FSTitle: Goldwater. (Barry M. Goldwater) Authors: Goldwater, Barry M.; Casserly, Jack Citation: Playboy, Sept 1988 v35 n9 p68(8) ------------------------------------------------------------- Subjects: Legislators_Personal narratives Presidential candidates_Appreciation Vietnamese Conflict, 1961-1975_Personal narratives People: Kennedy, John F._Appreciation Reference #: A6622600 ============================================================= Full Text COPYRIGHT Playboy Enterprises Inc. 1988 AS 1961 BEGAN, My good friend John F. Kennedy became President of the United States. His personal charm and eloquence lifted the spirits of millions of Americans. We conservatives were not, however, happy with what we saw and heard. I was about to fly to Luke Air Force Base outside Phoenix on a chill April morning in 1961, when a sergeant climbed onto the wing and said the President wanted to see me as soon as possible. While driving across the city, I had a foreboding about the meeting. I began to suspect that the reason for the President's summons was the invasion of Cuba. The coming mission was known on Capitol Hill, and there was already speculation about it in the media. Why would he call me unless there was trouble? There was only one reason: He needed me to support him publicly. The White House appeared quiet, even somber That seemed to be the President's mood when he entered the room. He appeared to be preoccupied, though he walked briskly We were relaxed in each other's company, because of years of private chats in the Senate. He bantered, "So you want this fucking job, eh?" I laughed and replied, "You must be reading some of those conservative right-wing newspapers. Kennedy grinned but quickly came to the point. He said grimly that the first phase of the invasion of Cuba by antiCastro Cuban forces had not gone as well as expected. Fidel Castro's air force had not, as planned, been completely demolished on the ground. Eight B-26s flown by Cuban exile pilots had made their surprise attack but had destroyed only half of the Cuban air, force. Three planes flown by the exiles had been lost. Kennedy was clearly having second thoughts about U.S. participation in the action. He was questioning the planning for the invasion and further involvement. The President finally said he thought the whole operation might fail. He turned, sitting on the edge of his desk, and faced me directly He then asked what I would do in the situation. I was stunned. The President was not a profile in courage, as portrayed in his best-selling book. He projected little of- the confidence and lofty resolve of his eloquent speeches. He was another man now that we were, in effect, on the shores of Cuba. He did not seem to have the old-fashioned guts to go on. Kennedy could see the shock on my face. There could be no turning back now. Nearly 1500 men would soon be on the beaches at the Bay of Pigs. We had helped put them wher they were. The commander does not abandon men he has sent to fight. The President had a professional and moral responsibility to those men. Slowly, so the words would sink in, I reminded the President that our Navy and its fighter planes were standing ready in nearby waters. They could be launched to protect thc next attack of B-26s. We must destroy all of Castro's planes on the ground. Then the exiles could fight their way from the beaches and spread out across the terrain. I told Kennedy that our action was moral and legal and would be understandable to the entire free world. The United States could not tolerate Soviet nuclear missiles in Cuba. Every great nation must be willing to use its strength. Otherwise, it's a paper tiger. Whether we agree or not, power belongs to those who use it. Kennedy still seemed to equivocate. I didn't understand how he could, or why he would, abandon those men. They would be killed or captured without a chance of accomplishing their mission or even defending themselves. I remember the moment well. Kennedy continued to search my face and eyes for an answer. This was also a crucial moment for me. For the first time, I saw clearly that I had the toughness of mind and will to lead the country. Others might be more educated or possess greater speaking and social skills, but I had something that individuals of greater talent did not have. I had an unshakable belief in, and willingness to defend, the fundamental interests of my country. It was not a boast. It was simply a matter of personal principle. I told the President, "I would do whatever is necessary to ensure the invasion is a success." I repeated, "Whatever is necessary" The President seemed to relax. My voice had risen. It was clear and emphatic. Kennedy replied, "You're right." I left the Oval Office fairly sure that the B-26s, escorted by U.S. Navy fighters, would soon blow holes to lead those freedom fighters off the beaches toward Havana. I was wrong. The brigade left Guatemala. The B-26s were first to destroy Castro's air force on the ground and then support the landing group with air coven Kennedy gave the go-ahead for the first air strike with the B-26 bombers launched from Central America. Then, for reasons he never explained, he canceled the follow-up attacks. U.S. Navy jet fighters, ready to support the B-26s from the nearby U.S.S. Boxer, never launched their attack. Kennedy had clearly lost his nerve. The brigade was routed. Some 300 men were killed and the rest were imprisoned. The President backed away from the counsel of all his top advisors when he refused to support an all-out attack and invasion of Cuba. He allowed the Russians, to remain on the island on the condition that they withdraw their nuclear missiles. The fact is, instead of the eyeball-to-eyeball victory that the Kennedy Administration claimed over Nikita Khrushchev, the President actually made concessions to the Soviet leader. Those included removing U.S. missiles from Turkey The decision not to attack Cuba was disastrous. We are still paying for it. I didn't want to run for the Presidency in 1964. That's the God's truth. To my knowledge, no individual who has run the race has ever made such a statement. It's also true that I knew, and said privately from the start, that I would lose to President Johnson. Also, as best as I can determine, no Presidential candidate has ever said that on the eve of his campaign. From my perspective-explaining the conservative viewpoint-the race itself had greater historical value and meaning than winning. On November 2, 1963, the Associated Press released a poll of GOP state and county leaders. An overwhelming majority, more than 85 percent, chose me as the "strongest candidate" against Kennedy But on November 22, I knew that the bullet that had killed Jack Kennedy had also shot down my chances for the Presidency I would not run. The overwhelming reason for the decision was my personal and political contempt for Lyndon Johnson. Johnson was a master of manipulation. He solved tough public issues through private plotting. His answer to almost everything was a deal-an air base here, a welfare project there. Within a month, I made a complete turnaround. Under tremendous pressure, I agreed to run against Johnson. On December eighth, there was a small meeting of some G.O.P. leaders in our Washington apartment. One by one, as casually as if we were talking about a Sunday-afternoon pro football game, they brought up the G.O.P. Presidential nomination, Each maintained that I had to reconsider my decision to drop out of the race. I got damned mad at all of them. Jack Kennedy was dead. It was over. There would never be a battle of issues. No battle about the liberal agenda. Johnson was a dirty fighter. Any campaign with him in it would involve a lot of innuendo and lies. And Johnson was treacherous, to boot. He'd slap you on the back today and stab you in the back tomorrow. Moreover, L.B.J. was dull. He was a lousy public speaker. The man didn't believe half of what he said. He was a hypocrite, and it came through in the hollowness of his speech. L.B.J. made me sick. The last thing L.B.J. wanted to do was talk political principles or beliefs. He wouldn't do it. He never believed in either. His only political dogma was expediency. Things were never right or wrong. Most problems could be fixed with cunning and craftiness. Finally, one by one, each of the Senators spoke. They talked of millions of conservatives around the country who had made a stand in favor of Barry Goldwater. My friend Denny Kitchel-lowkey, thoughtful-turned, looked directly at me and said, "Barry, I don't think you can back down. You could lead this country You've got to try it." Instinctively, intuitively, I knew that the commitment-the bond I had made with so many conservatives and they with me-was virtually unbreakable at this point. It was all oven I All right, damn it, I'll do it." We made a lot of mistakes. It was my decision to discuss the selling of the Tennessee Valley Authority in Knoxville and Social Security's financial crunch in Florida. We made other strategic and tactical errors &om the shortsighted viewpoint of an election victory I never blamed anyone. "Our ineptitude made us different from most campaigns," said Kitchen later It was a magnificent, screwy, splendid undertaking. We were a bunch of Westerners, outsiders, with the guts to challenge not only the entire Eastern establishment-Republican and Democratic alike-but the vast Federal apparatus, the great majority of the country's academics, big businesses and big unions and a man with an ego larger than his native state of Texas, Lyndon Johnson. Following the convention, we embarked on a 100-day journey that took us to more than 100 cities and towns-nearly 100,000 miles. I addressed millions of fellow citizens and ate more lousy cheeseburgers than I care to remember. As we kicked off the campaign, two concerns began nagging at me-that neither the racial debate nor the Vietnam war should become an issue in the campaign. In late August, I phoned President Johnson and requested a private meeting of "mutual concern." Johnson agreed, but quickly sent his White House scouts around Washington to "find out what Goldwater is up to." He never learned, since no one but me even knew I wanted a meeting. Some White House aides guessed, however, that I might bring up civil rights. They were half right. The meeting took place in the White House a few days before Labor Day. Johnson shook hands warmly He put his hand on my shoulder. In the Senate, we called it the "half Johnson": You were in a bit of trouble, but it wasn't serious. When he stretched his long arm around your back to the other shoulder that was the "full Johnson." It meant you weren't cooperating and he was going to squeeze you on some project you needed back home until you voted for his latest pet bill. Then there was "skinny-dip Johnson," who invited you to the White House pool and insisted you swim in the raw with him. Some fellows got embarrassed when Johnson began leading them around the basement without a towel. A few would agree to almost anything to keep their shorts on. Not me. I've been swimming in the nude since I was a kid. When Johnson negotiated, and it was clear that he felt some deal would be proposed, his eyes would begin to narrow. He was taking a bead on you, as he would on a squirrel. It was his intimidation routine. I began that day by saying that both of us had been around Washington a long time, that we were divided by philosophy and party but that we shared a love of country. "That's right, Barry," he said. "You and I are not like some people around the country. We're Americans first." He appeared to refer to antiwar protesters. It was a perfect opening, and I took it, telling the President that there was already too much division in the nation over the war. We should not contribute to it by making Vietnam an issue in the campaign. Johnson took a deep breath and sighed in relief. He jumped into his SamHouston-at-the-Alamo defense, with a do-or-die pitch about his difficulties in Vietnam. Finally, out of ammunition, he thanked me for the pledge. I interpreted that to mean he agreed. I said the same about civil rights-that if we attacked each other, the country would be divided into different camps and we could witness bloodshed. The President solemnly nodded. He said events were moving too quickly and we should try to calm the country. We shook hands. We honored the spirit of that private pact throughout the campaign. But reflecting on .the campaign now, perhaps the Vietnam war should also have become a matter of public debate. I had suggested to and agreed with President Johnson not to make a partisan political issue out of it to avoid further division on the home front. In retrospect, had Johnson and I squared off on the issue, the President might have revealed his intention to escalate the conflict without a military plan or diplomatic policy to win the war. We might have saved many American lives. During 1964, I discussed the theoretical possibility that some day, the American military might - use tactical-not strategic-nuclear weapons. Today, NATO's defense is based on the possible use of nuclear weapons. As a candidate, I brought to the attention of the American people an issue of the gravest importance and was castigated for it. Never did I advocate the use of such weapons. Yet Johnson, Bill Moyers, who later became his press secretary, and others in the White House waged a campaign of fear against me in what came to be known as the "card" and "bomb" ads. In their campaign television commercials, they portrayed me as a destroyer of Social Security and a mad nuclear bomber. I was depicted as a grotesque public monster. They converted my campaign slogan from "In your heart, you know he's right" to "In your guts, you know he's nuts." Their card ad showed two handsmeant to be mine-tearing apart a Social Security card. That was what Barry Goldwater would do if he became President, the commercial threatened, so save the system and elect President Johnson. The ad was a repellent lie. Moyers knew it yet approved the ad, and it was shown throughout the campaign. Moyers ordered two bomb commercials from the New York advertising firm of Doyle Dane Bernbach. He oversaw and approved their production. The first was a one-minute film that appeared during prime time on NBC. It showed a little girl in a sunny field of daisies. She begins plucking petals from a daisy. As she plucks the flower, a male voice in the background starts a countdown: ten : . . nine . . . eight . . . his voice becoming stronger. The picture suddenly explodes and the child disappears in a mushroom cloud. The voice concludes by urging voters to elect President Johnson, saying, "These are the stakes: to make a world in which all of God's children can live, or to go into the dark. We must either love each other or we must die. Vote for President Johnson on November third. The stakes are too high for you to stay home." There was no doubt as to the meaning: Barry Goldwater would blow up the world if he became President of the United States. The White House exploded its second bomb about a week later, again on network television. Another little girl was licking an ice-cream cone. A soft, motherly voice explained in the background that radioactive fallout had killed many children. A treaty had been signed to prevent such destruction. The gloomy voice said a man-Barry Goldwater-had voted against the Nuclear Test Ban Treaty. A Geiger counter rose in a crescendo as a male voice concluded, "Vote for President Johnson on November third. The stakes are too high for you to stay home." The commercials completely misrepresented my position, which called for treaty guarantees and other safeguards for the United States. Republican National Chairman Dean Burch filed a protest about the commercials with the toothless Fair Campaign Practices Committee. The committee requested that the Democratic National Committee drop the ads, which Johnson and Moyers were forced to do. They later claimed that the ads would have been canceled anyway. Those bomb commercials were the start of dirty political ads on television. It was the beginning of what I call electronic dirt. Moyers and the New York firm will Ion be remembered for helping launch that ugly development in our political history. Over the years, I've watched Moyers appear on CBS News and the Public Broadcasting Service. He has lectured us on truth, the public trust, a fairer and finer America. He portrays himself as an honorable, decent American, Every time I see him, I get sick to my stomach and want to throw up. Toward the end of the 1964 campaign, several newsmen asked me for one last thought. I was sipping a bourbon and was finally beginning to relax a bit. "There was one big disappointment," I said. "We may not have spelled out the issues as well as we could have. That was the point of it allthe point of the entire campaign." I put down the drink and said, "If Jack were here, we would have had a good campaign." Those were my final words of the campaign. My wife, Peggy, and I went home. As we drove north toward Camelback Mountain, she was very quiet. I looked at her and simply said, "Peg, we were ahead of our time." We lost to the Johnson- Humphrey ticket, 43,000,000 to 27,000,000 votes, a Democratic landslide. The Goldwater-Miller ticket won six states. This old-timer has led two lives all these years, from my early days in school to my last in the U.S. Senate. Show me a gadget and you've found a handyman who'll be late to dinner. Lead me to a car engine or a television set on the fritz and you're talking with an amateur mechanic who just decided not to go to a party Taxi a new military fighter plane onto a runway and you've got an old jet jock who has tossed his day's schedule-sometimes even in the Senate-into the wastebasket. Flying is my first love. It has been a hobby and a part-time careen I flew in the U.S. Army Air Corps for about four years in World War Two. After the war, flying was so much in my blood that I formed Arizona's Air National Guard, The Government even paid me for it. That was the only time I ever beat the Feds. Over nearly 60 years, I've piloted about 15,000 hours and logged 7,000,000 or 8,000,000 miles in the air. It always seemed better than a lot of the hot air around Washington. My family will never forget fliers Jimmy Doolittle and Chuck Yeager for saying that for many years, every pilot in the military knew he had a copilot up there flying with him. His name was Barry Goldwater He did his damnedest on the Senate floor to get them more flying time and better planes. A plaque hanging from my office wall reminded me each day of my obligation to our younger generation of military pilots. It carried me through some heavy thunderstorms on Capitol Hill. It was found by my friend Bill Quinn in a small shop in Seoul, South Korea. It reads: A PILOT'S PRAYER GOD GRANT ME THE EYES OF AN EAGLE, THE RADAR OF A BAT AND THE BALLS OF AN ARMY HELICOPTER PILOT After the 1964 election, I got back on the speaking circuit, but this time, I was making money, more than I ever had in my life. The speeches covered the gamut of public issues, but audiences were primarily interested in two topics-where the Republican Party was going and how to win the war in Vietnam. For the next four years, the war became one of the driving forces of my life. I regularly spoke with American troops in Vietnam through the MARS network that had been patched into the ham-radio shack next to our home. I also toured our military bases on five visits to Vietnam, getting the views of many old friends and acquaintances-military commanders, pilots and GI's in the field. I was still flying in the Air Force Reserve. In the spring of 1965, I decided to visit President Johnson in the White House. We discussed the war and my travels to Vietnam and around the United States. I told the President that when you go to war, the first decision you must make is to win it. There were too many political restrictions on our commanders, including bombing limitations and a ban on "hot pursuit" into enemy sanctuaries in Laos, Cambodia and North Vietnam. We weren't trying to win the war. We were in a twilight zone, fighting a political conflict while using troops as pawns. It was clear from our conversation that Johnson was playing the war by ear. Neither he nor Defense Secretary Robert McNamara had any definitive strategy or policy for victory. I told Johnson and old colleagues on Capitol Hill that we had two clear choices: Either win the war in a relatively short time, say within a year, or pull out all our troops and come home. If the choice had been to win it, I would first have addressed the Congress and the American people and spelled out our choices-a short or long war, projected casualties and financial costs, the long-term effects on the American economy and the need for national unity. As Commander in Chief, I would have stated precisely what I proposed to do. At the same time, I would have warned the North Vietnamese by dropping thousands of leaflets on Hanoi and the rest of the country. My address and those messages would have said clearly that either they halt the conflict or we would wipe out all their in intallations-the city of Hanoi, Haiphong harbor, factories, dikes, everything. I would have given them a week to think about it. If they did not respond, we would literally have made a swamp of North Vietnam. We would have dropped 500-pound bombs and obliterated their infrastructure. Also, I would have sent our troops north and used our sea power to mine and blockade North Vietnamese ports. I never discussed nor advocated the use of nuclear weapons with Johnson or anyone else in authority I supported a total conventional air, ground and sea war That was not to be. Indeed, late in the conflict, it would not have been supported by most Americans. By then, millions saw little purpose to the war Some argue that in the course of the conflict, we actually hit North Vietnam with more bombs than were dropped in World War Two. They add that our most sophisticated weaponry did not halt the march of men and supplies from North to South Vietnam along the Ho Chi Minh Trail. The trail was the wrong target. There was, in fact, no single supply route. The trail changed every few days. In our limited time frame, knocking it out was not the answer. There was too much territory to cover in Laos and Cambodia. I know, because I flew over the trail as well as over the North Vietnamese supply depots and troop sanctuaries in Laos and Cambodia on visits to Vietnam between 1965 and the end of 1969. My first flight over the trail and Communist staging areas in Laos and Cambodia in 1965 was about six months after the Presidential campaign. I was 56 years old. The last was in 1969, when I was 60 and had returned to the Senate. The official reason for my visits was to talk with MARS outfits to see if they had sufficient equipment to contact radio stations leading to the United States. I was still a brigadier general in the Air Force Reserve. I never wanted to talk about those missions, because some people might say, "There goes Goldwater again, still trying to get into combat." Now that the war is over and I'm pretty much out of public life, a few thoughts about those flights may be informative. My first reconnaissance was in a slowmoving Army twin-engine Beechcraft Bonanza, which flew at about 2500 feet. I wanted to have a close look at the thickness of the jungle and determine whether our pilots could see supplies moving. It was important to know if heavy bombing in the area was a realistic objective. I saw very little of the trail, despite our low altitude and slow speed. The same was true for our small spotter planes. After a two-hour flight over the trail, during which we caught glimpses of narrow paths as well as some open stretches, I saw that hundreds of walkways crisscrossed one another over the long, wide terrain. It was a hidden and dispersed target, not ideal for heavy bombing. On other missions, I flew in T-39s. We went farther north, where I spotted North Vietnamese surface-to-air missiles and smaller anti-aircraft support. Presumably, we were flying over North Vietnam, though I no longer have the flight plans. We again flew over Laos and Cambodia, where the North Vietnamese had placed SAM and other anti-aircraft firepower U.S. pilots were not allowed to bomb those sites unless fired upon. On several occasions, I flew Marine helicopters from Danang. We were never fired on, but those flights were tricky, because we often flew lower than the hilltops on either side. It would have been easy for any sniper to open up on us. After one of those flights, the North Vietnamese fired a 120-millimeter rocket into our Danang billets. It exploded nearby and killed several Marines. I still have a piece of that shrapnel as a reminder of that day. Those flights convinced me that we should never have made the Ho Chi Minh Trail a prime target. Rather, we should have concentrated our firepower on the North Vietnamese's sources of waging war-harbors, cities, protective dikes and similar areas. My plan-as tough as it may seem to some-would have been more merciful to both sides. The war continued for another decade, with 58,000 American dead, 303,000 wounded and perhaps 1,000,000 Vietnamese killed. Many more were injured on both sides. And none of this describes the civilian suffering. As Johnson and McNamara upped the ante in Vietnam, an ironic twist from the Presidential campaign came to haunt them. It was an anonymous quote on Johnson's claim that if elected, Barry Goldwater would lead the nation into a massive war in Southeast Asia. The quote was, "I was told that if I voted for Goldwater, we were going to war in Vietnam. I did, and damned if we didn't." In 1969, I returned to the U.S. Senate for a third term after defeating Roy Elson, a longtime aide to Senator Carl Hayden, by a wide margin. Richard Nixon became our 37th President. Despite the positive contributions Richard Nixon made to his country, his lies will probably be remembered longer than his legitimate labors. He was the most dishonest individual I ever met in my life. Nothing in my public life has so baffled me as Nixons failure to face Watergate from the time of the burglary and tell the entire truth. In December 1973, after publicly criticizing Nixon for not coming clean to the American public, I was invited to have dinner with the President and Mrs. Nixon. It was, to say the least, remarkable timing and turned out to be a most unusual experience. Pat Nixon greeted me in the secondfloor yellow oval sitting room of the family quarters. A comfortable Christmas fire crackled. I had a small glass of sherry We chatted amiably Other guests arrived-Bryce Harlow and his wife, Betty, Pat Buchanan and his wife, Shelley, speechwriter Ray Price, Julie and David Eisenhower, Rosemary Woods, the President's longtime personal secretary, and Mary Brooks, an old friend of the Nixons' who was director of the U.S. Mint. The President entered after we were assembled. He was quite amiable, even garrulous. He moved quickly among us, rapidly jumping from one topic to another. Then, unexpectedly, his mind seemed to halt abruptly and wander aimlessly Each time after such lapses, he would snap back w a new subject. I became concerned. I had never seen Nixon talk so much yet so erractically as if he were a tape with unexpected blank sections. Pat Nixon eased us into the private family dining room. It was the first time I had the pleasure of dining there. As soup was served, Nixon was preoccupied with whether he and Pat should take the train to Key Biscayne, Florida, for a brief Christmas rest, The question seemed odd, even bizarre, considering all that was happening in Washington. The President asked for my opinion. I told him that the trip was fine. However, if he were caught on the train without good communications and something serious happened in the world, the country would never forgive him. I said, "Act like a President." The words shot out with a sting I never intended. Perhaps it was my subconscious talking. I was upset about Nixon's obsession with Watergate and his lack of leadership. What was so important about a trip to Florida? He didn't have his priorities straight. I bit my lips to say no more. But such gibberish coming from the President of the United States when the mood of the country was approaching a crisis worried me. Nixon continued his ceaseless, choppy chatter I was becoming more and more uncomfortable. What's going on? I asked myself. Why is Nixon rambling all over the map? Hunching and quickly dropping his shoulders? Incessantly sputtering, constantly switching subjects? Finally, searching for some reaction to his erratic behavior among his family and other guests, I asked myself the unthinkable: Is the President coming apart because of Watergate? Suddenly, Nixon was addressing me: "How do I stand, Barry?" He did not, of course, mention Watergate. The table fell silent for the first time that evening. I said the obvious: "People are divided-those who want you to go and others who wish you'd stay Among the latter, there's a particular group who believe a President should not resign." It was a tip-off. I was telling him that some of us in Congress neither expected nor wanted a President of the United States to quit..It would humiliate the office in the eyes of the world and was too horrible for Americans to contemplate. There was no reaction to my remarks-none whatever. I sat back, stunned and silent. Julie looked at her plate. Price and Buchanan seemed to be staring into the distance. Harlow gazed at me without expression. Rosemary Woods toyed with her salad. Nixon peered into the bottom of his wineglass. They all knew what I was telling them. It was simple and straightforward. I wanted the President to go on television and tell the American people the truth whatever it was. Dinner ended on a somber, strained note, with several stretches of silence-except for the President. He jabbered incessantly, often incoherently, to the end. I phoned Harlow the following day and bluntly questioned him about the President's behavior. He said that Nixon was drunk before and during dinner. To this day, Pat Buchanan will not comment on it. The evening was a watershed for me. Nixon appeared to be cracking. The Presidency was crumbling. I would not stand idly by if the situation worsened. Nixon had to come clean, one way or the other. To thisday, Nixon has never asked the nation for forgiveness. Yet he was given a pardon by President Ford. Ford called me just after granting the pardon but before announcing it. It was four A.M. when the phone rang at Newport Beach, California, where Peggy and I were on vacation. I said, "Mr. President, you have no right and no power to do that. Nixon has never been charged or convicted of anything. So what are you pardoning him of? It doesn't make sense. Ford said, "The public has the right to know that in the eyes of the President, Nixon is clear." I replied, "He may be clear in your eyes, but he's not clear in mine." The changes in the Republican Party in the past three generations have been enormous. But some observers already see cracks in the solidity of the new G.O.P and the conservative cause. Ronald Reagan will be missed. I will miss him. We fought for the conservative cause and were good friends, to boot. However, I am critical of President Reagan, especially for the Iranian arms sale. It was the biggest mistake of his Presidency to have traded with the most notorious terrorist gang in the world. I believe the President did know of the diversion of Iranian funds to the Contras. He had to know. The White House explanation makes him out to be either a liar or an incompetent. But whatever mistakes he might have made, Reagan has managed to do something that no one in the nation has accomplished since Teddy Roosevelt. He has projected a Republican populism-indeed, a conservative populism. He represents the spirit of the modern Republican Party, with its themes of family, hard work, patriotism and opportunity. Nostalgia for old days and other times rises like the sun most of my mornings. But in the evening, when the cool desert air refreshes my spirit, my blood flows faster and I shake my fist at the present. I am not happy with what I saw in my last years in Congress-nor about today or tomorrow. A Senator no longer lives or dies on his legislative effectiveness, as in the old days. Appearances-media attention, staff-generated bills and professional packagingoften replace legislative tenacity. The younger members of Congress seem to know a little about everything but not enough about anything. The Senate floor today is often chaos. It's every man for himself; his personal agenda, not completing the business of the institution. That makes one Senator temporarily more powerful, but often renders the body powerless. Senators often don't know what they're voting on. That's a lousy way to run a lemonade stand, much less our national legislative process. My bill to reorganize the Department of Defense ran 645 pages. I myself had a helluva time understanding everything in it. Multiply that several thousand times and you begin to have some idea of the confusion in which Congress operates. Worse yet, members often haven't the foggiest notion of the long-range implications of a law they have passed. Members of the Federal bureaucracy wind up interpreting and finalizing the law. No one elected them. They are responsible to nobody So off they go into the wild blue yonder! The final weeks of almost every session of the Congress now look and sound like a bargain-basement sale. Bills are passed so wildly that they often contain unprinted amendments. That means Congress is passing legislation it has never read! A new breed of Senator, born of a much more independent and self-centered attitude, walks the corridors of power today These new Senators are interested in doing a good job, but their mentality is different from that of most of their predecessors. The first priority of most is re-election. Genuine accomplishment in the Senate is secondary. The same is true in the House. Thomas "Tip" O'Neill, in his decade as Speaker, was much of the time unable to control a bunch of Democratic Young Turks. They ranged from those with a TV-celebrity complex, such as Brooklyn Democrat Stephen Solarz, to political punk rockers, such as California's Ron Dellums, whose behavior reflected the unpredictability of the Democratic Party itself. In my 30 years in Congress, the most self-serving group was the black caucus, which thrived on charges of racism. They saw most black problems as civil rights issues, not questions to be solved in and of themselves. Black leadership in Congress still lives 20 to 30 years in the past. Men such as Michigan's John Conyers, Jr., and Dellums peddle the past. Black leaders can no longer merely plead economic and cultural deprivation. It won't wash. The nation desperately needs new black leaders with ideas, ingenuity and modern goalsnot yesterday's pols who treat their people with contempt by addressing them with old slogans and tired promises of Government salvation. But I was never put under greater pressure than by the Israeli lobby, nor has the Senate as a whole. It's the most influential crowd in Congress and America, by fan The Israelis can come up with 50 or more votes on almost any bill in the Senate that affects their interest. They went to extraordinary lengths to get me to vote for them, even sending some of my dearest and closest Arizona friends, such as Harry Rosenzweig, to lobby me in Washington. The Israelis never raised the fact of my being half Jewish, but they stressed protecting Israel in the event of war. I told them over and over, "Without a treaty, we've already promised to go to war to protect Israel. And the United States is not getting all that much out of the deal. I think Israel is doing pretty well. I don't worry about Israel when I go to sleep at night. I worry about the U.S. Constitution, which I've sworn to uphold-not Israel's constitution, not that of Saudi Arabia, Lebanon or anybody else in the Middle East or the world. " That usually shut them up, but they went away mad, because I was not about to support everything they wanted. In my life, I've personally spoken to and shaken hands with about 20,000,000 Americans. The one question I've been asked more than any other is this: Should a young person go into politics? Unhesitatingly, I've always answered yes. But.... You must have the courage to accept considerable criticism, much of it unjustified. You must feel it in your gut and have the courage to accept defeat and continue toward your goals. Finally, you must believe in yourself, in your principles and in people. Of all of those, I considered my belief in people to be my greatest strength. I genuinely liked people and still do. If you don't love people., don't go into politics. Title: Bill Clinton's daily J.F.K. calendar. (Clinton's references to John Kennedy in statements) (Brief Article) Citation: Time, May 31, 1993 v141 n22 p16(1) ------------------------------------------------------------- People: Clinton, Bill_Addresses, essays, lectures; Kennedy, John F._Appreciation Reference #: A13773716 ============================================================= Full Text COPYRIGHT Time Inc. 1993 7 FRI Press conference with the Danish Prime Minister and the President of the European Commission: "Thirty-one years ago, President Kennedy made a statement that I believe holds as true today as it did then. He said, `We see in Europe a partner with whom we could deal on the basis of full equality.' " 12 WED New York City: "When President Kennedy took office, younger than I was when I took office, over 70% of the American people fundamentally believed that their leaders would tell them the truth." 14 FRI Press conference: "Mr. McLarty, Mr. Rubin, Ms. Rasco and Mr. Lake, to name four, and I are, I think, older than our counterparts were when President Kennedy was President." 