibility conflicts with its own concept
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of that ominous and all-encompassing enigma known as "the national
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security."
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The example of the Bay of Pigs is well known. The "Times" had
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deduced by evaluating various *published* accounts that a United
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States trained and financed group of Cuban exiles was about to
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invade Cuba. The story was to be a major exclusive featured on the
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front page. Instead the management of the "Times" decided to play
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down the story and strip it of its revelations. It appeared inside
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the paper under the deliberately misleading subhead, "Quick Action
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Opposed."[2] Thus a major diplomatic and strategic blunder which
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might otherwise have been averted was not.
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In 1966 when Dean Rusk protested to the "Times" that an impending
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news series on the CIA was not in the national interest, the "Times"
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responded by sending the completed series to John McCone, former
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head of the CIA, for editing. Turner Catledge, then Managing
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Editor, wrote a placating memo to his concerned boss, Arthur Ochs
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Sulzberger, the Publisher of the "Times." "I don't know of any
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other series in my time," wrote Catledge, "which has been prepared
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with greater care and with such remarkable attention to the views of
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the agency involved as this one."[3]
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There is little wonder that Talese described the relationship
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between the highest levels of the U.S. Government and "The New York
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Times" as "a hard alliance" which, in any large showdown, "would
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undoubtedly close ranks and stand together."[4]
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The 1960s represented a dark decade for many millions of
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Americans who saw their hopes and aspirations for the future dashed
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amid the blaze of guns that struck down President John F. Kennedy,
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the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., and Senator Robert F. Kennedy.
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In all three cases the official verdict was swift: lone assassin;
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no conspiracy. In all three cases serious doubts remain--doubts
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that have encountered little more than official silence and denial.
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The political assassinations of the '60s seem to have given rise
|
|
to a most peculiar policy at "The New York Times," a policy that
|
|
maintains that the "official" line is the *only* line. In the
|
|
process the "Times" has subjected its readers to distortion,
|
|
misrepresentation, and outright deception.
|
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Harrison E. Salisbury, Assistant Managing Editor of the "Times,"
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described the "Times" performance in the wake of the President's
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assassination thusly: "The `Times' by principle and by habit
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considers itself a `newspaper of record' [which] consciously seeks
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to present all of the facts required by a public spirited citizen to
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formulate an intelligent opinion. Clearly the shooting of the
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President would require an extraordinary record--detailed, accurate,
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clear, complete.
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"Thus the initial responsibility of the `Times' is to provide an
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intimate, detailed, accurate chronology of events. . . . The `Times'
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record must be the one that will enable the reader to pick his way,
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fairly well, through fact, fiction, and rumor."[5]
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Salisbury's prose made good reading, but it hardly describes the
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true nature of the "Times" coverage, epitomized by the definitive
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headline of November 25, 1963, "President's Assassin Shot to Death
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in Jail Corridor by a Dallas Citizen."[6] Thus the "Times" required
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no Warren Commission to tell it what it had already assumed three
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days after the President's assassination: that Lee Harvey Oswald,
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the official suspect, was the assassin.
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Nor were Jack Ruby's motives any mystery to the "Times" as was
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demonstrated the same day by the headline, "Kennedy Admirer Fired
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One Bullet."[7] Other stories, e.g. "Doctors Question Oswald's
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Sanity," and "Lone Assassin the Rule in U.S.: Plotting More
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Prevalent Abroad,"[8] tended to reinforce the erratic nature of the
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"assassin" and the notion that conspiracies are foreign to the
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American political scene.
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Once the Warren Commission was formed the "Times" acted as little
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less than a press agent for it. On March 30, 1964--a mere twelve
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days after the Warren Commission had begun its field investigation
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in Dallas--the "Times" carried an AP story reporting that the
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Commission had "found no evidence that the crime was anything but
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the irrational act of an individual, according to knowledgeable
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sources."[10]
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On June 1, the "Times" ran a Page One exclusive, "Panel to Reject
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Theories of Plot in Kennedy's Death," which amounted to an extensive
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preview of the Warren Report nearly four months prior to its
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official release.
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When the Warren Commission's report was issued on September 27,
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1964 its most vocal advocate was "The New York Times." The lead
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story said that "the commission analysed every issue in exhaustive,
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almost archeological detail."[11] A "Times" editorial said that
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"the facts--exhaustively gathered, independently checked and
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cogently set forth--destroy the basis for conspiracy theories that
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have grown weedlike in this country and abroad."[12]
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Arthur Krock called the report a "definitive history of the
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tragedy,"[13] and C.L. Sulzberger expressed relief at the report's
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conclusions. "It was essential in these restless days," wrote
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Sulzberger, "to remove unfounded suspicions that could excite latent
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jingo spirit. And it was necessary to reassure our allies that ours
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is a stable reliable democracy."[14]
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Such unequivocal praise of the Warren Report was nothing less
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than irresponsible journalism. There had been barely enough time
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for a thorough reading of the report, and the testimony and exhibits
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upon which it supposedly was based were not yet available. Without
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the latter no objective appraisal of the report was possible.
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The "Times" also made quite a financial proposition out of the
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Warren Report. The entire report was printed as a supplement to the
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September 28 edition. In addition the "Times" collaborated with the
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Book of the Month Club on a hard-bound edition and with Bantam Books
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on a soft-bound edition of the report (with a laudatory introduction
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by Harrison Salisbury in the latter).
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By the end of the first week Bantam had printed 1,100,000
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copies.[15] Ironically the "Times" would later imply that the
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critics of the report were guilty of exploitation because of the
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"minor, if lucrative industry" that arose from their challenges to
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the official version of the assassination.[16]
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Nor was the "Times" less effusive when the 26-volumes of exhibits
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and testimony were released on November 24. The "Times" instant
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analysis of the more than 10 million words contained in the volumes
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brought the premature observation that their publication by the
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Warren Commission "brings to a close its inquiry, at once monumental
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and meticulous."[17]
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Within a month, again in collaboration with Bantam, the "Times"
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published "The Witnesses," consisting of "highlights" of the
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hearings before the Warren Commission, prepared by "a group of
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editors and reporters of `The New York Times.'"
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"The Witnesses" included the affidavit of Arnold Rowland stating
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that he had observed a man with a rifle on the 6th floor of the
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Texas School Book Depository before the assassination, but not his
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testimony in which he stated that he had actually seen two men, and
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that the FBI had told him to "forget it," and in which he stated his
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opinion that the source of the shots had been the railroad yards in
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*front* of the President.
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Omitted from the testimony of amateur photographer Abraham
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Zapruder was his statement that his immediate reaction was that the
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shots had come from behind him (in *front* of the President).
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Similar statements relating an immediate impression that the
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shots had come from the front were deleted from the excerpted
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testimony of David F. Powers, a special assistant to the President,
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and Secret Service Agent Forest V. Sorrels, as it appeared in "The
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Witnesses."
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Deleted from the testimony of Secret Service Agents William
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Greer, Clinton Hill, and Roy Kellerman was the description each gave
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of a bullet wound in the President's back below the shoulder (the
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"official" autopsy report placed it about six inches higher in the
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neck). Also omitted from Agent Hill's excerpted testimony was his
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statement that he was not certain that all of the shots had come
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from the rear, and that they did not all sound alike.
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Autopsy surgeon Commander James J. Humes' excerpted testimony in
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"The Witnesses" omitted his statement that he had destroyed the
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first draft of the autopsy, as well as his verbal gymnastics in
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reconciling the location of the bullet holes six inches below the
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collar in the President's shirt and jacket with the officially
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designated location of the wound in the neck.
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Both Humes and Colonel Pierre Finck, a second autopsy surgeon,
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were skeptical that the nearly pristine bullet found on a stretcher
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in Parkland Hospital could have hit both Kennedy and Governor
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Connally (the Warren Commission ultimately concluded that this was
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indeed the case), but these exchanges also were omitted from "The
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Witnesses," as was the portion of the testimony of Nelson Delgado, a
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friend of Oswald's from his Marine Corps days, in which he referred
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to Oswald's extremely poor marksmanship.
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Testimony left out of "The Witnesses" altogether included
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numerous witnesses who reported at least some shots fired from the
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front, including Jean Hill who reported seeing a man fleeing from
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the area of the "grassy knoll" after the shooting. Also left out
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was the testimony of Wilma Tice and reporter Seth Kantor who
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reported seeing (the latter conversing with) Jack Ruby at Parkland
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Hospital, as well as many others who gave relevant but inconvenient
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testimony before the Warren Commission.
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In short, "The Witnesses" was a careful selection of only that
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testimony which tended to support the official findings contained in
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the Warren Report. It was a patently biased and dishonest work,
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shamelessly slanted toward the lone-assassin hypothesis, and
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capitalizing on the legendary objectivity of "The New York Times."
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In Europe where the press had been less eager to embrace the
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official findings of the Warren Commission, the assassination
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rapidly became a controversy. "Who Killed Kennedy," a critical book
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by American expatriate Thomas Buchanan was already a best-seller by
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the end of 1964.
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In Britain, Bertrand Russell organized a "Who Killed Kennedy
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Committee" composed of some of the most influential members of the
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British intellectual community.
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In December 1964, Hugh Trevor-Roper, well-known British historian
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and Regius Professor of Modern History at Oxford University, writing
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in "The Sunday Times" of London, accused the Warren Commission of
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setting up a smokescreen of irrelevant material while failing to ask
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elementary and essential questions.
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In the United States, too, the report slowly emerged as a major
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issue--spurred first by a number of critical articles and later by a
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series of major books.
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George and Patricia Nash documented Commission negligence in the
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October 1964 "New Leader" by locating without difficulty three
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witnesses to the slaying of Patrolman Tippit who had not been called
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by the Warren Commission, but whose accounts differed radically from
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the Commission's.
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The January and March 1965 issues of "Liberation" magazine
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carried articles highly critical of the "Warren Report" by
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Philadelphia attorney Vincent Salandria. An article in the January
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1965 "American Bar Association Journal" by Alfredda Scobey, a lawyer
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and former Warren Commission staff member, acknowledged that much of
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the evidence against Oswald was circumstantial and strongly implied
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that Oswald's conviction would have been less than guaranteed had he
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gone to trial.
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In February, 1966 the 18th annual meeting of the American Academy
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of Forensic Sciences held a symposium which scored the Commission
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for its failure to hear enough expert testimony, and for failing to
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examine the photos and X-rays taken of the President's body during
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the autopsy.
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On May 29, 1966 the "Warren Report" became a national issue
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overnight when "The Washington Post" ran an 8-column banner headline
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on Page One, "An Inquest: Skeptical Postscript to Warren Group's
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Report on Assassination," dealing with Harold Weisberg's "Whitewash"
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and Edward J. Epstein's "Inquest." The article covered a sizeable
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portion of page 1 and nearly all of page 3, and concluded that the
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two books raised "grave doubts about the Commission's work."
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Epstein had obtained interviews from several members of the
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Warren Commission and its staff and was given access to a number of
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internal Commission memoranda (the book began as an intended Masters
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thesis). Concentrating on the internal workings of the Commission,
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Epstein argued that bureaucratic pressures from within and time
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pressures imposed from without had severely handicapped the
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Commission with the result that the investigation was superficial
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rather than exhaustive.
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He cited the discrepancies pertaining to the location of the
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President's back wound, noting that the holes in the President's
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shirt and jacket, the report on the autopsy filed by FBI agents
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Siebert and O'Neill, and the testimony of three Secret Service
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agents all placed the location in the back below the shoulder while
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the official autopsy report located the wound significantly higher
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at the base of the neck. The higher location was essential to the
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Warren Commission's theory that the wound in the President's throat
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was one of exit for a bullet that had traversed his neck from the
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rear.
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Epstein contended that the Warren Commission was more interested
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in dispelling rumors than in exposing facts and that it preferred
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not to consider the possibility that there had been a second
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assassin. He implied the belief that the Warren Commission had
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deliberately altered the autopsy report, adding that if this were
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the case the "Warren Report" would have to be viewed as an
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expression of "political truth."[18]
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Weisberg approached the issue on a much broader level by
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carefully dissecting the mass of evidence purported by the Warren
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Commission to prove that Oswald was the lone assassin. In addition
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to the back wound discrepancy, Weisberg went into such matters as
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Oswald's marksmanship; the lack of tangible evidence linking Oswald
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with the shooting or the 6th floor window with the actual source of
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the shots; the shooting of officer Tippit, etc. Weisberg strongly
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implied that more than one gunman had been involved and that it was
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by no means certain that Oswald had been one of them.
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The major issues that arose out of these books and books that
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followed included:
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* "The Single-Bullet Theory:" The Commission's re-enactment
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of the assassination and observation of the film of
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the assassination taken by Zapruder revealed that from
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the time when Kennedy would first have been visible to
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a man perched in the 6th floor window until the time
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Governor Connally was shot, Oswald's gun was capable of
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firing only one round. The Commission concluded that a
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virtually pristine bullet found on a stretcher at
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Parkland Hospital had passed through the President's
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neck, hit Connally in the back shattering a rib,
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emerged from his chest, traversed his wrist, lodged in
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his thigh, and then fell out onto the stretcher.
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The Commission theorized that Connally had experienced a
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delayed reaction to his wounds, explaining why the
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Zapruder film appeared to show him unhit until a point
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significantly after the President definitely had been.
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Critics argued that it was extremely unlikely that one
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bullet could have accounted for seven wounds, shattering
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bone along the way, and still emerge undeformed. They
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also argued that a bullet striking bone, as was the case
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with Connally, results in an immediate reaction in
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compliance with the physical law of transfer of momentum,
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and that the later reaction by Connally, therefore,
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indicated that he had been hit by a second bullet.
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* "The Grassy Knoll:" Law-enforcement officers and bystanders
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immediately converged on this area after the
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assassination as the apparent source of the shots. It
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was located to the right front of the President.
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* "The Head Snap:" The Zapruder film revealed that upon impact
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of the final and fatal bullet the President's head was
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thrust violently to the left and to the rear--a reaction
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that seemed consistent with a shot fired from the grassy
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knoll.
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* "The Throat Wound:" The wound in the President's throat was
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originally diagnosed as an entrance wound by the doctors
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who treated him at Parkland Hospital. The Commission's
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contention that it was an exit wound was challenged by
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|
most of the critics.
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The Warren Report was soon under attack from all sides. In July
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1966 Richard Goodwin, a former advisor and close associate of
|
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President Kennedy, reviewed "Inquest" for "Book Week." He called
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the book "impressive" and called for the convening of a panel to
|
|
evaluate the findings of the Warren Commission and determine if a
|
|
completely new investigation was warranted.[19] He later added that
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there were other associates of the late President "who feel as I
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do."[20]
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|
In September 1966 a Harris Poll found that 54% of the American
|
|
public doubted that the Warren Commission had told the full
|
|
story.[21] The same month Mark Lane's "Rush to Judgment" made the
|
|
Best Seller List of "The New York Times" (by November 1966 it was
|
|
the Number One Best Seller, a position it maintained for several
|
|
months).
|
|
The "Times" of London called for a new investigation toward the
|
|
end of September 1966, a call that was echoed in "The London
|
|
Observer" by Lord Devlin, one of England's most respected legal
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|
figures.
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|
On September 28, 1966 Manhattan Congressman Theodore Kupferman
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asked Congress to conduct its own investigation into the adequacy of
|
|
the "Warren Report."
|
|
Writing in the October 1966 "Commentary" Alexander Bickel,
|
|
Chancellor Kent of Yale University, called for a new investigation
|
|
observing that "the findings of the Warren Commission, and the
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|
fatuous praise with which all of the voices of the great majority
|
|
greeted them two years ago, were in some measure a matter of wish
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|
fulfillment."
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|
The November 25, 1966 cover of "Life" magazine featured a frame
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|
from the Zapruder film with the bold caption: "Did Oswald Act
|
|
Alone? A Matter of Reasonable Doubt." "Life" questioned the
|
|
validity of the single-bullet theory and concluded that "a new
|
|
investigative body should be set up, perhaps at the initiative of
|
|
Congress."
|
|
The January 14, 1967 "Saturday Evening Post" also carried a cover
|
|
story challenging the Warren Report, and it also ran an editorial
|
|
calling for a new inquiry.
|
|
Others who publicly expressed doubts about the conclusions of the
|
|
Warren Commission included Senators Russell Long, Eugene McCarthy,
|
|
Strom Thurmond, William Fulbright, and Thomas Dodd; Congressmen
|
|
Ogden Reid, John W. Wydler, and William F. Ryan; Arthur Schlesinger
|
|
Jr., William Buckley, Norman Mailer, Murray Kempton, Max Lerner,
|
|
Pete Hammill, Walter Lippman, Dwight MacDonald, Richard H. Rovere,
|
|
Cardinal Cushing and many others.
|
|
The reaction of "The New York Times" was less than enthusiastic.
|
|
Following the May 29, 1966 "Washington Post" headline, a "Times"
|
|
reporter was assigned to do a story on the emerging controversy.
|
|
His story appeared on June 5--not on page 1, but on page 42. The
|
|
author of the piece wrote one of the critics: "With space
|
|
limitations and national desk instructions, I am sorry that
|
|
everything but the single-bullet hypothesis got forced out of the
|
|
story.[22]
|
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|
"Whitewash" and "Inquest" were reviewed in the July 3 "New York
|
|
Times Book Review" by the "Times"' Supreme Court correspondent, Fred
|
|
Graham. The "Times" apparently saw no conflict in assigning Graham
|
|
to review two books severely critical, implicitly if not explicitly,
|
|
of the then Chief Justice of the Supreme Court. The review was
|
|
largely a defense of the methods utilized by the Warren Commission
|
|
under the direction of "the nation's most distinguished jurist."
|
|
Graham called Weisberg a "painstaking investigator," but added
|
|
that he "questions so many points made by the report that the effect
|
|
is blunted--it is difficult to believe that any institution could be
|
|
as inept, careless, wrong, or venal as he implies. Rather, the
|
|
reader is impressed with the elusiveness of truth. . . ."
|
|
Graham called "Inquest" superficial, and he criticized Epstein's
|
|
use of the words "political truth," claiming that Epstein was
|
|
actually charging deliberate fraud. Graham admitted that the
|
|
single-bullet theory was "porous," but he maintained that no other
|
|
explanation made sense because if another assassin had fired from
|
|
the Book Depository it would have been unlikely that he and his
|
|
rifle could disappear without a trace.
|
|
Graham avoided alternatives that did make sense, e.g., that an
|
|
assassin or assassins had fired from the grassy knoll. He concluded
|
|
that "a major scholarly study is not feasible now because the
|
|
crucial papers in the archives . . . have not yet been de-
|
|
classified."
|
|
On the one hand he was ignoring the fact that the "Times" had
|
|
lauded the Warren Report before any evidence was available, and on
|
|
the other hand he was passing judgment in advance on any subsequent
|
|
critical works, a fact that should have disqualified him as a
|
|
reviewer of future books on the subject.
|
|
On August 28, 1966 Mark Lane's "Rush to Judgment" and Leo
|
|
Sauvage's "The Oswald Affair" were reviewed in "The New York Times
|
|
Book Review" by Fred Graham. His review gave the false impression
|
|
that both books relied mainly on eyewitness testimony rather than
|
|
more tangible hard evidence. "Eyewitness testimony," noted Graham,
|
|
"is far less reliable than it seems to be."
|
|
He made the incredible observation that the main source of the
|
|
Warren Commission's dilemma lay in the fact that it had to issue a
|
|
report. The broad proof against Oswald and the lack of evidence
|
|
pointing to any other possible assassin, according to Graham, gave
|
|
the Commission no choice "but to smooth over the inconsistencies to
|
|
the extent possible and brand Oswald the lone assassin."
|
|
Graham concluded with the unsubstantiable claim that Oswald would
|
|
easily have been convicted of murder by any jury faced with the
|
|
material before the Warren Commission and in these books.
|
|
As the controversy grew the "Times" greeted the issue with a most
|
|
astonishing article in the September 11, 1966 "New York Times
|
|
Magazine," entitled "No Conspiracy, But--Two Assassins, Perhaps?" by
|
|
Henry Fairlie, an English political commentator. Fairlie
|
|
acknowledged that it was hard to dispute the contention that the
|
|
Warren Commission "did a hurried and slovenly job," and he conceded
|
|
that there might well have been more than one assassin; "available
|
|
evidence seems to me confusing."
|
|
But he contended that even if this supposition were made, "it
|
|
still does not justify making the long leap to a conspiracy theory,"
|
|
because even if two or more people were involved, he argued, "it is
|
|
possible to regard such people as fanatics or nuts and nothing
|
|
more." Of course, if there were two or more people involved it was,
|
|
*by definition*, a conspiracy.
|
|
The article concluded that it was not the proper time for a new
|
|
investigation, for "to set up another independent body with no
|
|
promise that it would succeed, would be to agitate public doubt
|
|
without being certain that it could in the end, settle it. Popular
|
|
fear and hysteria are dangerous weirds to excite . . ."
|
|
Thus it would appear that to Henry Fairlie and "The New York
|
|
Times" it was more important to support the official findings of the
|
|
Warren Commission--even though questionable--than to look further
|
|
into the President's assassination and risk adding to the already
|
|
existing doubt and scepticism about those findings, warranted or
|
|
not.
|
|
|
|
|
|
The Times Investigation
|
|
|
|
Toward the end of 1966 a degree of dissatisfaction with the
|
|
conclusions of the Warren Commission began to manifest itself at the
|
|
"Times."
|
|
Tom Wicker wrote in his column that a number of impressive books
|
|
had opened to question the Warren Commission's "procedures, its
|
|
objectivity and its members diligence. The damaging fear has been
|
|
planted, here as well as abroad, that the commission--even if
|
|
subconsciously--was more concerned to quiet public fears of
|
|
conspiracy and treachery than it was to establish the unvarnished
|
|
truth, and thus made the facts fit a convenient thesis." Wicker
|
|
endorsed the call for a Congressional review that had been made by
|
|
Congressman Kupferman.[23]
|
|
Harrison Salisbury radically revised his early praise of the
|
|
Report--*not* in the "Times" but in the November 1966 issue of "The
|
|
Progressive," a magazine of limited circulation. While reiterating
|
|
his belief that Oswald acted alone, Salisbury wrote that his reading
|
|
of "Inquest" and "Rush to Judgment," both of which he called
|
|
"serious, thoughtful examinations," had convinced him that questions
|
|
of major importance remained unanswered.
|
|
Like Wicker, he endorsed the Kupferman resolution, adding the
|
|
principal areas of doubt. The nation no longer lives in the trauma
|
|
which persisted for months after the President's death. The Warren
|
|
Commission had good reason to concern itself for the national
|
|
interest, to worry about national morale, to take upon itself the
|
|
task of damping down rumors. But today and tomorrow the sole
|
|
criteria of an inquiry should be the truth--every element of it that
|
|
can be obtained--and a frank facing of unresolved and unresolvable
|
|
dilemmas.