17 MON Los Alamos, New Mexico: "President Kennedy stood on this very spot just over 30 years ago and saluted the great patriots at Los Alamos." CAPTION: NO CAPTION Title: Two presidents: vanity and politics. (John F. Kennedy and Bill Clinton) (Column) Authors: Lansner, Kermit Citation: Financial World, Nov 23, 1993 v162 n23 p80(1) ------------------------------------------------------------- Subjects: Profile of Power (Book)_Evaluation People: Kennedy, John F._Appreciation; Clinton, Bill_Political activity Reference #: A14552356 ============================================================= Abstract: Several similarities exist between Kennedy and Pres Clinton, including the facts that both were Democrats who won by slim majorities and introduced social reform legislation during their terms. Richard Reeves's book, 'Profile of Power,' analyzes Kennedy's presidency. ============================================================= Full Text COPYRIGHT Financial World Partners 1993 OF ALL THE POST-WAR PRESIDENTS, NONE HAS CAPTURED THE POLITICAL imagination of the American people as completely as John F. Kennedy has. There is a veritable library of books about his personal and political life and new ones appear every year. Richard Reeves's Profile of Power is the most recent. It is a rather dry, well-researched account of Kennedy's 34 months in office, based on hundreds of personal interviews and a thorough study of the printed, oral and visual record. Books about the Kennedy years range from adulatory to critically revisionist. Reeves's study is altogether balanced and remarkably free of passion. It proceeds chronologically from Kennedy' s inauguration on Jan. 20, 1961, to his death by an assassin's bullets at 12:30 p.m. on Nov. 22, 1963. The 30th anniversary of JFK's death will be the occasion for a spate of seminars, conferences, interviews and reminiscences about the Kennedy years. R will also be an occasion, as previous anniversaries were not, to compare the president of three decades ago with the one who is currently in office. The comparison is inevitable--and appropriate. Both men are Democrats; both won by thin margins (JFK beat Nixon by only 118,574 votes); and both men, labled for their youth, succeeded a much older president. (It is surprising to note that Nixon, whom we never think of as young, was only four years older than Kennedy.) For reasons that are both personal and poetical, Bill Clinton has gone out of his way to underline the continuity between himself and JFK. As they move through the weeks and months of the Kennedy Administration, readers of Reeves's book will find it natural to compare the two leaders at different points in their presidencies. For many, the major drama will be found in the politico-military challenges they faced. For JFK the crises were Berlin, Cuba, Vietnam; for Clinton, Bosnia, Somalia, Haiti. No comparison. Reeves's account of the way Kennedy's thinking about his domestic agenda developed is particularly interesting. During a period when the economy was moving by fits and starts, Walter Heller and Paul Samuelson undertook to educate the young President in the principles of Keynesian economics. Both urged the necessity of lowering taxes. (It puts firings in a certain perspective to be reminded that in 1961 personal tax rates escalated from 20% on the first $2,000 of earnings to 50% on anything between $32,000 and $36,000, and then up to 91% on marginal incomes above $400,000.) The ominous magnitude of the current budget deficit has given a new meaning to the term. But back in 1961, JFK's economists kept arguing that budget deficits meant new private investment and new jobs. Kennedy understood this. But he also understood the traditional American commitment to "puritan economics." Reeves tells this story: "Early on [Kennedy] had told Paul Samuelson that publicly pushing for a tax cut was asking for it: 'The Republicans would kick us in the balls on that one.' "'Suppose,' Kennedy said, 'that I ask for something, a bold program and I don't get it?' "'Then you've fought the good fight,' Samuelson replied. "'That's vanity, Paul, not politics,' the President said." In the event, politics was not enough. JFK never got his tax bill, nor his health care program for older citizens, nor much else in the way of social legislation. A coalition of southern Democrats and the Republican opposition was too strong. On July 17, 1962, for example, Medicare was defeated by a 52-48 vote in the Senate. It took the monumental vanity and political ruthlessness of Lyndon Johnson to change all this. Thirty-one years after the defeat of Kennedy's Medicare bill, another young President personally delivered his own health care bill to Congress. Here we have a truly "bold program," a work of monumental complexity, a masterpiece of intricate social engineering of the kind the Clintons clearly relish. Kennedy had a different, more relaxed attitude toward legislative detail. It is ironic that the school of government named after him is an incubator of the kind of policy ingenuity so dear to Mr. Clinton. President Clinton's vanity is to present the Congress--all in one swoop--with a massive and many-faceted piece of legislation whose consequences are strictly unpredictable. His call for universal and comprehensive health care files the banners of efficiency, economy and quality. It may bring a burgeoning bureaucracy, spiraling costs and a decline in the level of care for many citizens. No one is certain. Mr. Clinton's politics may be found in his announcement disclaiming "pride of authorship" in the final shape of this legislation rather than an attempt to impose his will on a recalcitrant Congress. Whatever happens, he may emerge a political winner. If Congress does not come up with a health care package (something the public vaguely wants), he knows where to put the blame. If it passes a bill, however different from what he proposes, he can take the credit. Kennedy would have appreciated this. Title: Citizen Kennedy: 'Let the word go forth.' (John F. Kennedy) Authors: Fairlie, Henry Citation: The New Republic, Feb 3, 1986 v194 p14(3) ------------------------------------------------------------- Subjects: Liberalism_Analysis Presidents_Addresses, essays, lectures People: Kennedy, John F._Addresses, essays, lectures Reference #: A4123750 ============================================================= Full Text COPYRIGHT The New Republic Inc. 1986 ON JANUARY 20 it will have been a quarter of a century since the young president stood bareheaded in the cold, and gave an inaugural address of such brilliance and power that Sam Rayburn pronounced it "better than anything Franklin Roosevelt said at his best--it was better than Lincoln." Four of the presidents since then have given six inaugural addresses. We can remember not a word from any of them, nothing of the bearing of the men of the atmosphere of the ceremony. The inaugural address of John F. Kennedy can be quoted by those who were not even born at the time. "And so, my fellow Americans, ask not what your country can do for you; ask what you can do for your country." There is no one who thinks that those words were said by Richard Nixon or Ronald Reagan, and all efforts to play no them have always failed. Despite their familiarity, they are not shopworn. They were--they still are--the key words of the inaugural. You could put aside everything else about standing on the walls of freedom round the world, and you would still be left with that remarkable summons to the citizens of the Republic. Ideas in politics must sometimes go underground for a while; the time is not favorable to them. But underground they gather new energy and still work their way into the roots of the nation's life, until the people again feel the need for them. One day some new president will find other words to summon the people from their private pursuits to remember their obligations to the Union, the Republic, the Res Publica--the state. IT IS ASTONISHING to read again the almost liturgical language in which Kennedy fashioned, sentence by sentence, his call to the American people. He began at once with a series of the rhetorical antitheses he got from Theodore Sorensen, who wrote most of his major speeches: "We observe today not a victory of party, but a celebration of freedom, symbolizing an end as well as a beginning, signifying renewal as well as change." Of course if was exactly "a victory of party" that was being celebrated, but every new American president has to disown politics at his inauguration. In that opening sentence, past, present, and future were brought together to proclaim a universal mission: "... the same revolutionary beliefs for which our forebears fought are still at issue around the globe." The mission had been made universal in time and space. "Let the word go forth" (whose spine does not tingle still at the archaism, the almost Old Testament archaism?) "from this time and place, to a new generation of Americans born in this century" (like JFK), "tempered by war" (the Second World War had not yet passed into history), "disciplined by a hard and bitter peace" (the Cold War was made to seem like an occasion for national regeneration), "proud of our ancient heritage" (the mission was given the authority of the past)," and unwilling to witness or permit the slow undoing of those human rights to which this nation has always been committed, and to which was are committed today, at home and around the world" (the whole, wide world). There was one decision that was all-important, an understandable but revealing and radical mistake. Working on the early drafts of the speech at Palm Beach, Kennedy was dissatisfied with each attempt to outline a domestic program. On January 16, when work on the final draft began, he decided to make no mention of domestic questions. Not only was foreign his dominant interest; as a politician he always trod warily among the interests that have to be reconciled on domestic policy. But in a last-minute addition to the speech, he added that human rights must be defended as well "at home." This was as far as he would go in meeting the criticism that he was avoiding the issue of civil rights. The address would have seemed a great deal less martial if he had leavened it with some real attention to people's concerned at home. Already universal, the mision was now made boundles: "Let every nation know, whether it wishes us well or ill, that we shall pay any price, bear any burden, meet any hardship, support any friend, oppose any foe, in order to assure the survival and the success of liberty. This much we pledge--and more." What more could be pledged? You cannot just take snippets for a book of quotations from this speech. It was knit together with every word reinforcing, expanding every other. So it went on: "the graves of young Americans ... around the globe"; "a grand and global alliance"; "maximum danger"; "long twilight struggle"; "patient in tribulation"; ;strength and sacrifice." By then who could resist the final call: "And so, my Fellow Americans ..."? THE LANGUAGE, the elevated sense of purpose, the incitement to a limitless mission, still seem as dangerous and misplaced in a democracy in peacetime as they have always seemed to me. And yet--and yet--how we need something of that voice now. I still do not like the reckless wording, the implications, of the "ask not ..." sentence. And yet it calls us with a summons that America and the West pine to hear again, after Nixon, Ford, Carter, Reagan. John Kennedy and Lyndon Johnson were the last two presidents who in their inaugurations addressed the American people as if they were citizens. It is rather an old-fashioned word: "citizen." When you hear it now, you think of classes in civics; or your mind reaches back to the Funeral Oration of Pericles, or to the Romans who did more to elevate the idea of citizenship than any other people, or to the Founding Fathers, or to Lincoln, or to the New Deal--and the Second World War. You don't hear the word "citizen" and then think of Grenada. What passes for conservatism now in America, in the administration or outside it, has all but dispensed with the idea of citizenship. No political leader can expect the American people--or the British, French, or German people--to sacrifice their lives and their treasures overseas if they are asked to sacrifice little of their private greed and pleasures at home. You are not going to get a people to fight for the freedom of Indians in the Punjab if they've been told they may forget the plight of the Indians on the Pine Ridge reservation. There is a direct, unequivocal relationship between the Americans of the New Deal and the Americans bones of their fathers. The citizen is public; he cannot be addressed as private. Behind every overseas enterprise of a democracy, there must be a sense of compassion: "These people must be saved--even with our own lives." Democracies will not for long go to war for less. But what if the springs of compassion are dried up at home? What if the citizens have been told they need feel no compassion for their fellow citizens? If they have been told that if they make enough money it will trickle down and help the whole society? Then why not let it trickle down and help all those people abroad? See how much money the American people would contribute to a Christmas appeal for the contras! And so, you fellow Americans, buy your condominium and your Volvo--that's your war effort. Norman Podhoretz worte a column the other day, and I agreed wholeheartedly with its general drift: that people have been given far too many excuses to escape the responsibility for their own lives. But then at the end there came an attack on the idea of compassion: we are too compassionate of others, of their failings, of ourselves, of our own failings. It seemed, as I read it, wholly gratuitous to introduce this harsh, unlovely note. But it reflected a need in these former Democrats and liberals not just to correct the mistakes of their former allies, but to pull down the whole temple of concern for others they built over the years. Is it really necessary to reject civic consciousness, of which compassion for one's less fortunate fellow citizens is the ultimate binding cement, to be a conservative or neoconservative? The educating fact about John Kennedy is that, although throughout his presidency he tried to avoid the domestic questions that would have brought him political difficulties, his own sense of mission, as defined in the inaugural address, again and again forced him to act, and usually to act to the right end. There was also his sense of the majesty of the office, and that is a contribution to the idea of citizenship as well, for although no one can be very happy about Robert Kennedy's use of the Department of Justice, there was no way that John Kennedy could have appointed a John Mitchell as attorney general. PERHAPS only a schoolboy's education makes me echo the Roman insistence on the three great civic virtues: dignitas, gravitas, pietas. But Kennedy's inaugural address, even though too elevated, reminded us of those virtues; and to a great extent so did his presidency, with all its mistakes. In contract, the current administration has drained, drop by drop, almost all dignitas and gravitas and pietas from the public discourse in America. With the idea of citizenship all but submerged in appeals to private pursuits, private satisfactions, the private sector, the most Reagan could hope to lead against a real enemy would be a herd of the Gadarence swine. The Democratic impulse needed correction: no one now sensibly denies that. It has not only been corrected--it has been over-corrected. The Union needs to be put again before the States. The public sector needs to be brought back refreshed to direct the private sector. The citizen needs to be called out of his worries about how to live on $85,000 a year. Will any Democrat before 1986 be unafraid enough, not to use the language of John Fitzgerald Kennedy 25 years ago, but to find in it the inspiration to create his own summons to the citizen that is appropriate to the last 12 years of the 20th century? I sadly doubt it. But in the next two years will one please try? If the American is not public, what's left of the Republic? Title: Rallying the nation. (excerpts from presidents' speeches in times of war) Authors: Sudo, Phil Citation: Scholastic Update, Feb 8, 1991 v123 n10 p16(2) ------------------------------------------------------------- Subjects: Presidents_Addresses, essays, lectures War_Addresses, essays, lectures People: Washington, George_Addresses, essays, lectures; Lincoln, Abraham_Addresses, essays, lectures; Wilson, Woodrow_Addresses, essays, lectures; Roosevelt, Franklin D._Addresses, essays, lectures; Kennedy, John F._Addresses, essays, lectures; Bush, George_Addresses, essays, lectures Reference #: A10397977 ============================================================= Full Text COPYRIGHT Scholastic Inc. 1991 Rallying the Nation The job of a President involves more than making policy. In times of war or great struggle, Presidents must pull the country together and prepare the troops for battle. History shows that some of these leaders succeed famously, while others never quite move the American public. John F. Kennedy, for example, consistently inspired the nation to action; his successor,Lyndon B. Johnson, often failed. At their best, the words of President define out highest aspirations as a nation, calling us to duty and sacrifice. The following are a few examples from history. What do they have in common? How do they differ? Would the words of George Washington have inspired today's troops in the Persian Gulf? Do George Bush's words inspire you? THE TIME IS NOW NEAR AT hand which must probably determine whether Americans are to be freemen or slaves.... The fate of unborn millions will now depend, under God, on the courage and conduct of this army. Our cruel and unrelenting enemy leaves us only the choice of a brave resistance, or the most abject submission. We have, therefore, to resolve to conquer or to die. -- George Washington, address to American troops before the Battle of Long Island, 1776. IT IS NOT MERELY FOR today, but for all time to come, that we should perpetuate for our children's children that great and free government which we have enjoyed all our lives.... It is for this the struggle should be maintained, that we may not loss our birthright .... The nation is worth fighting for, to secure such an inestimable jewel. --Abraham Lincoln, speech to the 164th Ohio Regiment, 1864. IT IS A FEARFUL THING TO lead this great and peaceful people into war, into the most terrible and disastrous of all wars. Civilization itself seems to be in the balance, but right is more precious than peace, and we shall fight for the things which we have always carried nearest our hearts, for democracy, for the right of those who submit to authority to have a voice in their own government.... To such a task we can dedicate our lives, our fortunes, everything we are, everything we have, with the pride of those who know the day has come when America is privileged to spend her blood and might for the principles that gave her birth.... --Woodrow Wilson, address to Congress, 1917, asking for a declaration of war on Germany. WE ARE NOW IN THIS WAR. We are all in it--all the way. Every single man, woman, and child is a partner in the most tremendous undertaking of our American history. We must share together the bad news and the good news, the defeats and the victories--the changing fortunes of ar.... We are going to win the war and we are going to win the peace that follows. --Franklin D. Roosevelt, radio address to the nation, the day after Japan's attack on Pearl Harbor, 1941. LET EVERY NATION KNOW, whether it wishes us well or ill, that we shall pay any price, bear any burden, meet any hardship, support any friend, opoose any foe to assure the survival and success of liberty. --John F. Kennedy, inaugural address, Washington, D.C., 1961. WE ARE READY TO USE force to defend a new order emerging among the nations of the world, a world of sovereign nations living in peace. We have seen too often in this century how quickly any threat to one becomes a threat to all. At this critical moment in history, at a time the Cold War is fading into the past, we cannot fail. At stake is not simply some distant country called Kuwait. At stake is the kind of world we will inhabit. --George Bush, radio address to the nation, January 1991. Title: The Kennedy Legacy: A Generation Later._(book reviews) Authors: Novak, Ralph Citation: People Weekly, Sept 5, 1988 v30 n10 p34(1) ------------------------------------------------------------- Subjects: Books_Reviews People: Kennedy, John F._Bibliography; Lowe, Jacques; Sheed, Wilfrid Rev Grade: A Reference #: A6624140 ============================================================= Full Text COPYRIGHT Time Inc. 1988 THE KENNEDY LEGACY: A GENERATION LATER Photographs by Jacques Lowe; Text by Wilfrid Sheed Few of the Kennedy books published in this sad anniversary year will be as evocative as this one. Many of the 100 photographs by Lowe, John Kennedy's personal photographer, have not been published before. They show the man of consummate public charm, laughing and gently playing with his children, but they also show the offstage politician, the gleam in his eye replaced by a steely chill. The text, by New York-based critic-novelist Sheed, is a mixed proposition. His insistence on referring to people by first names -- ''Jack,'' ''Lyndon,'' even ''Nikita'' -- is trivializing. He is guilty of pathetic East Coast provincialism, sneering at American tourists' use of what he calls ''Milwaukee French,'' as if Wisconsin could never produce anything as elegant as, say, Hamptons French. He uses ''Dayton, Ohio, frame of mind'' to represent a backward community, too, as if everyone agrees Dayton is a primitive village. He begins by asking, ''Was our enthusiasm for Kennedy some sort of mass delusion based on a hoax?'' His enthusiasm for the Kennedys, however, makes his answers -- he ends up calling John Kennedy ''a great President'' -- of suspect value. He is especially soft in his discussion of two of JFK's most vulnerable areas: the degree to which his liaison with ex-Mafia moll Judith Campbell Exner called his judgment into question and the extent to which he was responsible for U.S. involvement in Vietnam. Sheed resolves the issues by noting that unnamed friends of the President have said that had Kennedy lived, he would have avoided involvement with anyone like Exner and would have avoided a deeper Vietnam War. Despite that kind of tooth-fairy school of logic, Sheed is such a vivid writer that the book is often a pleasure to read. He notes, for example, that when John Kennedy ran for office in Massachusetts, ''his whole family had seemed to blanket the state, as if they were all running for office in a body.'' And he is capable of summing things up with great clarity: ''Kennedy cre ated the impression that anything could happen in this world and beyond, and that everything was being considered, and this was at the very heart of the fun.'' (Viking, $24.95) -- Ralph Novak Title: Publisher's note. (books based on Life magazine material) (column) Authors: Valk, Elizabeth P. Citation: Life, Nov 1988 v11 n13 p5(1) ------------------------------------------------------------- Subjects: Life (Periodical)_Publishing People: Kennedy, John F._Bibliography Reference #: A6745994 ============================================================= Full Text COPYRIGHT Time Inc. 1988 Many of the photographs that appear in this magazine are so vivid, so evocative, so worthy of being seen again and again, that LIFE has become an important source for books of all kinds. One extra issue of LIFE, published in December, 1963, was both a historical document and an instant collector's item. This month marks the 25th anniversary of John Kennedy's death. After the assassination, the staff worked 48 hours straight through to design and write a memorial edition. Two weeks after the tragedy, the 88-page magazine was on the newsstands. The first two printings sold out. LIFE's offices were getting 10,000 requests daily for the issue and almost three million copies were purchased. Now that issue, with a new wraparound cover, has been reproduced exactly as it appeared originally. It goes on sale November 7. For those who would like to order a copy (it will not be sent to subscribers), there is a coupon on page 202. From other compelling material published first in LIFE, two books have been assembled by Philip B. Kunhardt Jr., a former managing editor. LIFE in Camelot (Little, Brown, $40) is a picture book about the Kennedy years. It begins with a 1937 portrait of the entire Kennedy family and ends with Theodore White's memorable interview with the bereaved Jacqueline Kennedy -- the article that gave the era the name Camelot. This volume has 500 photographs, 150 published for the first time. Two years ago Kunhardt put together a collection of those funny, remarkable pictures that serve as the dessert at the end of each issue. The book, LIFE Smiles Back, was a best-seller, and so he has come up with a second volume called LIFE Laughs Last. The subtitle is ''200 More Classic Photos from the Famous Back Page of America's Favorite Magazine'' (Simon & Schuster, $17.95). For those of us who think of animals as slightly human, the pictures in this jolly volume, which will be in the stores before Christmas, provide some hilarious supporting evidence. For the kinds of photographs that made this magazine famous there is John Loengard's just- published LIFE Classic Photographs: A Personal Interpretation (New York Graphic Society, $24.95). Loengard, a photographer who was a LIFE picture editor for 14 years, selected some great pictures by such legends as Alfred Eisenstaedt, Margaret Bourke-White, Henri Cartier-Bresson, Elliott Erwitt, Mary Ellen Mark, Gjon Mili and almost 80 others. Many of the photographs are famous, but what makes the book exceptionally interesting are Loengard's comments about the photographers, their assignment and how each particular shot succeeds. Just as the contents of this magazine are often published in books, so, too, do some books deserve a preview in LIFE. One excerpted this month is The Home Planet, edited by Kevin W. Kelley for the Association of Space Explorers and published by Addison-Wesley. Another excerpt is from Melvyn Bragg's biography of Richard Burton. The British actor loved the English language, and one of his great ambitions was to be a writer. Fortunately for us, he kept notebooks, and Bragg quotes generously from them. We think you will agree that Burton's picture of obsessive love, fame, scandal and wealth -- told from the inside -- makes compelling reading. Title: Presidential pages. (more books on the John F. Kennedy assassination to come out in November 1993, the 30th anniversary of the assassination) (Brief Article) Citation: Entertainment Weekly, August 27, 1993 n185-86 p12(1) ------------------------------------------------------------- People: Kennedy, John F._Bibliography Reference #: A14241332 ============================================================= Full Text COPYRIGHT Entertainment Weekly Inc. 1993 Call it the missives of November. Just when it seemed the file on the Kennedys couldn't get any thicker, in sweep around a dozen new books on America's most famous First Family, a flood inspired by the 30th anniversary of JFK's death and the uproar over Oliver Stone's critically acclaimed JFK. While there has never been a shortage of Kennedy tomes (4,744 to date), most were released by small publishers and catered mainly to assassination buffs. But this fall the torch has been passed to such heavyweight companies as Simon & Schuster (which just released Joe McGinniss' widely panned Teddy take, The Last Brother). Among the entries: * The Killing of a President, by Robert J. Groden, a former photo consultant who uses previously top secret photos of JFK's autopsy to argue there was a cover-up (Viking Studio). * President Kennedy, a detailed play-by-play of JFK's decision-making by frequent New Yorker contributor Richard Reeves (Simon & Schuster). * Case Closed, by lawyer and author Gerald Posner, who uses new evidence to argue that "Oswald did it" (Random House). * Who Shot JFK?, a hip, comic-book-style guide to potential assassins by former RFK speech writer Bob Callahan (Fireside Books/Simon & Schuster). Jack Perry, the biography buyer at Waldenbooks, believes this is only the cusp of a new publishing frontier. "I'm looking at two books about the younger Kennedys right now," he says, "a JFK Jr. bio, Prince Charming [Dutton] and one called The Kennedys: The Third Generation [Thunder's Mouth Press]. With the grandkids and everything, this thing could go on and on." Title: Lest we forget the Bay of Pigs; the unlearned lessons. Authors: LaFeber, Walter Citation: The Nation, April 19, 1986 v242 p537(3) ------------------------------------------------------------- Subjects: Bay of Pigs_History United States_Relations with Cuba People: Kennedy, John F._Foreign relations Locations: United States; Cuba Reference #: A4211099 ============================================================= Full Text COPYRIGHT The Nation Company Inc. 1986 LEST WE FORGET THE BAY OF PIGS WALTER LAFEBER President Kennedy's attempt to destroy Fidel Castro's regime at the Bay of Pigs has rightly been called the perfect failure. But the debacle of April 17, 1961, went far beyond Cuba. It helped lure the United States down a violent dead-end street in pursuit of revolutionaries throughout Latin America. It resulted in the first Soviet presence in the hemisphere. It rapidly accelerated Washington's disastrous policies in Vietnam. It caused nations throughout the world to question U.S. judgment and dependability. Twenty-five years later Washington officials still do not understand the reasons for this failure and seem bent on repeating it. Certainly no place appeared move vulnerable to U.S. power than Cuba. The United States had controlled the island since 1898. Its ambassador was Cuba's second-most-powerful official, after the president, and at times the most powerful. Fidel Castro changed all that with his victory over dictator Fulgencio Batista on New Year's Day, 1959. During the rest of that year, his determination to transform Cuba led to radical land reforms and other economic changes that brought him closer to the Cuban Communist Party--which, as late as 1958, had refused to work with him--and put him on a collision course with the Eisenhower Administration. As historian Richard Welch has put it, North Americans discovered, to their amazement, "that the Cuban Revolution was un-American.' When in early 1960 the United States tried to strangle Castro with tough economic sanctions, he turned to the Soviet bloc for help. Eisenhower tightened the choke hold and, in March of that year, secretly ordered the Central Intelligence Agency to plan an invasion of Cuba. U.S. appeals for help in isolating Cuba drew little response from Latin American countries, who feared the Cubans less than Washington's century-old policy of intervention in their affairs. But two dependable friends did volunteer: Guatemalan dictator Gen. Miguel Ydigoras, one in a succession of military leaders who ruled that country after the C.I.A. overthrew the elected reformist government in 1954, and Anastasio Somoza in Nicaragua. Those two men provided training bases in their countries for the Cuban exiles involved in the Bay of Pigs operation. This collaboration is indelibly etched in Central American and Cuban memories. Campaigning for the presidency in 1960, Kennedy blamed Eisenhower for losing Cuba to the Communists. The accusation trapped the new President. He discovered that the former general, an old hand at plotting covert counter-revolutions, had invasion plans well under way. Kennedy's State Department, however, warned that such an incursion would set back U.S. relations with Latin America and, moreover, probably fail. It quickly became obvious that the C.I.A.'s plans were lacking in intelligence, in both senses of the word. The agency and the Administration said openly that Cuban exiles were going to restore freedom to their homeland, but clearly the C.I.A. was recruiting, training and controlling them. Mutual trust was conspicuously absent. One agent admitted that he refused to tell the exiles when they were to invade because "I don't trust any goddamn Cubans.' Propaganda about the exiles made U.S. officials believe that the invasion, carried out by an independently formed anti-Castro force, would cost this country almost nothing. The ultimate responsibility lay with the C.I.A. and Kennedy. Both desperately tried to ignore the operation's central problem--North Americans telling the Cubans how to run their country --by assuming that once the exile force landed, the Cuban people would spontaneously assist in overthrowing Castro. Harboring serious reservations about the operation, Kennedy decided to cut direct U.S. military support to an absolute minimum. Nevertheless, he despised Castro and saw himself going head-to-head with Nikita Khrushchev over which superpower would control the Third World. He was also passionately committed to a romantic view of counter-revolutionary operations and feared being labeled as less of an anti-Communist than Eisenhower, whose policies he had blasted only months earlier. So the attack went ahead on the night of April 17. It was doomed from the start. In the first place, the C.I.A. mistook the coral reefs in the Bay of Pigs for seaweed. The exile crafts ran aground and were easy targets for Castro's small but effective air force. When U.S. naval officers on an aircraft carrier just offshore urgently requested permission to launch their planes to support the exiles, the White House rejected the request. Robert Kennedy recalled: "We kept asking when the uprisings were going to take place. Dick Bissell [the C.I.A. official in charge of the operation] said it was going to take place during the night. Of course no uprising did take place.' Castro killed or captured nearly all the invaders. At a televised press conference Kennedy took full responsibility for the disaster. Kennedyites have since gone to great lengths to blame the fiasco on the C.I.A. But deeper causes than agency bungling were involved. In the aftermath, U.S. officials tried to fool the public into believing that the exile force was acting on its own and that it was so strongly identified with the cause of freedom that the Cuban people would rally to its banner. Those officials were, and remain, vastly ignorant of both the damage North American control has inflicted on Caribbean and Central American societies and the promise of escape from that past that revolutionaries like Castro seemed to offer. Moreover, the exiles could never have conquered Castro's army without massive U.S. involvement. That realization led Senator J. William Fulbright, in a last-ditch attempt to stop the invasion, to post the classic question: What if we win? "Winning' would have meant a U.S. occupation of Cuba and, no doubt, a bloody guerrilla war. U.S. troops in Cuba would have been as unpopular as the Russians are in Afghanistan. In addition, most Americans took seriously the U.S. commitment to the Organization of American States Charter of 1948 not to use force to overthrow Latin American governments. As it was, the invasion violated that pledge. The respect for the rule of law that supposedly distinguishes U.S. foreign policy from that of the Soviet Union was cast aside. Kennedy's successors have continued to regard the Bay of Pigs tragedy as a failure by the "experts' to run a military operation properly, instead of what it was: a failure to understand the political and economic causes of revolution. By relying on the C.I.A. and the exiles, U.S. officials unwittingly tried to revive the imperialist past. Over the next several years Kennedy's Administration authorized sabotage, dirty tricks and even assassination attempts to eliminate Castro. Those attacks only made the Cuban leader more popular at home and drove him closer to the Russians. Finally, in the aftermath of the debacle, Kennedy resolved to redeem himself by sending more troops to Vietnam. The significant escalation of involvement in Southeast Asia by the end of 1961 was a direct result of Kennedy's misreading of the lessons to be drawn from the Cuban revolution. With the Bay of Pigs invasion Kennedy dealt militarily with the effects, not the causes, of revolution. Although sympathetic to the Cuban exiles' cause, Harold Feeney demonstrates in the following article that the United States is better at enlisting and exploiting exile forces than in protecting them or dealing with the long-term social and political consequences of their actions. There are troubling parallels between the C.I.A.-created Brigade 2506 in 1961 and the C.I.A.-created contras in 1986. As did Kennedy with the Cuban invasion force, Reagan pretends that his Nicaraguan "freedom fighters' are an independent band of dedicated patriots who will stem the tide of communism in the hemisphere at little cost in U.S. lives and treasure. Just as Kennedy raised the specter of "losing' Cuba to Communism, so Reagan depicts the Nicaraguan revolution in stark cold was terms and threatens that legislators who oppose his aid program for the contras will be blamed for losing Central America to Moscow. Washington's ignorance of the causes of the "perfect failure' twenty-five years ago, which led to disaster in Vietnam, is now drawing this country into another calamity in Central America. Title: They shoot allies, don't they? When, 25 years ago, Ngo Dinh Diem was assassinated, his supporters blamed the United States. They were right. Authors: Winters, Francis X. Citation: National Review, Nov 25, 1988 v40 n23 p34(4) ------------------------------------------------------------- Subjects: Vietnamese Conflict, 1961-1975_History People: Ngo Dinh Diem_Assassination; Kennedy, John F._Foreign relations Reference #: A6827326 ============================================================= Full Text COPYRIGHT National Review Inc. 1988 President John F. Kennedy's dispatch of General Maxwell Taylor to Saigon on October 17 signals the diplomatic style of the New Frontier. Taylor's report on Vietnam, submitted on November 3, calls for a modest commitment of eight thousand U.S. ground troops, whose introduction to South Vietnam would be masked by designating them as flood-control specialists. Saigon The Kennedy Administration finally pares down the Taylor proposal of eight thousand troops to seven hundred, but attaches codicils requiring U.S. involvement in Saigon decision-making. President Ngo Dinh Diem balks. "Vietnam," he informs Ambassador Frederick Nolting, "does not wish to become a protectorate of the U.S." After reconsideration, the condition attached to the dispatch of the troops is changed to merely one of "mutual consultation." Diem's "intransigence," as it was viewed at this time in Washington, should not have surprised anyone familiar with Vietnam. For Diem lived in the shadow of Ho Chi Minh. Born in Hut on opposite banks of the Perfume River, they were weaned on the same revolutionary dream of freeing their country from the French. Steered by their respective temperaments, they early elected different routes to independence. Ho, a proletarian pilgrim, left Vietnam in the 1920s, studying in Moscow, returning to Vietnam through China, plunging into the jungle war against the elusive occupiers, first the Japanese, then the French, finally the Americans. His rival, Ngo Dinh Diem, elected the domestic role of a mandarin moralist. A brief essay at national office in 1933, as Emperor Bao Dai's Minister of the Interior with responsibility for security, ended with his resignation when he discovered that Vietnam's so-called independence under the French was illusory. Ho and Diem met only once as adults. In 1946 Ho's forces captured Diem and held him in prison until Ho summoned him for an interview at his mountain stronghold at Tuyen Quang. Ho took the prisoner by surprise: "I am ready to offer you a high post in my government." If Diem was surprised by the offer, Ho was equally taken aback by the response. "You and I want totally different futures for Vietnam. Can you guarantee that you will not impose a dictatorship of the proletariat here?" Diem then put Ho's protestations to the test. "I will accept the Ministry of the Interior [police] with full control of intelligence." Ho did not turn down the counter-offer out of hand. He deliberated two weeks before judging such a division of his power unwise. Their parting words were these: DIEM: "I don't believe you understand the kind of man I am. Look me in the face. Am I a man who fears?" Ho: "No, you are not such a man." DIEM: "Good, then I will go now." Four years later Ho issued a death warrant for Diem, who fled to the United States. During his years there, Diem received Vietnamese visitors who offered support for his return to Vietnam. Americans, too-who spanned the political spectrum from Justice William 0. Douglas to Francis Cardinal Spellman-promoted his return to Saigon as an alternative to Ho Chi Minh. It was Justice Douglas who hosted a luncheon at the Supreme Court in 1953 to introduce Diem to Senators John F. Kennedy and Mike Mansfield. Finally, that same year, Emperor Bao Dai's counselors agreed on Diem as their candidate for Prime Minister of Vietnam. A Confucian moralist, Diem was also a monarchist, whose political philosophy assumed the immutability of social and political order, incarnated in the person of the ruler. He took a distinctly pragmatic view of this, however, successfully ending the rule of Bao Dai, whom he regarded as an irresponsible ruler, through a referendum in 1954. Diem subsequently held several "demonstration elections." But he resented the unrelenting American pressure to change the Vietnamese political order so that it would more closely resemble the American order. He felt that mimicking American political activity did not accord with the realities of Vietnamese society, would be demeaning, and would serve mainly to undermine his own authority. Aware that his nationalist credentials were weak in comparison with the martial aura of Ho Chi Minh, Diem had an uphill struggle resisting the Americans' efforts to remake him in their own image. Nonetheless Diem and his American allies made remarkable social progress from 1956 to 1962, doubling rice production, increasing rubber productivity, diversifying agriculture, redistributing lands, doubling the commercial fishing catch, eliminating the need to import sugar. At the same time, he equipped an army of 350,000. These fragile threads of stability began to display a pattern of success that would later cause Ho to recall: "1962 was Diem's year." New Delhi and Georgetown Conscious of his adversary in Hanoi, Diem was unaware of another one in New Delhi. There, the U.S. Ambassador -John Kenneth Galbraith, Harvard economics professor and sometime tutor to John F. Kennedy-fretted about the destiny of America's young President. As Diem was anxious about his own image of independence from Kennedy, Galbraith worried about Kennedy's image of association with this Oriental despot. Writing to his friend Arthur Schlesinger in October 1961, he proposed agitating to send Averell Harriman to Saigon as ambassador to demand democratic reforms from the regime. Galbraith would have his chance to carry his fight against Diem to the White House when he returned the following month, accompanying Nehru on a state visit. Meeting with the President, Nehru, Harriman, and Rusk on November 7, Galbraith is pleased to hear Kennedy broach the topic of Vietnamese neutrality to Nehru. Later in Galbraith's Washington stay, he, Harriman, and Schlesinger chat over dinner about an alternative strategy in Vietnam; simply removing Diem from power. Still later this month Galbraith "purloined" (his word) the highly classified report of the Taylor mission to Vietnam. Outraged by the report's