|
|
On November 16, 1966, on the other hand, Clifton Daniel, then
|
|
Managing Editor, in addressing a public symposium on "The Role of
|
|
the Mass Media in Achieving and Preserving a Free Society," defended
|
|
the "Warren Report" and accused its critics of "dragging red
|
|
herrings all over the place."[24]
|
|
Under this setting the "Times" quietly undertook, in early
|
|
November 1966, a new investigation of the assassination under the
|
|
direction of Harrison Salisbury. "We will go over all the areas of
|
|
doubt." Salisbury told "Newsweek," "and hope to eliminate
|
|
them."[25]
|
|
On November 25, with the unpublicized investigation already
|
|
underway, the "Times" ran a carefully worded editorial, "Unanswered
|
|
Questions," which maintained that there were enough solid doubts of
|
|
thoughtful citizens to require official answers. "Further dignified
|
|
silence, or merely more denials by the commission or its staff, are
|
|
no longer enough."
|
|
About a month into the investigation Salisbury received
|
|
permission from the government of North Vietnam to visit Hanoi, and
|
|
he quickly departed for Paris to complete final preparations for the
|
|
trip. Shortly after his departure the "Times" investigation was
|
|
ended.
|
|
Reporter Peter Kihss, a member of the team, wrote Ms. Sylvia
|
|
Meagher on January 7, 1967, "Regrettably the project has broken off
|
|
without any windup story, at least until Harrison Salisbury, who was
|
|
in charge, gets back from North Vietnam."
|
|
Another member of the team, Gene Roberts--then Atlanta bureau
|
|
chief and at the time I spoke with him National Editor of the
|
|
"Times" (he recently left to become Executive Editor of "The
|
|
Philadelphia Enquirer")--told me that "There was no real connection
|
|
between Salisbury going to Hanoi and the decision not to publish, or
|
|
to disband the inquiry. It just kind of happened that way.
|
|
Presumably if he had been here he might have knocked it off even
|
|
sooner or he might have continued it a week or two. I just don't
|
|
know.[26]
|
|
Roberts told me that the team was unable to find evidence
|
|
supporting the contentions of the critics. "We found no evidence
|
|
that the Warren Report was wrong," he said, "which is not to say
|
|
that the Warren Report was right. We are not in the business of
|
|
printing opinion, and that is why nothing was printed in the
|
|
end."[27]
|
|
If Salisbury's words to "Newsweek" are to be taken literally the
|
|
purpose of the investigation to begin with was to shore up the
|
|
findings of the Warren Commission. There can be little doubt that
|
|
if the investigation had strongly reaffirmed those findings it would
|
|
have been boldly splashed across the front page. Yet there now seem
|
|
to be several versions as to just what that investigation found.
|
|
George Palmer, Assistant to the Managing Editor, wrote one
|
|
questioner that nothing had been printed about the investigation
|
|
"for the simple reason that there were no findings,"[28] but he
|
|
wrote me that "the discontinuance of our inquiries meant that they
|
|
had substantially reaffirmed the findings of the Warren
|
|
Commission."[29]
|
|
Palmer also wrote me that the determination to discontinue the
|
|
investigation was made upon the *return* of Harrison Salisbury from
|
|
Hanoi. Walter Sullivan, "Times" Science Editor, writing on behalf
|
|
of Salisbury, wrote Washington attorney Bernard Fensterwald,
|
|
Chairman of the Committee to Investigate Assassinations, "It is true
|
|
that an intensive investigation of the J.F. Kennedy assassination
|
|
was carried out by the "Times" staff under Mr. Salisbury's
|
|
supervision. It was set aside when he suddenly received permission
|
|
to visit Hanoi. At this stage, Mr. Salisbury tells me, it had
|
|
become obvious that the President was killed by a single demented
|
|
man and that no conspiracy was involved. The investigation has
|
|
therefore not been pursued further.[30]
|
|
Following the "Times" at best inconclusive investigation its
|
|
advocacy of the official line became at least as rigid as it had
|
|
ever been. An anonymous review of "The Truth About the
|
|
Assassination" by Charles Roberts, "Newsweek"'s White House
|
|
correspondent, said:
|
|
"Publish 10,400,000 words of research and what do you get? In
|
|
the case of the Warren Commission and the book business, you get a
|
|
fabulously successful spin-off called the assassination industry,
|
|
whose products would never stand the scrutiny of Consumers Union.
|
|
Consumers buy it as they buy most trash: the packaging promises
|
|
satisfaction but the innards are mostly distortions, unsupported
|
|
theories and gaping omissions" that are "neatly debunked by Charles
|
|
Roberts. . . .
|
|
"By selecting the incredible and the contradictory, scavengers
|
|
like Mark Lane sowed confusion. By writing an honest guide for the
|
|
perplexed, Roberts performs a public service."[31]
|
|
In fact, Roberts' book was extremely superficial, its text
|
|
consuming a mere 118 pages. It glossed over the crucial evidence,
|
|
substituting personal invective against the critics for answers to
|
|
their criticisms.
|
|
In late 1967 the publication of "Six Seconds In Dallas" by
|
|
Professor Josiah Thomson and "Accessories After The Fact" by Sylvia
|
|
Meagher further fanned the flames of the Warren controversy. Ms.
|
|
Meagher had previously distinguished herself by putting together a
|
|
subject index to the 26-volumes--a service the Warren Commission had
|
|
neglected to provide.
|
|
"Six Seconds In Dallas" was previewed by "The Saturday Evening
|
|
Post," which featured the book's jacket on its December 2, 1967
|
|
cover along with the headline "Major New Study Shows Three Assassins
|
|
Killed Kennedy." An editorial in that issue stated that it had now
|
|
been "demonstrated fairly conclusively that the Warren Commission
|
|
was wrong."
|
|
Thompson's book contained a comprehensive study of the Zapruder
|
|
film, graphs of the reaction of Connally, tables summarizing the
|
|
impressions of eyewitnesses, interviews with crucial witnesses,
|
|
mathematical calculations of the acceleration of the President's
|
|
head in relation to the movement of the car, etc. The book was
|
|
profusely illustrated with photographs, drawings and charts.
|
|
"Accessories After the Fact" was an exhaustive analysis of the 26
|
|
volumes and related material from the National Archives not
|
|
contained in the volumes. "Playboy" called it "the best of the new
|
|
crop of books--and the most chilling in its implications."
|
|
"Playboy" called the most unsettling aspect of both books "the
|
|
failure of the Warren Commission to investigate, evaluate--or even
|
|
acknowledge--the huge body of evidence in its possession indicating
|
|
the possible presence of more than one gunman . . .
|
|
"These new books lend weight to widening appeals by Congressmen
|
|
and the press for an independent new investigation . . ."[32]
|
|
Congressman Theodore Kupferman said, "On the subject of the
|
|
Warren Report, Sylvia Meagher could replace a computer," calling her
|
|
book "overwhelming."[33]
|
|
Congressman William F. Ryan said, "Sylvia Meagher raises a number
|
|
of disturbing questions." He added that it pointed out the need for
|
|
a Congressional review of the findings of the Warren
|
|
Commission."[34]
|
|
Both books were reviewed in "The New York Times Book Review" on
|
|
February 28, 1968--by Fred Graham, of course. Graham found it
|
|
astonishing that there was such a degree of disbelief "in a document
|
|
that has the endorsement of some of the highest officials in the
|
|
Government." He contended that inconsistencies notwithstanding,
|
|
"None of the critics have been able to suggest any other explanation
|
|
that fits the known facts better than the Warren Commission's."
|
|
Graham found Ms. Meagher's book "a bore," and he found that
|
|
Thompson's scientific approach ignored "the larger logic of the
|
|
Warren Report. Although it has seemed that the flow of anti-`Warren
|
|
Report' books would never end," he continued, "these two may
|
|
represent a sweet climax."
|
|
|
|
|
|
The New Orleans Aftermath
|
|
|
|
"The New York Times" followed the March 1, 1969 acquittal of Clay
|
|
L. Shaw (charged by New Orleans D.A. Jim Garrison with conspiring to
|
|
assassinate the late President) with a renewed offensive against
|
|
previous criticism of the "Warren Report." An editorial on March 2
|
|
referred to Garrison's "obsessional conviction about the fraudulent
|
|
character of the Warren Commission" as a "fantasy."
|
|
The "News of the Week in Review" that day carried a piece by
|
|
Sidney Zion, "Garrison Flops on the Conspiracy Theory," which
|
|
maintained, in essence, that Garrison had "restored the credibility
|
|
of the Warren Report." The "Times" ignored the fact that the jury
|
|
had been charged solely with the duty of determining the guilt or
|
|
innocence of Mr. Shaw, not with determining the validity of the
|
|
Warren Report.
|
|
On April 20, 1969 "The New York Times Magazine" carried an
|
|
article, "The Final Chapter in the Assassination Controversy?" by
|
|
Edward J. Epstein, onetime critic of the Warren Report.
|
|
Epstein's article was a bitter attack upon the critics which
|
|
impugned their motives and integrity, and implied that much of their
|
|
criticism was politically motivated. He suggested that many of the
|
|
critics were "demonologists" with "books as well as conspiracy
|
|
theories to advertise," doubtless excluding his own "Inquest" from
|
|
this category. He conspicuously neglected to mention that only
|
|
"Inquest" had accused the Commission of seeking "political truth."
|
|
Epstein was less critical of Professor Thompson and Ms. Meagher,
|
|
both of whom had disassociated themselves from Garrison and his
|
|
investigations, but he maintained that their books contained only
|
|
two substantial arguments which, if true, would preclude Oswald as
|
|
the lone assassin--the improbability of the single-bullet theory and
|
|
the backward acceleration of the President's head.
|
|
To dispose of the first point Epstein relied upon a CBS inquiry
|
|
which had theorized that 3 jiggles in the Zapruder film represented
|
|
the photographer's reaction to the sound of shots, and therefore
|
|
themselves coincided with the points at which the shots were fired.
|
|
CBS had thereby hypothesized that the first shot had been fired
|
|
at an earlier point than the Warren Commission had believed likely-
|
|
-at a point when the President would have been visible from the 6th
|
|
floor window for about 1/10th of a second through a break in the
|
|
foliage of a large oak tree which otherwise obstructed the view
|
|
until a later point.
|
|
However, CBS had failed to mention that jiggles appeared at
|
|
several other points in the film, and that there were five jiggles,
|
|
not three, in the frame sequence in question. "Life" magazine,
|
|
which owns the original Zapruder film, rejected the "jiggle theory"
|
|
in November 1966, attributing all but the most violent one that
|
|
coincided with the head shot to imperfections in the camera
|
|
mechanism.[35]
|
|
The CBS analysis was a skillful deception which has been
|
|
thoroughly discredited, including by Professor Thompson in his book
|
|
(see "Six Seconds In Dallas," Appendix F--a critique of the CBS
|
|
documentary, "The Warren Report"). Epstein maintained that the
|
|
CBS analysis persuasively argued that the President and Governor
|
|
Connally could have been hit by separate bullets by a single
|
|
assassin, and that the single-bullet theory had therefore been
|
|
rendered "irrelevant."
|
|
What is more significant than the questionable nature of the
|
|
CBS analysis is the fact that Epstein misrepresented the
|
|
conclusions, for CBS did not theorize an earlier hit, but an
|
|
earlier miss. CBS recognized that an earlier hit meant a steeper
|
|
trajectory, precluding the throat wound being one of exit, and again
|
|
implying a fraudulent autopsy report.