recommendation that eight thousand U.S. troops be dispatched there, Galbraith seeks and secures Kennedy's approval to visit Vietnam to evaluate the adequacy of its government. After three "intensive" days in Saigon, Galbraith judges the government to be illegitimate, urging Kennedy to "drop Diem" in favor of a military regime. (Galbraith later volunteered that the advice he gave to Kennedy masked his real view, which was that the U.S. should "return that part of the world [Vietnam] to the obscurity for which God had so obviously predestined it." When asked why he offered the President quite contradictory advice on a matter of great national moment, he admitted that the President, who feared that losing Vietnam might result in losing the 1964 election, would have cut him out of the inner circle of the White House if he had spoken the truth about Vietnam.) Glen Ora, Virginia Galbraith, back in Washington, is invited to the weekend White House at Glen Ora, in the Virginia hunt country. The President, Galbraith, and Schlesinger discuss the possibility of a neutralist settlement in Vietnam. Kennedy asks Galbraith to draft a memo proposing such a solution, which Galbraith does, with the help of Averell Harriman. Harriman, sharing Galbraith's contempt for Diem, proposes approaching Ho Chi Minh with an offer of mutual (U.S./ Vietcong) reduction of forces in South Vietnam. Geneva Harriman succeeds in negotiating the Laos Accords, which "guarantee" the neutrality of that nation without, however, providing any measures to verify compliance. Diem objects to the Accords, which unilaterally shield North Vietnamese troops in Laos from attack by South Vietnam. The South Vietnamese delegate to the Laos conference walks out. Saigon Harriman arrives to persuade Diem to sign the Laos Accords. When Diem starts to outline the objections, Harriman ostentatiously yanks his hearing aid from his ear, closing his eyes and waiting for the storm to pass. Later, Ambassador Nolting persuades Diem to sign the Accords, which would permit Ho Chi Minh to construct without interference the trail from North to South Vietnam that would come to bear his name. Harriman's critics later rename the trail the "W. Averell Harriman Memorial Highway." Geneva Harriman is authorized by Kennedy to make the first official approach to North Vietnam, seeking out the Foreign Minister, Ung Van Khien, to offer an extension of the generous terms of the Laotian "neutrality" to Vietnam as well. Harriman's instructions include cautions to conceal this demarche from Diem, who is, quite reasonably, assumed to be opposed to this offer to abandon South Vietnam to the Communist North. While his admirers, including the magnanimous Dean Rusk, considered Harriman "an able generalist," his critics thought the expression "general ableist" more fitting. The governor, displaying the energy and ambition of an adolescent, was able to effect anything a (Democratic) President wanted. The formula worked as predicted with Kennedy, who promoted Harriman to the post of Under Secretary of State for Political Affairs in March 1963. Palm Beach, Florida Senator Mike Mansfield reports to Kennedy on a visit to Diem made on a trip requested by the President. Mansfield's gloomy assessment reflects his shock at the deterioration in Diem's personal and political condition. Mansfield, who had supported Diem for a decade, has now given up on him, urging JFK to prepare for a retreat from the beleaguered outpost. Kennedy angrily rejects the report, but later regrets his response. Alarmed by the revelations of Diem's declining fortunes, Kennedy dispatches Mike Forrestal (now McGeorge Bundy's Southeast Asia officer on the National Security Council) and Roger Hilsman (who was soon to replace Harriman as Assistant Secretary of State for the Far East) to Vietnam to reassess America's stakes in the region. Washington Kennedy admits to Senator Mansfield (and others) in February that he has come around to Mansfield's view and intends to withdraw the U.S. commitment to Diem, but not until after his own re-election in 1964. The reason for his delayed response to Mansfield's advice: abandoning Vietnam to the Communists in 1963, after virtually abandoning Laos under the guise "neutralism" in the Laos Accords the previous year, would cost him re-election. Vung Tau, a resort on the South China Sea A new factor enters the equation, as 25,000 Buddhists converge for the dedication of a new statue of the Buddha. Vietnamese Buddhism was one of the few factors of social cohesion that survived the French colonial intervention. Not surprisingly, therefore, it re-emerged as a vehicle of nationalism, a harbinger of hope for national renewal. Diem himself had sensed this political potential and, despite his own family's three-hundred-year tradition of Catholicism, had meticulously cultivated the Buddhist revival. In the nine years of his rule, Diem had constructed 1,200 new pagodas and rebuilt 1,200 more. Though far from a majority of Vietnamese, the four million Buddhists were a significant segment of the population of 14 million. They outnumbered Catholics almost three to one (there were 1.5 million Catholics). The government of South Vietnam could ignore such a constituency only at its peril. Opposition forces, looking to unseat Diem, had at hand a ready-made vanguard of revolution. Hue Tri Quang, a successful lawyer who had turned to a life of religious devotion by entering a Buddhist monastery in 1958, emerges once more to public life on May 8, 1963, at the annual observance of the Buddha's birthday. He turns the second day of the festival into a protest against religious persecution, seizing the radio station to broadcast his indictment of Diem. Government security forces, seeking to restore order, enter a melee in which seven people are killed by an explosion. Saigon Tri Quang is now a resident of the Xa Loi Pagoda in Saigon. On the morning of June 11, several monks from this pagoda drive to a busy downtown intersection in the company of an elderly monk, Quang Duc, and abet his efforts to burn himself alive. Aimed at the liberal sentiments of the White House, the monk's sacrifice captures the sympathies of the American people for the "majority" religion of Vietnam, Buddhism, allegedly suffering repression by the Catholic president. (Later official U.S. analysis would estimate the activist segment of the Buddhist community at 400,000.) Tri Quang, sensing the vulnerability of a Catholic President in a Protestant nation caught supporting a Catholic president in a Buddhist nation, decides to press his case in the court of public opinion. Summoning an American journalist, Tri Quang urges her to tell Kennedy to abandon Diem. "If he does not, he will see ten . . . forty . . . fifty bonzes burning." Dublin President Kennedy, while basking in the nostalgia of his triumphal presidential tour of Ireland, signals his solution to the Buddhist question in Vietnam. On June 27, he announces the replacement of the U.S. Ambassador in Saigon, Fritz Nolting-known to be sympathetic to Diem-by Henry Cabot Lodge, his old political rival. Lodge had been mentioned to Kennedy for the post of ambassador by Dean Rusk, to whom Lodge had personally proposed this assignment. Seeking perhaps to insulate himself from partisan attack over his evolving policies in Southeast Asia, Kennedy chose Lodge despite vigorous staff protest. He was a politician who would be able to handle the press, who were increasingly becoming principal actors in the unfolding drama in Saigon. Hanoi Ho Chi Minh signals a willingness to compromise with Diem on Vietnam's future. Through the Polish member of the International Control Commission, Mieczyslaw Maneli, Ho sends a message that Diem will not be challenged as head of a southern government in a federated Vietnam. He adds a personal greeting: "Shake his hand for me. Diem is a patriot in his own way." To a journalist, Wilfred Burchett, Ho announces that he is open to the possibility of a ceasefire, in hopes of driving a wedge between Diem and Kennedy. Saigon On August 7, Diem welcomes to his palace a sympathetic American journalist, Marguerite Higgins of the New York Herald Tribune, for an interview. Diem asks: "What am I to think of the American government? Am I merely a puppet on Washington's string? If you order Vietnam around like a puppet on a string, how will you be different from the French? I hope that your government will take a good look at these generals plotting to take my place. There are no George Washingtons among our military. "The key to good relations between the United States and Vietnam, whether it is governed by me or those who come after me [a refrain in Diem's long discourse], is respect for the substance of sovereignty. The newer independence is, the more passionate is the people's attachment to it." Washington Harriman, Forrestal, and Hilsman interrupt a rare Saturday golf outing of George Ball (Acting Secretary of State in Rusk's absence). Harriman insists that a cable from the newly arrived Ambassador Lodge in Saigon requires an immediate reply. Ball cables Lodge to order Diem to remove his brother, Nhu, from government, on penalty of a U.S. search for an alternative government. The cable requires Lodge to meet personally with Diem to explain this new policy. Saigon On August 25, Lodge, declining to meet Diem, orders CIA Chief of Station John Richardson to proceed directly to step two of the plan, alerting the generals that Washington has given the green light for a coup. Lodge, quickly discovering that there are neither George Washingtons nor Benedict Arnolds among the Saigon generals, turns in desperation to the colonels. This change of rank involves an indefinite delay in the change of government. Washington Diem's Buddhist emissary to the UN General Assembly, Prince Buu Hoi, calls on Harriman and Hilsman to parry their call for "pluralism" in Vietnam. Seeking to initiate them into the mysteries of Buddhist pluralism, Buu Hoi presents a letter from Thich Tran Khiet, the leader of Vietnamese Buddhism, in which Thich Tran Khiet deplored Tri Quang's politicization of the Buddhist heritage. Early in their meeting, Harriman yanks the hearing aid from his ear, a nervous gesture he often displays in the presence of Asians. The next day, General Taylor and Defense Secretary Robert McNamara report back to Kennedy on the new fact-finding mission he has sent them on. They accept Lodge's view that it is too late to reform Diem, and argue against calling off the coup. They also agree to the policy change demanded by the plotters: suspension of U.S. assistance to Nhu's special forces under Colonel Le Quang Tung. When word reaches Saigon of this cutoff, the colonels choose the day for their coup, the Feast of All Saints (November 1). Saigon Diem summons Tran Van Dihn, recently returned from the embassy in Washington, to issue instructions for his new assignment as ambassador in New Delhi. Tran is to await there the arrival of a high official from Hanoi to discuss further the proposals of a Vietnamese federation that Ho Chi Minh had broached in July. Cautioning his ambassador against unwarranted optimism, Diem is unable to conceal his own. Saigon, All Saints Day The coup duly took place. Diem, offered asylum ,(along with Tri Quang, who had taken refuge in the U.S. Embassy in late August), preferred death to dishonor. After a final prayerful vigil, he and his brother Nhu assisted at their last Mass, the commemoration of all the faithful departed. He rose to meet his fate, was handcuffed, thrown into an armored personnel carrier, shot in the head, and dumped into a cemetery facing the embassy. This did not, however, still the voice of Tri Quang, the American oracle of Vietnamese Buddhism. Between 1963 and 1966, his principal religious function was to preside at the obsequies of the eight military governments that sprang from Lodge's scheme to bring Vietnam into the twentieth century. His impartial demonstrations against all these successor governments ended with his imprisonment in 1966. John Kennedy's legacy to Vietnam was a set of dominoes. The dominoes were those eight military governments that briefly succeeded Diem, each standing precariously after a coup, then toppling in turn. To his own countrymen the young President left a debt, the debt-not unreasonably-felt by U.S. government officials who had conspired to remove Diem from office. Having installed a government by force, Washington could find no decent way to disown it. Thus the Johnson Administration was drawn ineluctably into the Saigon vortex. Instability was Kennedy's legacy to South Vietnam. Instability in Saigon bred inflexibility in Washington. At one point in this saga, Ambassador Galbraith-using a phrase that he later admitted had attracted him more by its sound than by its sensesaid to President Kennedy, "Nothing succeeds like successors." At the time of Diem's assassination, 98 Americans had died in Vietnam. Title: Present at the construction. (Berlin Wall) (column) Authors: Sidey, Hugh Citation: Time, Nov 20, 1989 v134 n21 p33(1) ------------------------------------------------------------- Subjects: Cold War_History Berlin Wall_History People: Kennedy, John F._Foreign relations Reference #: A8110413 ============================================================= Full Text COPYRIGHT Time Inc. 1989 All summer long John Kennedy had brooded, waiting for Nikita Khrushchev to make good on his threat to get rid of "the bone in my throat" -- partitioned Berlin. But he had not anticipated what would happen on that warm August afternoon in 1961 when he set out from Hyannis Port, Mass., on the yacht Marlin loaded with family and his favorite picnic dish, fish chowder. When the flash came from Washington that the Wall was going up, the Army major on duty became so agitated that he walked into the surf in full uniform to deliver the bulletin to Brigadier General Chester Clifton, the President's military aide, who was swimming just offshore. Clifton signaled the Marlin back and handed Kennedy the terse message. "You all go ahead," J.F.K. told his family. "I won't be out." He climbed into a golf cart with Clifton and in silence rode to his house. "Why in hell didn't we know about it?" he blurted, not expecting an answer. "What can we do?" he asked, turning to Clifton. "What can the military do?" Clifton told him that out of some 40 contingency plans for Berlin, he could not recall a single one dealing with a wall being built between the Soviet and Allied sectors. In fact, there was not much he could do. Later, in the Oval Office, he sighed that the Wall would stay until the Soviets tired of it. "We could have sent tanks over and knocked the Wall down," he mused. "What then? They build another one back a hundred yards? We knock that down, then we go to war?" When Kennedy did see the Wall, the event became one of the great spectacles of the cold war, his speech one of the most memorable in his presidency. When Kennedy flew into Berlin that June morning, he had a text that did not please him. "You think this is any good?" he asked the U.S. Berlin commander, Major General James Polk, who had joined the Kennedy caravan. Polk scanned the speech and replied bluntly, "I think it is terrible." Kennedy agreed and began to write a new one. But before he taunted the builders of the Wall, he rode four hours through the streets of West Berlin in the midst of a human fury of adoration intensified by the city's constant isolation. Nothing before in Kennedy's exuberant political life had approached this demonstration of between 1 million and 2 million cheering, roaring Germans. At Checkpoint Charlie he asked that family members and other guests not climb up to the viewing stand. Mouth set, Kennedy studied the strange, gray emptiness before him. Then, in far windows in East Berlin apartments, three women appeared waving handkerchiefs. "Isn't that kind of dangerous?" wondered Kennedy. Yes, he was told. Kennedy stood several seconds in tribute to those tiny figures. The crowd that waited for him to speak in front of West Berlin's city hall occupied every foot of the square and all the connecting streets. Kennedy raised his jaw and chopped the air with his hand, his voice growing ragged as he shouted his challenges to the other world and answered with his famous refrain, "Let them come to Berlin." In that moment the tribute Kennedy gave to those people was as honorably held, as profoundly pure as anything he had ever said. It was made of truth and given to history. "Ich bin ein Berliner." CAPTION: J.F.K. staring into the strange, gray emptiness Title: Secrets from the J.F.K. years. (Michael Beschloss book 'The Crisis Years', a book on John F. Kennedy administration) Authors: Ellis, David Citation: Time, May 6, 1991 v137 n18 p17(1) ------------------------------------------------------------- Subjects: The Crisis Year (Book)_Criticism, interpretation, etc. People: Beschloss, Michael_Authorship; Kennedy, John F._Foreign relations; Khrushchev, Nikita_Foreign relations Reference #: A10662770 ============================================================= Full Text COPYRIGHT Time Inc. 1991 Despite their cliffhanging confrontations, John F. Kennedy and Nikita Khrushchev were faithful pen pals. The Crisis Years (HarperCollins), a new book on the Kennedy Administration by historian Michael Beschloss, discloses the contents of 80 secret messages between the U.S. and Soviet leaders on subjects ranging from the Berlin Wall to Vietnam. In his research, Beschloss discovered why the correspondence came to an abrupt end six weeks before Kennedy's death: because of a bureaucratic misunderstanding, the State Department failed to send a crucial Kennedy response to Khrushchev's peace proposals. The book, due in June, describes Kennedy's elaborate White House taping system. Secret Service agents put microphones in the mansion's library, presidential bedroom telephone, Oval Office and Cabinet Room. The author provides excerpts from now public transcripts of meetings during the Cuban missile crisis. Kennedy's tentative behavior on the tapes of initial meetings, writes Beschloss, does "not quite bear out later claims . . . that this was a President superbly in command of the crisis from the start." Title: They just don't get him: three decades after J.F.K.'s death, Generation X ponders his mystique. (John Kennedy) Authors: Reeves, Richard Citation: Time, Nov 22, 1993 v142 n22 p62(2) ------------------------------------------------------------- Subjects: Conflict of generations_Analysis Nineteen-sixties decade_History People: Kennedy, John F._Public opinion Reference #: A14554792 ============================================================= Abstract: Most post-boomers, who are too young to remember Pres Kennedy, seem to have a respect and awe for the optimism he represented even though the mass media has emphasized Kennedy's negative qualities recently. Kennedy could inspire individuals to participate in social change. ============================================================= Full Text COPYRIGHT Time Inc. 1993 She was three years old on Nov. 22, 1963. "I knew it was the most important thing ever," she said to me, recalling the day John F. Kennedy died. "My mother was crying. I had never seen an adult cry." Now a graduate student in government at the University of Texas, she said she often thinks about that day 30 years ago. When I asked her what she thinks about Kennedy now, she said she doesn't really know much about him. Yet she shares with other young people a sense of loss and anger about something they never got to know. The post-baby boomers, who were born after the 1960 presidential campaign, seem to have no clear picture of the man or his times. Camelot, the myth created by his wife and court after the assassination, means almost nothing to them. The political revisionism that followed, portraying Kennedy as a self-serving cold warrior, means little more to them because they know almost nothing of the history that was being so energetically revised. The newest Kennedy myth is even further from reality than the first two. Devastated baby boomers and conspiracy peddlers seem to have put young Americans in a mysterious, alluring haze. The question I heard most often at universities was this: "What was it that J. Edgar Hoover had on Kennedy, so that he could never be fired at the FBI?" When the editors of the Harvard Crimson asked me that question, I answered, "In 1960 J. Edgar Hoover was the most admired man in the U.S. He saved us from John Dillinger and Hitler, and now he was rounding up the dirty commies. Kennedy didn't even get 50% of the vote. He would have been nuts to fire Hoover." The silence that followed was either polite or because they thought I came from another planet. Which of course I did. In America, a nation that believes it transcends history, each generation can be a world of its own. We each have our own vision of Kennedy. The World War II veterans who were Kennedy's contemporaries. Me, who was in college when he was elected. Bill Clinton and the other baby boomers, who were in high school. The kids at Harvard and the University of Texas. A baby boomer who teaches political science at the Austin campus said in a seminar that she felt she knew almost everything about Kennedy, from the big mistakes in governing to the big womanizing -- a word that bespeaks evil to generations sensitive to feminism. And yet when she hears the name or thinks about the man, "I just melt." That was a brave thing to say in a roomful of presidential scholars. But other men and women in the room nodded, a bit rueful. Many Americans feel that way, I believe, because Kennedy passed the great test of democratic leadership: he brought out the best in most of his people most of the time. Whatever one thinks of the political record or the political man, John Kennedy was a surpassing cultural figure -- an artist, like Picasso, who changed the way people looked at things. Kennedy painted with words and images and other people's lives, squeezing people and perceptions like tubes of paint, gently or brutally, changing millions of lives. He focused Americans in the directions that truly mattered -- toward active citizenship, toward the joy of life itself. The most important thing about Kennedy was not any great political decision, though he made some, but his own political ambition. He did not wait his turn. He directly challenged the political system he wanted to control, understanding that the most important qualification for the most powerful job in the world was wanting it. After him, no one else wanted to wait either -- neither young Negroes in Nashville, Tennessee, nor young charmers in Arkansas -- and few institutions were rigid enough or flexible enough to survive. When he was asked early in 1960 why he thought he should be President, he answered, "I look around me at the others in the race, and I say to myself, `Well, if they think they can do it, why not me?' Why not me? That's the answer. And I think it's enough." For those who lived during his times, Kennedy seemed to be the beginning of the new, though perhaps he was just the end of the old. The U.S. was beginning to burst its seams economically, technologically, culturally. When Kennedy took office, the American economy was growing at a little more than 2% a year. By the end of 1963, the growth rate was nearly 6%. He came to office in the days of carbon paper, mimeograph machines and flashbulbs. Three years later, jet airliners, interstate highways, direct long-distance telephone dialing, and Polaroid cameras were speeding up people and life. New things and words were appearing almost every day: ZIP codes, Weight Watchers, Valium, transistors, computers, lasers, the Pill, LSD. In 1963 Lawrence of Arabia won the Academy Award as best film, but another nominated picture seemed to move America more, To Kill a Mockingbird, about race and justice and hope in the South. The music of young Americans was changing from perky love songs to stuff of a different romance. If I Had a Hammer and Blowin' in the Wind were melodic calls for justice and freedom all over this world. America was rich, and its wealth was shared by many millions. A lot of this was new, and people did not quite know what to do with it or how to act. But the Kennedys would show them! The young and restless rich, well educated and well mannered, gaily presiding over the White House, the world really. Watching the Kennedys was educational, teaching that most American of endeavors: self-improvement. That was the way we were. But why do our children and their children care about all this? The extraordinary thing is not what each of us remembers or believes, but that everyone remembers or cares at all. "We know all the bad stuff," said one of the Harvard twentysomethings with typical anger. "But Kennedy represents good things that we never got to share. It doesn't seem fair that there was optimism then. He symbolizes idealism and service, an era when people could do things. When things got done." "Look at MTV and this election," he said. "The slogans they used were Kennedy: `ROCK THE VOTE!' `CHOOSE OR LOSE!' We want our Kennedy too." CAPTION: Each generation has its own vision of Kennedy because he passed the test of democratic leadership: he brought out the best in most of his people most of the time Title: The most vividly recalled U.S. president: why Canada wept. (the assassination of former U.S. President John F. Kennedy) (Special Report) Authors: Lynch, Charles Citation: Maclean's, Nov 22, 1993 v106 n47 p51(2) ------------------------------------------------------------- Subjects: Canada_Relations with the United States United States_Relations with Canada People: Kennedy, John F._Public opinion Locations: Canada; United States Reference #: A14593012 ============================================================= Abstract: Many Canadians have fond memories of former Pres Kennedy and were saddened when he was assassinated in Dallas, TX, on Nov 22, 1963. Kennedy's maternal relatives had lived in New Brunswick before moving to the US. Kennedy helped to establish warm relations between the US and Canada. ============================================================= Full Text COPYRIGHT Maclean Hunter (Canada) 1993 Two United States presidents have meant as much to Canadians as to Americans. It may be that both were more popular in Canada than in their homeland. Franklin D. Roosevelt was the first, John F. Kennedy the second and most vividly remembered of the two, though his achievements were minuscule beside FDR's. Canada's prolonged love affairs with these two men may have been rooted in the fact that Down East Canadians knew them both before they became the most powerful leaders in the world--Roosevelt through his ties with Campobello, N.B., Kennedy as the complete Bostonian, harking back to the days when ``the Boston States'' meant more to Maritimers than Montreal, Toronto or points west. When Kennedy grew up in Massachusetts, one in five families there had roots in the Atlantic provinces. Kennedy's maternal ancestors, the Fitzgeralds, landed from Ireland in New Brunswick before moving on to Boston. To this day, Saint John calls itself the most Irish city in Canada, a smaller version of the Massachusetts capital. Jack Kennedy himself came to Fredericton at the invitation of the chancellor of the University of New Brunswick, Lord Beaverbrook. It was 1957, and Kennedy was introduced by Beaverbrook as ``the next president of the United States.'' Kennedy responded with what came to be known as the ``good fences make good neighbors'' speech. So Canada wept, too, when Kennedy was shot. It may be that had he lived and become engulfed in failure, as all subsequent presidents except Ronald Reagan have been, the reaction to him would have turned sour long since, and there would be no honoring his anniversaries. Vietnam might have sunk him as it did his successor. Today's media would have finished him, on his private peccadillos alone. But he fulfilled one of the prime conditions for remembrance, be it fair or foul, by dying young. And dying spectacularly, with controversy thrown in that bubbles and boils with mystery to this day. My youngest daughter was in her Grade 5 classroom in an Ottawa school the day Kennedy was shot, and the teachers wheeled in a TV set so the kids could watch history being made, something they would remember all their lives. And they have, more vividly than they remember any of our prime ministers, even the Kennedy-esque Pierre Trudeau. More than they remember our prime minister of the day, Lester Pearson, whom Kennedy admired above all Canadians, as intensely as he despised Pearson's predecessor, John Diefenbaker. My own experience on the day of Kennedy's assassination was unique, in that I was led to believe it was either Pearson or Diefenbaker who had been shot. I was in Jakarta on a round-the-world journalistic junket and had arranged an interview with the Indonesian dictator Sukarno, at his mountain retreat in Bogor. During the drive up-country, the Indonesian conducting officer turned to me and said, ``Your leader has been shot.'' Startled, I said: ``Lester Pearson shot?'' The man shook his head. ``John Diefenbaker?'' I blurted. The name ``John'' must have rung a bell, because the man nodded assent, and I spent the rest of the 100-km drive mourning Dief, and wondering who could have shot him, and why. It was only on arrival in Bogor that I found the Sukarno cabinet assembled, hailing Kennedy's death as a victory for freedom (the Red Chinese also celebrated it as a bright day), and pondering whether Sukarno should go to Washington for the funeral. The answer was no and my interview was cancelled. I asked to be taken back to Jakarta, where the only refuge from the festive reaction to Kennedy's death was the United States Embassy. So I went there, and joined in the shedding of tears. My first sight of Kennedy had been at the Los Angeles Democratic convention that nominated him for the presidency in a bitter fight with Lyndon Johnson. It was a close-run thing, as was the subsequent election against Richard Nixon, and to be near to it was to know how important the Kennedy money was, and how hungry for power was Kennedy's younger brother, Bobby. Without Bobby, there would have been no Kennedy in the White House, and yet watching him I developed a dislike that lasted until he, too, fell to an assassin's bullet. The recruiting of Johnson as vice-presidential candidate, and the marketing of Jack and Jackie as the dawning of a new age for America, overcame the public prejudice against a Roman Catholic, and cancelled the momentum of the popular presidency of Dwight Eisenhower, the hero of the Second World War. Kennedy ran as a war hero, too, and the voters fell for it. Even in Canada, where we put down our own war heroes, we liked Ike, and even named our most famous mountain after him, though the name didn't stick and it reverted to Castle Mountain. Our mountain named for Kennedy, in the Yukon, has had better luck. Canadians were no strangers to Roman Catholics in office, though religious prejudices were as deep here as in most of the United States. But there, the election of a Roman Catholic president was revolutionary, and it got Kennedy off to a roaring start with echoes of hope and renewal heard around the world. The Canadian connection was special, from the time Kennedy came to Ottawa on his first foreign visit as president and aggravated his old wartime back injury planting a tree in the grounds of Government House. Diefenbaker took an instant dislike to ``the young whippersnapper,'' and it was heightened when Kennedy addressed Parliament and called on Canada to accept her responsibilities and join the Organization of American States. Diefenbaker regarded it as a command to ``jump through the hoop,'' and said no. The best anecdote on the Diefenbaker-Kennedy feud followed the discovery of a White House working paper in an East Block wastebasket, the paper listing the things the United States should ``push'' Canada to do. Diefenbaker kept the paper as a reminder to resist all pressure from Washington. The legend is that Kennedy had scribbled in the margin: ``What do we do with the s.o.b. now?'' Kennedy subsequently denied it, reportedly saying he couldn't have called Diefenbaker an s.o.b. when he didn't know he was one at the time. His opinion jelled during the Cuban missile crisis, the globe's closest brush with a Third World War. Canada was part of the North American Air Defence Agreement, along with the United States. Washington deemed that Soviet missiles on Cuban bases were a threat to continental security and put its forces on combat alert, expecting Canada to do likewise. Diefenbaker said no. Canadian defence minister Douglas Harkness sided with Kennedy and ordered a partial alert of Canadian forces, without informing Diefenbaker. The result was a split in the Canada-U.S. defence alliance that would not be healed as long as either Diefenbaker or Kennedy remained in office. Diefenbaker, with a shove from Kennedy, was the first to go. Things came to a head in the Canadian election of 1963, when a key issue was whether Canada was committed to taking U.S. nuclear warheads for Bomarc anti-aircraft missiles, Diefenbaker saying no, Lester Pearson saying yes. Kennedy backed Pearson, and a letter was circulated from U.S. ambassador Walton Butterworth congratulating Pearson on his nuclear stand (the stand that caused Trudeau to call Pearson ``the unfrocked prince of peace.'') Pearson won the election and ordered an investigation that led to the Butterworth letter being branded a forgery. Diefenbaker dubbed Butterworth ``Butterballs'' and kept copies of the ``forgery'' handy for the rest of his life. Kennedy's influence in the 1963 Canadian election may have swung the balance, because pro-U.S. feeling was strong here and Kennedy was more popular with Canadians than any homegrown leader. Pearson's grappling with the English-French question was reminiscent of Kennedy's approach to racial divisions in the United States, though both problems remain 30 years later. And there were traces of Kennedy in Dalton Camp's campaign to unseat Diefenbaker as Conservative leader in 1967. Camp enlisted the youth wing of the party in his cause and it has always been my belief that he aimed for the leadership himself, believing he could rouse the same emotions in Canada that Kennedy had. But Diefenbaker was too tough for Camp & Co. to swallow, and though they unseated him they had to settle for Robert Stanfield as his successor. Diefenbaker's farewell speech to the parliamentary press gallery included what must have been the toughest attack ever voiced by a Canadian prime minister about a U.S. president, and Diefenbaker carried the Kennedy grudge to his grave, leaving subsequent PMs to grapple with the ups and downs of relations with the United States. Stanfield was billed as ``the man with the winning way,'' but the trouble was he was a slow mover--and what there was of the Kennedy magic in the northern air moved to the Liberals and Pierre Trudeau. The story of Trudeaumania is one of the strangest and most unlikely in Canadian political history, but much of the flair displayed so suddenly by this shy, introverted man was on the Kennedy pattern, including the sexy side that was totally new, happening right in the open with women of all ages throwing themselves at his feet. Part of the Kennedy inheritance was to complete the swing of Canada's attention from British politics to American. The Second World War and FDR had led Canada away from British ways to a perceived role as honest broker between London and Washington. With Kennedy, Washington became predominant in Canadian foreign and even domestic affairs, and has remained so ever since. Like Pierre Trudeau, he haunts us still. His memory diminished the presidencies of all who followed him, just as the memory of Trudeau has taken its toll of Joe Clark, John Turner, Brian Mulroney and Kim Campbell, and casts a shadow over the prime ministry of Jean Chr*tien. It is Pierre and Maggie that we remember, just as we remember Jack and Jackie, almost as though the brave new world they promised actually had come to pass. It didn't in either country, but in a cold climate, the memories stay warm, along with the expectations that there must be a better way of doing politics. Charles Lynch retired a decade ago as chief of Southam News and is now an Ottawa-based freelance columnist, author and broadcaster. Title: Minority report. (correspondence with Judith K. Exner) (Column) Authors: Hitchens, Christopher Citation: The Nation, April 4, 1994 v258 n13 p440(1) ------------------------------------------------------------- People: Exner Judith K._Records and correspondence; Kennedy, John F._Public opinion Reference #: A14973050 ============================================================= Abstract: A letter from Judith Exner, and a reply to that letter, are presented. Exner, who allegedly had a relationship with Pres John F. Kennedy and served as a go-between with Sam Giancana, objects to the characterization of 'gun moll.' The reply urges Exner to make her papers public. ============================================================= Full Text COPYRIGHT The Nation Company Inc. 1994 I "must say that a person gets a good class of correspondence in this business. Allow me to share with you a fax that arrived from Newport Beach, California, just the other day: Dear Mr. Hitchens: I was watching Brian Lamb's show on Cable News Network [sic] yesterday when I heard you refer to me as a "gun moll." This is a highly offensive misrepresentation of me which I hope you will not repeat. The facts concerning my family background, as well as my lengthy relationship with Jack Kennedy, were set forth in the April 1990 issue of Vanity Fair. As the article illustrates, my dealings with Sam Giancana and Johnny Rosselli occurred only because Jack Kennedy asked me to serve as a go-between. My two-month relationship with Sam Giancana, which occurred after my relationship with Jack Kennedy had ended, and which was so brief that the FBI never even noticed it, should not be used as the defining moment of my life. I doubt that you would like to be forever known for what you did for two months over 30 years ago. I will take responsibility for my own actions, but not for those of Jack Kennedy and Sam Giancana. My contacts with Sam Giancana and Johnny Rosselli during my relationship with Jack Kennedy were solely on Jack's behalf. Also, my contacts with Sam Giancana and Johnny Rosselli afterward were a direct result of the FBI harassment I suffered due to J. Edgar Hoover's interest in maintaining leverage over Jack and Bobby Kennedy. In addition to reviewing the Vanity Fair article, I also recommend that you watch my interview with Larry King in February 1991. I think you will see that you have a mistaken impression of who I am. You may respond to this letter through my FOIA attorney, James H. Lesar, Esquire, 918 F Street N.W., Suite 509, Washington, DC 20004. Sincerely, Judith K. Exner To which I have responded as follows: Dear Ms. Exner, It was good of you to write. I prefer to reply directly, rather than through the offices of a lawyer who appears to be named after a men's magazine. May I begin by making a suggestion? I have a baby daughter who is 5 months old. Everybody says she looks just like me. I prefer not to think that in saying this the witnesses affirm that I am toothless, bald, incontinent, greedy, drooling and solipsistic. Extending the analogy, may I ask whether, when you hear the words "gun moll" on television, you make the automatic assumption that the reference must be to yourself? The point is of more than passing interest, because I did not utter your name on the air, and also because we currently have a President who yearns to be compared to the late John F. Kennedy. When he does hear the comparison, are we to take it that he relishes being compared to a relentless adulterer who had a back-channel to organized crime? I leave the question with you. Turning now to the Vanity Fair article, which you recommend as factually pristine. (I know from my own experience that the magazine has a meticulous legal and fact-checking department.) I draw your attention to the following paragraphs of the piece: For two years, she'd been seeing Sam on behalf of the president of the United States, she says, carrying envelopes, arranging their meetings .... She knew it was screwy--the gangsters protecting her from the G-men. But Sam treated her like a lady and the F.B.I. treated her like a tramp. The agents followed her, hissing, "Hey, Judy, come here." Sam sent a dozen yellow roses every day. [Emphasis in the original.] In view of this, do you still say that "the FBI never even noticed" your friendship with Mr. Giancana? You do state that your actual contacts with him, and with another Mafia leader, were undertaken at the instigation of President Kennedy. In your book, you produced White House telephone numbers and other classified materials that substantiated your claim (to the shock and dismay of Benjamin Bradlee and other Kennedy confidants). If you were smart enough to keep these pieces of life insurance, were you not bright enough to work out what line of business Messrs. Giancana and Rosselli were pursuing? So, never mind about the "gun moll" bit, which I'll agree was on the cheap side even if I did keep your name out of it. (Actually, both your names, since you were originally famous as Judith Campbell.) Here is another extract from the Vanity Fair article that you recommend: A March 15, 1962, memo reveals that the Feds were not unaware of her relations with the commander-in-chief. An interview between an agent and a private detective in L.A. produced this observation: "He [the detective] then made the statement that Campbell is the girl who was 'shacking up with John Kennedy in the East.'" I hardly like to say this, but you do invite the thought. It is as "President's moll" rather than as "gun moll" that you pique the curiosity. At some stage in the early 1960s, in other words, the boyish patron of the Green Berets and the Peace Corps made a simultaneous foreign-policy alliance with the Cosa Nostra. The consequences are with us still. Mr. Kennedy remains a veritable Siegfried to many ignorant liberals. Any further light that you can throw on this would be a service to what remains of our democratic republic. Even Oliver Stone might dry his eyes, and others would open their own. Since you are evidently misremembering even your own story, why not instruct that attorney to make all your papers public and, so to speak, clear the air? You could then claim the private life that would be rightfully yours. I apologize for the unavoidable gender-specificity of this communication. Sincerely, Christopher Hitchens Title: Department releases Kennedy-Khrushchev correspondence in Cuban missile crisis. (John F. Kennedy, Nikita Khrushchev) (Department of State spokesperson Margaret Tutwiler statement) (Transcript) Citation: US Department of State Dispatch, Jan 13, 1992 v3 n2 p29(1) ------------------------------------------------------------- Subjects: Cuban Missile Crisis, October 1962_History People: Kennedy, John F._Records and correspondence; Khrushchev, Nikita_Records and correspondence Reference #: A11826668 ============================================================= Abstract: The State Department and Russia are jointly releasing all Kennedy-Khrushchev correspondence on the Cuban missile crisis. A list of the declassified correspondence is included. ============================================================= Full Text COPYRIGHT U.S. Government Printing Office 1992 The Department is today declassifying and releasing the remaining pieces of correspondence between President Kennedy and Soviet General Secretary Khrushchev relating to the Cuban missile crisis. The Russian Government is taking the same action, and a similar announcement is being made in Moscow. The United States and Russia have also agreed to publish jointly all Kennedy-Khrushchev correspondence related to the Cuban missile crisis. We are discussing details of the joint publication, which we expect to be accomplished this year. For the United States, the correspondence will be published by the United States Information Agency as a special issue of its publication Problems of Communism. This will include both English and Russian texts, plus scholarly commentary. Release by the United States and the Russian federation of these letters comes at a time of dramatic change, when fundamentally new relations are developing between the United States and Russia. These documents, which involve critical high-level exchanges at the height of the Cold War, which is now behind us, will be of interest to historians and scholars as well as to the general public. The Department is pleased to be able to work with the Russian federation to make the complete historical record of this correspondence available publicly. The correspondence declassified and released today is: * Letter from General Secretary Khrushchev to President Kennedy dated October 30, 1962 (unofficial translation); * Letter from President Kennedy to General Secretary Khrushchev dated November 3, 1962 (US original text); * Letter from General Secretary Khrushchev to President Kennedy dated November 4, 1962 (unofficial translation). * Letter from General Secretary Khrushchev to President Kennedy dated November 12, 1962 (unofficial translation); * Oral message from President Kennedy to General Secretary Khrushchev dated November 12, 1962 (unofficial English translation provided by the Russians); * Letter from General Secretary Khrushchev to President Kennedy dated November 14, 1962 (unofficial translation); * Letter from President Kennedy to General Secretary Khrushchev dated November 15, 1962 (US original text); * Oral message from President Kennedy to General Secretary Khrushchev dated November 20, 1962 (unofficial English translation provided by the Russians); * Letter from General Secretary Khrushchev to President Kennedy dated November 20, 1962 (unofficial translation); * Letter from General Secretary Khrushchev to President Kennedy dated November 22, 1962 (unofficial translation); * Letter from General Secretary Khrushchev to President Kennedy dated December 10, 1962 (unofficial translation); and * Letter from President Kennedy to General Secretary Khrushchev dated December 14, 1962 (US original text). Title: New look at an old failure; an ex-CIA historian fights to air his version of the Bay of Pigs. (Jack Pfeiffer) Authors: Peterzell, Jay Citation: Time, June 1, 1987 v129 p29(1) ------------------------------------------------------------- Subjects: Freedom of information_Cases United States. Central Intelligence Agency_Officials and employees Bay of Pigs_Military aspects United States_Relations with Cuba People: Kennedy, John F._Military policy; Pfeiffer, Jack_Cases Locations: Cuba; United States Reference #: A4856155 ============================================================= Full Text COPYRIGHT Time Inc. 1987 New Look at an Old Failure An ex-CIA historian fights to air his version of the Bay of Pigs As the nation picks through the wreckage of the Iran-contra affair for lessons, a dispute is brewing within the intelligence community that could throw new light on the granddaddy of all covert-action fiascos: the Bay of Pigs. The CIA's former chief historian, Jack Pfeiffer, is suing to force the release of his detailed and still classified studies on the invasion, which challenge the conventional historical wisdom about why it failed. Previous historians have tended to place most of the blame on the CIA's deputy director for planning, Richard Bissell. His penchant for secrecy, they say, led him to keep the agency's intelligence division and other military analysts pretty much in the dark, thus resulting in a poor assessment of the risks involved. Indeed, a still secret case study prepared for the Tower commission, one of a series that sought to compare previous covert activities with the Iran-contra affair, also attri butes the Bay of Pigs failure to excessive secrecy of CIA planners and lack of adequate review by intelligence experts. In fact, Pfeiffer argues, a series of meetings and memos shows that senior officials of the CIA's intelligence division and Pentagon planners were briefed at all stages of the discussion. According to Pfeiffer, the conventional view casting Bissell as the villain of the tale is reflected in a damning report by the CIA's inspector general at the time, Lyman Kirkpatrick. Although Kirkpatrick, 70, who resigned from the CIA in 1965, ordered the destruction of all the records on which his report was based, Pfeiffer managed to uncover the material. He says it led him to conclude that Kirkpatrick had deliberately skewed the report to discredit Bissell, who was his rivalfor the position of CIA director. Kirkpatrick defends his original assessment. ''Bissell was running it ((with a group)) that was cut off from everyone who should have assessed the plan.'' Denying that his conclusions were based on personal rivalry, Kirkpatrick argues, ''Bissell and I were friends.'' Bissell, 77, who was eased out of the agency in 1962 and until now has never publicly defended his role, comments dryly, ''That's not the case.'' In his view, and that of Historian Pfeiffer, the reason that theBay of Pigs failed was not because the machinery of Government was short-circuited. Rather, it was a case in which the entire system worked the way it was supposed to -- and produced a fiasco. The newly elected President, John Kennedy, was adamant about notinvolving American forces. Indeed, he insisted on hiding any evidence of American support for the exile army. For that reason the White House decided to cancel crucial air strikes and change the site of the landing from the town of Trinidad, at the foot of the central mountains, to the quieter venue of the Bay of Pigs. It was these decisions, Pfeiffer argues, rather than a faulty process of consultations, that doomed the operation from the start. The Navy was ready in case Kennedy decided to lift his ban on direct U.S. involvement, Bissell revealed in his interview with TIME. As the Cuban exiles went ashore that moonless night in April 1961, a force of about 1,500 Marines waited on a ship near the coast. Admiral Arleigh Burke, Chief of Naval Operations at the time, confirms this previously unreported deployment. The Marines were ''available,'' says Burke, now 85. ''These things are just a general military precaution.'' After 25 years, Pfeiffer thinks it is time for his own studies of the fiasco to be made public. ''Kirkpatrick's order to destroy the documents was outrageous,'' he commented last week. ''What's to say the CIA's records on the Iran-contra matter won't disappear the same way?'' Title: Kennedy, Vietnam, and Oliver Stone's big lie. (John F. Kennedy) Authors: Loebs, Bruce Citation: USA Today (Magazine), May 1993 v121 n2576 p88(4) ------------------------------------------------------------- Subjects: JFK (Motion picture)_Criticism, interpretation, etc. People: Kennedy, John F._Military policy; Stone, Oliver_Criticism, interpretation, etc. Reference #: A13807584 ============================================================= Abstract: Oliver Stone's film 'JFK' charges that Kennedy was murdered by the military-industrial complex and government leaders because he planned to withdraw US troops from Vietnam. An analysis of Kennedy's Vietnam strategy that disputes this accusation is presented. ============================================================= Full Text COPYRIGHT Society for the Advancement of Education 1993 By claiming that the President was assassinated to prevent him from pulling U.S. troops out of the war, the movie "JFK" distorted history for the sake of propaganda. IN THE 1991 film, "JFK," director Oliver Stone's protagonist Jim Garrison (Kevin Costner) warns the audience that "Hitler always said the bigger the lie, the more people will believe it." Hypocritically, Stone then proceeds to practice Adolf Hitler's "big lie" strategy in "JFK." He charges that the military-industrial complex, including the FBI, CIA, and "the nation's highest officials," with Vice-Pres. Lyndon Johnson's "connivance," murdered Pres. John F. Kennedy to prevent him from withdrawing U.S. troops from Vietnam. The basic premise on which this accusation hinges is false--Kennedy did not plan to remove U.S. troops from Vietnam. To support this motive for the assassination, Stone shows an interview with Kennedy by Walter Cronkite on Sept. 2, 1963, with the President saying, "We can help them; we can give them equipment; we can send our men out there as advisers; but they have to win it--the people of Vietnam against the communists." However, Stone flagrantly distorts Kennedy's words by expunging JFK's next comment to Cronkite: "But I don't agree with those who say we should withdraw. That would be a mistake. That would be a great mistake." In alleging Kennedy's plan to withdraw from Vietnam, Stone repeats a canard begun by Kenneth O'Donnell, the President's appointments secretary, in a 1970 article in Life. To shield him from blame for the Vietnam disaster, pro-Kennedy historians, including William Manchester, Theodore Sorenson, and John Newman, who advised Stone for "JFK," had described a "plan" to withdraw from Vietnam. A principal proponent of the withdrawal myth is historian Arthur Schlesinger, Jr., adviser, friend, and biographer of John and Robert Kennedy. In a 1978 biography of Robert Kennedy, Schlesinger cites private remarks JFK made in 1963 to Canadian Prime Minister Lester Pearson, Michael Forrestal, Sen. Mike Mansfield, and O'Donnell about Vietnam and concludes that Kennedy "left a formal plan, processed successfully through the Pentagon, for a withdrawal of American advisers by the end of 1965." Schlesinger even contends that the tragedy of Vietnam might have been avoided "if Kennedy had lived long enough to carry out his plan for American withdrawal" in 1965. In a 1986 book, The Cycles of American History, Schlesinger refers to "Kennedy's plan for a complete withdrawal of American advisers from Vietnam by 1965--a plan canceled by Johnson a few months after [JFK was assassinated in] Dallas." Why, then, did Kennedy continue to order American troops to Vietnam after supposedly deciding as early as July, 1962, to remove all American forces in 1965? To this crucial question, Schlesinger offers a bizarre rationalization. Quoting from O'Donnell's book, Johnny, We Hardly Knew Ye, he maintains that, after deciding to withdraw, Kennedy told Mansfield, "But I can't do it until 1965--after I'm reelected." Schlesinger asserts that Kennedy told O'Donnell, "If I tried to pull out completely now from Vietnam, we would have another Joe McCarthy red scare on our hands, but I can do it after I'm reelected. So we had better make damned sure that I am reelected." Schlesinger wants us to believe that Kennedy decided in 1962 or early 1963 to withdraw all U.S. forces, but continued to maintain troops in South Vietnam because he feared losing the 1964 election. The unavoidable conclusion from this tale is grotesque. If Schlesinger is right, the President willfully sacrificed American lives for political profit. During the Kennedy Administration, 108 Americans died and 486 were wounded in Vietnam, and these figures increased from the time of his assassination in November, 1963, until November, 1964, after the presidential election when Schlesinger maintains Kennedy would have begun to withdraw U.S. troops. Furthermore, if the Schlesinger-Stone thesis is correct, Kennedy is responsible for the death of more than 58,000 Americans and millions of Southeast Asians. Had JFK withdrawn U.S. forces in the spring of 1963, when Schlesinger claims he decided to do so, but declined for political reasons, the U.S. might not have become deeply involved in the Vietnam War. Lyndon Johnson, who correctly believed he was following his predecessor's policy in Southeast Asia, probably would not have reintroduced military forces after Kennedy had removed all U.S. troops. Schlesinger's and Stone's allegation is wrong. Evidence does not support their corruption of Kennedy's Vietnam record. The thesis that JFK reached a firm decision to withdraw all U.S. troops by 1965, regardless of the consequences in Vietnam, is denied by Schlesinger's own source (the Pentagon Papers), Kennedy's public statements, and the President's closest advisers, including Robert Kennedy. Schlesinger's evidence refutes his arguments. In criticizing Norman Podhoretz's book, Why We Were in Vietnam, he writes. "Mr. Podhoretz's research in the Pentagon Papers might have led him to the plan for the phased withdrawal of American military personnel in Vietnam by the end of 1965." Although the Pentagon Papers analysis does reveal a contingency plan to withdraw troops, the study shows clearly that this was not irrevocable and was predicated on a premature assumption made in July, 1962, which was corrected later, that the Vietcong and North Vietnam would be defeated. The Pentagon Papers analyst states that the withdrawal of U.S. forces from Vietnam "was begun amid the euphoria and optimism of July 1962 and was ended in the pessimism of March 1964." He continues, "only the micawberesque prediction could have led decision-makers in Washington to believe that the fight against the guerrillas would have clearly turned the corner by FY '65." According to the Pentagon Papers, the crucial condition that corrected Kennedy's hasty prediction about victory in Vietnam was the military overthrow of South Vietnam Pres. Ngo Dinh Diem; his assassination on Nov. 1, 1963, three weeks before Kennedy's death; and "the resulting political instability and the deterioration of the military situation" which immediately "led decision-makers to set aside this planning process." After the Diem coup, writes the Pentagon analyst, "all this planning [of a U.S. withdrawal] began to take on a kind of absurd quality as the situation in Vietnam deteriorated drastically and visibly. The phaseout policy was overtaken by the sinking after-effects of the Diem coup." The Pentagon analyst concludes that phased withdrawal "was overtaken by events." Thus, Schlesinger's source, the Pentagon Papers, contradicts his assertion that JFK planned to withdraw all U.S. forces from Vietnam by 1965. Furthermore, unless it is to be believed that the President repeatedly lied to the American people about Vietnam to conceal his "secret plan" to withdraw, Kennedy's numerous public statements supporting South Vietnam are compelling evidence that he opposed a withdrawal. In the 1950s, then-Sen. John F. Kennedy was one of the leaders of the American Friends of Vietnam, an organization described by co-founder Joseph Buttinger as a group of liberal intellectuals who became "Diem's most effective defenders." Kennedy was one of South Vietnam's strongest champions. He told an American Friends of Vietnam convention in 1956, "If we are not the parents of little Vietnam, then surely we are the godparents. This is our offspring. We cannot abandon it; we cannot ignore its needs." After he became president, Kennedy backed his strong personal commitment to a non-communist South Vietnam by ordering 15,000 troops to aid that nation. To the very day he was assassinated, Kennedy publicly pledged American support to South Vietnam. On Sept. 9, 1963, Kennedy explained to David Brinkley that he believed in the domino theory in Southeast Asia. "I believe it. I believe it," the President repeated and then expressed his categorical opposition to withdrawing from Vietnam: "What I am concerned about is that Americans will get impatient and say because they don't like events in Southeast Asia or they don't like the government in Saigon, that we should withdraw. That only makes it easy for the communists. I think we should stay. We should use our influence in as effective a way as we can, but we should not withdraw." At a news conference on Sept. 12, 1963, Kennedy emphasized that "what helps to win the war we support. What interferes with the war effort we oppose." Understanding Kennedy's Vietnam Policy Timing is crucial in understanding Kennedy's Vietnam policy. His private statements about withdrawing U.S. troops were made prior to the Diem assassination, after which, according to the Pentagon Papers, "the phaseout policy was overtaken by the sinking aftereffects of the Diem coup." When the President mentioned withdrawal in 1963, he did so on the assumption that the war would be won. As Robert Kennedy indicated, "we were winning the war in 1962 and 1963. Up until May or so in 1963, the situation was getting progressively better. The situation began to deteriorate in the spring of 1963." On Oct. 11, 1963, JFK issued National Security Action Memorandum 263, calling for a plan to accelerate the training of the South Vietnamese army to allow American forces to withdraw in 1965. However, NSAM 263 was not incontrovertible, and the President made other contingency plans to increase U.S. forces in Vietnam. According to Sorenson, Kennedy "ordered the departments to be prepared for the introduction of combat troops, should they prove to be necessary." Gen. Maxwell Taylor, Special Military Representative to President Kennedy, on whose on-site reports JFK based his hope for a troop withdrawal, explains in Swords and Plowshares that "the 1965 date was feasible only if the political situation did not worsen and affect the military effort, which it soon did, and if Diem carried out needed internal reforms, which he did not." On Oct. 31, 1963, the day before the Diem coup, Kennedy carefully qualified his withdrawal memorandum, telling a press conference, "It would be our hope to lessen the number of Americans there by 1,000 as the training intensifies and is carried on in South Vietnam." Kennedy's "hope" for removing U.S. troops from Vietnam was dashed by the Diem coup and, in the Pentagon Papers analyst's words, "the resulting political instability and the deterioration of the military situation." Consequently, at a news conference on Nov. 14, eight days before his death, the President conceded the unlikelihood of withdrawing 1,000 troops by December, thus setting aside his Oct. 11 memorandum. Kennedy was asked, "Mr. President, in view of the changed situation in South Vietnam, do you still expect to bring back 1,000 troops before the end of the year, or has that figure been raised or lowered?" JFK hedged: "No, we are going to be bringing back several hundred before the end of the year, but I think on the question of the exact number I thought we would wait until the meeting of November 20th." That meeting, on which Kennedy said he would base his decision for a troop withdrawal, took place in Hawaii between U.S. Ambassador to South Vietnam Henry Cabot Lodge, Maxwell Taylor, and Secretary of Defense Robert McNamara and produced a pessimistic report on military and political conditions in South Vietnam. Lodge subsequently reported to the new president, Lyndon Johnson, that "It was all bad in Vietnam, that hard decisions were ahead and not far ahead." Johnson's resolve to continue Kennedy's policies led him to approve a small troop withdrawal in December, 1963, even though he believed "it became increasingly questionable" whether the withdrawal was based on "a valid assumption" about conditions in South Vietnam. In fact, the Pentagon Papers analyst argues that Kennedy would not have withdrawn troops in December as Johnson did. Kennedy endorsed U.S. military support to South Vietnam until his death. On the morning of his murder, the President told the Ft. Worth Chamber of Commerce, "without the United States, South Vietnam would collapse overnight. I don't think we are fatigued or tired. We are still the keystone in the arch of freedom, and I think we will continue to do as we have done in our past, our duty." In his last prepared speech, which he was to deliver at the Trade Mart in Dallas on Nov. 22, JFK pledged aid to nations opposing "the ambitions of international communism." He pointed out that "our assistance to these nations can be painful, risky, and costly, as is true in Southeast Asia today. But we dare not weary of the task." The President identified nine nations, including Vietnam, that did not have "the resources to maintain the forces" needed to resist "the threat of communist aggression." Kennedy warned that he might be required to send combat troops to Vietnam: "Reducing our efforts to train, equip, and assist their armies can only encourage communist penetration and require in time the increased deployment of American combat forces." The President closed that speech by boldly proclaiming, "We in this country, in this generation--by destiny rather than choice--are the watchmen on the wall of world freedom." To believe Schlesinger and Stone, we must dismiss Kennedy's strong public statements supporting South Vietnam and conclude that he was one of the biggest liars in American history. In rejecting Stone's withdrawal thesis, McGeorge Bundy, JFK's Special Assistant for National Security Affairs, states, "Kennedy didn't hide his views: his public statements were what he believed." Schlesinger's and Stone's contrived Vietnam withdrawal plan is refuted by Schlesinger's own source, the Pentagon Papers, by the words of Kennedy himself, and is denied emphatically by JFK's closest advisers. Ted Sorenson, Special Assistant to President Kennedy, often described as JFK's "alter ego," explains the Vietnam policy Kennedy held in November, 1963, in his biography of the President: "He was simply going to weather it out, a nasty, untidy mess to which there was no other acceptable solution. Talk of abandoning so unstable an ally and so costly a commitment ~only makes it easy for the communists,' said the President, ~I think we should stay.'" Secretary of State Dean Rusk told the BBC he doesn't believe Kennedy planned to withdraw all American troops from Vietnam after the 1964 election: "I had hundreds of talks with President Kennedy about Vietnam and on no single occasion did he ever express to me any ideas on that line." He adds that "Kennedy never said anything like that to me, and we discussed Vietnam--oh, I'd say hundreds of times. He never said it, never suggested it, never hinted at it, and I simply do not believe it." Rusk rejects on moral grounds Schlesinger's callous claim that Kennedy sent Americans to Vietnam for political reasons: "If he had decided in 1962 or 1963 that he would take the troops out after the election of 1964, sometime during 1965, then that would have been a suggestion that he would leave Americans in uniform in a combat situation for domestic political purposes, and no President can do that." What would Kennedy have done The American public can not know what specific military strategy Kennedy would have followed to meet the crisis in Vietnam in late 1963 and 1964. In December, 1963, Robert McNamara, following another inspection trip to Vietnam, told Pres. Johnson, "the situation is very disturbing. Current trends, unless reversed in the next two or three months, will lead to neutralization at best and more likely to a communist controlled state." In March, 1964, McNamara and Taylor returned from South Vietnam to inform LBJ that conditions had "unquestionably been growing worse." Later in 1964, ominous developments changed the entire nature of the ground war in South Vietnam. According to Mike Mansfield, who headed a special Congressional delegation to Vietnam, "about the end of 1964, North Vietnamese regular troops began to enter South Vietnam" armed with the sophisticated AK-47 communist weapons system. To meet this crisis, would JFK have escalated U.S. involvement in Vietnam in 1965? According to Robert Kennedy, "we'd face that when we came to it. It didn't have to be faced at that time." Given his longstanding determination to aid South Vietnam, reaffirmed on the day of his death, Pres. Kennedy probably would have met the growing emergency with U.S. military force. According to Sorenson, JFK would "not turn back from that commitment. He ordered the departments to be prepared for the introduction of combat troops, should they prove to be necessary." Walter Rostow, one of Kennedy's advisers for national security affairs, explains that, "had President Kennedy lived, he would have been forced to follow the same course toward escalation of the Vietnam War that President Johnson did, and possibly would have done so earlier." Kennedy told Rostow, "I've got to hold Southeast Asia come hell or high water." Significantly, Kennedy's principal foreign policy advisers--Rusk, McNamara, Lodge, Taylor, and Rostow--were retained by Lyndon Johnson. Firm in their recommendations to Johnson to fight in Vietnam, would they have advised Kennedy differently? Convincing testimony against the Schlesinger-Stone withdrawal thesis comes from Robert Kennedy, described by Schlesinger as "his brother's total partner." Robert Kennedy frequently expressed JFK's determination to stay in South Vietnam. Sent by the President to Southeast Asia in 1962, he told a Saigon news conference, "we are going to win in Vietnam. We will remain here until we do win." In May, 1964, six months after the President's death, Robert Kennedy explained his brother's Vietnam policy in a private interview with John Bartlow Martin for the oral history program of the John F. Kennedy Library. He stated unequivocally that the President did not plan to withdraw troops from Vietnam: "The President felt that he had a strong, overwhelming reason for being in Vietnam and that we should win the war in Vietnam." Martin asked, "There was never any consideration given to pulling out?" Kennedy responded, "No." Martin asked, "But the President was convinced that we had to stay in there?" Kennedy replied, "Yes." Martin asked, "And we couldn't lose it?" Kennedy answered, "Yes." Without proof that John F. Kennedy planned to withdraw U.S. troops from Vietnam, Stone's basic thesis in "JFK" collapses. According to the Dec. 23, 1991, issue of Newsweek, "If there was no clear sign that Kennedy was going to pull out of Vietnam, there is no clear motive for Stone's grand conspiracy to kill him." In 1992, Richard Nixon bluntly discarded with an epithet Stone's repugnant accusation that the U.S. government, including Lyndon Johnson, killed Kennedy. If Stone's premise is true--that the military-industrial complex would murder presidents to prevent them from withdrawing U.S. forces from Vietnam--these assassins killed the wrong president. Why would they assassinate Kennedy, who had opposed withdrawal, and spare Nixon, who, beginning in 1969, removed all 549,000 U.S. combat troops from Vietnam? Stone's "JFK" can not be dismissed as a mere movie. Despite his pious pronouncement in the film that "the truth is the most important value we have," Stone instead follows Hitler's maxim, as stated in Mein Kampf, that "the masses fall victim more easily to a big lie than a small one," and, "even with the explanation of the matter, the masses long hestiate and vacillate and accept at least some ground as true. Consequently, from the most bold lie something will remain." It is clear that much will remain of Stone's big lie. Stone is a brilliant propagandist, and his film is powerful and persuasive. For many people, "JFK" will be the correct account of the assassination of Pres. John F. Kennedy. Title: The disease J.F.K. tried to keep secret. (Addison's disease) (Brief Article) Citation: Time, Oct 19, 1992 v140 n16 p24(2) ------------------------------------------------------------- Subjects: Presidents_Health aspects Addison's disease_Diagnosis People: Kennedy, John F._Health aspects Reference #: A12752805 ============================================================= Full Text COPYRIGHT Time Inc. 1992 TITLE: DISEASE J F K TRIED TO KEEP SECRET DOCTORS CONFIRM RUMORS OF THE PRESIDENTS ADRENAL GLAND PROBLEMS TITLE: WEEK HEALTH SCIENCE During the 1960 presidential campaign, rumors surfaced that candidate John F. Kennedy was suffering from Addison's disease, an incurable, potentially fatal deterioration of the adrenal glands. If true, the information could have influenced the outcome of what ended up being a very tight election. But Kennedy denied it, and the press, as it would later do with other unsavory talk about the Kennedy clan, let the matter rest. Now an article in the Journal of the American Medical Association has finally set the record straight. According to the author, Journal editor George Lundberg, one of the pathologists who assisted at the President's 1963 autopsy has confirmed that Kennedy's adrenal glands, which normally sit atop the kidneys, were nowhere to be found. Lundberg has also confirmed that someone described only as "Case 3 . . . a man 37 years of age," treated for Addison's disease in 1954 at the Hospital for Special Surgery in New York City, was in fact Kennedy. Although Addison's is incurable, it is fully treatable, and was in the 1950s. But people are very touchy about the health problems of potential Presidents. If the story had been confirmed 32 years ago, Richard Nixon might have taken office a lot sooner. Title: Acknowledging the past. (Dallas creates John F. Kennedy exhibit) Citation: Time, Aug 31, 1987 v130 p23(1) ------------------------------------------------------------- Subjects: Historic sites_Texas Texas. School Book Depository_Exhibitions Dallas, Texas_Exhibitions People: Kennedy, John F._Exhibitions Locations: Dallas Reference #: A5144263 ============================================================= Full Text COPYRIGHT Time Inc. 1987 American Notes DALLAS Acknowledging The Past For many in Dallas, the Texas School Book Depository has been a monument to the most shameful day in the city's history. For years tourists have trekked to the red-brick building where Lee Harvey Oswald fired the shots that killed President John F. Kennedy. But the structure was closed to the public until 1981, when it was declared a Texas historic site, and visitors still are not allowed near Oswald's sixth-floor sniper perch. Now Dallas has decided to acknowledge the continuing interest in the site. The city's landmark commission gave approval for a 60-ft. elevator tower that will run to the building's sixth floor, where a historical exhibit will detail the President's murder. The $3 million project is scheduled to open by the fall of 1988, the 25th anniversary of the assassination. ''Dallas has come to terms with worldwide curiosity,'' declared Dallas County Chief Executive Lee Jackson. ''We'll present the building to the world and let people draw their own conclusions.'' Title: Conspiracy to end conspiracies. (Oliver Stone's new film 'JFK') Authors: Bethell, Tom Citation: National Review, Dec 16, 1991 v43 n23 p48(3) ------------------------------------------------------------- Subjects: Presidents_Assassination Conspiracy_Portrayals, depictions, etc. New Orleans, Louisiana_Politics and government JFK (Motion picture)_Criticism, interpretation, etc. People: Stone, Oliver_Criticism, interpretation, etc.; Kennedy, John F._Crimes against; Shaw, Clay_Cases; Garrison, Jim_Public opinion Locations: New Orleans, Louisiana Reference #: A11732977 ============================================================= Abstract: Oliver Stone challenges all sense of credibility with his new motion picture 'JFK.' His conspiracy theory of John F. Kennedy's assassination is blurred by the homage he pays to Jim Garrison and his relentless investigation of Clay Shaw based on his 'links' to anyone and everyone. ============================================================= Full Text COPYRIGHT National Review Inc. 1991 WHEN I HEARD Oliver Stone was delving into the mystery of the Kennedy assassination and making a high-budget movie about it, I felt a slight chill of apprehension. Would I be unmasked as a CIA agent? A friend of mine, who has been in regular contact with Stone in recent months, called me from Los Angeles. I asked him if he thought I could reach Stone by phone. Improbable, he said. Stone regarded me as a "serious enemy," and would be unlikely to grant me an interview on this subject or any other. I was relieved to learn that I was not actually going to be in the movie (scheduled for Christmas release). According to Robert Sam Anson's cover story in Esquire, Stone "needs his enemies to do good work." So I like to think that I may nonetheless have indirectly made an artistic contribution to Stone's latest opus. Just to clear this up: through a series of flukes too tedious to relate, in the late fall of 1966 I found employment in District Attorney Jim Garrison's then-secret investigation of the Kennedy assassination. This meant going to Dallas, where I proved to be quite hopeless as a detective; then to Washington, D.C., where some English journalists taught me to play poker and I spent enjoyable hours at the National Archives perusing nonclassified records of the investigation carried out by the FBI and Secret Service; then back to New Orleans. Jim Garrison is the hero of Stone's movie Kevin Costner plays the role. Garrison himself, recently retired from the Louisiana Court of Appeals, plays Earl Warren. Oliver Stone told Anson that he saw Garrison as "somewhat like a Jimmy Stewart character in an old Capra movie." Garrison is depicted as the truth-seeking official who bucks the establishment and presses forward against powerful, shadowy enemies. That's not my recollection of life in Garrison's office, however. The truth is that a quite hilarious movie could with accuracy have been made about the Garrison investigation. But that would hardly be Stone's style. At his best, Garrison did have a wonderful sense of humor. Most of the time, however, he lived in a strange world of his own imagination-which he sometimes confused with the real world. His most striking characteristic as DA was a truly astounding recklessness and irresponsibility. We were an oddly assorted team. Among my fellow investigators was Mort Sahl, the satirist, who really did have credentials issued by the DA's office, and was in fact fondly regarded at Garrison's HQ at Tulane and Broad. Unlike many other people who came to help out, Sahl didn't cause trouble for us by feeding Garrison's bizarre fantasies. Sahl, too, could be marvelously funny, and I do look back fondly on some very entertaining evenings with him, Garrison, a former FBI agent named Bill Turner, and one or two others. Another and rather more somber gumshoe was a man known to us all as Bill Boxley, a stocky, grizzle-haired fellow, in demeanor very much the insurance-claims adjuster, with his ever-present briefcase and an air of diligent, sober appraisal. In fact, he told me that he was a reformed alcoholic, and I recall him sitting through many an evening, listening poker-faced to Garrison's fantastic soliloquies, drinking endless coffee and smoking cigarettes. Boxley had told Garrison that his real name was William Wood and that he had worked for the CIA in the 1950s. "Garrison started to make accusations about CIA involvement in the Kennedy assassination shortly after he hired Boxley to work on the case," I wrote over twenty years ago in an unpublished, still classified (by me) manuscript about the case. (The time is still not right for its release, I fear.) BY DECEMBER 1968, however, Garrison's staff was beginning to tire of filing mischievous charges and subpoenaing unknown individuals all over the country-netting Garrison headlines, but leaving in their wake a stream of courtroom embarrassments for his lawyers to clean up. Boxley would have to go, Garrison's aides felt, and to achieve this they persuaded the boss that Boxley was not merely a former but a current CIA employee-and working actively to undermine his case by feeding him false leads. Garrison's chief trial lawyer, James Alcock, told me at the time: "I don't believe Boxley was an [active] agent, but he was giving Jim [Garrison] so much bull we had to get rid of him somehow." Poor old Boxley must have felt terribly let down. It's true that he led Garrison astray but he did so out of bad judgment, not perfidy. He certainly wasn't secretly plotting against Garrison with shadowy figures in Langley, Virginia. The big test for Jim Garrison came early in 1969, with the trial of a New Orleans businessman named Clay Shaw. He had been charged with conspiring to assassinate Kennedy, along with Lee Harvey Oswald and an Eastern Air Lines pilot called David Ferrie. Ferrie himself had died (of a cerebral hemorrhage, the coroner ruled) a few days after news of Garrison's investigation was published in the New Orleans States-Item, on February 22, 1967. It's worth noting that there was great jubilation in Garrison's office when Ferrie so fortuitously died. The news of Garrison's investigation had generated worldwide publicity, and now his leading suspect was dead. The staff felt that this was a golden opportunity for Garrison to get out while he was ahead: Declare sadly that he had tried to find the truth but that Ferrie had mysteriously died. The assistant DAs and various police investigators working for Garrison assumed that the boss would quietly close down the investigation. Instead Garrison forged ahead recklessly, charging Clay Shaw with plotting the assassination of the century. Everyone in Garrison's office knew that the case against Shaw was an embarrassment. The principal witness, Perry Russo, who claimed he had seen Shaw, Ferrie, and Oswald at a party discussing an assassination, was not credible, and his story was soon exposed by Jim Phelan in the Saturday Evening Post. Nearly two years elapsed between the indictment and trial of Shaw. In that time Garrison would frequently reassure the staff that the trial would never take place. He was confident that Shaw, like Ferrie before him, would die unexpectedly, or perhaps that the Federal Government would close us down permanently, or that something drastic would intervene. The rest of us weren't quite so optimistic. The dreaded trial date kept approaching, and I remember Jim Alcock gloomily saying one day that "we're looking at a directed verdict." (In which the judge concludes that there is so little evidence that he directs the jury to acquit the defendant.) Imagine the pleasure, then, when one day an accountant in New York contacted the office and told us he was prepared to testify that he had been at a party in New Orleans in 1963, and there had heard Ferrie and Shaw talking about killing Kennedy. His name was Charles Spiesel. Two lawyers were promptly dispatched to New York to interview the man. On his return to New Orleans, one of them said of Spiesel: "Well, he'd make a great witness, but he' crazy." How crazy? "He fingerprints his children in the morning to make sure that the Federal Government hasn't substituted dead ringers in the middle of the night." Oh, that kind of crazy. But then again . . . apart from that . . . his demeanor was normal, he held down a good job, he did professional work. (Lingering in the air was the unstated question: Would defense counsel think to ask a surprise witness, Do you fingerprint your children?) Later I found out that they really were planning to use Spiesel as a witness against Shaw. There is no "discovery" law in Louisiana, meaning that the prosecution can put surprise witnesses on the stand at the last minute, without having to warn defense counsel. I knew Clay Shaw was innocent; in fact I think everyone in the DA's office also knew it, except for Garrison himself-who was incapable of thinking straight on the subject. For me, this was not an easy time. It seemed that the only result of my interest in the Kennedy assassination was going to be to help convict an innocent man of the crime. Earlier, I had met one of Clay Shaw's lawyers socially. Now I decided to help him, and so I transmitted to him a memo I had written, listing the names and addresses of those who would testify against Shaw, also summarizing their testimony (but nothing about their backgrounds or oddities of character). I also told Garrison what I had done, before the Shaw trial began. In retrospect, especially in view of later testimony linking Garrison to organized crime, I may have been lucky to get out of there alive. (I always liked Garrison, though, and I think he knew that.) Anyway, the trial began, and I was later told that the private investigator's report on Spiesel, flown in from New York, only just arrived in time for the cross examination: he was already on the witness stand. Spiesel's background did come out. On the stand, he cheerfully estimated that he had been hypnotized against his will fifty or sixty times by secret enemies. Shaw was acquitted, the jury deliberating for less than an hour. Great secrecy has surrounded the Stone movie, but various assassination buffs and reporters have acquired copies of the script. One who did so was George Lardner Jr. of the Washington Post. He reports that the character in the movie who leaks the witness list to Shaw's lawyers is William Boxley. With the trial about to begin an aide says to Garrison: "He [Boxley] is working for the Federal Government. It means they have everything, Jim. All our witnesses, our strategy for the trial." Lardner adds: "This serves as the excuse for the disastrous testimony of Charles Spiesel. He was one of Boxley's witnesses, chief,' the Stone script quotes one of Garrison's prosecutors as saying. 