|
|
CBS reluctantly endorsed the single-bullet theory as "essential"
|
|
to the lone-assassin findings of the Warren Commission.[36]
|
|
Epstein, too, recognized this when he wrote in "Inquest": "Either
|
|
both men were hit by the same bullet, or there were two
|
|
assassins."[37] His misrepresentation of the CBS study alleviated
|
|
him of the problem of credibly defending the single-bullet theory-
|
|
-an undertaking he obviously did not relish.
|
|
Epstein dismissed the head movement by citing a report released
|
|
by the Justice Department in January 1969 in which a panel of
|
|
forensic pathologists who had studied the sequestered autopsy photos
|
|
and X-rays had concluded that they supported the Warren Report. But
|
|
even superficial study of the Panel Report (its popular name)
|
|
revealed glaring differences between it and the original autopsy
|
|
report.
|
|
Thus again Epstein relied upon a study which raised more
|
|
questions than it answered in an effort to explain away
|
|
irreconcilable deficiencies in the "Warren Report." In this way he
|
|
was able to conclude that he knew of no substantial evidence "that
|
|
indicated there was more than one rifleman firing."
|
|
Ms. Meagher and Professor Thompson sent the "Times" letters of
|
|
almost identical length, both challenging the veracity of the CBS
|
|
study and the Panel Report. But Ms. Meagher's letter also included
|
|
quotes from a letter Epstein had written her more than a year
|
|
earlier: "I am shocked that 5 not 3 frames were blurred. If this
|
|
is so, CBS was egregiously dishonest and the tests are
|
|
meaningless." And, "By a common sense standard, which you point out
|
|
the `Warren Report' uses, I think your book shows it extremely
|
|
unlikely, even inconceivable, that a single assassin was
|
|
responsible."
|
|
The "Times" thanked Ms. Meagher for her letter, adding that "We
|
|
are planning to run a letter along very similar lines from Josiah
|
|
Thompson and I am sure that you will understand that space
|
|
limitations will prevent us from using both."
|
|
Ms. Meagher wrote again asking that the "Times" reconsider and
|
|
print at least the paragraph which revealed that Epstein knew in
|
|
advance that the CBS claims were specious, and that his private
|
|
admissions in writing were the exact opposite of his representations
|
|
in the "Times."
|
|
"One understands the `Times' unwillingness to acknowledge to its
|
|
readers that it has given Epstein a platform from which to
|
|
disseminate not mere error, but deliberate falsehood," wrote Ms.
|
|
Meagher. "However I would like to request you to reconsider your
|
|
decision . . . in the interests of fair play and of undoing a
|
|
disservice to your readers that was surely unintended."
|
|
She received no reply, and her letter was not published.
|
|
Harold Weisberg wrote the "Times" asking that certain statements
|
|
which he felt were libelous be corrected, and asking that he be
|
|
permitted to write an article rebutting Epstein. The "Times"
|
|
replied denying libel and maintaining that the article itself was
|
|
sound. "If however you want to write us a short letter of not more
|
|
than 250 or 300 words challenging Epstein's interpretation of the
|
|
assassination," the "Times" added, "we'd be glad to consider it for
|
|
publication. But I'd like to caution you to avoid difficult, arcane
|
|
details that would simply baffle our readers."
|
|
Readers of "The New York Times" . . . baffled?
|
|
|
|
|
|
A Heritage of Stone
|
|
|
|
On December 1, 1970 the daily book columns of the "Times" carried
|
|
a dual review of two books on the Jim Garrison affair. The first,
|
|
"American Grotesque," by James Kirkwood, was critical of Garrison
|
|
and the methods he utilized in prosecuting Clay Shaw. The second,
|
|
"A Heritage of Stone," was Jim Garrison's own account of the Kennedy
|
|
assassination.
|
|
The review by "Times" staff reviewer John Leonard, was entitled
|
|
"Who Killed John F. Kennedy?" The portion dealing with "A Heritage
|
|
of Stone" follows:
|
|
|
|
Which brings us to Jim Garrison's "A Heritage of Stone."
|
|
The District Attorney of Orleans Parish argues that
|
|
Kennedy's assassination can only he explained by a "model"
|
|
that pins the murder on the Central Intelligence Agency.
|
|
The CIA could have engineered Dallas in behalf of the
|
|
military-intelligence-industrial complex that feared the
|
|
President's disposition toward a detente with the Russians.
|
|
Mr. Garrison nowhere in his book mentions Clay Shaw, or the
|
|
botch his office made of Shaw's prosecution; he is,
|
|
however, heavy on all the other characters who have become
|
|
familiar to us, via late-night talk shows on television.
|
|
And he insists that the Warren Commission, the executive
|
|
branch of the government, some members of the Dallas Police
|
|
Department, the pathologists at Bethesda who performed the
|
|
second Kennedy autopsy and many, many others must have
|
|
known they were lying to the American public.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Mysteries Persist
|
|
|
|
Frankly, I prefer to believe that the Warren Commission
|
|
did a poor job, rather than a dishonest one. I like to
|
|
think that Mr. Garrison invents monsters to explain
|
|
incompetence. But until somebody explains why two
|
|
autopsies came to two different conclusions about the
|
|
President's wounds, why the limousine was washed out and
|
|
rebuilt without investigation, why certain witnesses near
|
|
the "grassy knoll" were never asked to testify before the
|
|
Commission, why we were all so eager to buy Oswald's
|
|
brilliant marksmanship in split seconds, why no one
|
|
inquired into Jack Ruby's relations with a staggering
|
|
variety of strange people, why a "loner" like Oswald always
|
|
had friends and could always get a passport--who can blame
|
|
the Garrison guerrillas for fantasizing?
|
|
Something stinks about this whole affair. "A Heritage
|
|
of Stone" rehashes the smelliness: the recipe is as
|
|
unappetizing as our doubts about the official version of
|
|
what happened. (Would then-Attorney General Robert F.
|
|
Kennedy have endured his brother's murder in silence? Was
|
|
John Kennedy quite so liberated from cold war cliches as
|
|
Mr. Garrison maintains?) But the stench is there, and
|
|
clings to each of us. Why were Kennedy's neck organs not
|
|
examined at Bethesda for evidence of a frontal shot? Why
|
|
was his body whisked away to Washington before the legally
|
|
required Texas inquest? Why?
|
|
|
|
This review was certainly not an unfair one, and it raised some
|
|
rather searching questions--questions one rarely saw asked in the
|
|
"Times." But this review appeared only in the early edition.
|
|
Before the second edition could reach the stands it underwent a
|
|
strange metamorphosis. The title was changed from "Who Killed John
|
|
F. Kennedy?" to "The Shaw-Garrison Affair," and the review now read
|
|
as follows:
|
|
|
|
Which brings us to Jim Garrison's "A Heritage of Stone."
|
|
The District Attorney of Orleans Parish argues that
|
|
Kennedy's assassination can only he explained by a "model"
|
|
that pins the murder on the Central Intelligence Agency.
|
|
The CIA could have engineered Dallas in behalf of the
|
|
military-intelligence-industrial complex that feared the
|
|
President's disposition toward a detente with the Russians.
|
|
Mr. Garrison nowhere in his book mentions Clay Shaw, or the
|
|
botch his office made of Shaw's prosecution; he is,
|
|
however, heavy on all the other characters who have become
|
|
familiar to us via late-night talk shows on television.
|
|
And he insists that the Warren Commission, the executive
|
|
branch of the government, some members of the Dallas Police
|
|
Department, the pathologists at Bethesda who performed the
|
|
second Kennedy autopsy and many, many others must have
|
|
known they were lying to the American public.
|
|
Frankly, I prefer to believe that the Warren Commission
|
|
did a poor job, rather than a dishonest one. I like to
|
|
think that Mr. Garrison invents monsters to explain
|
|
incompetence.[38]
|
|
|
|
Thus the paragraph heading "Mysteries Persist" had mysteriously
|
|
vanished, and the last 30 lines of the review had been whisked
|
|
away--into some subterranean "Times" "memory hole," no doubt. The
|
|
meaning of the review was completely altered, and the questions
|
|
which the "Times" apparently feels are unaskable remained unasked.
|
|
A letter to the "Times" inquiring as to the reason for alteration
|
|
of the original review brought a response from George Palmer,
|
|
Assistant to the Managing Editor: "Deleting that material . . .
|
|
involved routine editing in line with a long-standing policy of our
|
|
paper. Our book reviewers are granted full freedom to write
|
|
whatever they wish about the books and authors they are dealing
|
|
with, but we do not permit personalized editorials in the book
|
|
columns."[39]
|
|
This was a form letter which the "Times" sent out, with minor
|
|
variations, to those who questioned the two reviews. The recipient
|
|
of one such letter observed that the line "Frankly I *prefer* to
|
|
believe* that the Warren Commission did a poor job rather than a
|
|
dishonest one," was clearly editorial in nature--surely much more so
|
|
than the material that was deleted. To this Palmer replied: "I
|
|
don't believe these comments represented the type of excessive
|
|
editorializing our editors had in mind when they made the
|
|
deletions."[40]
|
|
The "Times" seems to have clarified just what it considers
|
|
"excessive editorializing" when on September 29, 1971 Christopher
|
|
Lehmann-Haupt, in reviewing "The Magician," by Sol Stein, described
|
|
the protagonist as "a random case; he is one of those `types,' like
|
|
Lee Harvey Oswald and James Earl Ray, who are born to lead, but
|
|
lacking the equipment to do so, must assassinate the true leaders."
|
|
The "Times" saw nothing "excessive" or "editorial" in this review,
|
|
and it appeared in the second edition exactly as it had appeared in
|
|
the first.
|
|
Interestingly enough, then Managing Editor, Turner Catledge,
|
|
pledged after the death of Oswald that future articles and headlines
|
|
would refer to Oswald as the *alleged* assassin. The American
|
|
system of justice carrying with it the presumption of innocence
|
|
until guilt is proven in a court of law. Catledge's pledge has been
|
|
consistently and systematically disregarded ever since.[41]
|
|
|
|
|
|
The Eighth Anniversary
|
|
|
|
One of the important witnesses for the Warren Commission was
|
|
Charles Givens, a porter employed at the Book Depository. In a
|
|
deposition taken by Commission lawyer David W. Belin, Givens
|
|
testified that he had left the 6th floor (where he worked) at about
|
|
11:30 a.m. on the morning of the assassination, but that he had
|
|
forgotten his cigarettes, and when he returned to retrieve them at
|
|
about noon he encountered Oswald lurking near the Southeast corner
|
|
window--the alleged sniper's nest.
|
|
Writing in the August 13, 1971 "Texas Observer," Sylvia Meagher
|
|
cast great doubt upon the veracity of Givens and the methods of the
|
|
Warren Commission. Her article, "The Curious Testimony of Mr.
|
|
Givens," revealed that material from the National Archives relating
|
|
to Givens gave an entirely different account .
|
|
On the day of the assassination Givens told authorities that he
|
|
had last seen Oswald at 11:50 a.m. reading a newspaper on the
|
|
*first* floor of the Depository. Neither then nor in two subsequent
|
|
affidavits sworn to prior to his Warren Commission testimony did he
|
|
ever mention having returned to the 6th floor.
|
|
However, an FBI agent's report noted a statement by Lt. Jack
|
|
Revill of the Dallas Police that Givens had previously had
|
|
difficulty with the Dallas Police and probably "would change his
|
|
testimony for money." Moreover, David Belin, the lawyer who took
|
|
Givens testimony, was aware of Givens' earlier statements, for he
|
|
had noted them in a memo six weeks *before* Givens testified. In
|
|
that same memo he noted that three other Depository employees, like
|
|
Givens, had also reported seeing Oswald on the first floor.