'I'm sorry. He was totally sane when we talked."' No, he wasn't. And Spiesel wasn't one of Boxley's witnesses, either. Nor was Boxley working for the feds. Why, then, is Boxley given this unflattering role in the movie, when I might have more appropriately been cast in the role? Boxley smoked too many cigarettes, and in 1980 died of emphysema. He can't sue. Was I working for the feds, or MI-6, or whatever? No, but I would guess Stone thinks otherwise. Since learning that I was probably on Stone's enemies list, I have taken the trouble to see some of his movies (Born on the Fourth of July, The Doors, Wall Street). Even when one disagrees with the political point of view expressed-and his movies are intensely political-they strike me as being well made and eminently "watchable." I am told by someone who has seen parts of JFK that the Dealey Plaza scenes in Dallas are brilliantly reconstructed, and include footage from the home movie filmed by Abraham Zapruder. This shows Kennedy being thrown violently backward as he is hit in the head by a rifle bullet. Oswald and the Texas School Book Depository, of course, were behind the presidential limousine. Watching that sequence, one finds it very hard to believe that Oswald fired the fatal shot. About 56 per cent of Americans believe that Kennedy was killed as a result of a conspiracy. I imagine that number will increase after this film is released. WAS THERE a conspiracy? Unexpectedly, I find myself more suspicious of the Warren Commission's "lone gunman" finding than I was when I last wrote about this subject (in the midSeventies). Oswald must have been (at the least) involved in the assassination, however, and it is counterproductive to argue, as Jim Garrison does, that Oswald was "totally, unequivocally, completely innocent." If so, why did Garrison charge Shaw with conspiring with an innocent man? If an innocent Oswald was framed, as some think, it was certainly very obliging of him to show up for work on the morning of November 22 carrying a package of "curtain rods." Still, Oswald's background is certainly very peculiar and doesn't fit the "lone assassin" profile. He worked as a radar technician at a U-2 base in Japan, later defecting to the Soviet Union. The U-2 spy plane was shot down while he was there, and the pilot, Gary Powers, later said that Oswald could have provided crucial information about its operation to the Soviet authorities. It's very hard to believe (as alleged) that the intelligence agencies were not interested in such a person on his return to the United States. Oswald's association with the mysterious Count George de Mohrenschildt in Dallas in 1962-63 raises many questions about intelligence links. (De Mohrenschildt wrote to Garrison and offered to help, but Garrison showed no interest and as far as I know never responded.) Likewise, Oswald's employment by a firm where government-classified photographs were analyzed, his knowledge of "microdots," his visit to the Dallas FBI office a few days before the assassination, the note that he left there that was destroyed on the day of the assassination, his odd visit to the Cuban consulate in Mexico City in September 1963, his puzzling association with Cubans in New Orleans that summer (Garrison never got to the bottom of that), the (anti-Castro) 544 Camp Street" address on some of the pro-Castro literature Oswald was handing out in New Orleans (again, never cleared up by Garrison), and a number of other points, not to mention the physical and ballistic evidence in Dallas, are more than sufficient to explain why there is still a lot of interest in this baffling subject. The House Committee's 1979 conclusion that President Kennedy "probably was assassinated as a result of a conspiracy" does not strike me as being entirely wrongheaded. It's a puzzle where the pieces just don't fit together properly and people are going to continue trying to reassemble them. Shaping up in the news media has been something close to a "Stop Oliver Stone" campaign. It's interesting that this righteous wrath was never aroused by his earlier anti-Vietnam-War or decadence-celebrating movies. Anson mentioned Stone's "lengthening list of opponents, which unites foes who've been fighting over the Kennedy assassination for decades." Stone, he writes, has been accused of "sullying the memory of a martyred President; of recklessness and irresponsibility, mendacity and McCarthyism, paranoia and dementia-even of treason." It's enough to engender a certain sympathy for the man. It does strike me that if the Vietnam War is fair game for revisionism, so is the Kennedy assassination. Just so long as we remember that Clay Shaw and I had nothing to do with it. Title: What if Oswald had stood trial? A riveting courtroom drama based on the Kennedy assassination. (simulated trial of Lee Harvey Oswald televised) Authors: Zoglin, Richard Citation: Time, Dec 1, 1986 v128 p60(1) ------------------------------------------------------------- Subjects: On Trial: Lee Harvey Oswald (television program)_Criticism, interpretation, etc. Mock trials_Portrayals, depictions, etc. Trials_Drama People: Bunton, Lucius_Performances; Spence, Gerry_Performances; Bugliosi, Vincent T._Performances; Oswald, Lee Harvey_Investigations; Kennedy, John F._Assassination Reference #: A4539308 ============================================================= Full Text COPYRIGHT Time Inc. 1986 Twenty-three years after the fatal shots rang out in Dallas, questions about the assassination of John F. Kennedy still reverberate. The 1964 Warren Report concluded that Lee Harvey Oswald, acting alone, shot the President from the Texas School Book Depository. But 15 years later, the House Select Committee on Assassinations, while agreeing that Oswald was the murderer, decided he was most probably part of a conspiracy. Though some of the evidence leading to that finding has been discredited, conspiracy theories continue to proliferate, tracing the crime to everything from a Mafia cabal to the CIA. Now an extraordinary television trial has tried to shed some light on the controversy. In On Trial: Lee Harvey Oswald, a two- part, 5 1/2-hour program that de buted on Showtime last weekend and will be repeated several times in upcoming weeks, the case against Oswald is argued for the first time in a courtroom setting under the rules of courtroom evidence. Real witnesses are exam- ined by real attorneys, and the testimony is evaluated by a jury. The verdict: guilty of murder. Polled on a separate question, the jury decided by a majority vote that Oswald was the sole assassin. This unique experiment in reality programming was conceived by London Weekend Television, which staged a mock trial of Richard III for British TV in 1984. Looking for another historical crime to ''try'' on TV, the producers turned to the Kennedy assassination. Unlike earlier fictional treatments like the 1977 ABC movie The Trial of Lee Harvey Oswald, the program has no script and (except for extras) uses no actors. Two prominent attorneys were enlisted to argue the case. For the prosecution: Vincent Bugliosi, 52, the former Los Angeles deputy district attorney who prosecuted Charles Manson. For the defense: Gerry Spence, 57, who successfully represented Karen Silkwood's family in a suit against the Kerr-McGee Corp. Lucius Bunton, 61, a U.S. district judge from Texas, was selected to preside, and a jury was chosen from the Dallas jury rolls. (Oswald is represented by an empty chair.) All of them were flown to London for the three-day taping, which resulted in 18 hours of testimony; Showtime, the program's co-producer, plans to air the full-length version next year. The program's research staff spent 18 months tracking down some four dozen witnesses, 21 of whom appear in the TV trial. Those testifying for the prosecution range from experts in pathology and ballistics to former Oswald acquaintances like Buell Wesley Frazier, who drove him to work on the day of the assassination. The defense witnesses include Dr. Cyril Wecht, a pathologist, who argues that a single bullet could not (as the official version states) have struck both Kennedy and Texas Governor John Connally, and others who give evidence sugesting that Oswald was the patsy in a conspiracy, possibly involving Oswald's killer, Jack Ruby. The trial includes a detailed examination of the famous film taken by Abraham Za pruder, including the horrific frames in which the President's head literally explodes from a gunshot. Though most of the witnesses have testified previously, they have never before faced cross- examination. Both attorneys are persuasive advocates. Bugliosi deflates some of the more outlandish conspiracy theories with rapid-fire probes. Spence, a drawling, flamboyant courtroom performer, homes in shrewdly on ambiguities and unanswered questions in the official account. Some questions seem rather conclusively settled. The Zapruder film, for ex ample, shows Kennedy lurching backward after the shot to his head, implying that the bullet came from somewhere in front of the car. But the medical evidence leaves no doubt that both shots came from the rear; as one expert explains, the backward lurch could have been caused by an involuntary neuromuscular reaction to the devastating bullet. Other testimony has the drama of the unfathomable. Perhaps most compelling is the appearance of Ruth Paine, the school psychologist with whom Oswald's wife Marina lived before the assassina- tion. Holding up bravely under Spence's prickly cross-examination, she describes Oswald's actions before the assassination in articulate but quavering words. Paine: It's important that people understand that Lee was a very ordinary person, that people can kill a President without that being something that shows on them in advance. Spence: Is it really your purpose to try to defame this man in some way? Paine: I think it's really important for history that a full picture of the man be seen. Spence: Yes, so do I. The show-biz demands of television do some damage to the program's credibility. Because it is not a real trial, witnesses could not be subpoenaed (Marina Oswald was among the few who refused to appear). The lawyers agreed to adhere to a time limit on questioning, and the number of witnesses was streamlined. Complained Spence after the taping: ''All kinds of inadmissible hearsay got into evidence, necessitated by the fact that this was a three-day trial instead of a three-month trial.'' Nevertheless, the participants contend, the program contributes importantly to the assassination record. ''I defy anyone who is familiar with the Kennedy assassi nation,'' says Bugliosi, ''to look at the 18 hours of tape or examine the trial transcript and say that the gut issues of the case were not addressed or were treated cosmeti cally.'' Even for casual observers raised on Perry Mason, On Trial: Lee Harvey Oswald provides a fascinating lesson in history and the law. And, not incidentally, TV's best courtroom drama ever. Title: Remembering Dallas. (assassination of John F. Kennedy; American Survey) Citation: The Economist, Nov 26, 1988 v309 n7578 p25(1) ------------------------------------------------------------- Subjects: Assassination_Analysis People: Kennedy, John F._Assassination; Oswald, Lee Harvey_Evaluation Reference #: A6850020 ============================================================= Full Text COPYRIGHT Economist Newspaper Ltd. (England) 1988 WASHINGTON, DC When Lee Harvey Oswald's bullet (for his it was, without a doubt) tore into President john Kennedy's brain on November 22 1963 on a street in Dallas, the Washington correspondent of The Economist wrote of the country having been "shocked half out of its wits". The shock, having run a subterranean course these 25 years, has raised its head in full force at the anniversary, as the blast of coverage by print, radio and above all television (for the assassination was a huge television event) appears to witness. The outpouring is full of perplexity. People feel that the nation suffered a loss not to be measured by Kennedy's modest legislative, political and diplomatic achievements. The feeling is not baseless: there was about the Kennedy presidency a class, a style, a youthfulness, a grace and wit and imagination that are not quantifiable. These things were felt not only in America, but around the world, where the outpouring of distress at the assassination was unexampled. Matters are made no better by the difficulty that the public still has in accepting the official interpretation of the event, arrived at in 1964 by the Warren Commission over which the chief justice of the United States, Earl Warren, presided. The commission concluded that the assassination did not result from any conspiracy, but was carried out by Oswald acting alone; that the three shots fired were his, and President Kennedy and Governor john Connally of Texas (who was wounded) were struck by bullets from only one direction; that police carelessness then allowed jack Ruby, a night-club owner with Mafia connections, to kill Oswald, but that Ruby, too, was acting for nobody but himself. The public questioning of these conclusions will not be silent. A poll taken jointly by the New York Times and CBS News last month indicated that only 13% of the persons questioned believed Oswald was acting alone, while 66% believed there was a conspiracy. That people kill each other for no reason is common knowledge, but there is still a basic implausibility about it. Committee has followed committee, book has followed book, facts have been piled up in vast numbers, but gaps remain and analysts pick at them. A contributory factor is that in the turbulence of the event, some of the procedures followed were imperfect. Even before the assassination, the staff people accompanying President Kennedy and Vice-President Lyndon johnson felt themselves in a hostile place. Kennedy himself said, when about to leave Fort Worth for Dallas on his last morning, "We're headed into nut country now." When he was pronounced dead, the overwhelming impulse of his entourage was to carry his body back to Washington in the utmost haste. About the only calm ones seem to have been Mrs Kennedy, whose deportment was flawless through the whole sequence from murder to state funeral, and Vice-President johnson, firmly imposing order on the transfer of office. Bullets and bits of lead were collected without precise documentation. Whether the same bullet could have killed Kennedy and wounded Mr Connally is argued about to this day. The remonstrations of local officials, that such procedures as autopsy and inquest ought to be carried out in the county where the death had occurred, were violently brushed aside. The autopsy performed at Bethesda Naval Hospital was described on a Nova telecast, shown on many public television stations in the past week, as deficient in several important respects. The same programme aired the unexplained question of why the body arrived for autopsy in a different coffin and a different bag from those in which it left the Dallas hospital. What became of Kennedy's damaged brain nobody seems to know. The dissenters, or some of them, are trying to show that the corpse may have been tampered with in order to support one theory and discredit another. Since the Warren report appeared, several commission members have complained that, out of deference to Kennedy family wishes, they were not allowed to see the autopsy and x-ray photographs, but had to be content with hearing the conclusions of the medical witnesses. Theories of conspiracy and suppression of evidence did not command such a ready hearing in 1963 as they do today, when a string of deceptions, cover-ups, scandals and fiascos has worn public confidence ragged. Some disclosures of the intervening period have fed scepticism about the Warren Commission's work. It came out in the 1970s that the Central Intelligence Agency mounted a whole series of assassination plots against Mr Fidel Castro between 1960 and 1965, thus providing him with a motive for acting against President Kennedy (which, so far as anybody knows, he did not do). The CIA did not disclose this fact to the Warren Commission, even though one of the commission's members, Allen Dulles, had been director of the CIA until 1961. Similarly the Federal Bureau of Investigation waited until 1975 to come up with information about small transactions which it had with Oswald and with Ruby that the commission would have been glad to get in 1963. The assassination literature flourishes. Mr David Belin, the Des Moines lawyer who was a counsel to the Warren Commission, is about to publish his book "Final Disclosure". He will maintain that the commission was right. "The Great Expectations of john Connally", by james Reston, junior, will come out next year. He will recall Oswald's grievance against Governor Connally, arising from the time when Mr Connally was secretary of the navy and Oswald was stripped of his honourable discharge from the marine corps. Mr Reston's conclusion, unless he changes his mind, will be that it was not the president, but Governor Connally, whom Oswald was out to kill. Title: A shattering afternoon in Dallas. (Kennedy Assassination special section) Authors: Sidey, Hugh Citation: Time, Nov 28, 1988 v132 n22 p45(1) ------------------------------------------------------------- Subjects: Assassination_Influence Presidents_Assassination People: Kennedy, John F._Assassination Reference #: A6832222 ============================================================= Full Text COPYRIGHT Time Inc. 1988 Assassination was impossible. John Kennedy, with Jackie beside him in her raspberry pink suit, was too young, too exuberant to fall. The Secret Service, snooping beneath manhole covers, scanning for hostile eyes, was invincible. There would be no darkness on this bright day in Dallas. How fragile our myths, how fleeting certainty. Perhaps we knew when the first sound reached the press bus behind Kennedy's limousine. A distant crack, another. A pause, and another crack. Something was dangerously off-key. Bob Pierpoint of CBS stood up, and our eyes met for ever so tiny an instant. We knew but did not want to believe. ''What was that?'' he asked. Doug Kiker, now of NBC, then a reporter for the New York Herald Tribune, was typing on his lap. He paused. Kennedy's limousine had turned the corner beneath a boxy, ugly building and sunk out of sight. The pigeons -- the famous pigeons of death -- were rising and swooping under the trees. Pierpoint stood still for a couple more seconds, Kiker pecked a time or two. Three seconds, four. Then reality rushed with terrifying clarity down that short street beneath the Texas School Book Depository. We were never the same, nor was the world. The story at the core was the stuff of everyday American violence. A killer and a city street and a wild ride to an emergency room and a young body too broken to repair. But it was Camelot and this was John Kennedy, and television now rushed in to make the dreadful event an epic. Madness descended. Motorcycle cops jumped curbs, machines roaring over the grass in a ballet of aimless panic. The crowd on the grassy knoll looked like it had been swept with a giant scythe. The street was empty, a stark, lifeless slab of concrete that smelled of disaster. Kennedy's motorcade had been chopped in two like a luckless centipede, the front end blown to God knew where, the rear end writhing and thrashing. The presidential limousine rested at Parkland Hospital. A grim young man was washing away the blood and flesh that had splattered the leather upholstery. The sight was shattering. The red roses given to Jackie were still in the car -- crushed, broken. The young man in his neat dark suit, sleeves pushed up, swabbed the seats. They glistened in their miserable wetness. Beside the car was a bucket with brownish red water. If any doubt remained about this calamity, it was swept away in one glance at that bucket. So simple, so hideous. The nurses' classroom at Parkland became a vortex of the world's clamor for information. Each word from that tiny point of a suburban hospital was flung across continents. Two priests left the hospital, silent, sagging. Their duty was plainly over, whatever it had been. Asked if Kennedy was dead or alive, they remained silent for a few seconds. Then one of them blurted the terrible truth: ''He's dead, all right.'' The four words were carried back to the temporary pressroom, then exploded around the world. The tragedy enlarged through the afternoon. First had come the awareness of the death of a man, a friend, a father and a husband. Then numbed nerves began to grapple with the fact that the Government too was brain-dead for the moment. There was the sense of a beast in convulsion at Parkland. Police rushed here and there. Vehicles circled, darted. A small coterie with Vice President Lyndon Johnson . . . No, try it again. A small coterie with President Lyndon Johnson dashed for Love Field and Air Force One. A piece of lead weighing less than an ounce had blown away a single mind, and history had been halted in its tracks, pushed back a generation, then hesitantly restarted, but in a different direction. Tragedy picks out its participants without regard for position or prestige. Press secretary Pierre Salinger was flying to Japan with a Cabinet delegation, so Malcolm Kilduff, his deputy, became the link between the trauma room at Parkland and the world beyond. On a torn fragment of paper, he crafted in a few short sentences the message that would sadden the globe. ''President John F. Kennedy died . . .'' As newsmen shouted, Kilduff sought out an empty room with a friend. The scrap of paper with its devastating message quivered like a leaf in his fingers. He lighted a cigarette. Then something broke. ''I saw that man's head,'' he sobbed. ''I couldn't believe it. I nearly died. Oh, my God. Oh, my God.'' At noon John Kennedy had grinned and waved back as the cheers cascaded down the Dallas streets. Two hours later what was left of him re-entered the public domain on the loading dock of Parkland Hospital. ''I can't stand it,'' muttered one of the journalists watching. ''Like dirty laundry out the back door.'' Jackie carried what dignity was left. Face stained, clothes marked with dried blood, eyes straight ahead, hand on the bronze casket as it was wheeled down the ramp. Several aides walked beside Jackie. The whole bright prospect of their new world shaped by their friend and leader had been vaporized in an instant by Oswald. Jackie was helped into the white hearse to ride with Kennedy's body to Air Force One. Everything about the scene was small and colorless -- casket salesman, disheveled reporters, unpainted concrete, exhaust fumes, arguing police and security men, traffic grinding by on a freeway. The new Government formed in the fuselage of Air Force One, yet another ritual that mocked dignity. But it was, perhaps, that magnificent plane that began to reclaim the majesty of the presidency. With the body of Kennedy onboard, the new President invested formally, Colonel James Swindal taxied his plane out on the emptied runway of Love Field. The ship paused in lonely splendor, then lifted off into a blue sky, clean and beautiful even in that mournful flight. Title: Did the mob kill J.F.K? (Kennedy Assassination special section) Authors: Magnuson, Ed Citation: Time, Nov 28, 1988 v132 n22 p42(3) ------------------------------------------------------------- Subjects: Assassination_Investigations Presidents_Assassination Organized crime_Investigations People: Kennedy, John F._Assassination Reference #: A6832182 ============================================================= Full Text COPYRIGHT Time Inc. 1988 Some portentous voices out of the underworld a quarter-century ago: ''Kennedy's not going to make it to the ((1964)) election -- he's going to be hit.'' -- Santo Trafficante, the top Florida mobster, to an FBI informer in August 1962. ''You know what they say in Sicily: if you want to kill a dog, you don't cut off the tail, you cut off the head.'' -- Carlos Marcello, Mafia boss in New Orleans, to an acquaintance that same month, explaining why President John Kennedy, not Attorney General Robert Kennedy, would be killed. ''There is a price on the President's head. Somebody will kill Kennedy when he comes down South.'' -- Bernard Tregle, a New Orleans restaurant owner allegedly associated with Marcello, within hearing of one of his employees in April 1963. Out of the mouths of such sinister characters the assassination-conspiracy theorists of the 1980s have fashioned the latest in a long-running series of explanations of what may forever remain unexplainable: why Lee Harvey Oswald killed John F. Kennedy in Dallas on Nov. 22, 1963, exactly 25 years ago this week. In an anniversary spate of books and TV specials, the trendy theory is that the Mafia arranged the President's murder and the silencing of Oswald by Dallas strip-joint owner Jack Ruby. This, of course, clashes with the Warren Commission's conclusion that Oswald acted alone for his own twisted reasons and that Ruby impetuously killed the assassin to spare Jacqueline Kennedy the ordeal of a Dallas trial of her husband's slayer. As the excerpts from James Reston Jr.'s forthcoming book show, there are new twists on the lone- assassin conclusion as well. His contention that Oswald may have intended to kill Texas Governor John Connally rather than Kennedy was rather perfunctorily dismissed by the Warren Commission. Although Marina Oswald had testified to this belief, the commission's lawyers found her generally inconsistent and discounted much of what she said. The commission relied on Texas prosecutor Henry Wade for evaluation of the alleged conversation between Oswald and Ruby, overheard at Ruby's Carousel Club by Dallas lawyer Carroll Jarnagin. Wade found Jarnagin sincere in thinking he had heard Oswald offer to kill Connally so that gangsters could open up the state for their rackets, but he told the commission that the lawyer nonetheless had failed a lie-detector test on the subject. Other theories persist: that Oswald, an avowed Marxist who had gone from service as a U.S. Marin e to spend more than two years in the Soviet Union, returned as a homicidal tool of the KGB; that when he tried to go back to the Soviet Union via Cuba in September 1963, Fidel Castro's embassy in Mexico City encouraged him to kill Kennedy. The reason: Castro knew that the CIA had plotted with Chicago mobster Sam Giancana and Hollywood boss John Roselli to kill him. Support, of a sort, for the Castro-as-mastermind theory recently came from David W. Belin, a top counsel for the Warren Commission. In his new book, Final Disclosure, Belin says that ''it is possible'' Oswald was part of a Cuban conspiracy. It may have developed, Belin writes, when Oswald visited Mexico City. But wait. For the Mafia-did-it advocates, the plot is much thicker. In their view, the man who rode a bus to Mexico City before the assassination, talking to travelers about his plans to meet Fidel Castro and then raising a ruckus at the Cuban embassy, probably was not Oswald. More likely, he was an impostor, dispatched by Mafia schemers so that when the real Oswald killed the President, a Cuban-Soviet connection would be readily assumed. The existence of someone posing as Oswald would, of course, be proof in itself of a conspiracy. The possibility of an Oswald double is emphasized by the recent pin-it-on-the-Mob authors: John H. Davis (Mafia Kingfish: Carlos Marcello and the Assassination of John F. Kennedy) and David E. Scheim (Contract on America: The Mafia Murder of President John F. Kennedy). Earlier, G. Robert Blakey and Richard N. Billings suggested that underworld and anti-Castro schemers had joined to use Oswald as a handy fall guy (The Plot to Kill the President). As evidence that someone was making sure that the real Oswald would be pinned to the crime of the century, Davis cites long-familiar sightings of ''Oswald'' in the Dallas area before the assassination: practice shooting at a rifle range, acting rude while buying ammunition, test- driving a car and claiming he would soon have ''a lot of money'' to buy it (Marina insists that he did not drive). Scheim and Davis readily accept this Oswald as an impostor. But both conveniently tend to consider other alleged sightings of Oswald as genuine: sitting in a New Orleans bar with an associate of mobster Marcello's and taking money under the table; traveling with another Marcello crony three months before the assassination. In this selective reasoning, neither author seems to consider that some or all of the witnesses could be mistaken, their memories swayed by the TV images of the assassin's face. Yet, as most of the books explain, the Mob had ample reason to want Kennedy out of the way. As early as 1957, he sat on the Senate Rackets Committee chaired by Arkansas' John McClellan; Robert Kennedy was its chief counsel. The Kennedys joined in the committee's stiff grilling of such gangsters as Los Angeles' Mickey Cohen, Louisiana's Marcello and Teamsters president Jimmy Hoffa, whose underworld ties presumably led to his murder in 1975. After Robert Kennedy became Attorney General in 1961, the Justice Department waged a war against organized crime. Despite the foot dragging of FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover, who had long claimed there was no Mafia, the Justice Department indicted 116 members of the Mob. Bobby also undertook a personal vendetta against Hoffa, who was convicted of jury tampering and pension-fund fraud in separate trials in 1964. Robert Kennedy's crusade against the lesser-known Marcello, whose Mob territory embraced Texas, was almost as intense. Born in Tunisia of Sicilian parents who moved to the U.S. in 1910, Marcello later used a phony Guatemalan birth registration to avoid deportation to Italy. Fully aware that Marcello was not a Guatemalan, Kennedy in 1961 nevertheless had Immigration agents hustle him aboard a 78-seat jet as its lone passenger and deposit him in Guatemala City. Marcello and his American lawyer were later flown to El Salvador, where soldiers dumped the two expensively dressed men in the mountains. Marcello claimed he fainted three times and broke several ribs before finding his way to a small airport. Slipping secretly back into New Orleans, he vowed revenge against the Kennedys. But if the Mafia had a strong motive to kill the President, where are the connections to Oswald, the executioner, and Ruby, the silencer? They are almost too numerous to count, if you accept the claims of Scheim, a manager of computerized information at the National Institutes of Health. He seems to have amassed every reference ever printed about the J.F.K. assassination figures and mobsters, then woven these threads to fit a Mafia-hit theory. Some of the connections are provocative. Take Oswald. His father Robert died of a heart attack in August 1939. Lee, born two months later, spent much of his first three years with Lillian and Charles Murret, his aunt and uncle, in New Orleans. In April 1963, while looking for a job in New Orleans, he stayed with the Murrets. Charles Murret was a bookmaker in a gambling operation run by Marcello, and for a few months Oswald allegedly collected bets for his uncle. Marcello and other New Orleans gangsters thus may have been aware that the much publicized former Marine defector was in their midst. That summer, when Oswald passed out leaflets for his one-man chapter of the Fair Play for Cuba Committee, his literature listed 544 Camp Street as the chapter office. That building housed the offices of Guy Banister, a private investigator and former FBI agent. Banister had been hired by Marcello to help him fight court battles. Working for Banister was David Ferrie, a former airline pilot who had publicly berated Kennedy for the failure of the Bay of Pigs invasion of Cuba. In 1955 Ferrie headed a New Orleans squadron of the Civil Air Patrol. One of his cadets was Oswald. Some witnesses thought they saw the two together in Clinton, La., in September 1963. On the two weekends before the Kennedy assassination, Ferrie huddled with Marcello at a farmhouse on the mobster's delta property. Ferrie later told the FBI that he was helping Marcello map strategy for a perjury and conspiracy trial then under way. (Marcello was acquitted on the day of the assassination.) On the night of the assassination Ferrie drove 350 miles through a rainstorm to Houston, arriving at about 4 a.m. He later insisted that this was a hunting trip, but he spent hours making calls from public phones at a skating rink. To the conspiracy writers, all this meant that Marcello had been using Ferrie to help plot the killing of Kennedy. Ferrie's hasty trip, they imply, was to make sure, from telephones beyond Marcello's haunts, that Ruby killed Oswald. As for Ruby, his gangster role is magnified by the recent books that go beyond the Warren Commission's portrayal of a strip-show proprietor and police buff. Some authors see him as a small- time hood in Chicago who worked his way up in what had been Al Capone's outfit. He was sent to Dallas in 1947, they say, with other Chicago gangsters to take over that city's rackets. Other reports had Ruby being exiled to Dallas by the Chicago Mob. Yet Marcello retained control of Dallas operations, working mainly through local boss Joseph Civello. The new books claim that Ruby was close to him and other Dallas gangsters active in prostitution, narcotics and slot machines. Telephone records show that as the assassination date approached, Ruby made numerous calls to relatively high Mob figures in Chicago, New Orleans and Los Angeles, as well as to two associates of Jimmy Hoffa's. He later told the FBI that the calls were made to get union help in stopping other Dallas clubs from using amateur strippers. Yet the gangsters he called would not seem likely to trouble themselves with such petty problems. However, if Oswald were merely a ''patsy,'' as he claimed, it is difficult to understand why, after leaving the Texas School Book Depository building and picking up a revolver at his rooming house, he gunned down officer J.D. Tippit, who was about to question him. Six witnesses identified Oswald as Tippit's killer. Three watched him discard empty cartridges. The cartridges matched the gun he was carrying when police seized him in a theater. Nor, despite the decades of sarcasm by earlier critics, has the basic evidence that Oswald k illed Kennedy been shaken. Fragments of the bullets that hit Kennedy were matched with the rifle found on the sixth floor of the Depository. Oswald's fingerprints were on the rifle barrel. Fibers from the clothes he wore when arrested were caught on the rifle butt. That morning he had brought a long, thin package to work from the house in Irving where he spent weekends with Marina. He explained to the co-worker who gave him a ride that it contained curtain rods for his Dallas apartment, even though his flat had a full set. One other problem for a conspiracy: Oswald got his job at the Depository on Oct. 15; the Secret Service did not decide on the motorcade route past this building until Nov. 14. It was not in Dallas newspapers until Nov. 19. Most of the conspiracy writers contend that there was another gunman in Dealey Plaza, firing from a grassy knoll in front of the presidential motorcade. Numerous witnesses, including some officers, thought they heard shots from that direction. Still, as the House Assassinations Committee neared the completion of an exhaustive two-year reinvestigation of the Kennedy murder in December 1978, it approved a tentative conclusion that there had been no conspiracy. But then Blakey, its chief counsel, found an acoustics expert who examined a police Dictabelt recording made of one of the two radio channels used during the motorcade. After tests in Dealey Plaza, the scientist concluded that sounds on the belt came from an escorting motorcycle with its microphone stuck open, that four shots could be detected on the belt and that there was a fifty- fifty probability that one of them came from the knoll. Blakey called in two other experts, who raised the estimate to 95%. The committee then concluded that a conspiracy was ''probable.'' In 1982, however, the National Academy of Sciences examined the same recording. Its experts detected cross talk from the other police channel on the belt, chatter that it identified as occurring one minute after the shooting. ''The acoustic analyses,'' the Academy experts reported, ''do not demonstrate that there was a grassy-knoll shot.'' Moreover, three panels of independent experts examined the materials from Kennedy's autopsy. All concluded that he had been hit only by shots fired from behind him. One conspiracy writer, David Lifton, offered a way out of these inconvenient findings: in his 1981 book, Best Evidence, he contended that conspirators had altered the President's body to conceal evidence of an entry wound from the front. Others note that Kennedy's brain has not been examined by anyone, except superficially by the autopsy doctors. Robert Kennedy did not turn it over to the National Archives with other autopsy evidence in 1966. He presumably did not want it preserved as a grisly artifact. The timing of Ruby's assault on Oswald also fails to fit any tidy conspiracy. If he had been stalking Oswald, why was he in a Western Union office wiring $25 to one of his strippers, Karen Carlin, at 11:17 a.m. that Sunday? Not even the Dallas police knew when their interrogation of Oswald would end and when he would be transferred to custody of the county sheriff. In fact, a U.S. postal inspector had unexpectedly dropped in on the questioning and joined the quizzing. That held up the transfer by at least half an hour; without the delay, Ruby would have been too late. His televised shooting of Oswald occurred at 11:21 a.m. The resourceful Warren Commission critics have a solution to that dilemma too. They note credible reports that Ruby visited police headquarters, where Oswald was being held, twice on the night of the assassination, even attending a press conference at which Oswald was exposed to photographers. Ruby sat at the back of the room, allegedly carrying his handgun. He was spotted in a crowd outside the building about 3 p.m. on Saturday, when the transfer originally had been scheduled. On Sunday morning, three TV technicians reported seeing him near their van overlooking the transfer ramp well before 11 a.m. This pattern, these writers say, fits a stalking of Oswald. But why did Ruby go off to Western Union at a crucial moment? It was a prearranged plan to make the killing look spontaneous, they reply. Someone signaled Ruby when Oswald's move began. They imply that a cop did this; they do not say how. Warren Commission critics point out that its members had never been told about the CIA's scheming with mobsters to assassinate Castro, even though Castro had warned publicly on Sept. 7, 1963, that ''U.S. leaders should think that if they are aiding terrorist plans to eliminate Cuban leaders, they themselves will not be safe.'' Allen Dulles, a member of the commission who had been the CIA director when the plots were hatched, did not disclose this secret to the investigators. The CIA had told Robert Kennedy, but he too kept this information from the commission. Bobby's apparent acquiescence in the attempts to kill Castro may have added twinges of guilt to his deep grief over his brother's death. Clearly, those plots were something the commission had every right to know about. If alerted to the CIA-Mafia entanglement, it might have worked even harder to close some of the investigatory gaps through which, 25 years later, the conspiracy advocates still rush with a welter of accusations, speculation and, so far, a dearth of conclusive evidence. Title: November 22, 1963; inspired by the vision of a daring young President, Americans imagine a bold new world, only to see the dream brutally broken. (portrait of America on the day John F. Kennedy was assassinated) Citation: People Weekly, Nov 28, 1988 v30 n22 p54(13) ------------------------------------------------------------- Subjects: Presidents_Assassination People: Kennedy, John F._Assassination Reference #: A6840052 ============================================================= Full Text COPYRIGHT Time Inc. 1988 As dawn breaks from sea to shining sea, it marks the beginning of a bright day in Dallas but an unpromising one in much of the country. There is a forecast of rain in the central plains, the heartland is muffled in clouds, and snow is falling in the Rockies. But America's spirits are light. The country is peaceful and prosperous and, more than that, it seems imbued with a kind of optimism, a freshness, a yearning for action. As a people, we have not yet made up our mind about John Fitzgerald Kennedy, our President of a thousand days, but his prospects for reelection seem on the upswing. We were comfortable with Ike; now we sense an assurance in this forceful young President who stumbled so badly at the Bay of Pigs, then brought us through the sobering danger of the Cuban missile crisis. With his direct and vigorous speeches, he makes us feel that we are living in stirring times and that he is truly a leader, taking us on a path we might not have chosen for ourselves. ''Let the word go forth from this time and place,'' he has told us, ''that the torch has been passed to a new generation of Americans.'' And we believe him. Today this man will be taken from us. We will learn, in the years to come, more than we ever wanted to know of his imperfection. Yet there is no denying what he has meant to us, and no reclaiming what we will lose. What follows is a portrait of America on this day, in the hours before it takes on its historic meaning. It is a mosaic of American lives being lived unaware of impending tragedy -- an album, if you will, filled with snapshots of a time beyond saving. The Schoolboy It is 5 A.M. and still dark in East Berlin, Conn., as 16-year-old Dick Benson's mother shakes him awake. Groggily, the boy tumbles out of bed, pulls on dungarees, a flannel shirt and battered work boots, then heads off through the morning chill on his Columbia bike. Bare bulbs gleam in the whitewashed barn at Shepard's farm, just a mile down the road; Ed Rhenberg, the herdsman, is already milking the 50-odd head of cattle. Dick joins in as soon as he arrives. After three years of working part-time on the farm, Dick, who makes 60 cents an hour, has the operation down cold. He enjoys his time with the animals, as well as the chance to smoke his cigarettes, far from his mother's disapproving gaze. But today he has something -- someone -- on his mind; the beautiful Joyce Johnson, and she's his date for tonight's junior prom. Dick is in love, and aglow with anticipation. It is only 6:45 A.M. when he finishes cleaning out the stalls and leaving some fresh Canadian hay for the cows. But Dick is already wondering how he's going to get everything done that he has to do. He has to find the time to wash and polish the family car -- a white '61 Ford Falcon station wagon. He has to pop down to the florist's to get a wrist corsage for Joyce, then over to the jewelers to pick up a pair of cuff links for himself. Back home now, dressed for school in slacks, tab-collar shirt and sweater, he dashes into the kitchen and wolfs down his breakfast. He listens impatiently, shifting from foot to foot, as his mother warns him to drive carefully. Then he is behind the wheel of the Falcon -- actually driving it to school! -- and the inessential world falls away. His mind is back on Joyce Johnson and the promise of enchantment held by the prom, whose theme will be An Evening in the Blue Grotto. The President's personal secretary, Evelyn Lincoln, calls on John F. Kennedy in his suite in Fort Worth's Hotel Texas. She is meeting friends who have driven over from Dallas for breakfast and asks if the President would mind saying hello. In a cheerful mood, Kennedy agrees to do it -- later that morning. The Bride Waking up for what she knows will be the last time in her cherished four-poster bed, LoRaine Leland, 20, pulls the covers tightly around herself and slowly surveys the bedroom that has been her haven for as long as she can remember. She glances wistfully at bookshelves loaded with her childhood collection of stuffed animals and yearbooks from Robert E. Lee High School in Jacksonville, Fla. Then her eyes roam toward her closet, where her white, floor-length peau de soie wedding gown hangs on the door, along with a fingertip veil with seed pearls and crystals. This evening, LoRaine will marry John Charles Davidson, 23, a rookie fireman, at the First Baptist Church of Jacksonville. Suddenly remembering all the things still left to be done, she bolts out of bed and prepares to deal with the half-packed suitcase she will carry on her honeymoon to South Florida. For months LoRaine has been planning what to take, including her blue plaid madras shorts, a pale-blue chiffon dress for fancy dinners, a white peignoir to wear to her bridal bed, and a bottle of Wind Song perfume. Everything seems under control, but LoRaine can't help worrying about the weather. If it rains, her bouffant hairdo -- just like Jackie Kennedy's -- will be an absolute mess. How come nothing like that ever happens to the First Lady? The Novelist In Chicago, novelist Saul Bellow is at home, writing, in the study of the apartment on East 55th Street that he shares with his wife, Susan, who is five months pregnant. He is feeding his Smith- Corona electric typewriter the cheap, white paper that he buys by the ream and enjoying the machine's busy chattering as he fingers the keys. Bellow, 48, is into the final stages of his sixth novel, Herzog, the tale of a twice-divorced intellectual -- like the author himself -- who can find nothing in Spinoza or Aristotle to help him understand what has gone wrong in his life. The Presidents Flying back to New York's Idlewild Airport from a business meeting in Dallas, former presidential candidate Richard Nixon, 50, is back in private life to stay, he says. Just last fall he was defeated by Edmund G. (Pat) Brown in his race for Governor of California and told the press bitterly afterward that they wouldn't have Nixon to kick around anymore. Former President Dwight Eisenhower, 73, in New York for a banquet this evening, has already checked into the Waldorf- Astoria Hotel. At the Waldorf Towers next door, another veteran of the Oval Office, 89-year-old Herbert Hoover is resting in his apartment. Harry Truman, 79, is at home with wife Bess in Independence, Mo. In Washington, D.C., Congressman Gerald Ford, 50, is getting ready for a meeting with an educational counselor for one of his children. Jimmy Carter, 39, a Georgia State Senator, is weighing grain on his farm out in Plains. Actor Ronald Reagan, 52, is driving to his Lake Malibu ranch for the day. Texas oilman George Bush, 39, is preparing to speak at a luncheon in East Texas, still hoping he can win an uphill campaign for the U.S. Senate next fall. The Hunter Roger Little can't stop grinning as he regales the regular morning coffee crowd at the Williamston (Mich.) Cafe with the story of his hunting trip. Pulling out a copy of the daily Lansing State Journal, he tells his buddies to take a gander at the sports section. A story inside tells how Little, 26, a journeyman printer, bagged a 235-lb. nine-point buck, one of the the biggest deer shot all year in Michigan. Later, at work, he thinks about having a trophy made of the buck, now hanging from a tree at his parents' house, and relives the moment of the kill one more time. He had been planning to shoot the first deer he saw that day, but when he caught a doe in the sights of his Swedish Mauser rifle, he hesitated, missing his chance. He could hardly believe his good luck when a huge buck sauntered into view seconds later. Thinking about it now, Little can still feel his pulse quicken as he gently squeezes the trigger and holds the Mauser steady against the recoil. Lee Harvey Oswald has arrived at the Irving home of co-worker Wesley Frazier, an order clerk at the Texas School Book Depository in Dallas. The two men sometimes ride to work together in Frazier's car, and today Frazier notices a long package that Oswald has placed on the back seat. Lee says it's curtain rods. The two men talk about the presidential visit; glancing up at the still cloudy skies, Frazier mentions that it sure doesn't look like a good day for a parade. The Grapepicker A chill fog shrouds the Caric and Sons Ranch in Delano, Calif., as Peter Velasco, 53, begins picking bunches of Almeria, Revere and Emperor grapes. Dressed in a heavy workshirt, with a bandana around his neck, Velasco longs in vain for a feeling of warmth. Like the 60 other workers on this job, most of whom are Filipino immigrants like himself, Velasco has a chronic case of the shivers. At night he sleeps in an unheated company barrack, and each morning the sun all too slowly breaks through the fog. Eight years ago, Velasco quit a small farm he worked with his brother and headed north. He receives only 95 cents an hour for his labor, and three years ago, in 1960, he joined the organizing committee of the AFL-CIO's fledgling Agricultural Workers Union. Velasco hopes that John Kennedy, even though he is a rich man, will help improve conditions for poor migrant workers like himself. But in the meantime, Velasco enjoys the routine of his work. Listening to Mexican music on a small transistor radio, he picks only the bunches that have ripened, the ones with coffee-colored stems. In an hour Velasco hopes to have picked 44 pounds of grapes, enough to fill two large wooden crates. He moves methodically and quickly, knowing that the exertion of moving the crates will ease the cold in his fingers and toes. Frazier and Oswald are arriving at the Book Depository. At about the same time, Kennedy and Lawrence O'Brien, his close friend and aide, are looking out a hotel window toward a vast parking lot. Kennedy remarks that if anyone wanted to get him, it would be very easy to do it here. The Child ''Girls, today we will have a special treat,'' Sister Alice announces to her third-grade class at the Academy of the Holy Names in Tampa, Fla. ''While we write our thank-you letters to the President, we are going to watch his motorcade in Dallas on television.'' Of the 25 girls present, 8-year-old Rosemary Weekley knows that she has the most to be thankful for. Four days before, Sister Alice had taken the class to nearby MacDill Air Force Base to catch a quick glimpse of President Kennedy as he arrived on Air Force One for a briefing and a speaking tour in Florida. Rosemary waved excitedly as she watched the President emerge from the plane and climb into a waiting car. Then, as Secret Service agents scrambled after him, Kennedy impulsively leaped from the car to greet Sister Alice's class. Rosemary was the first one to shake his hand; she still can't believe it happened. Now she must find the right words to thank her hero for bringing such joy into her life, and she hopes that seeing him again on television will give her inspiration. As Kennedy climbs onto a flatbed truck to speak to a crowd of about 5,000 gathered outside his hotel, the rain stops and the sun peeks through. There are shouts of ''Where's Jackie?'' The President smiles and points to his hotel suite, where the First Lady is reportedly still getting ready. The Corpsman When President Kennedy challenged America's youth to make the world a better place, he struck a spark that brought Doug Frago to the tiny village of Rabinal in Guatemala. Normally on a day like today the 23-year-old Peace Corps volunteer would be teaching the farmers how to protect their crops from disease or showing them how to clean up their beehives as a way of increasing honey production. Growing up on a sweet-potato and watermelon farm in central California, Frago got hooked on bees when he was 10. And he always wanted to travel. Graduating from college with an agronomy degree, he was looking for a way to combine his work with his wanderlust. In President Kennedy's Peace Corps he found one. Today he is eight kilometers from Rabinal, in the village of Cabulco, vaccinating dogs against rabies. Although the village is in the mountains, the temperature is close to 90 degreesF. After a while, Doug and his two Guatemalan assistants take a break from the dogs -- they will vaccinate 300 today -- to advise a group of farmers. Later they will sit down to a lunch of tortillas, black beans and coffee. The President finishes his speech and walks back toward the hotel for a Chamber of Commerce breakfast. Along the way he stops to shake the hand of 16-year-old Mary Ann Glicksman. Isn't she supposed to be in school? he asks. When she says yes, he smiles and says, ''Tell your teacher the President of the United States says to excuse you.'' The Waiter The thought of having to handle dishes while wearing white gloves puts waiter Ossie Richie in a panic. ''What if I drop something on the President?'' he wonders. Mindful that it isn't often a sharecropper's son is chosen to serve breakfast to a President, Richie, 23, is determined to do the job right. But he knows that so much could go wrong. Last night, for example, while working his regular job at Fort Worth's exclusive Town Club, Richie was so preoccupied with the President's visit that he absentmindedly locked a group of poker-playing bigwigs in a back room for 15 minutes. There will be hell to pay for that later. But now, after grooming and rehearsing all night, Richie is a picture of perfection. His black Sunday shoes have been spit-shined so you can see your face in them. His brand-new white shirt is gleaming. His tan waiter's waistcoat with its brass buttons is spotless. Standing before the American flag, on a platform overlooking the hotel's packed banquet room, Richie clenches his fists to make sure his gloves are tight. He hears applause as President Kennedy enters with his wife. Then, to Richie's amazement, the President reaches out to shake his hand. Light-headed with excitement, Richie pours the President a cup of coffee and serves him his eggs. As he bends over, though, Richie suddenly senses his suspenders are slipping. He considers reaching inside his jacket to make the needed adjustments, but a quick glance at the Secret Service men standing silently nearby tells him that wouldn't be a good idea. ''They might think I'm reaching for a gun or something,'' he says to himself. ''Bad things could happen to me real f ast.'' The Mother Mary Ann Fischer, mother of the celebrated Fischer quints, feels like a star. She and her husband, Andrew, are being driven through New York's hectic streets to tape the TV show I've Got a Secret -- in the same limo that President Kennedy had used two weeks earlier. ''My wife will never believe this,'' the excited driver is saying. ''First, I have the President in my car, then the parents of quints. Unbelievable!'' Mary Ann, 30, smiles at the celebrity treatment, but her thoughts wander back to the babies, already ten weeks old but still in the hospital back in Aberdeen, S.Dak. Although born two months prematurely, all are doing well -- thank God for that. She hopes one will be home by Thanksgiving and that all ten of her kids will be together by Christmas. That would be something to celebrate. Cheers go up at the Chamber of Commerce breakfast as Jackie arrives with her Secret Service escort. She is wearing a pink wool suit with navy-blue lapels, and a pink pillbox hat. In the audience is Dr. Marion Brooks, a Fort Worth physician who is a leader in the black community. Dr. Brooks is a late addition to the gathering. Originally, the group had not included blacks but eventually invited 50. The Minister By mid-morning, the Rev. Colin Gracey is at his desk in the Trinity Episcopal Church in Concord, Mass., working his way through the stack of mail that piled up during the week he was in jail. Gracey was arrested in Williamston, N.C., for taking part in a march against segregation, sponsored by the Southern Christian Leadership Conference. Two days ago, the 28-year-old clergyman drove all night long in his dilapidated 1953 blue Ford station wagon, arriving back in Concord at 7 A.M. He is happy to be home with his wife, Susan, and their three little girls. But he is also tired and preoccupied. His mind keeps drifting back to the previous evening, when he was summoned to a church meeting and questioned for nearly an hour about his reasons for participating in the freedom march. A number of church members had been upset by a photograph in the local paper that showed the new curate walking arm-in-arm with a black family. Staring out the window at the gray slate roof of his church, Gracey reflects on the fact that civil disobedience is hard for some people to understand. But he believes the President is committed to the cause of racial equality, and the young minister will not forsake his own commitment to activism. Instead he hopes to do a better job of explaining to his critics in this town, whose very name is synonymous with freedom, why he feels compelled to speak out against racial injustice. The Kennedys are back in their suite preparing to leave for the flight to Dallas. The President telephones onetime Vice-President John Nance Garner in Uvalde, Texas, to congratulate him on his 95th birthday. The Newsman An eager young television correspondent, Dan Rather, 32, is CBS News bureau chief in New Orleans. He has been assigned to set up the network's coverage of the President's visit to Texas, and after working through the night, he had been given an urgent, unrelated request. The CBS Evening News, with its anchorman, Walter Cronkite, has recently been expanded from 15 minutes to a half hour, and the editors were concerned about not having enough material to fill out the broadcast. At the last minute they called Rather and asked him to cover John Garner's birthday. After flying at first light from Dallas to Garner's ranch in a small charter plane, Rather and his cameramen filmed an interview as Garner came out on his porch to greet Miss West Texas Wool and have his picture taken with her. As Rather looked on, the elder statesman, holding a glass of bourbon in one hand, reached over to pat Miss West Texas Wool on the backside with the other. Now, back in Dallas, Rather smiles as he remembers the scene. The Family At home in McLean, Va., with his wife, Ethel, Attorney General Bobby Kennedy, 38, has planned a working lunch with a Justice Department official. Ted Kennedy, 29, the junior Senator from Massachusetts, is presiding over the Senate, while his wife, Joan, 27, visits a beauty parlor in anticipation of their fifth-anniversary dinner that night. At the White House, preparations are under way for John-John Kennedy's third-birthday party on Monday, just three days from now, and Caroline's sixth on Nov. 27. The Kennedy party departs for Dallas on Air Force One. Vice-President Lyndon Johnson and Texas Governor John Connally are aboard Air Force Two, already airborne. According to LBJ's executive assistant, Liz Carpenter, the talk on the Johnson plane is about the reception awaiting Kennedy in Dallas. Someone calls it ''the most anti-everything city in Texas.'' The Soldier In Vietnam's central highlands Sgt. Jerry Sims, 33, rips open a box of C-Rations and practically inhales a can full of ham and lima beans. Mildly aware of his own body odor, ever present in the steamy jungle, Sims straightens his camouflage jungle fatigues and places his prized green beret on his head. Then he slings his M-16 rifle over his shoulder and turns a watchful eye toward 100 fiercely independent mountain tribesmen -- Montagnards he has been assigned to train as an anti-Communist guerrilla force. Despite the hardships of his duty, Sims, a high school dropout, considers himself a lucky man. Before he enlisted in the Army in 1946, he had been hanging out with a bad crowd in Youngstown, Ohio. Two of his old buddies were later convicted of murder; one was sent to the electric chair. But now, after 17 years of distinguished service in West Germany and Korea, Sims is an intelligence expert in the Army Special Forces. Like most of the 12,000 Army men currently in Vietnam on President Kennedy's orders, Sims is proud to help stop the spread of Communism in Southeast Asia. And as a Green Beret, he is a member of an elite corps of guerrilla fighters that Kennedy hopes will prove more effective than conventional forces. Sims and his Montagnards settle down for a watchful night, with ambush patrols on the alert for Vietcong. The Singer Mary Travers, 27, the husky-voiced blond centerpiece of Peter, Paul and Mary, the country's favorite folk trio, is sleeping in. Last night's concert in Fort Worth was another sweet success, and tonight's performance is about an hour's drive away in Dallas. Later, after breakfast, she and Paul get into their rental car. Peter and a friend are planning to follow in another car. President Kennedy will be in Dallas today, too, and Mary remembers the gala concert the group played for him almost two years ago. Afterward, during a party at Vice-President Lyndon Johnson's home, Jack Kennedy linked arms with Gene Kelly for a lively song-and-tap-dance version of ''When Irish Eyes Are Smiling.'' Mary replays the fond memory in her mind as Paul guides the car onto the highway a little after 11:30 A.M. It is a sunny Texas day. The road is flat, and the riding is easy under a vast canopy of clearing blue sky. They are listening to the radio. Touching down at Love Field the President is pleasantly surprised by the size and exuberance of the waiting crowd. He remarks that the throng doesn't look anti-Kennedy. The Candidate Ramona Lucero is a nervous wreck. She and four classmates are in the stage dressing room at Bernalillo (N.Mex.) High School, where Miss Rael, the Spanish teacher, is showing them how to apply mascara. In a few hours, Ramona, 16, and the other girls will be performing in a talent show in front of 500 students, parents and teachers. The winner will be crowned homecoming queen on Saturday night at the big basketball game and dance. For Bernalillo (pop. 2,600), a small town on the Rio Grande with no movie theater or bowling alley, basketball is everything, and being elected homecoming queen would be the next thing to heaven. Miss Rael is pouring on the hair spray, and the girls are coughing and laughing like crazy, but it doesn't make them any less nervous. Ramona is trying to feel confident, but she can't help worrying how her version of ''Moon River'' will sound compared with the acts of the other girls. She decides to concentrate instead on the clothes she'll be wearing -- the $9 gold four-inch heels (her first pair) and the $18 yellow wool suit her mother bought at J.C. Penney's and hemmed a little below the knee, just like Jackie Kennedy's. After the contest, Ramona knows, the school band will lead a parade through the dirt streets of town. It will be really cool to be riding just ahead of the floats, in one of the convertibles the Albuquerque Chevy dealership has loaned the school for the big day. There will be a pep rally tonight and a bonfire, and tomorrow the big game and the dance. After landing at Love Field the Kennedys climb into the open limousine for the motorcade through Dallas. Because he wants the crowd to see him, the President has decided to dispense with the limo's optional top. The Beach Boys They are hot on the charts and in concert, but this morning Brian Wilson, 21, Mike Love, 22, and Al Jardine, 21, of the Beach Boys are still zonked out in Wilson's rented Hawthorne, Calif., house. There is virtually no furniture in the place, and Love is asleep on the floor. He and Wilson were up most of the night, working on a song titled ''Warmth of the Sun.'' Brian kept playing around with the melody, which was haunting and mystical, and all Mike could think of was ''the loss of someone you love.'' The Stars, Present and Future Gary Hart, 26, a third-year student at Yale Law School, is in his New Haven, Conn., apartment preparing for an afternoon job interview with a Denver law firm. Bill Bradley, 20, the Princeton basketball star, is studying in his university library carrel. Folksinger Joan Baez, 22, is shopping for groceries in Carmel, Calif., American bandstand host Dick Clark, 33, has arrived in Dallas with a bus load of musicians for a one-night-only performance of his Caravan of Stars. In London, earlier in the day, a shaggy-haired group called the Beatles, who had recently returned from their first European tour, released their second album, With the Beatles. Their first U.S. single, ''I Want to Hold Your Hand,'' is scheduled for release in January. Kennedy halts the motorcade briefly to greet a group of children waiting at curbside. They stand behind a sign saying, ''Mr. President, please stop and shake our hands.'' He does. Riding with her husband two cars behind the President, Lady Bird Johnson observes with pleasure that there is no indication of hostility. The Player Taking a breather during practice at the Redskins' stadium in Washington, D.C., wide receiver Bobby Mitchell, 28, wonders when his team will summon the will to win. The Redskins have lost seven straight National Football League games and look ragged now as they practice for Sunday's game against the Philadelphia Eagles. Still, Mitchell, the first black man to play with the Redskins, is happy to have quieted redneck fans with the brilliance of his play after joining the club the year before. His work off the field is going well too. A few months ago, after making several appearances with Attorney General Robert Kennedy in an effort to persuade young blacks to stay in school, Mitchell was invited to a formal gathering in the White House and was astounded when President Kennedy entered the room and immediately walked past several dignitaries to shake his hand. Nothing could ever compare to the pride he felt at that moment. Right now, as he goes back on the field to run some pass routes, Mitchell has more mundane matters on his mind: His timing with quarterback Norm Snead is off just a hair. ''With a perfect pass,'' he thinks to himself, ''there is no way anyone can catch me.'' The Dallas Trade Mart, where the President is to have lunch and make a speech, is electric with anticipation. There are presents for both of the President's children, including a big teddy bear for the birthday boy, John-John. The Astronaut Waiting his turn at the helm of a flight simulator at a Boeing plant in Seattle, Ed Dwight, 30, sips his coffee in silence and listens as a dozen of his fellow astronaut-trainees banter among themselves. The first black accepted in the space program, Dwight feels like a pariah. Sure, some of the guys sidle up to him occasionally. He assumes they figure it might be to their advantage to stay on good terms with him, since President Kennedy has taken a personal interest in his career. But others, Dwight believes, have decided to give him the cold shoulder. Despite having logged more than 2,000 hours as an Air Force test pilot, Dwight himself sometimes jokes that President Kennedy ''picked me out of a turnip patch'' to become an astronaut. But he will never forget how deeply honored he felt in November 1961, when he received a personal letter from Kennedy asking him to apply for the space program. Come what may, he plans to prove himself worthy of his Commander in Chief's high regard. The Children Standing outside St. Ann's School in the Little Mexico section of Dallas with her class of 7th and 8th graders, Sister Audrey, 28, looks proudly over her 54 breathlessly expectant students. Up at 5 A.M. for morning meditation, chores and Mass, Sister Audrey had said a special prayer that President Kennedy would be safe in Dallas and would help bring hope into the lives of these Hispanic children, the poorest of Dallas' poor. Later the Roman Catholic nun could barely contain herself when Sister Maria, the principal, told everyone that the presidential motorcade would pass right by St. Ann's. Sister Audrey fielded question after question from her class, particularly about the Secret Service. ''Why would the President need protection coming past our school?'' one boy asked. Now, after the children have patiently braved the cold for an hour, a wild cheer goes up as the motorcade comes into view. President Kennedy waves to Sister Audrey's students and mouths, ''Hi, how are you?'' Later, the sisters led all the students in a prayer of thanksgiving for having seen the President. The limo starts slowly down the slope in front of the Book Depository. Often, as the motorcade wound its way, the slow-moving press and VIP buses in its wake had backfired. Some parade-watchers had jumped at the sound, then laughed at their own skittishness. People had been making macabre jokes about the anti-Kennedy feeling in Dallas. The Protester Insurance salesman Ed Crissey is meeting his lawyer and a friend for lunch in a little restaurant in downtown Dallas. He expects the place to be less crowded than usual, since most of the regulars will be three blocks away watching the Kennedy motorcade. For his part, Crissey, 40, is content to watch the procession on the evening news. He senses that ''something is going to happen'' today, that there is going to be some kind of confrontation, and he wants people to see him in a public place well away from the motorcade. If there is trouble, the former military intelligence officer, a member of the right-wing John Birch Society, suspects he might be held partly responsible. For it is he, along with multimillionaire Nelson Bunker Hunt and oilman H. R. ''Bum'' Bright, who, in today's Dallas Morning News, took out a full-page ad, with an obituary-black border, asking why Kennedy is soft on Communism. Sitting in the restaurant now, Crissey is telling himself he doesn't want anything serious to happen today. But he doesn't regret the ad -- it's gotten to the point that right-minded citizens have to speak out. The Actress It is early afternoon in New York, and actress Elizabeth Ashley, 24, has just opened her eyes. Lying next to her, still asleep in her one-bedroom basement apartment, is George Peppard. They have been lovers for more than a year, but he has been in Europe for weeks. She looks down at him contentedly. She can't believe her good luck: She is starring in Neil Simon's smash hit Barefoot in the Park, with Robert Redford in his first leading role, and only two weeks ago they were invited to a late-night party given by President Kennedy's sister, Eunice, and her husband, Sargent Shriver. The President was one of the guests. At one point he thrilled her by asking, ''How does it feel to be the newest star on Broadway?'' Could she be imagining all this? Ashley wonders. No, out on the coffee table in the living room there is proof positive. The cover of this week's LIFE carries her picture. But the newest star on Broadway has to be at Mr. Kenneth's in half an hour to have her hair done. Thank God there's no matinee today. Careful not to wake Peppard, she slips into a pale long-john shirt, farmer overalls and Tony Lama boots. Without makeup, she puts on her Navy pea jacket, a brown tweed stevedore's cap and, of course, the requisite dark glasses. Stopping at the bedroom door, she reflects once more on how far she has come. Little Elizabeth Cole from Baton Rouge, La. Starring in a Broadway show. Making love to a movie star. Hobnobbing with Kennedys. What more could anyone ask? How much happier could anyone be? It would take something truly terrible, she thinks, to darken this day, this golden time in her life. She blows the sleeping Peppard a kiss and heads out the door. The Schoolgirl At Alexander Ramsey High School in Roseville, Minn., some members of the senior class are gathered in the band room for a special slide-show presentation about the Civil War. Many of the 100 students gossip during the show about what they will do that evening after the big basketball game between the Ramsey Rams and the Moundview Mustangs. Patty Andrews, 17, plans to borrow her father's Volkswagen bug to go cruising with her best friend, Marilyn Holmquist. But as the music quickens toward the end of the slide show, Patty and Marilyn listen raptly to a narrator's solemn description of the scene at Ford's Theater in Washington on April 14, 1865. A hush falls over the students as they look at an image of Abraham Lincoln in the presidential box, oblivious to the presence behind him of a lone gunman, John Wilkes Booth. In Dealey Plaza, Dallas, a shot rings out. AN EPILOGUE The junior prom he had looked forward to, says Dick Benson, was ''sad and very subdued.'' Six years later he went to Vietnam, where he lost a leg and the use of one arm when a booby trap exploded under him. Now 41, he still lives in East Berlin, Conn. -- with his wife, Gail, and their daughter. LoRaine Leland's wedding to fireman John Davidson went ahead as planned. They have two children, and this week will celebrate their silver anniversary. Inevitably, LoRaine, 45, is reminded each year of how tragedy intruded on what should have been the happiest day of her life. Author Saul Bellow, 73, won the 1965 National Book Award for Herzog. Divorced from Susan, he married Alexandra Ionescu Tulcea in 1974. Roger Little, 51, marked the opening of hunting season last week by stalking deer with two of his sons. He has eight children from three marriages. The head of the magnificent buck he shot in November 1963 is mounted in his photography studio in Calumet, Mich. As secretary-treasurer emeritus of the United Farmworkers' Union, Peter Velasco, 78, still champions the cause of migrant farmworkers. He lives in La Paz, Calif., with his wife, Delores Neubauer, a former nun. Rosemary Weekley, 33, is married, has two children and lives in LaGrange, Ga., where she works as a pediatric nurse. Doug Frago, 48, left the Peace Corps in 1965 to become a farmer. He rejoined the Corps in June 1985, and has become its associate director for international operations. Ossie Richie, 48, is a bartender at the same Fort Worth hotel, now renamed the Hyatt Regency. After raising their quintuplets, and their five other children, Mary Ann Fischer, 55, and her husband, Andy, were divorced in 1980. The Rev. Colin Gracey, now 53 and chaplain to Northeastern University in Boston, remains a vigorous social activist, lately in the cause of the environment. Dan Rather, 57, who came to national prominence through his coverage of the Kennedy assas sination, now commands a $3 million a year salary as anchorman of the CBS Evening News. After completing two combat tours in Vietnam, Jerry Sims was still a staunch supporter of American involvement in the war, and retired as a master sergeant in 1967. Now 58 and the grandfather of five, he owns an electrical contracting business in West Palm Beach, Fla. Mary Travers, 52, continues to make music with Peter Yarrow and Paul Stookey. Going to Dallas is always difficult, she says. ''For me it's the place of remembrance.'' Ramona Lucero, 41, was not elected homecoming queen, and remembers there wasn't much joy for anyone in that night's festivities. The mother of three children, she still lives in Bernalillo, N. Mex., and teaches in the elementary school. The Beach Boys endure but rarely play ''Warmth of the Sun'' anymore because it reminds them of JFK's death. ''That song had so much impact for me,'' says Mike Love, 47, ''I can hardly listen to it now.'' In 1983, wide receiver Bobby Mitchell, 53, was elected to the National Football League Hall of Fame. He is assistant general manager of the Washington Redskins. Three days after the assassination Ed Dwight was unceremoniously dropped from the astronaut tra ining program. ''When my protector was killed, I was out,'' he says. Dwight, now 55, is a successful Denver-based artist whose work has included bronze busts of Martin Luther King Jr., Hank Aaron and jazzman Charlie Parker. Still working with disadvantaged students, as a school administrator at Sacred Heart School in San Francisco, Sister Audrey, 53, believes the assassination robbed the poor of hope. ''My students had seen him and taken him into their hearts,'' she says. ''It could have made a real difference in their lives.'' While he continues to support conservative causes, Ed Crissey, 65, now draws his inspiration from the Bible. ''I'm a fundamentalist,'' he says, ''and proud of it.'' While he defends his role in placing the anti-Kennedy ad, he says he regrets the President's death. When Elizabeth Ashley and her co-star Robert Redford went onstage to play Barefoot in the Park the night of JFK's murder, they were determined to get the audience's mind off the tragedy. ''I remember Redford saying, 'Let's really try and get them to laugh,' '' says Ashley, 49. Married in 1966, she and George Peppard were later divorced. When the principal of her high school abruptly stopped her class's Civil War slide show to announce, ''The President has been shot,'' Patty Andrews didn't know at first whether he was talking about Abraham Lincoln or John F. Kennedy. Now 42 and married to her high school sweetheart, she is a school secretary in Plymouth, Minn., and the mother of two daughters. ''We were all so innocent, so carefree before Kennedy was killed,'' she says. ''We grew up real quick.'' Title: Camelot and Dallas: the entangling Kennedy myths. Authors: Morley, Jefferson Citation: The Nation, Dec 12, 1988 v247 n18 p646(3) ------------------------------------------------------------- Subjects: Conspiracy in motion pictures_Criticism, interpretation, etc. People: Kennedy, John F._Assassination Reference #: A6852070 ============================================================= Full Text COPYRIGHT The Nation Company Inc. 1988 November 22 was, as always, a national commemoration of two American myths: Camelot and conspiracy. The television specials, the books, the 0p-Ed commentary all focused on either the timeless glory of the Kennedy years or on previouslyundetected machinations, real or imagined, behind his murder. On the one hand, the yearning for morally heroic leadership; on the other, the fear of undemocratic plots. The anniversary of the assassination endures as a national rite because it brings together these two elemental themes of American history. Camelot and conspiracy are shorthand for two different ways in which Americans make sense of national public life. What gives November 22 its enduring pull on the public imagination is the constant and unsettling tension between the two. John F. Kennedy's Camelot was a modern version of John Winthrop's "city upon a hill." In this myth of history, the American story is proclaimed by great and attractive men. The conspiracy theories of Dallas are an installment in the American populist tradition of anti-Masonry, muckraking and McCarthyism, official history, seen as a ruse perpetrated by