|
|
David Belin's reply in the same issue of "The Texas Observer"
|
|
decried the "assassination sensationalists," assured the reader that
|
|
he was an honorable man, and insisted that the Warren Commission had
|
|
done a thorough and competent job. "The Texas Observer," commenting
|
|
on the exchange, called Belin's answer "the slick irrelevant reply
|
|
of a lawyer who doesn't have much of a defense to present."
|
|
Ms. Meagher sent copies of her article, Belin's reply and the
|
|
accompanying editorial to several people at the "Times" including
|
|
Harrison Salisbury, whose responsibilities include editing the Op-Ed
|
|
page. Salisbury's position seemed ambiguous, for since his article
|
|
in "The Progressive" in 1966 he had again implied acceptance of the
|
|
official version of the assassination in his introduction to the
|
|
"Times/Bantam" edition of the "Report of the National Commission on
|
|
the Causes and Prevention of Violence."
|
|
His position would not be ambiguous for long. On November 22,
|
|
1971--the 8th anniversary of the President's death--a headline "The
|
|
Warren Report Was Right" appeared emblazoned across the top of the
|
|
Op-Ed page. The article decried the "assassination sensationalists"
|
|
and its author was none other than David W. Belin.
|
|
Ms. Meagher sent a second copy of the "Observer" material to
|
|
Salisbury, and it was returned with a polite form letter thanking
|
|
her for her manuscript which the "Times" regretted it could not use.
|
|
She replied that the form letter did not surprise her, but that she
|
|
had not sent a manuscript, but rather documented material which
|
|
demonstrated irrefutably deliberate misrepresentation of evidence by
|
|
the Warren Commission, and which "clearly implicated David W. Belin
|
|
in serious impropriety and misfeasance."
|
|
She noted that "You have not questioned, much less challenged,
|
|
the documentary evidence I made available to you twice in two
|
|
months. Instead you provided a forum for Belin to influence your
|
|
readers, without even cautioning them that serious charges had been
|
|
published elsewhere on his conduct as an assistant counsel for the
|
|
Warren Commission."
|
|
Ms. Meagher concluded that the "Times" 1964 praise of the Warren
|
|
Report "may have been merely gullible or unprofessional," but that
|
|
in 1971 it was simply "propaganda on behalf of a discredited
|
|
Government paper," wrapped in sanctimony and pretending "to seek
|
|
truth or justice."
|
|
Salisbury's reply read in full: "Do forgive the form card which
|
|
went back to you. That was a product of our bureaucracy, I'm
|
|
afraid. I hadn't seen your letter, alas, having been out of the
|
|
office for a few days."
|
|
|
|
|
|
The Kennedy Photos and X-Rays
|
|
|
|
The photos and X-rays taken of the President's body during the
|
|
autopsy represent possibly the most crucial evidence of the
|
|
assassination. They could settle whether the President was hit in
|
|
the neck or in the back, and they could resolve considerable doubt
|
|
as to the direction from which the various bullets were fired.
|
|
Nevertheless, they were allegedly never viewed by the Warren
|
|
Commission. In late 1966 they were deposited in the National
|
|
Archives under the proviso that only Government agencies would be
|
|
permitted to view them for five years at which time "recognized
|
|
experts in the field of pathology or related areas of science and
|
|
technology" might be permitted to view them.
|
|
Toward the end of 1968 D.A. Garrison of New Orleans took legal
|
|
steps to secure release of the material. In an effort to block
|
|
access, the Justice Department released a report by a panel of
|
|
forensic pathologists who had examined the photos and X-rays a year
|
|
earlier and had reported that they confirmed the medical findings
|
|
that all the shots came from the rear.
|
|
The Panel Report was covered for the "Times" by Fred Graham. His
|
|
uncritical story was carried on page 1 and consumed eight additional
|
|
columns on page 17.[42] But far from resolving the controversy the
|
|
Panel Report only raised new questions, for even perfunctory study
|
|
of it revealed radical differences between it and the original
|
|
autopsy report and the Warren Commission testimony of the autopsy
|
|
surgeons, not the least of which was the fact that the fatal head
|
|
wound had mysteriously moved by approximately 4 inches.
|
|
Some of the discrepancies were brought to Graham's attention by
|
|
Sylvia Meagher. He replied: "Thank you for your thoughtful and
|
|
informative letter about the Kennedy X-rays and photographs. I wish
|
|
I had known this at the time, but perhaps it is not too late to
|
|
backtrack a bit and see if anyone can come up with explanations. . .
|
|
. I'll see what can be turned up, and if anything can, I trust
|
|
you'll be reading about it."[43]
|
|
There was no follow-up story. The following month Dr. Cyril H.
|
|
Wecht, an eminently qualified forensic pathologist, testified in the
|
|
District of Columbia Court of General Sessions about the
|
|
inconsistencies between the Panel Report and the autopsy report.
|
|
Judge Charles Halleck was sufficiently impressed with Dr. Wecht's
|
|
testimony to rule against the Justice Department, ordering that
|
|
Wecht be permitted to examine the autopsy material as the basis for
|
|
his testimony on the medical findings.
|
|
(The ruling was later rendered moot when the Justice Department
|
|
announced it would appeal. This would have resulted in an
|
|
indefinite delay beyond the conclusion of the Shaw trial, and
|
|
Garrison withdrew his suit.)
|
|
The "Times" coverage of this event consisted of a 4-paragraph UPI
|
|
dispatch which omitted any mention of Dr. Wecht's testimony
|
|
regarding the Panel Report. The UPI story was buried on page
|
|
13.[44] Five days later Fred Graham reported on the Justice
|
|
Department's announcement that it would appeal Judge Halleck's order
|
|
that the photos and X-rays be produced at the Shaw trial, but the
|
|
story contained no reference to Dr. Wecht or his testimony.[45]
|
|
When the first person "not under Government auspices" was
|
|
permitted to see the photos and X-rays this year the *exclusive* was
|
|
obtained by Fred Graham of "The New York Times."
|
|
On January 9, 1972 the "Times" announced on page 1 that Dr. John
|
|
K. Lattimer, Chairman of the Department of Urology at Columbia
|
|
University's College of Physicians and Surgeons, had viewed the
|
|
photos and X-rays and found that they "eliminate any doubt
|
|
completely" about the validity of the Warren Commission's conclusion
|
|
that Oswald fired all the shots.
|
|
Dr. Lattimer disagreed with the Commission only insofar as he
|
|
said that the neck wound was actually *higher* than the Commission
|
|
had reported. He maintained that therefore the throat wound could
|
|
not possibly be one of entrance because the front wound was so far
|
|
below the back one that "if anyone were to have shot him from the
|
|
front, they would have to be squatting on the floor in front of
|
|
him."
|
|
Graham's article noted that "some skeptics" regarded Lattimer as
|
|
"an apologist for the `Warren Report,'" but he did not elaborate.
|
|
In fact Dr. Lattimer had earned the title over a period of several
|
|
years by publishing a number of sycophantic articles in defense of
|
|
the "Warren Report." In the March 13, 1970 issue of "Medical World
|
|
News," for example, he wrote:
|
|
"Oswald showed what the educated, modern-day, traitorous
|
|
guerrilla can do among his own people--working with religious-type
|
|
conviction, willing to lay down his own life, but proposing to kill
|
|
as many anti-communists as possible. Oswald was devious, skilled at
|
|
his business, and amazingly cool."
|
|
More important than Dr. Lattimer's background, however, is the
|
|
fact that a number of interesting questions were raised both by his
|
|
selection as the person who would finally be permitted to study the
|
|
autopsy material, and by the rather curious nature of his
|
|
"observations."
|
|
How, for example. did a urologist with virtually no knowledge of
|
|
forensic pathology[46] (the branch of forensic medicine specializing
|
|
in the determination of the cause and manner of death in cases where
|
|
it is sudden, suspicious, unexpected, unexplained, traumatic,
|
|
medically undetected or violent) qualify as an "expert in the field
|
|
of pathology or related areas of science and technology" to view the
|
|
autopsy photos and X-rays?
|
|
Why was a urologist chosen when three doctors with experience in
|
|
forensic pathology, including Dr. Wecht, had also applied? Dr.
|
|
Wecht is Chief Medical Examiner of Pittsburgh, Research Professor of
|
|
Law and Director of the Institute of Forensic Sciences at Duquesne
|
|
University School of Law, past-President of the American College of
|
|
Legal Medicine, and past-President of the American Academy of
|
|
Forensic Sciences.
|
|
By coincidence. of the four applicants, only the urologist, Dr.
|
|
Lattimer, had spoken or written of the "Warren Report" in an
|
|
uncritical fashion. How could he contend unequivocally that the
|
|
photos and X-rays "eliminate any doubt completely" that *Oswald* had
|
|
fired all the shots--something they are incapable of proving to
|
|
anyone not endowed with telepathic powers?
|
|
Moreover, if a shot from the front would have had to come from
|
|
the floor of the President's car as Dr. Lattimer suggests, a shot
|
|
from the rear following the same trajectory in reverse would have
|
|
ended up *in* the floor.
|
|
How could such a bullet following this new steeper trajectory
|
|
have altered its course to strike Governor Connally below the right
|
|
armpit and exit below his right nipple as the Warren Commission
|
|
contends it did?
|
|
Even more curious is the fact that despite the inconsistencies of
|
|
the Panel Report, it did *not* cite a higher location for the "neck"
|
|
wound.
|
|
Thus the Panel Report, the autopsy report, and Dr. Lattimer all
|
|
offered *different* descriptions of the President's wounds.
|
|
None of these questions were raised by Fred Graham. He did add
|
|
that Burke Marshall, the Kennedy family representative charged with
|
|
deciding which "recognized experts" will be admitted, was also
|
|
considering the requests of Dr. Cyril H. Wecht and Dr. John Nichols,
|
|
"pathologists who have written critically of the Warren Commission
|
|
report," and Dr. E. Forrest Chapman.
|
|
"Mr. Marshall said that in granting or denying permission, he
|
|
would not consider whether applicants were supporters or critics of
|
|
the `Warren Report,' but only if they had a serious historical
|
|
purpose in seeing the material."
|
|
In 1964 Burke Marshall, then head of the Civil Rights Section of
|
|
the Justice Department, showed a keen interest in investigating how
|
|
Malcolm X was financing his international travels aimed at bringing
|
|
the American racial question before the United Nations--an area
|
|
which would hardly seem to be of concern to the Civil Rights
|
|
Division.[47]
|
|
It was reliably reported to me that the Lattimer story caused
|
|
serious repercussions at the "Times" as a result of a torrent of
|
|
outraged letters from forensic experts and scholars astounded that
|
|
Dr. Lattimer had assumed the role of expert in a highly specialized
|
|
field in which he had no competence, and that the "Times" had lent
|
|
him credibility with its uncritical reporting.
|
|
Possibly as a result of these letters or possibly because he was
|
|
becoming somewhat skeptical himself, Fred Graham telephoned Dr.
|
|
Wecht in May 1972 to inquire as to the status of his application.
|
|
Dr. Wecht told Graham that Marshall had totally ignored repeated
|
|
letters and telegrams seeking either an approval or rejection of his
|
|
application. According to Dr. Wecht, Fred Graham made at least two
|
|
calls to Burke Marshall after his initial conversation with Wecht,
|
|
and Graham applied at least some degree of pressure upon Marshall to
|
|
act upon Wecht's application.
|
|
Whether or not the spectre of an article in "The New York Times"
|
|
asking why the autopsy material continued to be inaccessible helped
|
|
to influence his decision is impossible to say, but in mid-June,
|
|
Burke Marshall approved Dr. Wecht's application.
|
|
Dr. Wecht spent two days at the National Archives on August 23
|
|
and 24, making a detailed study of the photographs, X-rays, and
|
|
related physical evidence. Because of the positive role Graham had
|
|
played, Wecht offered him an exclusive interview.
|
|
Wecht limited his discussion of his observations pending closer
|
|
study and consultation and issuance of a detailed report. He did
|
|
discuss a "little flap" of loose scalp which "might have been an
|
|
entrance or exit wound," but which had never been mentioned before
|
|
either by Dr. Lattimer or in the autopsy report or in the Panel
|
|
Report.
|
|
He also disclosed that photographs of the top of the removed
|
|
brain "disclose a sizeable foreign object that could have been a
|
|
flattened bullet fragment or a brain tumor." This object was
|
|
reported by the Panel, but was not mentioned in the autopsy report
|
|
or by Dr. Lattimer.
|
|
Wecht also reported that he had requested permission to examine
|
|
the preserved brain of the President (essential to any thorough
|
|
examination, and specifically necessary if the flattened object in
|
|
the brain was to be identified), as well as microscopic slides of
|
|
tissue removed from the President's wounds (these can identify
|
|
whether a wound is one of entrance or exit), but that these items,
|
|
which have never been studied, were denied him.
|
|
Wecht told Graham that he intended to write to Mr. Marshall
|
|
asking him to lay all the questions to rest by allowing him to again
|
|
inspect the materials "plus the brain and microscopic slides of the
|
|
wounds, with a team of experts, including a radiologist, a
|
|
neurosurgeon, a firearms expert, a criminalist and an examiner of
|
|
questioned documents."
|
|
Graham also interviewed Marshall who denied knowledge of the
|
|
brain or other objects not in the archives. He said that "They have
|
|
no bearing on who killed the President." He deplored Dr. Wecht's
|
|
"chasing after parts of the President's body because he hasn't found
|
|
any evidence that anything else was wrong." He termed the probing
|
|
"offensive," and said "It is a terrible thing to do to that family."
|
|
Graham's story ran in the "Sunday New York Times" on August 27 on
|
|
page 1. While the article betrayed a degree of slanting (e.g.,
|
|
"While [Dr. Wecht] was here last week, he was provided
|
|
transportation by the Committee to Investigate Assassinations, a
|
|
Washington-based organization that includes District Attorney Jim
|
|
Garrison of New Orleans"), Graham nevertheless gave a very factual
|
|
recounting of his interview with Dr. Wecht.
|
|
Graham also did considerable background research and conducted a
|
|
number of secondary interviews in an effort to trace the history of
|
|
the missing brain. What will transpire when Dr. Wecht issues his
|
|
technical report detailing his findings, and whether Fred Graham
|
|
follows up on Dr. Wecht's request of Marshall that a second panel
|
|
including Dr. Wecht and other experts be allowed to now conduct a
|
|
thorough examination of *all* the material remains to be seen.
|
|
Marshall has so far ignored the request.
|
|
|
|
|
|
The Times and the King Case
|
|
|
|
On March 10. 1969 the official curtain closed on the
|
|
assassination of Martin Luther King. James Earl Ray pleaded guilty
|
|
to a technical plea of murder "as explained to you by your lawyers,"
|
|
and was sentenced to 99 years in prison (Ray has always maintained
|
|
that he killed no one). Thus the State of Tennessee, by an
|
|
arrangement that had the advance blessings of the Federal
|
|
Government, dispensed with the formality of a trial for the accused
|
|
assassin of Dr. King.
|
|
The next day a scathing editorial in the "Times" entitled
|
|
"Tongue-Tied Justice," denounced the proceedings, calling "the
|
|
aborted trial of James Earl Ray" a "mockery of justice" and "a
|
|
shocking breach of faith with the American people." The "Times"
|
|
demanded to know, "Was there a conspiracy to kill Dr. King and who
|
|
was in it?" They demanded the convening of formal legal
|
|
proceedings, by the Federal Government if not the State.
|
|
But, for all its editorial eloquence the "Times" record on the
|
|
King case once the "official" verdict was in would be no better than
|
|
it had been in the John F. Kennedy case (prior to the Ray trial the
|
|
"Times" reporting, particularly that of Martin Waldron, was
|
|
excellent). Ray's efforts to obtain a new trial and his contention
|
|
that he had been pressured into his plea were, and continue to be,
|
|
almost completely blacked-out by the "Times."
|
|
March 1971 brought a challenge to the "official" contention that
|
|
Ray had killed Dr. King and that there had been no conspiracy. The
|
|
challenge was a new book by Harold Weisberg, "Frame-Up: The Martin
|
|
Luther King/James Earl Ray Case."
|
|
"Frame-Up" was the culmination of more than two years of
|
|
investigation, legal action, and research. Much of his evidence
|
|
Weisberg obtained when he successfully sued the Justice Department
|
|
for access to the suppressed James Earl Ray extradition file. The
|
|
suit resulted in a rare Summary Judgment against the Justice
|
|
Department (not news fit to print to the "Times"), and the release
|
|
of official documents which were exculpatory of Ray.
|
|
Thus Weisberg revealed that ballistics tests which failed to link
|
|
Ray's rifle with the crime were misrepresented by the prosecution in
|
|
the formal narration, implying the opposite by substituting the word
|
|
"consistent," a meaningless word in ballistics terminology.
|
|
The alleged shot from the bathroom window would have required a
|
|
contortionist, and tangible evidence suggested that the shot had
|
|
come from elsewhere. Numerous contradictions and conflict impeached
|
|
the testimony of the only alleged witness placing Ray at the scene.
|
|
Ray left no prints in the bathroom, or in another room where he
|
|
was alleged to have rearranged furniture, or in the car, he
|
|
allegedly drove 400 miles after the slaying, or on parts of the
|
|
rifle he would have had to handle in order to fire it.
|
|
Persuasive evidence suggested that a bundle conveniently left
|
|
behind in a doorway near the rooming house and which contained the
|
|
alleged assassination rifle and several of Ray's personal effects,
|
|
had actually been planted on the scene by someone other than Ray.
|
|
Much more in "Frame-Up" pointed toward a conspiracy in which Ray had
|
|
served the role of "patsy."
|
|
The "Times" found no news fit to print in "Frame- Up," though
|
|
even Fred Graham had called Weisberg a "painstaking investigator,"
|
|
and "Times" reporter Peter Kihss had written lengthy and favorable
|
|
articles about two of his previous books.[48]
|
|
"Frame-Up" was enthusiastically received at first. "Publishers'
|
|
Weekly" said: "This review can barely suggest the detailed number
|
|
of Weisberg's charges, speculations, freshly documented evidence and
|
|
revelations about the King murder. In two areas he is pure TNT:
|
|
his attack on Ray's lawyer, Percy Foreman . . . and his sensational
|
|
head-on assault on J. Edgar Hoover, the FBI and the government
|
|
itself for what he claims was the suppressing of official evidence
|
|
indicating Ray was not alone in the King assassination. . . .
|
|
Weisberg has brought forth a blistering book."[49]
|
|
"Saturday Review" said: "Evidence that Ray fired the fatal shot.
|
|
There is none. . . . The reek of conspiracy is on everything.
|
|
Weisberg is an indefatigable researcher . . . he has pursued the
|
|
facts. . . . And they are facts that lay claim to the conscience of
|
|
America."[50]
|
|
"The Chicago Sun Times" said: "Weisberg has dug up much
|
|
material, some of it properly designated as suppressed, that must
|
|
give any reasonable and unprejudiced person pause."[51]
|
|
The "Times" of London in a news story on "Frame-Up" called
|
|
Weisberg "one of that small but impassioned group of authorities on
|
|
recent American political assassinations . . . "Frame-Up" is a
|
|
detailed analysis of the entire process of Mr. Ray's arrest and
|
|
trial. . . . There is remarkably little evidence to connect Ray
|
|
with the shot that killed Dr. King."[52]
|
|
"Frame-Up" was reviewed in "The New York Times Book Review" on
|
|
May 2, 1971 by John Kaplan. The review began: "The silly season
|
|
apparently is over so far as the critics of the Warren Commission
|
|
are concerned. . . . Now Harold Weisberg . . . hopes to repeat the
|
|
triumph of his Whitewash series with "Frame-Up. . . . Mr.
|
|
Weisberg's theory is that James Earl Ray was merely a decoy, part of
|
|
a conspiracy, apparently . . . his evidence is exiguous at best."
|
|
The review continued: "Mr. Weisberg's grasp of law is, to say
|
|
the least, somewhat shaky (he is described elsewhere as a chicken
|
|
farmer). . . . Whether or not Ray fired the fatal bullet or merely
|
|
acted as a decoy does not influence the propriety of his guilty
|
|
plea. In either case, he would be a murderer. . . . A review such
|
|
as this in which nothing favorable is said obviously prompts
|
|
questions as to why one might wish to read or, for that matter, to
|
|
devote newspaper review space to the book. . . . Finally, one might
|
|
ask if "Frame-Up" tells us anything significant about the Martin
|
|
Luther King assassination. Regrettably, the answer is no. . . ."
|
|
Kaplan's review was nothing short of a personal attack upon
|
|
Harold Weisberg which totally ignored the contents of "Frame-Up,"
|
|
and falsely implied that "newspaper stories" were the basis of his
|
|
"exiguous" evidence.
|
|
An article on the front page of "The Wall Street Journal," "How
|
|
Book Reviews Make or Break Books--or Have No Impact," described "The
|
|
New York Times Book Review" as "generally considered the most
|
|
prestigious and influential review medium."[53] It described how a
|
|
particularly poor review there can discourage further reviews and
|
|
cut off bookstore orders. "Frame-Up" received no further reviews,
|
|
and for all practical purposes the book was soon dead.
|
|
The "Times" capsule biography of the reviewer said that "John
|
|
Kaplan teaches at Stanford Law School and is author of "Marijuana:
|
|
The New Prohibition." It was inadequate, to say the least.
|
|
From 1957 to 1961 Kaplan served the Justice Department (against
|
|
which Weisberg obtained the Summary Judgment not mentioned in the
|
|
"Times" review), first as a lawyer with the Criminal Division, then
|
|
as a special prosecutor in Chicago, and finally as an Assistant U.S.
|
|
Attorney in San Francisco.
|
|
He wrote an article, "The Assassins," which appeared in the
|
|
Spring 1967 "American Scholar." The assassins John Kaplan was
|
|
talking about were the critics of the "Warren Report" whom he
|
|
characterized as "revisionists," "perverse," and "silly." He was
|
|
also critical of "Life"'s call for a new investigation and the
|
|
"Times" call for answers to unanswered questions. These, according
|
|
to Kaplan, "contributed relatively little in the way of
|
|
enlightenment."[54]
|
|
In its original form "The Assassins" was considered so libelous
|
|
by the legal counsel of "The American Scholar" that the latter
|
|
refused to publish it until Kaplan reluctantly agreed to revise
|
|
it.[55] Kaplan's most recent venture, published the same week as
|
|
his review of "Frame-Up," was an article written for the U.S.
|
|
Information Agency (the *official* propaganda arm of the Government)
|
|
entitled "The Case of Angela Davis: The Processes of American
|
|
Justice."[56]
|
|
John Leonard, now editor of "The New York Times Book Review,"
|
|
told me that he had been totally unaware of Kaplan's background. He
|
|
had received a letter from Mr. Weisberg, and its contents distressed
|
|
him. Leonard told me that "another editor" had assigned the book,
|
|
but he implied that the matter would be rectified on the letters
|
|
page.[57] It was John Leonard, then a daily reviewer, whose review
|
|
of "A Heritage of Stone" had been edited because it was "excessively
|
|
editorial."