unaccountable elites. American history is manipulated by unseen hands. Each November 22, we can try out the view from Winthrop's hill and from the Grassy Knoll. Americans appear to believe in both myths. In a recent poll, 30 percent of the respondents said Kennedy was the "greatest" President of the United States, more than cited any other President. Polls taken on the assassination since the late 1960s show that four out of five respondents do not believe the Warren Commission's explanation of the assassination. An ABC-Washington Post poll in 1983 found that 80 percent believe more than one person was responsible for the gunfire in Dealey Plaza. But if the Warren Commission could not, or would not, uncover the truth, if Camelot could be undone by hidden plotters, which myth of history makes more sense? This is the underlying symbolic question of November 22, and we commemorate Kennedy's death in order to mull that over. "What has become unravened since that afternoon iii Dallas," writes Don DeLillo, author of the best-selling novel Libra, an imaginative re-creation of the assassination, "is not the plot, of course, not the dense mass of character and events, but the sense of a coherent reality most of us shared." The anniversary of the Kennedy assassination is the occasion for trying to regain that "coherent reality." The assassination took on this purpose almost immediately, In a string of reassuring pop best-sellers, Kennedy's death was reconstructed to make sense of public life torn apart by violence. In books like Night of Camp David, The President's Plane Is Missing, The Man and Seven Days in May, Camelot and conspiracy were combined to revive the dead Kennedy, The apparent threat to the fictional President actually presaged his vindication before the world. The basic plot device of these books is simple: The American presidency faces mortal peril from unknown but sinister forces-a falling roof, a missing plane, madness or military plotters. The threat to the integrity of the President, however, is matched by the President's own bold measures, which promise worldwide disarmament, racial harmony or some other political breakthrough. The presidency survives the threat and the nation emerges a better and safer place. During the national crises in these books (and the films made of some of them), history is always guided by the skillful hand of the pragmatic liberal leader. But in the 1970s came revelations of Kennedy's plans to assassinate foreign leaders, of his sexual license, his bugging of Martin Luther King Jr. The Kennedy assassination was reworked, especially by Hollywood, to present a different American reality. Camelot often was portrayed as a hoax, conspiracy as realism. Hollywood gave its mass audience a deeply suspicious view of elites. The belief in conspiracy, which burst out around 1966, has always been derided by elite commentators. The National Commission on Violence, appointed in June 1968, insisted that doubts about the Warren Commission were caused not by the probe's obvious flaws but by "primal anxieties created by the archetypal crime of parricide." Hollywood, in movies like Executive Action, Winter Kill, Nashville, Taxi Driver and The Parallax View, responded that the people were not sick, the system was. In Alan Pakuna's The Parallax View, Warren Beatty plays a newspaper reporter who discovers that the agents of the mysterious Parallax Corporation are behind the assassinations of two promising Kennedy-like politicians. After witnessing the second assassination, Beatty races to tell the truth, only to be gunned down by men who have framed him as the killer. A Warren-like commission concludes that the investigative reporter was the assassin, a "confused and distorted" lone madman. This is paranoia squared: Those who expose the secret manipulators of history will be blamed for their crimes. Martin Scorsese's Taxi Driver is more subtle. Robert De Niro is Travis Bickle, a cabdriver with a crush on a pretty woman who works on the campaign staff of presidential candidate Charles Palantine. As Travis woos her, we see the imitation Kennedy candidate in the background intoning, "We ARE the people." Far from being a great leader, he is a precursor of Dan Quayle. The campaign aide spurns Travis and he next tries to rescue a young prostitute from the city streets. She answers his old-fashioned morality by mouthing the cliches of "liberation" and rejects him as well. Travis buys a gun, and in a hotel room aims it at the traffic below, as if seeing redemption from the sixth floor of the Texas School Book Depository. He has gone mad and, heavily armed, closes in on a Palantine rally where he is chased by the Secret Service. Humiliated, he turns his murderous rage on the men who abuse the young hooker. And when he wakes up from this bloody rampage he finds himself celebrated in the tabloids, famous for fifteen minutes. Taxi Driver was a disconcerting variation on assassination mythology because it inverted both the myth of Camelot and of conspiracy. Travis is not an assassin of morality but a moral assassin who pathetically fails to shape history by shedding blood. He is not the agent, witting or unwitting, of sinister unseen forces but their degraded victim. In the film, society's ideals of glamour, the buck and fast sex are the real conspiracy against Everyman. The sense of helplessness created by political assassination is not an isolated incident in otherwise normal public life, but the enduring nature of urban reality. The popular mistrust of official history in the 1970s was so deep it was comic. In 1979 a Congressional investigating committee concluded that the Kennedy assassination was the result of a political conspiracy"Next thing you know"' Johnny Carson, emcee of the Zeitgeist, gibed that night, "they'll be blaming World War 11 on Hitler." With the onset of the Reagan era, such cynicism was muted. Ronald Reagan restored Hollywood style to the White House and claimed, not always implausibly, to be heir to the Kennedy legacy. Emulation of the rich and famous became a refuge from the disintegration of public life seen in Taxi Driver Camelot and conspiracy in Dallas were domesticated for prime time, "Who shot J.F.K.?" became "Who shot J.R.?" By November 1983, the Camelot backlash was in full swing. The twentieth anniversary of the assassination received even more media exposure than had the anniversaries of 1978 and 1973 -much of it devoted to nostalgia about the Kennedy family and the Kennedy "charm." The underside of Camelot was acknowledged, then dismissed as unimportant. Adam Walinsky, a former Robert Kennedy aide turned Reagan supporter, asserted the prevailing elite mood in The New York Times: "We are done with the debunking." As for conspiracy, there also was a certain (perhaps understandable) impatience with the rich ambiguities of the assassination. The Washington Post said the truth would never be known. A Los Angeles Times reporter dared to conclude that the Warren Commission was right. Newsweek left the public misgivings about the government's version of events to an inarticulate barber in Iowa. The magazine asked who was responsible for the Kennedy assassination. "People in general, I guess, or the higher-ups," the man answered. "In other words, not just your run-of-the-mill people that are walking the streets." This year's twenty-fifth anniversary was, as they say, the biggest yet. The presidential campaign, echoing with themes of Kennedy and conspiracy, was a prelude. Dukakis and Quayle both packaged themselves as Kennedys and failed. Bush packaged liberalism as a kind of conspiracy and succeeded. Updating Joe McCarthy and Phyllis Schlafly, he presented the L-word as an ongoing plot card-carrying" elite against the common man. Reagan again linked himself to Kennedy, great leaders who provided a bulwark against the conspiracy that dared not speak its name. In commemorations of the anniversary of the assassination itself, conspiracy returned with a vengeance. Several TV specials and books identify the Mafia as the culprit. In DeLillo's Libra, Camelot is rotten with conspiracies. The change in mood from 1983 was exemplified by the NBC miniseries Favorite Son. Five years ago, the miniseries of the assassination was JFK, a pious epic of Camelot starring Martin Sheen. Favorite Son, by contrast, was a satiric romp through the intrigues of the Kennedy and Reagan years: attempted assassination, Latin American counterrevolutionaries, rogue C.I.A. plots, kinky sex performed as frequently as possible and a genial grandpa of a President who sets everything right at the end. If only the unsettling celebration of the twenty-fifth anniversary could be concluded so neatly. Camelot and conspiracy are not just tokens of our nostalgia but fundamental questions of the political order. Is history beyond the reach of ordinary Americans? Can (or should) the United States recapture the imperial grandeur of the Kennedy years? In reliving what DeLillo the six seconds that broke the back of the American century," we feel a deep unspoken tension. That's why the gunfire in Dealey Plaza still scares us, still rings in our ears. Title: See Oswald's lair - for $4. (Texas School Book Depository, Dallas) Citation: Time, Feb 27, 1989 v133 n9 p25(1) ------------------------------------------------------------- Subjects: Texas. School Book Depository_Galleries and museums Dallas, Texas_Galleries and museums People: Kennedy, John F._Assassination; Oswald, Lee Harvey_Galleries and museums Locations: Texas Reference #: A7050372 ============================================================= Full Text COPYRIGHT Time Inc. 1989 Now, for just $4 ($3 for senior citizens), one can ride an elevator to the sixth floor of the former Texas School Book Depository in Dallas and see the perch from which Lee Harvey Oswald gunned down a President. The book cartons have been arranged just the way Oswald placed them 25 years ago to avoid being seen by co-workers. True, a clear screen keeps tourists from entering the assassin's lair, but the view of Dealey Plaza from accessible windows is about the same. One cannot, however, bring a rifle to check out the sights. A metal detector has been set up to spot gun toters. The controversial display opened this week, after years of local arguments over how, if at all, the site should be preserved. A private nonprofit foundation raised $1.3 million to create the museum, and Dallas County, which owns the building, built a reception area with a $2.2 million bond issue. The Kennedy family, which was known to oppose the project, was not consulted on the plans. Title: More shots in Dealey Plaza. (Oliver Stone's upcoming movie portrays assassination of John F. Kennedy) Authors: Zoglin, Richard Citation: Time, June 10, 1991 v137 n23 p64(2) ------------------------------------------------------------- Subjects: Film adaptations_Criticism, interpretation, etc. On the Trail of the Assassins (Book)_Usage People: Stone, Oliver_Production and direction; Kennedy, John F._Assassination Reference #: A10824145 ============================================================= Full Text COPYRIGHT Time Inc. 1991 Did Lee Harvey Oswald act alone? Were three shots fired in Dealey Plaza on that awful afternoon in November, or were there more? Was there a large-scale, sinister conspiracy behind the assassination of John F. Kennedy, or just one troubled little man with communist sympathies and a Mannlicher-Carcano rifle? Unanswered questions about the Kennedy assassination have nagged the nation for nearly 28 years, rousing emotions, inciting speculation, provoking arguments. It was probably inevitable that Hollywood would step into this minefield sooner or later -- and probably inevitable that the man leading the charge would be Oliver Stone, filmdom's most flamboyant interpreter of the 1960s (Platoon, The Doors, Born on the Fourth of July). Stone is only halfway through shooting his movie about the assassination, for which he has staged an elaborate re-creation of the event in Dallas. But already the film (at least an early draft of the script, which Stone has tried to keep secret) has come under vigorous assault. The Washington Post attacked the movie's "errors and absurdities." Experts on the assassination have voiced outrage at Stone's version of events. Stone has responded with dark hints of a conspiracy to discredit his movie. And who said the '60s were over? The hero of Stone's film, scheduled for release in December by Warner Bros., is former New Orleans district attorney Jim Garrison, a wide-eyed conspiracy buff who in 1969 put New Orleans businessman Clay Shaw on trial for complicity in Kennedy's murder. (The case ended in a quick acquittal.) Stone's script, a version of which was obtained by TIME, is based largely on Garrison's 1988 book, On the Trail of the Assassins. Garrison is considered somewhere near the far-out fringe of conspiracy theorists, but Stone appears to have bought his version virtually wholesale. One need look no further than the actor who will play Garrison: Hollywood's reigning all-American hero Kevin Costner. In the early draft of Stone's script (co-written with Zachary Sklar, who edited Garrison's book), we learn that Oswald was just a pawn in an elaborate plot that ranged from seedy gay bars in the French Quarter to the corridors of power in Washington. We meet bizarre characters like David Ferrie, a homosexual ex-airline pilot with a homemade wig and greasepaint eyebrows who claimed involvement in the conspiracy but died before he could testify. We witness shadowy meetings between Oswald and Jack Ruby before the assassination. We are told that as many as seven shots may have been fired at Kennedy from three different directions -- none of them by Oswald. The killing was planned, Garrison discovers in the film, by a coalition that included the Mafia, the CIA and other protectors of the military-industrial complex. In a key scene, the crusading D.A. has a rendezvous in Washington with a mysterious unnamed figure who describes how security for the President's visit to Dallas was slackened. It was all part of a plot, he tells Garrison, to eliminate Kennedy and put Lyndon Johnson in office so that the Vietnam War could be escalated. "This was a military-style ambush from start to finish," Garrison tells his staff later, "a coup d'etat with Lyndon waiting in the wings." David Belin, former counsel to the Warren Commission and author of two books on the assassination, calls the script "a bunch of hokum." By ignoring key pieces of evidence and misrepresenting others, Belin says, Stone casts doubt even on issues that are relatively clear-cut, like Oswald's murder of Dallas police officer J.D. Tippit. (Oswald was identified as the gunman at the scene by at least six eyewitnesses.) "It is a shame that a man as talented as Stone has had to go to such lengths to deceive the American public," says Belin. In his article for the Post, George Lardner Jr., who covered the Shaw trial and now specializes in national-security issues, called Garrison's investigation "a fraud" and attacked the script for such dubious scenes as one in which Ferrie is murdered by two mysterious figures who force medicine down his throat. (The New Orleans coroner ruled that Ferrie died of natural causes, though two apparent suicide notes were found.) Lardner also ridiculed the film's attempt to explain away Garrison's botched prosecution of Shaw by inventing a Garrison aide who turns out to be a mole for the Feds aiming to sabotage the case. Even critics of the Warren Commission find fault with Stone's version of events. Harold Weisberg, author of Whitewash, one of the earliest attacks on the Warren Report, calls Stone's script "a travesty" that dredges up bogus theories and unfounded speculation. Among them: the suggestion that three hobos arrested near the assassination site were involved (they were vagrants who had nothing to do with the assassination, says Weisberg), and Garrison's "discovery" that the route of Kennedy's motorcade had been changed at the last minute (a phony charge, says Weisberg, that was based on conflicting descriptions of the parade route in the Dallas Morning News. Stone, with some justification, has objected to his film's being dissected even before it is finished. The criticisms, he says, are based on the first draft of a script that has been substantially revised. (The Ferrie murder scene, for example, has been eliminated.) Stone compares the Post's attack on his film to the Hearst newspapers' efforts to suppress Citizen Kane five decades ago. "This is a repeat performance," says Stone. "But nothing is going to stop me from finishing this movie." The director insists, moreover, on his right to make a movie that expresses his view of a critical historical event. "William Shakespeare made Richard III into a bad guy. Now the historians say he was wrong. Does that mean Shakespeare shouldn't have written Richard III?" Stone appears to have less tolerance for others who want to do the same thing. According to Hollywood sources, the director has worked hard to block a movie based on Don DeLillo's 1988 book, Libra, a fictionalized account of the assassination. "Stone has a right to make his film, but he doesn't have a right to try and stop everyone else from making their films," says Dale Pollock, president of A&M Films, which has been trying to make the DeLillo movie. Stone maintains that the controversy is not something he has courted. "I'm not making this film for money," the director says of his lavishly publicized epic starring Hollywood's hottest leading man. "I want to pay homage to J.F.K., the godfather of my generation." But if his film turns out to distort history, he may wind up doing more harm than homage to the memory of the fallen President. CAPTION: Stone took great pains to re-create the assassination scene in Dallas, with Steve Reed and Jodi Farber portraying the President and the First Lady. But seven -- not three -- shots ring out, and conspirators seem to be hiding under every bed. CAPTION: See above. Title: Why we still care. (John F. Kennedy assassination) Authors: Grunwald, Lisa Citation: Life, Dec 1991 v14 n16 p34(10) ------------------------------------------------------------- Subjects: Conspiracy_Investigations United States. President's Commission on the Assassination of President John F. Kennedy_Public opinion JFK (Motion picture)_Production and direction People: Kennedy, John F._Assassination; Stone, Oliver_Production and direction Reference #: A11565510 ============================================================= Abstract: The assassination of John F. Kennedy in 1963 has spawned an industry of conspiracy investigators and book writers. One conspiracy theory, based on the investigations of Jim Garrison, will be presented in 'JFK,' the new film by director Oliver Stone. ============================================================= Full Text COPYRIGHT Time Inc. 1991 It took just 5.6 seconds from the moment the first bullet hit President Kennedy's neck to the moment the last bullet tore off the top of his head. In that time, the country lost a leader and gained a martyr. It lost a great source of its faith and gained an even greater source of doubt. And it lost the outcome of a hundred unmade decisions: the agenda in the President's mind at the instant it ceased to be a mind -- what to do in Vietnam, in Cuba, with Khrushchev, Hoover, Hoffa. It lost, in other words, the history that the man who was killed would have helped to make. And it gained a different history, the 28 years that have passed since then. It also gained something less important but equally inescapable: a persistent cottage industry that has provided work -- sometimes created careers -- for countless authors, filmmakers, researchers and conspiracy buffs. For nearly three decades they have dismantled the assassination like a dream, seeking and finding hidden images, secret symbols, echoes of truths and, sometimes, truths. Relentlessly, they have pursued leads, analyzed evidence, interviewed witnesses, learned the arcana of acoustics, forensics, photography. Together, they have produced more than 600 books about the assassination and more than a dozen television documentaries, as well as novels, plays, miniseries, musicals, poems, college courses, exhibits, lectures, newsletters and feature films. The latest and most ballyhooed of the industry's products is a movie, due out this month, by the self-appointed chronicler of the '60s, Oliver Stone. JFK was directed and cowritten by Stone, and ever since it started filming in April on a closed set in Dallas, bootlegged copies of its first-draft script have been abundant -- and premature criticism of its contents impassioned. Articles this spring in The Washington Post, The Chicago Tribune, Time and The New Orleans Times-Picayune raised questions about Stone's accuracy and his motives. The Tribune's Jon Margolis called the script an "insult to intelligence and decency." The Post's George Lardner Jr. decried its many "errors and absurdities" in a lengthy feature story titled "Dallas in Wonderland." Stone, who created Platoon, Wall Street, Born on the Fourth of July and The Doors, tends to make news whenever he makes movies. He has a gift not only for storytelling but also for hitting the nation's nerve. Still, the advance reaction to JFK has gone beyond the usual hype. One of the reasons seems to be that he has cast the very credible Kevin Costner in the central role of Jim Garrison, a controversial former New Orleans district attorney who in 1969 attempted to convict a local businessman named Clay Shaw of conspiracy to assassinate the President. Garrison, who raised eyebrows, tempers and some lingering questions with his prosecution of Shaw, was generally dismissed by the press as a publicity seeker -- and equally praised by conspiracy researchers as a maverick. The jury in the six-week trial reached a not guilty verdict in less than an hour. But Garrison has held firm to his theory that Shaw was part of a coup engineered by the covert action arm of the CIA. In his 1988 book, On the Trail of the Assassins, he insisted that the cast of characters involved in the conspiracy or cover-up ultimately included the CIA, the Secret Service, LBJ, J. Edgar Hoover, Earl Warren, the Dallas police and just about everyone except Lee Harvey Oswald, who he claimed was busy that day being framed. As Garrison, now 70 and a retired state appeals court judge, has put it: "Lee Oswald was totally, unequivocally, completely innocent of the assassination, and the fact that history . . . has made a villain of this young man who wanted nothing more than to be a fine Marine is in some ways the greatest injustice of all." Oliver Stone, 45, sits in a conference room at Skywalker Sound, a large postproduction facility west of Los Angeles. Along with a crew of 65, he has spent the last three months working 16-hour days and trying to edit 120 hours of film down to three. His eyes are puffy, and his hair is wild, and he looks very tired. He is reminded about Jim Garrison's words and acknowledges that though he's based much of his film on Garrison's story and admires the man, he doesn't see eye-to-eye with him on every point. Stone doesn't, for example, believe the CIA masterminded the plot. He suspects Army Intelligence was involved. And he thinks of Lee Harvey Oswald as "semi-innocent, which means semi-guilty." Garrison, in his film, is a semi-fictional protagonist, "an underdog," according to Stone, whose goal is to seek the truth. So just how much of the real Jim Garrison and how much of his perspective Stone has adopted won't be known until the movie is released. What is clear is that JFK is a conspiracy film and that for the American people, 45 percent of whom were not even born at the time of Kennedy's death, it has the potential to become the version of history they take to be history. "The best thing this movie could do for me," Stone says, "is if it would exist as an alternate myth to the Warren Commission myth, if it would be a beacon to another generation that would think of the Kennedy killing always in these new terms." That prospect has alarmed even some long-standing members of the assassination research community. Harold Weisberg, 78, the author of six books on the assassination, has gathered some 250,000 documents through the Freedom of Information Act. He believes passionately that there was a conspiracy but feels that the whole truth will never be known and fears that Stone's movie will distort the established facts. "Oliver Stone will do an influential job," says Weisberg, "and the people are going to believe what he says. You have to know the subject to know what an atrocity this is." Meanwhile, other assassination researchers -- even those who might have been expected to resent Stone as a Johnny-come-lately -- are greeting the prospect of his movie with unconcealed delight. Says R. B. Cutler, the 78-year-old publisher of a bimonthly newsletter called the Grassy Knoll Gazette: "When the movie comes out, someone is going to stand up in 1992 and say, `Hey, Bush, Oliver tells me Oswald didn't do it alone. Who the hell did?' " Mark Lane, whose new book, Plausible Denial, points the finger at the CIA and is thus at odds with some of Stone's views, nevertheless declares: "The greatest contribution to a discussion in America about this subject since the shot was fired is being made by Oliver Stone. He's placed it on the agenda, and I salute him." In short, there is enthusiasm among many of the buffs for anything that keeps interest in the assassination alive. Since November 22, 1963, it has never really waned. Despite the Kennedy family's wishes, JFK remains the only former President who is commemorated on the day of his death, not his birth. Every year, on the anniversary of the assassination, a somewhat macabre crowd gathers to mourn and reminisce at Dealey Plaza in Dallas. Four million people visit the grave at Arlington National Cemetery each year, praying, reciting words from the great speeches, gazing upon the eternal flame. John Metzler Jr., Arlington's superintendent, receives dozens of letters addressed to Kennedy in care of the cemetery from all over the country. "People tell the President how much they like him," he says, "and that they would like him to do things for them. Others just come to the site. They get tears in their eyes. Some lay a single flower. You can see it's a humbling time." At the former Texas School Book Depository, from which Oswald is said to have fired the fatal shots, a museum called The Sixth Floor was opened in 1989. For six dollars, a visitor can hear an audiotape of interviews with witnesses, view memorabilia from the '60s and book cartons that re-create the sniper's perch. As executive director of the exhibit, Bob Hays sees the visitors and their emotion and says he is still amazed by their intensity. "They come to question," he says, "they come to remember, and in part, I think, they come to heal." The healing has to do with Camelot, a word that conjures a host of pictures, a pang of idealism and of loss. No matter what the country is told about the real Jack Kennedy -- his infidelities, his health problems, his crudeness, his questionable World War II heroism, dubious Pulitzer Prize, tainted Cook County votes -- the illusion is more powerful than the disillusionment. Even in a bad Kennedy year such as this, when Ted and Joan and Willie fail to garner the kind of headlines that the country still expects of them, America's royal family remains indestructibly glamorous. The main reason is that its chief tragedy remains, like its victim, larger than life, even larger than death. Would we care as much if he had been less handsome? If she had been less beautiful? If he hadn't had those children? That speechwriter? That voice? Would we feel at all the same if the press hadn't been so deferential, so polite, so selective? If he'd been killed at 55 or 60 instead of 46? If he hadn't been killed but had died of old age? Other loved Presidents have died in office, even in this century; when FDR was gone, the citizens wept in streets and crowded bars. But when we lost FDR we lost a father; when we lost JFK we lost a son and brother, and, as with all such premature, unnatural deaths, the grief was simply deeper, the disbelief more profound. Hence, the consumers for the Kennedy industry. The expected audience for Oliver Stone's film. The readers who have made five books best-sellers in the last two years, as well as dozens more in the past 28. The endless stream of TV Jackies and TV Jacks, the fake pink Chanel suits and fake Boston accents. And yes, the magazine covers. Kennedys sell. "The Kennedy story is inherently engaging because of what might have been," says Kent Carroll, who at Carroll & Graf has published four books on the assassination. "A young life was snuffed out. It's a real-life story. Kennedy's accomplishments as President were mediocre, but he's viewed as being one of the great Presidents. It has to do with what people want to believe he was. He is the unfulfilled promise." Even 20 years after Kennedy's death, a Harris Survey found that a majority of Americans still felt "a deep sense of grief" for the President and "miss[ed] him more" as time went by. Camelot remains the American Eden. Though many of the theorists are quick to assert that they are not blind to Kennedy's faults, others seem less inclined to let go of the legend. As Jim Marrs writes in Crossfire, a kind of compendium of assassination theories (and another book used by Stone in the writing of his film): "I seek not only the killers of President Kennedy, I seek the persons who killed Camelot." Says Mark North, author of the newly published Act of Treason (which blames the assassination on J. Edgar Hoover): "My interest initially was historical -- trying to set the record straight. Then it became a question that the memory of John Kennedy had been wronged. People can say what they want about him, about his philandering and the Bay of Pigs, but he donated all his salary to charity, and he was an honest man who had the country's interests at heart." Penn Jones Jr., 77, may be the assassination researcher who has taken Kennedy's death most personally. Former publisher of Texas's weekly Midlothian Mirror, Jones started in the mid-'60s to question the official version of Kennedy's death in the paper's editorials. In subsequent years he published both a newsletter (The Continuing Inquiry) and, using his own money, a four-book series called Forgive My Grief. Jones believes the assassination was a military coup ordered by the Joint Chiefs of Staff with the CIA's cooperation. He believes there were nine assassins that day in Dallas, one of them concealed by a manhole cover. Surrounded by portraits of JFK and floor-to-ceiling shelves filled with assassination books, tapes and mementos, he talks in his phoneless, white-frame farmhouse in Waxahachie, a rustic town half an hour south of Dallas. "Democracy died in Dealey Plaza," he says sadly. "I love democracy. I loved Kennedy." His pain and his work are shared by Elaine Kavanaugh Jones, 38, his colleague since 1978 and wife since 1986 (they met on the grassy knoll). "A lot of people study the assassination for the mystery, the intrigue," she says, "but we do it because we loved him. He brought youth and wit to this country. He made every single person believe they had an important part in this country. Now there's no hope." In contrast to the Joneses, Oliver Stone is quick to say he sees Kennedy's imperfections. "I was never a Kennedy lover when he was alive," he says, "so I did not come to this with a liberal ambulance-chasing knee-jerk reaction to the murder, or saying he was some kind of god. Kennedy was a man with many flaws, and an ambivalent man. I see him as a pragmatic politician wanting to get elected and willing almost to sell his mother to do so." Yet Stone, whose own experience as a soldier in Vietnam has shaped much of his politics and his art, also sees the dead President as the first great victim of that war. "Kennedy was a man who achieved a vision and by the end of his thousand days in office was becoming less of a cold warrior and more of a statesman and peacemaker," Stone says. "He told [Senators] Mike Mansfield and Wayne Morse and he told [aide] Kenny O'Donnell that he was going to withdraw all the troops after he was reelected. I have a very strong feeling that if Kennedy had lived, the Vietnam war as we knew it would never have happened. There were sinister forces at work that killed him because he was seeking to change things." The production company Stone set up for this film is called Camelot. But Camelot alone does not explain the assassination industry. Not everyone needs a hero; some people need a villain. For some, conspiracy theories can answer a deeply personal need to make sense of an event that, if the official version were true, would be too vast and too random to fathom. As Dr. James W. Pennebaker, a Dallas psychologist who specializes in studying the effects of traumatic events on communities, puts it: "It doesn't make sense to people that a partially deranged man would have done this. It doesn't make sense that Elvis could have just died." The fact that a single madman could change the world in a single moment can be more unsettling than the prospect of an organized action, however corrupt. The organization suggests control; the madman suggests chaos. Mark Lane begs to differ. "That's just cheap psychology," he argues, "a mystical concept imposed upon us by people who've refused to look at the facts." But Harold Weisberg he argues, "a mystical concept imposed upon us by people who've refused to look at the facts." But Harold Weisberg is one researcher who agrees. "People want to give meaning to a random event like the assassination," he suggests. Sayst Stone: "[The press] demeans Kennedy, they trivialize history by making November 22, 1963, into a car accident. A thunderbolt came down from the sky and knocked off this guy. O.K., we lost him, grieve a bit, have your three days of grief, and then move on. That's what they would like us to believe. Well, it wasn't an accident." Whether inspired by goodness or convinced of evil, the assassination theorists share an extraordinary intensity. David Lifton, author of the 1981 best-selling Best Evidence, not only remembers where he was when he heard the news of JFK's death; he remembers where he was when he decided to begin researching it. Lifton's theory, one of the most sensational, is that JFK's body was surgically altered to conceal the evidence that he'd been shot from the front. "It was a night in October of 1966 when I figured out that the body must have been altered," he says. "I went to a coffee shop with my girlfriend. I took a napkin and wrote down my two choices. One was to complete my graduate studies and get a master's degree at Cornell. The other was to follow up this evidence, to do what I was burning to do. I saved the napkin in a folder somewhere. I ended up in an apartment living with filing cabinets. I had no idea then that the book would take me fifteen years. But I had the sense that I was really onto something. I knew it couldn't wait." Says Mark North, who started his career as a tax attorney: "My father fought in the battle of Iwo Jima, my brother in Vietnam. I was an Eagle Scout. It bothered me that this could happen in my country." Oliver Stone's intensity about the assassination, like his interpretation of it, has evolved. He was a senior in high school the day that Kennedy was shot. "I was just on a lunch break or something, and I remember that somebody came and knocked at the door. Just a quiet moment. And actually I didn't realize at the time that my life had changed forever." He was not, he says, a buff. He accepted the theory that Oswald was the lone gunman. But three years ago, while finishing Born on the Fourth of July in the Far East, Stone read Jim Garrison's book. "I was very shaken by it," he recalls. "I was deeply, deeply moved and appalled, and I optioned the book myself. I wanted to get this story out." With Garrison's editor, Zachary Sklar, serving as coauthor, Stone immersed himself in the process of research and writing -- and suddenly found himself deluged by the buff community. "They lined up," he says, "like hogs at a trough. Not all, but some. They wanted to be consulted or to have their theories included, and we could not do that. There are too many books and too many researchers. But because we were a movie, we were considered the golden goose." Stone says his emotions have changed in the course of the project. "Much of my initial rage went into the script-writing process," he says, "and by the time you're shooting, so many other people are involved that you're sharing that kind of anger; you're not carrying the burden by yourself. It's a job, and you do it professionally." Still, it is impossible to talk to Stone without being struck by his anger. He is angry at the government, which he perceives as dishonest; at some of the research community, which he perceives as envious; and at most of the press, which he perceives alternately as blind and blinding. His response to his early critics in the press was to call them "Doberman pinschers trained to protect the government." "The media," he says, "would like to think that they can control the people, but I think the people, if they turn out for the movie, will show that they care. And they're not going to buy the official version." He can sound close to delusion, and he knows it. "I'm not going to be classified as a paranoid," he says. "But I do see a special interest -- a vested interest -- in certain publications to maintain the official Warren Commission theory." Asked if he dreams of the assassination, he answers, "If I say yes, that could be taken negatively. That could be pictured as me seeing a shooter behind every bush." He wants to be clear that he is not a kook. "I had much anxiety over this film," he says. "I've had many three-o'clock-in-the-morning attacks, doubts, uncertainties. It probably has aged me and certainly has exhausted me. And I certainly hold the possibility that I could be dead wrong in my head. I have that capacity. To look at myself and laugh and say, `Maybe Oswald is what everyone thinks he was, and I'm on the longest, goofiest spin in history -- in my history.' " But no. Stone's imagery for Kennedy, while not Arthurian, remains regal, and his sense of injustice sublime. "The Kennedy myth is a bit like America's Hamlet story," he says. "Kennedy is the king who was murdered. There's been an ugly succession of kings in this country, none of whom have worked, really worked. And we, the American people, are like Hamlet before the first act, waiting to find out that there is a false king who sits on the throne." In Hamlet, of course, the false king was also the murderer, and even Stone does not go as far as some others, who trace a CIA plot from the Bay of Pigs to Watergate to George Bush. Though Stone believes that one person did know of the whole assassination plan, he also says that only a viewer of his movie who is "very alert" will be able to say who that person is. His film, he insists, doesn't solve the murder; he's not sure that the murder can ever be solved. "I'm not in the business of bringing charges and trying to make a case in a court of law in the light of day," he says. But mystery has a rich tendency to breed conspiracy theories. Since 1966, when the first attacks on the Warren Commission report were made, polls conducted by organizations including Gallup, Harris and The Washington Post have consistently shown that a majority of Americans (56 percent in the most recent sampling) believe there was some kind of conspiracy behind the assassination. A lot of their doubts about the official version have been inspired by other people's convictions; like the best preachers and politicians, the conspiracy theorists can often sway by the sheer force of their faith. And with the exception of David W. Belin, a former counsel to the Warren Commission and the author of two books that support its methods and findings, the buffs have generally been the noisemakers. It is difficult to confront their exhortations without being somewhat seduced. It is also difficult to dismiss some of their questions. Why weren't more of the witnesses interviewed by the Warren Commission? How could one bullet have pierced JFK's back and neck, then John Connally's chest, wrist and hand, and ended up on the governor's stretcher virtually pristine? Why wasn't Oswald, a known supporter of Castro, watched by federal agents? Why, after his arrest, did he insist upon his innocence and call himself a patsy? Why did more than 50 witnesses say they thought the shots had come not from the Book Depository behind the President but from the infamous grassy knoll ahead? Why, when the alleged lone gunman was supposed to have fired from behind JFK, does the crucial footage shot by Abraham Zapruder seem to show him recoiling backward? The answers to such questions, as provided by the conspiracy