|
|
Weisberg's letter received no reply, nor did a subsequent one
|
|
addressed directly to Leonard seeking some acknowledgment to the
|
|
first, "if only to record that you did not consciously assign this
|
|
review to a man so saddled with irreconcilable conflicts."
|
|
On May 29 the "Times Book Review" published but one letter
|
|
dealing with the Kaplan review--that a strongly worded denial of a
|
|
footnote unrelated to the Ray case in which Weisberg said, in the
|
|
context of discussing press coverage, that in 1966 the book reviewer
|
|
of the "Washington Post" had been ordered not to review "Whitewash"
|
|
after he read it and decided on a favorable review. Kaplan chose to
|
|
quote it out of context as an example of how, in Kaplan's words,
|
|
Weisberg thought he was being picked on.
|
|
Geoffrey Wolff, who had been Book Review Editor of the
|
|
"Washington Post" in 1966, vociferously denied the footnote in a
|
|
letter which the "Times," in total disregard of publishing ethics,
|
|
chose to publish without sending Weisberg a copy so that he could
|
|
respond. Weisberg was not permitted to quote his dated
|
|
contemporaneous notes of his meetings with Wolff and a letter he had
|
|
written Wolff in August 1966, and readers of the "Times" were given
|
|
only Wolff's version of what had occurred, leaving them with the
|
|
impression that there was only one version.
|
|
Thus the "Times" assigned a biased reviewer who was permitted to
|
|
misrepresent "Frame-Up"'s contents and to quote a tangential
|
|
footnote completely out of context as an exercise in personal
|
|
invective against Weisberg. This was followed by the publication of
|
|
only one letter which compounded the defamation of the Kaplan
|
|
review.
|
|
This train of events suggests that the "Times" never intended
|
|
anything less than to kill "Frame-Up" and discredit Weisberg.
|
|
Following the appearance of Wolff's letter, John Leonard told me
|
|
that it had been published at that time because it had been set in
|
|
type while others had not been, but that a "full page round-up" of
|
|
letters dealing with the Kaplan review would be published "in about
|
|
three weeks."[58]
|
|
Weisberg's letter responding to the published Wolff letter
|
|
received no reply from the "Times" and was never published. The
|
|
full page round-up never appeared. Instead on August 29, 17 weeks
|
|
after the Kaplan review and 12 weeks after the publication of the
|
|
Wolff letter--after "Frame-Up" was already dead--Weisberg's original
|
|
letter (which Leonard told me he had just received when I spoke to
|
|
him on May 5) was published in the "Times Book Review" along with a
|
|
self-serving reply by Kaplan, who was permitted the traditional
|
|
right of reply that the "Times" had previously denied Weisberg.
|
|
Weisberg wrote John Leonard: "I think you owe me . . . more than
|
|
this too late, too little, too dishonest feebleness. . . . You have
|
|
my work, which stands, as it must, alone. You have my detailed and
|
|
lengthy letters, which remain undenied by anyone, unanswered by you.
|
|
You have enough to show that the "Times" and John Leonard will at
|
|
least make an effort to be decent and honorable. Will you?"
|
|
For the first time Weisberg received a reply. Leonard's response
|
|
read in full: "Apparently everyone in the country is without honor
|
|
except you. I don't think we have anything useful to say to one
|
|
another."[59]
|
|
|
|
|
|
The Times and the RFK Case
|
|
|
|
If many were unsatisfied with the "official" facts about the
|
|
assassination of President Kennedy and Dr. King, there seemed little
|
|
reason to doubt that Senator Robert F. Kennedy had fallen victim to
|
|
the deranged act of a single sick individual--until the publication
|
|
of Robert Blair Kaiser's "R.F.K. Must Die!"
|
|
Kaiser is an established and respected reporter and a former
|
|
correspondent for "Time" magazine. His previous reporting had won
|
|
him a Pulitzer Prize nomination and an Overseas Press Club Award for
|
|
the best magazine reporting in foreign affairs.
|
|
He signed on with the Sirhan defense team as an investigator. In
|
|
the course of his studies and investigations he became the chief
|
|
repository of knowledge in the case and the bridge between the
|
|
defense attorneys and the psychiatrists probing the motivations of
|
|
Sirhan Sirhan. Kaiser was to spend close to 200 hours with Sirhan,
|
|
and that exposure together with his researches were to convince him
|
|
that there had been a conspiracy.
|
|
Kaiser was unimpressed with the investigations turned in by the
|
|
Los Angeles Police Department and the FBI He felt that they were
|
|
predisposed to the conclusion that no conspiracy existed, and they
|
|
were consequently unwilling to pursue leads in that direction.
|
|
Thus when the "girl in the polka-dot dress" seen with Sirhan just
|
|
before the assassination was not turned up, the authorities
|
|
concluded that she did not exist despite overwhelming evidence to
|
|
the contrary. Nor was a zealous effort made to locate or thoroughly
|
|
investigate certain acquaintances of Sirhan who could not be
|
|
regarded as above suspicion.
|
|
Kaiser became perplexed by Sirhan's notebooks in which he had
|
|
often repeatedly written his name, and in which several pages bore
|
|
the similarly repeated inscription "RFK must die," always
|
|
accompanied by the phrase "Please pay to the order of Sirhan."
|
|
Sirhan had no recollection of these writings, nor did he recall
|
|
firing at Senator Kennedy.
|
|
On the night of the assassination Sirhan had behaved oddly. He
|
|
was observed staring fixedly at a teletype machine two hours before
|
|
the assassination, and he did not respond when addressed by the
|
|
teletype operator. Several bystanders could not loosen the vice-
|
|
like grip or sway the seemingly frozen arm of Sirhan when he began
|
|
firing. After the shooting it was reported that his eyes were
|
|
dilated, and he was described as extremely detached during the all-
|
|
night police interrogation. In the morning he was found shivering
|
|
in his cell.
|
|
Dr. Bernard L. Diamond. the chief psychiatrist for the defense,
|
|
decided upon the use of hypnosis on Sirhan. His subject proved so
|
|
susceptible that Diamond concluded that Sirhan had likely been
|
|
frequently hypnotized before. Under hypnosis Sirhan proved adept at
|
|
the same type of automatic writing that appeared in his notebooks.
|
|
Given a pen and paper he filled an entire page with his name,
|
|
continuing to write even at the end of the page. Instructed to
|
|
write about Robert Kennedy he wrote "RFK must die" repeatedly until
|
|
told to stop. Under hypnosis Sirhan recalled his previous notebook
|
|
entries which had been made in a trance-like state induced by
|
|
mirrors in his bedroom.
|
|
The hallways of the Ambassador Hotel were also lined with
|
|
mirrors. Dr. Diamond programmed Sirhan to climb the bars of his
|
|
cell like a monkey, but to retain no memory of the instructions.
|
|
Upon awakening Sirhan climbed the bars of his cell "for exercise."
|
|
Hypnosis produced an interesting side-effect on Sirhan. Upon
|
|
emerging from a hypnotic state he would suffer chills--just as he
|
|
had the morning after the assassination.
|
|
Dr. Diamond became convinced that Sirhan had acted in a
|
|
dissociated state, unconscious of his actions, the night he
|
|
allegedly killed Senator Kennedy. He concluded that Sirhan had
|
|
programmed himself like a robot. Kaiser reached a slightly
|
|
different conclusion. If Sirhan had programmed himself, he
|
|
reasoned, why did he retain no recollection of the programming or
|
|
the shooting. Furthermore, when asked under hypnosis if others had
|
|
been involved, Sirhan would go into a deeper trance in which he
|
|
could not reply or he would block--hesitating for a long period
|
|
before giving a negative reply.
|
|
Kaiser's research turned up several case-histories in which a
|
|
suggestible individual had actually been programmed by a skilled
|
|
hypnotist to perform illegal acts with no recollection of either the
|
|
deed or the programming, including a relatively recent case in
|
|
Europe in which a man convicted of murder was later acquitted when a
|
|
suspicious psychiatrist succeeded in deprogramming him with the
|
|
result that the programmer was convicted in his stead. Kaiser felt
|
|
that Sirhan, too, had been programmed and his memory blocked by some
|
|
kind of blocking mechanism.
|
|
"R.F.K Must Die!", which was also not "news fit to print" was
|
|
reviewed in "The New York Times Book Review" on November 15, 1970 by
|
|
Dr. Thomas S. Szasz. Kaiser was described as a "conscientious and
|
|
competent reporter," but the review totally ignored the contents of
|
|
the book, the reviewer preferring to expound upon his own philosophy
|
|
that it is "absurd" to judge Sirhan's act in any context other than
|
|
the fact that he had committed the act, because in courtroom
|
|
psychiatry "facts are constructed to fit theories."
|
|
Dr. Szasz also expounded upon his faith in capital punishment as
|
|
a deterrent to crime and upon several other irrelevancies. Only one
|
|
sentence of the review addressed Kaiser's premise: "And Kaiser
|
|
uncritically accepts Diamond's theory of the assassination `that
|
|
Sirhan had--by his automatic writing--programmed himself exactly
|
|
like a computer is programmed by its magnetic tape . . . for the
|
|
coming assassination.'"
|
|
Dr. Szasz completely misrepresented the thesis of the book he was
|
|
reviewing, for Kaiser explicitly disagreed with Dr. Diamond. Dr.
|
|
Szasz' review gave no hint that Kaiser had postulated a conspiracy.
|
|
Robert Kaiser wrote me: "My narrative of the facts, most of which
|
|
have been hidden from the public, cried out for a reopening of the
|
|
case by the authorities. That was news and Dr. Szasz ignored
|
|
it."[60]
|
|
Assigning Dr. Thomas Szasz to review "R.F.K. Must Die!" was like
|
|
assigning Martha Mitchell to review Senator Fulbright's "The
|
|
Arrogance of Power." Kaiser's book was largely a psychiatric study
|
|
of Sirhan and a narrative of the psychiatric nature of the defense
|
|
strategy (Sirhan had definite paranoid-schizophrenic tendencies).
|
|
Dr. Szasz is generally regarded as the most controversial figure
|
|
in the psychiatric profession, for he contends that mental illness
|
|
is a myth, and he is irrevocably opposed to the use of psychiatry in
|
|
the courtroom. His views are so controversial that "The New York
|
|
Times Magazine" devoted an entire article to them.[61] Dr. Szasz'
|
|
philosophy regarding courtroom psychiatry and mental illness
|
|
precluded in advance an objective review.
|
|
The relationship existing between Dr. Szasz and Dr. Diamond (who
|
|
Kaiser describes as "the only hero in my book"[62]), moreover,
|
|
should have further disqualified Dr. Szasz, for their views
|
|
diametrically oppose one another, and the two men have faced each
|
|
other in public debate.
|
|
Dr. Diamond is a leading expert on and advocate of the legal
|
|
concept known as "diminished capacity," a psychiatric defense. In
|
|
the October 1964 "California Law Review" Dr. Diamond reviewed one of
|
|
Dr. Szasz' books. A quote of the opening lines of that review
|
|
illustrates sufficiently well the enmity existing between the two:
|
|
"`Law, Liberty and Psychiatry' is an irresponsible,
|
|
reprehensible, and dangerous book. It is irresponsible and
|
|
reprehensible because the author must surely know better. It is a
|
|
dangerous book because its author is clever, brilliant and
|
|
articulate--the book reads well and could be most convincing to the
|
|
intelligent, but uncritical reader."
|
|
Kaiser cogently summed up the Szasz review: "An honest review of
|
|
my book, pro or con, one that would have dealt with the facts I
|
|
revealed and the issues I raised, could have been a valuable service
|
|
to the large reading public that depends on the "Times Book Review."
|
|
From a purely personal viewpoint, it made the difference for me;
|
|
instead of being a bestseller, my book was only a modest success--
|
|
not because the reviewer made a successful attack on my thesis, but
|
|
because he simply ignored it."[63]
|
|
One of the confusing facts in the Robert Kennedy case is that the
|
|
fatal bullet entered behind the left ear and was fired from only
|
|
about an inch away, a fact that was attested to by the massive
|
|
powder burns the weapon produced around the wound. Sirhan was
|
|
several feet in front of Senator Kennedy. It was generally assumed
|
|
that Kennedy had fallen in Sirhan's direction, receiving the wound
|
|
as he fell, but events of the past summer have challenged this
|
|
theory.
|
|
On May 28, 1971 Los Angeles attorney Barbara Warner Blehr
|
|
challenged the qualifications of DeWayne Wolfer, acting head of the
|
|
LAPD Crime Lab, in an effort to block his permanent appointment.
|
|
Her challenge included declarations by three ballistics experts
|
|
alleging that Wolfer had violated the four precepts of firearms
|
|
identification when he testified at Sirhan's trial that Sirhan's gun
|
|
and no other was involved in the shooting of Kennedy and two other
|
|
persons on the scene.
|
|
Ms. Blehr charged that Wolfer's testimony established that three
|
|
bullets introduced in evidence were fired *not* from Sirhan's gun
|
|
but from a second similar gun which, through evidence in the case
|
|
on June 6, 1968 "was reportedly destroyed by the LAPD . . . in July,
|
|
1968." She charged that a second person with a gun similar to
|
|
Sirhan's had also fired shots at Senator Kennedy.
|
|
Ms. Blehr's charges resulted in the convening of a grand jury
|
|
which ultimately found that serious questions concerning the
|
|
integrity of exhibits in the Sirhan case were raised as a result of
|
|
handling of the evidence by unauthorized persons while in the
|
|
custody of the Los Angeles County Clerk's office. District Attorney
|
|
Busch claimed that the confusion was the result of a clerical error
|
|
made in labeling an envelope containing three bullets test-fired
|
|
from Sirhan's gun by Wolfer. He claimed that Ms. Blehr's charges
|
|
also contained serious errors, but he did not specify them.
|
|
Meanwhile there still seems to be a strong question as to whether
|
|
the ballistics markings on all of the bullets match up. Retired
|
|
criminologist William Harper viewed two of the bullets, one taken
|
|
from a second victim and the other removed from Kennedy's neck. He
|
|
stated that he could find "no individual characteristics in common
|
|
between these two bullets."
|
|
"The Los Angeles Times" has given each of these developments
|
|
large play, and a summary article on August 8, 1971 by "L.A. Times"
|
|
staff writer Dave Smith ran on page 1 and continued onto pages 8, 9
|
|
and 10, taking up approximately 125 column inches. By the same
|
|
token these developments have been almost totally blacked-out by
|
|
"The New York Times." Then National Editor, Gene Roberts, told me
|
|
that he could not explain why these developments had received so
|
|
little coverage, claiming ignorance of them--a situation for which
|
|
he acknowledged there was little excuse. He suggested that I
|
|
contact Wallace Turner, a reporter with the Los Angeles bureau whom
|
|
Roberts said was familiar with the Robert Kennedy case.[64]
|
|
I wrote instead to the L.A. bureau chief, Steven V. Roberts,
|
|
suggesting that a policy decision was responsible for the blackout.
|
|
He replied that "the questions were of the most tentative and flimsy
|
|
character" which "just did not merit doing a full-scale
|
|
investigation." Roberts wrote that he had told New York (meaning
|
|
the National desk) "to use whatever they wanted that was run by the
|
|
wire services, but that I was not going to do anything myself. . .
|
|
."[65]
|
|
I wrote again asking why these events were not news simply
|
|
because the "Times" had not investigated them, and also asking why
|
|
the L.A. Bureau had reported on Sirhan's efforts to block
|
|
publication of "R.F.K. Must Die!", but saw nothing newsworthy in
|
|
the book or its revelations when it was published. He replied: "As
|
|
I told you the first time, we have to set priorities here. We can
|
|
report only a small percentage of the many stories that come our way
|
|
every day. I have decided that the controversy over the Sirhan
|
|
bullets is not substantial enough to warrant my time, when there are
|
|
so many other things to worry about. I appreciate your concern, but
|
|
I think that's about all I have to say on the matter."[66]
|
|
One must wonder, should the controversy over the Sirhan bullets
|
|
prove substantial after all, how the "Times" will explain to its
|
|
readers that other priorities demanded that previous developments
|
|
were not "news fit to print."
|
|
|
|
|
|
Only "The New York Times" can answer why they have for nine years
|
|
maintained a consistent policy of literary assassination of
|
|
literature and deliberate management of news suggesting that three
|
|
of the greatest crimes of the 20th century may, despite "official"
|
|
findings to the contrary, be yet unsolved.
|
|
But the unassailable fact is that in the process they have acted
|
|
as little less than an unofficial propaganda arm of the Government
|
|
which has maintained so staunchly--and in the face of all evidence
|
|
to the contrary, great and trivial--that assassinations in the
|
|
United States are inevitably the work of lone demented madmen.
|
|
Justice Hugo Black in his concurring opinion in the Supreme Court
|
|
decision favoring "The New York Times" in the case of the Pentagon
|
|
Papers said, "Only a free and unrestrained press can effectively
|
|
expose deception in government. And paramount among the
|
|
responsibilities of a free press is the duty to prevent any part of
|
|
the Government from deceiving the people. . . ."
|
|
Far from preventing deception in the case of political
|
|
assassinations, the "Times" has practiced it, and in the process
|
|
defrauded its readers and violated every ethic of professional and
|
|
objective journalism.
|
|
The greatest tragedy is that the "Times" indeed is America's
|
|
newspaper of record. As was demonstrated with the Pentagon Papers
|
|
it wields the power to command international headlines. Along with
|
|
"The Washington Post" it is read daily by statesmen and bureaucrats
|
|
in the nation's capitol. It appears in every foreign capitol and in
|
|
11,464 cities around the world.[67]
|
|
Yet it seems all too evident that the "news fit to print" is
|
|
often little more than propaganda reflecting the biases and
|
|
preconceptions of the Publisher and editors of "The New York Times."
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
1. Gay Talese, "The Kingdom and The Power," Bantam Books, NY, 1970, p.547
|
|
|
|
2. "New York Times," April 7, 1961, p.2
|
|
|
|
3. Turner Catledge, "My Life and the Times," Harper & Row, NY, 1971, p.288
|
|
|
|
4. Talese, op. cit., p.148
|
|
|
|
5. "The Kennedy Assassination and the American Public--Social
|
|
Communication In Crisis," edited by Bradley S. Greenberg & Edwin B.
|
|
Parker, Stanford University Press, Stanford, Cal., pp.37-45
|
|
|
|
6. "New York Times," November 25, 1963, p.1
|
|
|
|
7. "New York Times," November 25, 1963, p.10
|
|
|
|
8. "New York Times," November 26, 1963, p.15; November 25, 1963, p.9
|
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9. Edward J. Epstein, "Inquest," Bantam Books, NY, 1966, p.19
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10. "New York Times," March 30, 1964, p.26
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11. "New York Times," September 28, 1964, p.1
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12. "New York Times," September 28, 1964, p.28
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13. "New York Times," September 29, 1964, p.42
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14. "New York Times," September 28, 1964, p.28
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15. "New York Times," October 18, 1964, VII:8
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16. "New York Times," January 10, 1969, Ed. "UFO's And All That"
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17. "New York Times," November 25, 1964, p.36
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18. Epstein, op. cit., p.50
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19. "Book Week," July 24, 1966, p.1
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20. "New York Times," July 24, 1966, p.25
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21. "New York Post," March 6, 1967, p.4
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22. Letter from Peter Kihss to Harold Weisberg--dated June 7, 1966
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23. "New York Times," September 25, 1966, IV:10
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24. "New York Times," November 17, 1966, p.46
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25. "Newsweek," December 12, 1966, p.20
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26. Telephone interview with Gene Roberts--October 18, 1971
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27. Telephone interview with Gene Roberts--September 29, 1971
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28. Letter from George Palmer to Mr. Richard Levine--dated March 8, 1971
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29. Letter from George Palmer to the author--dated August 26, 1971
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30. Letter from Walter Sullivan to Bernard Fensterwald, Jr.--dated March
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19, 1970
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31. "New York Times," May 21, 1967, VII:48
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32. "Playboy," February, 1968, pp.16-18
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33. Sylvia Meagher, "Accessories After The Fact," Bobbs-Merrill, NY,
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1967, back jacket
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34. Ibid
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35. Josiah Thompson, "Six Seconds In Dallas," Bernard Geiss Ass., NY,
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1967, p.293
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36. "C.B.S. News Inquiry--The Warren Report," June 25-28, 1967, part II,
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p.15 of transcript.
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37. Epstein, op. cit., p.40
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38. The two reviews were first discovered by the Washington based
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Committee to Investigate Assassinations which published them in its
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newsletter.
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39. Letter from George Palmer to the author--dated June 22, 1971
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40. Letter from George Palmer to Mr. Howard Roffman, Phil., PA, July 22,
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1971
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41. "New York Times," November 27, 1963, p.36
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42. "New York Times," January 17, 1969, p.1
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43. Letter from Fred Graham to Sylvia Meagher--dated January 26, 1969
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44. "New York Times," February 13, 1969, p.13
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45. "New York Times," February 18, 1969, p.29
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46. Interview of Dr. Lattimer by Long John Nebel--WNBC radio, Jan. 19, 1972
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47. "The Realist," February 1967, "The Murder of Malcolm X," by Eric
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Norden, p. 18
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48. "New York Times," December 8, 1966, p.40; July 9, 1967, p.51
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49. "Publishers' Weekly," February 1, 1971
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50. "Saturday Review," April 10, 1971
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51. "Chicago Sun Times," April 4, 1971
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52. "Times" of London, June 5, 1971, p.4
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53. "The Wall Street Journal," June 9, 1971, p.1
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54. "American Scholar," Spring 1967, p.302
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55. Telephone conversation with Mary Moore Maloney, Man. Ed. of "The
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American Scholar"--August 18, 1971
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56. USIA Byliner--L-5/71 -F- 111 May, 71 IPS/PO/OISETH--May 5&6, 1971
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57. Telephone conversation with John Leonard--May 5, 1971
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58. Telephone conversation with John Leonard--June 1, 1971
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59. Letter from John Leonard to Harold Weisberg--dated Sept. 9, 1971
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60. Letter from Robert Kaiser to the author--dated August 9, 1971
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61. "New York Times Magazine," October 3, 1971, "Normality Is A Square
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Circle or a Four Sided Triangle," by Maggie Scarf
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62. Letter from Robert Kaiser, op. cit.
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63. Ibid
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64. Telephone interview with Gene Roberts--Sept. 29, 1971
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65. Letter From Steven V. Roberts to the author--dated Dec. 29, 1971
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66. Letters from Steven V. Roberts to the author--dated Jan. 21, 1972
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67. Talese, op. cit., p.89
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--
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daveus rattus
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yer friendly neighborhood ratman
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KOYAANISQATSI
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ko.yan.nis.qatsi (from the Hopi Language) n. 1. crazy life. 2. life
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in turmoil. 3. life out of balance. 4. life disintegrating.
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5. a state of life that calls for another way of living.
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