buffs, are unfortunately never simple and, lacking evidence, not conclusive. But the suggestions of a conspiracy were sufficiently compelling to inspire an official reopening of the case by the House of Representatives in 1976. After two and a half years of study, at a cost of $5.4 million, the House Select Committee on Assassinations concluded that "President John F. Kennedy was probably assassinated as a result of a conspiracy." Part of the evidence: a recording from a motorcade policeman's Dictabelt that seemed to reveal that there had been four shots, not three. In 1988 the Justice Department concluded that the acoustical evidence on which the committee had based its conclusion had been misinterpreted. The Warren Commission findings stood, but so did the controversy. Says Jim Marrs: "It's the greatest murder mystery ever." Says David Belin: "It was the crime of the century." Says Stone: "The mystery has never been laid to rest." The true-crime nature of the assassination may be the most seductive part of all. In 1966, when Norman Mailer reviewed Mark Lane's first book, he predicted that the question marks would lure a lot of amateur Sherlock Holmeses to Dealey Plaza: " . . . plans will be made and money saved to make a trip to Dallas, which will become a shrine for all the unborn Baker Street Irregulars of the world." And that, of course, is precisely what has happened. Indeed, the Grassy Knoll Gazette's motto is a quote from Sir Arthur Conan Doyle: "When you have eliminated the impossible, whatever remains, however improbable, must be the truth." Even the buffs' names for the various characters in Dealey Plaza would not seem out of place in one of Conan Doyle's stories: Umbrella Man, Badge Man, Black Dog Man and so on. Erik Rinne, a Dallas teacher and researcher who believes that any one of 10 theories might explain the assassination, says: "I do the research for the lust of knowing. I want to know the unknown -- or the unknowable. It's like a Rubik's Cube. It's a labyrinth. It's like the mystery of the pyramids or Jack the Ripper." Rinne's course at Eastfield College near Dallas is called "Who Shot JFK?", and he always begins the class by telling his students he doesn't have all the answers. "It would be a letdown if this were solved," he concedes. "It's terrible to say, but this is something that could become a parlor game in twenty years." (In one case, it already has. A year ago a small California company came out with Coup D'Etat: The Assassination of John F. Kennedy Trading Cards, each card featuring a major player, theory or event in the case. At the JFK Assassination Information Center in Dallas, Larry N. Howard, 46, oversees an unofficial repository of tapes, artifacts, government documents and published material. His office is crowded with books and tapes about the assassination, and he has a large ring notebook filled with photos of the JFK set, where he worked as a consultant: There is Howard with Oliver Stone, Howard with Kevin Costner. He's proud to show it to visitors. Every day he receives a stack of pink phone message slips from researchers wanting to pass on information or ask questions about the assassination. He estimates that some 100 people around the country are still actively exploring the crime. Many of them visit his center, which stays open late at night and on weekends. He and his two full-time colleagues, working with a half dozen volunteers, charge a five-dollar admission fee and make additional money from the sale of books and T-shirts. Howard and his staff are determined to solve the Kennedy murder. "We're close," he says portentously. "We're very close." Last month Howard and the Information Center sponsored a three-day assassination symposium at Dallas's Hyatt Regency. The agenda included a book fair, a tour of the motorcade route and seminars featuring eyewitnesses and authors. "Relive History," the brochure suggested. Hundreds were planning to do just that: As long as there are unknowns, there is reason for hope. Says Hugh Forrest, one of the symposium's organizers: "Barring the solution of the assassination, we plan to make this an annual event." A CONSPIRACY LEXICON In 1964 the President's Commission on the Assassination of President Kennedy, chaired by Chief Justice Earl Warren, published its findings after ten and a half months of investigation. Lee Harvey Oswald, the commission said, a man who "showed disdain for democracy, capitalism, and American society in general," had acted alone, firing three shots from the sixth-floor window of the Texas School Book Depository. Eighty minutes after the assassination, Oswald was arrested for the murder of Officer J. D. Tippit; 12 hours later he was charged with JFK's murder; and two days after that, he was killed in custody, supposedly on impulse, by a grief-stricken Jack Ruby. Assassination students -- as well as a consistent majority of the American public -- have viewed the Warren Commission report as being anywhere from incomplete to fantastic. Their doubts have inspired a host of alternate theories with a singular cast of characters and a sometimes specialized vocabulary. BABUSHKA LADY An eyewitness, never interviewed by the Warren Commission, who was wearing a scarf and filming the motorcade as the shots were fired. In the '70s a woman named Beverly Oliver identified herself as the Babushka Lady and said that her film, which showed the grassy knoll, had been taken by FBI agents and never returned. BADGE MAN One of the purported grassy knoll assailants. In a blowup of a tiny section of a Polaroid photograph, some researchers see the image of a man with a badge on one shoulder and a flash of light before him. BANISTER, GUY A former FBI agent and anti-Castro activist. Employing David Ferrie, he worked at 544 Camp Street in New Orleans, the address on the pro-Castro leaflets Oswald had passed out several months before the shooting. BLACK DOG MAN Another photograph of the scene reveals a triangular black patch behind the concrete wall on the grassy knoll. Some researchers say the shape is a man with a gun. Members of the 1976 House Assassinations Committee felt that the dark patch looked like a dog-shaped blur. CIA CONSPIRACY THEORY The supposed motivation was three-fold. First, a desire on the part of certain agents to avenge what they saw as their disgrace at the Bay of Pigs. Second, a desire to thwart JFK's intention to withdraw advisers from Vietnam. And third, a desire for self-preservation in light of his purported plan to eliminate the agency. FERRIE, DAVID A New Orleans pilot and private eye -- according to some a CIA operative, to others a Mafia contact. Ferrie (who was left totally hairless by a disease) had known Oswald in the mid-'50s and is alleged to have lured him into the conspiracy. Ferrie died in 1967, apparently of a ruptured blood vessel, days after being named by District Attorney Jim Garrison as a possible conspirator in JFK's killing. His death is one of many considered mysterious by assassination buffs. FRAME 313 The frame of the home movie (page 35) taken by Abraham Zapruder, in which the fatal shot shatters JFK's head. FRENCH CONNECTION THEORY Suggests that at least one of the assassins was a French hitman working for the CIA. GARRISON, JIM Former New Orleans district attorney, he described David Ferrie as "one of history's most important individuals" and had, until the suspect's death, intended to prosecute him. Instead, he set his sights on businessman Clay Shaw, who was found not guilty of conspiracy in 1969. GRASSY KNOLL The sloping hill from which many theorists claim the fatal shot was fired. Most witnesses did say they thought the shots had come from this direction, but none saw a gunman shooting. HOOVER, J. EDGAR Mark North's Act of Treason claims that FBI Director Hoover had learned of a Mafia contract that had been put on JFK in September 1962. His "act of treason" was his failure to inform the Secret Service or his superiors in the Justice Department about the threat. According to North, Hoover's motive was self-preservation: "As a result . . . President Kennedy was assassinated, Johnson became President, and the director obtained an Executive Order, on May 8, 1964, waiving his compulsory retirement." JOHNSON, LYNDON BAINES Few buffs suggest that LBJ was directly involved in planning the assassination, but many believe that he may have been part of a vast cover-up. MAFIA THEORY Both Oswald and Jack Ruby have been shown to have had connections to organized crime. In addition, Louisiana mob boss Carlos Marcello apparently thought it a betrayal that the CIA under JFK would hire the Mafia to assassinate Castro while JFK allowed Robert Kennedy, as attorney general, to crack down on the mob. Marcello is said to have sworn vengeance on RFK. So why assassinate JFK? "If you want to kill a dog," Marcello reportedly said, "you don't cut off the tail, you cut off the head." But some theorists have the mob just carrying out CIA orders. MILITARY-INDUSTRIAL COMPLEX THEORY The interpretation of the assassination that focuses on perceived vested interests of big business and the military. Many assassination researchers see an attempt at self-preservation in JFK's destruction. According to them, Kennedy's acceptance of a nuclear test ban, his perceived softening toward the U.S.S.R. and Cuba, and his reassessment of the U.S. presence in Vietnam all constituted an economic and moral threat. PRISTINE BULLET The bullet that ended up on John Connally's stretcher, virtually unmarked, and was said by the Warren Commission to have injured both JFK and the Texas governor. RUBY, JACK The Dallas nightclub owner who shot Oswald in the basement of the Dallas police station. The Warren report saw no "significant link" between Ruby and organized crime, but by the time of the House investigation, Ruby's mob connections were taken more seriously. Though he never confessed to having had any part in a conspiracy, he did ask Earl Warren, "If you felt your life was in danger . . . wouldn't you be reluctant to go on speaking?" Ruby tried several times to kill himself in prison, once by running headlong into a wall. He died of cancer in prison in 1967, having told guards he had been injected with cancer-causing agents. THREE TRAMPS Among the suspects arrested near Dealey Plaza were three men dressed in shabby clothing who seemed to be vagrants. Released soon after their arrest, they were never conclusively identified. Some researchers recognize, in one of the tramps, the face of Charles V. Harrelson, a convicted hitman. Harrelson (who is the father of Cheers star Woody Harrelson) is in prison for murder; while conceding his resemblance to the "tramp," he denies having been in Dealey Plaza that day. TWO-COFFINS THEORY David Lifton's Best Evidence alleged that the coffin taken from Air Force One and driven to Bethesda Naval Medical Center was empty, and that a second coffin, bearing the President, was detoured to an unknown location, where proof that the fatal shot had come from the front was concealed. According to Lifton, the altered body actually arrived at Bethesda before the empty coffin; it was being prepared for autopsy, he claims, before the coffin had arrived. TWO-OSWALDS THEORY Questions about the true identity of Lee Harvey Oswald led Michael Eddowes, a British researcher, to publish The Oswald File in 1977, in which he claimed that the Oswald born in New Orleans in 1939 was captured by Soviets in 1959. According to Eddowes, JFK was killed by a KGB agent, an Oswald look-alike. Eddowes's evidence -- mostly discrepancies among medical reports --led to Oswald's exhumation in 1981. The body was positively identified as Oswald's. But two Dallas funeral directors now claim that the exhumed body is not the one they buried in 1963. UMBRELLA MAN He was standing by a Dealey Plaza freeway sign, beneath an open umbrella on a sunny day. One theory: The umbrella was a device that fired a paralyzing dart into JFK's neck. Another: The umbrella was a sign to JFK that he was being killed by disgruntled anti-Castro agents who had hoped vainly for "an umbrella" of air protection during the Bay of Pigs invasion. ZAPRUDER, ABRAHAM The Dallas clothing manufacturer who stood near a concrete wall on the grassy knoll and filmed the most famous footage in history. Some researchers still claim that LIFE, which purchased the film the day after the assassination, kept its most controversial contents from the public until the 1970s, either in outright collusion with the government or in a misguided attempt to shield the public from its grotesque contents. In fact, LIFE published even the most grisly of the movie frames, Frame 313, on October 2, 1964. CAPTION: JFK WHY WE STILL CARE A new movie about the assassination reopens an old controversy CAPTION: "We should know," says Oliver Stone, "the way politics is played, the way kings are killed." CAPTION: Mark Lane's new book will be his last on the assassination. "I've made my contribution," he says. CAPTION: Penn Jones Jr. has been a researcher since the '60s. "I think there were nine guns fired at JFK," he says, "and it was a beautiful coup d'etat." CAPTION: Stone's filming began with the motorcade in Dealey Plaza, where, with eerie precision, he re-created the events of November 22, 1963, in more detail than ever before. CAPTION: Bob Hays oversees The Sixth Floor in Dallas, where visitors can view the motorcade route. CAPTION: Larry Howard's Assassination Information Center stays open late at night and on weekends. Title: Plunging into the labyrinth. (director Oliver Stone) (Interview) Citation: Time, Dec 23, 1991 v138 n25 p74(3) ------------------------------------------------------------- Subjects: Motion picture producers and directors_Interviews JFK (Motion picture)_Production and direction People: Stone, Oliver_Interviews; Kennedy, John F._Assassination Reference #: A11687635 ============================================================= Abstract: Oliver Stone believes there was a conspiracy to kill John F. Kennedy, and has set out to show it in his new film 'JFK.' The director explains why he believes important facts were covered up. ============================================================= Full Text COPYRIGHT Time Inc. 1991 Q. In JFK you commingle real news footage with re-created historical scenes. Do you consider the film a docudrama, a work of fact or fiction? A. Am I a zebra? Am I a giraffe? What color are my spots? These are categorizations, and I tend to resist them. During the trial Jim Garrison says, let's speculate for a moment what happened that day. He goes on to speculate as to the events as they might have happened with more than one shooter. So I'm giving you a detailed outlaw history or counter-myth. A myth represents the true inner spiritual meaning of an event. I think the Warren Commission was a myth, and I think this movie, hopefully, if it's accepted by the public, will at least move people away from the Warren Commission and consider the possibility that there was a coup d'etat that removed President Kennedy. Q. Do you feel you as a filmmaker have a responsibility to historical fact? A. Whenever you start to dictate to an artist his "social responsibility" you get into an area of censorship. I think the artist has the right to interpret and reinterpret history and the events of his time. It's up to the artist himself to determine his own ethics by his own conscience. Q. Are you comfortable with this film in your own conscience? A. Totally. I dispute the "objective" version of events in Dealey Plaza as stated by the Warren Commission. The entire Warren Commission Report, 26 volumes, is a rat's nest of conflicting facts, and that's been pointed out not just by me but by many critics before me. Q. Is it accurate to say that you think the assassinations of John Kennedy, Martin Luther King and Bobby Kennedy are linked? A. I think the removal of the three most progressive leaders of the '60s during a time of bitterness and dissension and civil war in this country is very much tied into the assassination. I use the term civil war in its full implications, going back to the 1960s, where we were divided between hawks and doves, hippies and straights. These three leaders were pulling out of the war in Vietnam and shaking up the country. Civil rights, the cold war itself, everything was in question. There's no doubt that these three killings are linked, and it worked. That's what's amazing. They pulled it off. Q. Who's "they"? Who do you think has profited from the Kennedy and King assassinations? A. As shown in the movie, the money that was involved was enormous by any standard. Cold war money. It's not just Vietnam money. It's military-industrial money. It's nuclear money. It's the American war economy that Eisenhower warned us about, that came into being in this country in the 1940s, after World War II. It's also the continuation of the covert state, the invisible government that operates in this country and seems to be an unelected parallel government to our legitimate government. The CIA and military intelligence all got out of hand somewhere in the 1960s. It suddenly reached another level, where the concept of assassination -- the wet affair, liquidation -- became the vogue. Q. When you say a parallel government, do you mean a specific arm of the Executive Branch, like "special ops"? A. It's a moving, fluid thing, a series of forces at play. It's not necessarily individuals. Military-industrial interests are at stake. That puts into play certain forces. We have had many incidents recently, with Oliver North, with Richard Secord, the whole Iran-contra business. We've seen the scale on which arms are moved around the world. We've seen secret deals. There's more going on than ever meets the eye, and there's more going on than is ever written about in the newspapers. Q. Why did you pick Garrison as the focal point of JFK? A. Because in Jim I found a worthy protagonist, a vehicle to include all the research that was done in the case. I respect Jim. He put himself out there and led with his chin. His was a flawed investigation, but he did his best. He was one of a very few who early on said that the government did it. Which was an astounding statement in 1967, a very scary one. Q. It's still an astounding statement. Americans have the strong sense that their government is their government. They don't have the sense that, say, the Russians have had for generations, that the government belongs to the people who have seized power. A. You really think that? Maybe you're right. I may be in the minority. I just think the American people smell a rat. Q. Given our motley society, why couldn't a lone gunman have shot Kennedy? Why does it have to be a conspiracy? A. Assassins through history have always proclaimed their act. They've been proud of it. They've killed for a political reason. But Oswald always said, "I didn't do it. I'm a patsy." And we have an enormous accumulation of physical evidence that makes it very difficult to buy that one gunman could have done that kind of shooting job. Q. You stood in the window with that rifle and worked the bolt? A. Not only that, but we created the motorcade. We had a massive motorcade moving through that ravine called Dealey Plaza. We fired. We heard the shots and echoes too. We did more of an enactment than the FBI ever did, and by the way, their best marksmen were never able to match Oswald's feat. Q. In JFK the media, including TIME and LIFE, cover up the assassination conspiracy. Do you truly believe the press was CIA-infiltrated? A. I feel that the American reaction to the crime was to simplify it, to deal with good guys and bad guys and a lone gunman and John Wayne theatrics. The European press was much more skeptical, because they saw in this assassination political forces at play. The press in fact never did ask why Kennedy was killed. They immediately were, in a sense, trivialized by the questions of who and how. It all became a matter of scenery -- Oswald, Ruby. Scenery distracts from the essential questions. Who benefited? Who had the power to cover it up? I don't point the finger of evil intention, but it is documented that the agency spent quite a bit of money to keep a leg up in journalism, that there were a lot of people working on their payroll. Q. Specifically what evidence do you believe the press covered up? A. Among other things, you have LIFE buying the Zapruder film and burying it and not showing it to the American public.* Eventually it was made available, but only 12 years later. Garrison was the first one, I think, to get it out in a public forum with the trial in 1969. He subpoenaed Time-Life and succeeded in getting the film shown to a limited audience. Q. What is the importance of the Zapruder film? A. I think the most conclusive thing it shows is the fatal head shot coming from the front, from the fence. In addition, it shows the time frame of the shots, which makes it very difficult to believe Oswald fired three shots in 5.6 seconds. And of course it raises the whole question of how Connally and Kennedy were hit by the same bullet. Q. From what you're saying, you would have 400 of the most notable media people in America knowing about a conspiracy to kill Kennedy. A. I don't know that 400 people have to know anything. I think there is such a form of informational equilibrium that preserves the status quo that you can virtually call it silent consent. Q. Why did you put famous actors -- Jack Lemmon, Walter Matthau, Donald Sutherland, John Candy, Ed Asner -- into small roles? A. They help us along the road because the material might be in some sense dry and arcane to many people. Each actor has a little riddle or an obstacle for Garrison, who has to work his way around it to move farther into the heart of the labyrinth, where the Cretan Minotaur lives. Q. Isn't Garrison's wife, the character played by Sissy Spacek, simplified in the film? A. I didn't misinterpret his wife at all. That's the way she was. Garrison's investigation threatened her family life. They had five kids, and he was not home. We didn't practice politically correct feminism to try to make her into something she was not. What we did -- you could fault me for it -- was put a woman D.A. into his staff. He did not have a woman D.A. Q. Do you expect to see negative reaction to JFK? A. I think older white males will have a major problem with it. I think the younger generation will be more open. Q. The older generation has a memory of the event, the younger generation doesn't. What is your sense of responsibility to this younger, video generation, which will accept your movie as truth and history? A. We did a lot of homework. I had a dozen technical advisers going over the script with a fine-tooth comb. Everything that we have in there we stand behind. What is speculation is clearly speculation. We did not throw in any facts that we felt were wrong. I did make some composites. I've admitted that. I made it very clear [in interviews], for example, that Garrison never really met with the character called "X," played by Donald Sutherland, who explains the dimensions of the CIA conspiracy. Q. You have drawn together many threads of conspiratorial theory in the film. Are you endorsing everything or simply advancing them as possibilities? A. I think I pulled back in the movie from some of my own beliefs and probably softened some of my own conclusions for fear of seeming too aggressive and bullying about information. Q. With this film, aren't you joining the ranks of the conspiracy industry and commercializing a national tragedy? A. It's a cottage industry but not necessarily a very lucrative one. The movie faces commercial risk. It has to appeal on a large level to justify itself. Q. From many of your films it seems you see America as an ugly, disturbed country populated with sinister characters. A. Talk Radio is the darkest film I've made, but I don't personally feel that way about America. I have a lot more hope for America. I see it as a totally homogeneous land, and I love its vastness and its freedom. My mother is French. She was an immigrant who came over here in 1946. In a sense I'm half immigrant. I think that the best part of America is its lack of pretension and snobbism. If anything, in my work I've tried to veer away from the elites that I think have corrupted and made cynical the American Dream. I hark back to an immigrant belief in the goodness of this country. I find it coming still from Asia, Mexico, Latin America, Europe. I think movies in a sense thrive on that democracy. Q. Where were you on Nov. 22, 1963? A. In my room during a lunch break at the Hill School in Pennsylvania. My reaction was very similar to Jim's in the movie. A fellow student ran into the room and said, "They just shot the President." It was shocking to me because Kennedy was a handsome young man. I loved his rhetoric. Politically, I was against him because I was for Nixon and Goldwater. But in my heart I could not help being moved by his charisma. I was very sad for the family. We watched TV the whole weekend, just like in the movie. Then we moved on with our lives. We didn't really think about it. That was the point. Q. When did you begin to develop an intuition that maybe it wasn't Oswald alone, that maybe there was a conspiracy? A. I began to distrust the government through my Vietnam experience, when I started to see the degree of lying and corruption that was going on. When I came back from the war, I began to redefine the way I had grown up. I started writing screenplays more aggressively protesting the authority of this government. I wrote Platoon and Born on the Fourth of July. I had heard the Oswald stories, but I had honestly been defeated by the size of the literature, and I didn't see its implications in my life, as to how it affected the beginnings of the Vietnam War. And then Garrison's book was given to me. I read it and saw its implications as a thriller -- a whydunit. Q. You have been called a chronicler of the '60s and the last of the '60s radicals. What does the '60s mean to you? A. First of all, I was never a radical in the '60s. I was, if anything, very straight. I went to school. I went to Vietnam. I was very slow in coming around. I do think the '60s is a determinant decade for the '90s, because people in my generation -- I'm 45 now -- are coming to power. We're the next power base of this country. We all grew up in the cold war. We were born in the dawn of the nuclear age. So the '60s is really determining what's going to happen in the '90s. Q. You once said that Kennedy's assassination spawned the race riots, the hippie movement, organized protests and the drug culture. Do you think his death alone was responsible for this tide? A. Yes, in a metaphorical sense. I think there was an erosion of trust in the government on the subconscious level. On the conscious level, we moved on. We buried Oswald and got rid of Ruby. The nightmare went away. But subconsciously the major fissure had occurred. Historians in the 21st century are going to point to this as a key moment in American history. Q. Quite apart from whether there was a small, limited conspiracy, isn't the movie saying that it was in the general interest of Lyndon Johnson that Kennedy be assassinated and the war in Vietnam go forward? A. Kings are killed. It is the nature of political powers. I have no problem believing this. I can see where certain people do, and I can see where you might think I'm crazy. The film is a bit subversive in its approach. But a film can often be subversive to the subconscious. It comes out and it's often criticized and reviled, but it lasts. It's sort of like a tsunami wave. It starts out miles and miles from the beach. You hear a noise that just moves fast under the water. Then without warning it hits the beach, an explosion. Obviously, this film is going to be denied; there will be some decrying and reviling. All the errors are going to be attacked. It will be discredited. Yet it will survive. FOOTNOTE: * In fact Life printed the most relevant still frames in its next issue. But at the request of Zapruder, who feared "exploitation" of the tragedy, it did not allow the film to be shown as a moving image. In 1975 Life sold the film back to the Zapruder family for $1. CAPTION: Disenchanted by the war in Vietnam, the director aggressively questions governmental authority CAPTION: On location in Dallas, at the Texas School Book Depository Title: Who killed J.F.K.? (film maker Oliver Stone's 'JFK') Authors: Corliss, Richard Citation: Time, Dec 23, 1991 v138 n25 p66(5) ------------------------------------------------------------- Subjects: Motion pictures_Production and direction Conspiracies_Investigations JFK (Motion picture)_Production and direction People: Stone, Oliver_Production and direction; Kennedy, John F._Assassination Reference #: A11687625 ============================================================= Abstract: Oliver Stone's new movie 'JFK' will create renewed interest in conspiracy theories about the assassination of John F. Kennedy. Various conspiracy theories are described, in addition to details about the production of the film. ============================================================= Full Text COPYRIGHT Time Inc. 1991 J.F.K. blown away, What else do I have to say? -- Billy Joel, We Didn't Start the Fire On Nov. 22, 1963, somebody blasted the skull of America open. In a few seconds of rifle fire in Dallas' Dealey Plaza, a time warp gaped. Slapped out of a pretty postwar reverie, we screamed bloody murder. Oliver Stone screams bloody murder for a living. In his screenplays for Midnight Express and Scarface, he drew nightscapes of drug paranoia and police brutality. As writer-director of Platoon and Born on the Fourth of July, the Vietnam vet exorcised his demons by portraying the war as a rite of passage -- to fratricide. In Talk Radio he suggested that the penalty for a showman's reckless truth telling was to be killed by his audience. Jim Morrison, in The Doors, pays a similar fee for fame; the poet's capricious muse drives him to drugs, madness, death. Oddly enough, Stone's tortured artistic mission -- dispensing downers to a movie public famously addicted to escapism -- has its upside. He pours so much dramatic juice into the hemlock blender that folks go to his films, and official Hollywood has rewarded Stone with three Oscars. This past was prologue to his most outsize challenge: explaining the Kennedy assassination to his own satisfaction. Or anyone else's. JFK, the electrifying melodrama opening nationwide this week, attracted brickbats months ago when a long article in the Washington Post cataloged historical "errors and absurdities" in Stone and Zachary Sklar's screenplay. Assassination scholars ragged Stone for his naivete, his use of discredited testimony, his reliance on suspect "experts." A TIME critic said that if Stone's film "turns out to distort history, he may wind up doing more harm than homage to the memory of the fallen President." Tom Wicker, a New York Times columnist, has seen the film and believes it does all that and worse. He calls JFK "paranoid and fantastic," full of "wild assertions" and propagating an idea that, "if widely accepted, would be contemptuous of the very constitutional government Mr. Stone's film purports to uphold." Anybody want to see this movie? Warner Bros. hopes so; the studio (whose parent company also owns TIME) helped foot JFK's $40 million tab. It is also counting on Kevin Costner, America's No. 1 homegrown movie star, to lure audiences to what is at heart a high-voltage civics quiz. Though he doesn't necessarily agree with every notion floated in the film, Costner is happy to play front man for Stone. "Oliver's a patriot," he says. "And I believe with him that the impact of this movie will be liberating. Any part of the truth -- any discussion of what could be the truth -- can only make us freer." But Costner's coiled heroic presence is one more source of controversy, for the liberal icon of Dances with Wolves and Robin Hood: Prince of Thieves is playing Jim Garrison, who as New Orleans district attorney in the late '60s prosecuted the only Kennedy assassination case that ever went to trial. And, quickly, out the window. The jury found the defendant, businessman Clay Shaw, not guilty in less time than last week's West Palm Beach jurors took to exonerate William Kennedy Smith. For the past decade, Garrison (who appears in JFK as Chief Justice Earl Warren) has been part of America's conspiracy industry -- saint to some, buffoon to others. In Stone's mind, and in Costner's presence, the Garrison of JFK is a hero: pure and simple. Upon learning that Lee Harvey Oswald (Gary Oldman) had spent part of the summer in New Orleans, Garrison questions people who may have known the accused assailant: a ditsy homosexual named David Ferrie (Joe Pesci), a hooker named Willie O'Keefe (Kevin Bacon), a hipster lawyer (John Candy), an alcoholic private eye (Jack Lemmon) -- a lower-depths cast whose connections seem to hint at a dark secret. Perhaps even a conspiracy? Who dares call it treason? The D.A. does. A dogged sleuth for the truth, Garrison gets tips from "X," a disaffected military man (Donald Sutherland), help from his staff (Michael Rooker, Jay O. Sanders, Laurie Metcalf) and static from his wife (Sissy Spacek). By the time he has brought charges against the elegant debauchee Shaw (Tommy Lee Jones), the movie's Garrison is convinced of the breadth and enormity of this "secret murder at the heart of the American dream." So, you want to know, who killed the President and connived in the cover-up? Everybody! High officials in the CIA, the FBI, the Dallas constabulary, all three armed services, Big Business and the White House. Everybody done it -- everybody but Lee Harvey Oswald. Oh, Oswald was probably a double agent during his "defection" to the U.S.S.R., where he may have provided information that helped the Soviets gun down Francis Gary Powers' spy plane. He may also have been in cahoots with anti-Castro Cubans. But he didn't shoot J.F.K.; he didn't even shoot Dallas police officer J.D. Tippit. The one man charged with the Kennedy assassination was precisely what he said he was: "a patsy." Believe who will. Scoff who chooses. But save your outrage for matters of greater moment than even a major motion picture. It's a tribute to Stone's contentious showmanship that folks are het up about JFK, though it is neither the first nor the last movie assault on the Warren Commission Report. The 1973 film Executive Action hypothesized that leaders of the military-industrial complex conspired to kill J.F.K. A scheme even more toxic percolated through the 1979 movie Winter Kills, based on Richard Condon's novel: that a President very like Jack Kennedy could be assassinated by his own father. In February comes Ruby, from a Stephen Davis play about the man who really did shoot Oswald. And in April, Libra, based on Don DeLillo's fantasia about Oswald, his mother and the CIA, begins filming under John Malkovich's direction. Earlier this year, Libra's producers claimed that Stone had used his clout to torpedo their production, a charge Stone heatedly denies. Stone should have shown more confidence in his own film. Whatever one's suspicions about its use or abuse of the evidence, JFK is a knockout. Part history book, part comic book, the movie rushes toward judgment for three breathless hours, lassoing facts and factoids by the thousands, then bundling them together into an incendiary device that would frag any viewer's complacency. Stone's picture is, in both meanings of the word, sensational: it's tip-top tabloid journalism. In its bravura and breadth, JFK is seditiously enthralling; in its craft, wondrously complex. Stone assembles and presents his material like a brilliant, eccentric professor, dazzling you with free-form insights even as he's poking you -- oops! -- in the eye with his pointer. He uses a canny mix of documentary footage (including the Zapruder film) and re-enactments in 8-mm, 16-mm and 35-mm black-and-white and color to buttress, refute or footnote testimony. "We didn't worry about everything not fitting," says co-film editor Joe Hutshing. "The idea was to create a tapestry, with various textures, grain sizes and colors." The film also employs clever, subtle sound effects. When, during the first interrogation of Clay Shaw, Garrison springs Willie O'Keefe's name, we hear a dingdong! In story terms, it is a doorbell that cues the prostitute's appearance at Shaw's front door (with a subtextual aural gag: the prancing stud as Avon lady). But it also alerts the viewer that, after much digging, Garrison has come close to pay dirt. "The sound has a subliminal effect," Hutshing says. "It's like perfume -- it brings you back to that period." In his earlier films, Stone could go bats, with prowling cameras and screaming actors; but JFK is, for all its bravura, compact and controlled. Perhaps no Hollywood director has made a film with so many speaking parts or data; JFK is a crash briefing with great visual aids. If David Ferrie mentions a thunderstorm, Stone will lock it in your mind with a quick image of lightning splitting the Texas sky. Throughout, Stone juggles fact and supposition with such dervish dexterity that even when he drops a ball, he never loses his intense poise. As storyteller, Stone is catering a buffet banquet of conspiracy theories; you can gorge on them or just graze. He tells his audience what every entertainer says: entertain this notion. Suspend disbelief. Let's pretend. What if? Superficially, movies are a persuasive medium because they exist in the present tense, not the conditional. Each picture is happening before our eyes; each Stone film fantasy is, for the moment it is on the screen, the moviegoer's reality. But because films are fictions -- because even a naive viewer knows Kevin Costner is an actor playing a moviemaker's interpretation of a man named Jim Garrison -- the events they portray need not be factual, or even probable; they must only be plausible. Through his art and passion, Stone makes JFK plausible, and turns his thesis of a coup d'etat into fodder for renewed debate. The movie recognizes that history is not only what we are told to believe; often it is gossip that becomes gospel. Does Stone see himself as a political director? "Not at all," he says. "I am trying to be a dramatist." And a dramatist looks for a pattern. Coincidences, random motives and the privately festering grudges of a lone nut may be the small sad facts behind the Kennedy assassination, but they satisfy no one's demands -- least of all Stone's -- for the coherence of myth. The director needs a big-picture view to make his big picture work. And a hero like the movie's Garrison needs a martyr like the movie's Kennedy. The President must be restored to Camelot; the philanderer of revisionist history must be revised again, shown in home movies as a loving husband, a doting dad. More important, he must be a crusader who not only is determined to achieve his noble aims but also is aware of mortal danger from his enemies. If he was killed by Oswald alone, then Kennedy was no martyr -- just the victim of really rotten luck. Stone argues that Kennedy was so progressive, so "soft on communism" (and on Castro) and so popular that the right-wing establishment was driven to kill him. But this is a romantic, perhaps fantasy, J.F.K.; he can as easily be seen as a cold warrior with star quality. He believed in the domino theory of communism storming across Asia; he exercised superpower machismo by eyeballing the Soviet Union over its Cuban missiles until Khrushchev blinked. He took flak from liberals for appointing segregationist Southerners as judges in federal courts. Martin Luther King Jr., not Kennedy, was the moral leader of the civil rights movement -- rights confirmed only in Lyndon Johnson's tenure. Stone's Garrison is semifictional as well, and open to charges of distortion. As played with understated power by Costner, in his specs and rumpled jacket, Garrison is the ordinary decent man whose search for truth makes him extraordinary in a time of national fear and cowardice. Borrowing the quest plot from Hamlet (or Star Wars), JFK sends its hero out to avenge the murder of his spiritual father, Jack Kennedy. "This is not a biography of Jim Garrison," Costner says. "He was just the flagpole Oliver tied the events around. Was he right? I'm not sure. I tried to play him without judging him. That's somebody else's job. My job was to validate him as a character. It's up to the moviegoer to decide whether what he says is valid." What wasn't valid, some supporters of conspiracy scenarios charge, was the real Garrison's tactics. In mythologizing the D.A., JFK ignores allegations that he bullied witnesses and suppressed a polygraph test. These moral zits would deface the hero's image -- and Stone's too, since he likely sees himself as a modern movie Garrison, a brave man vilified for unearthing the sordid, cleansing truth. If Stone wants to raise the Garrison flagpole and sit on it, waving elaborate theories as if they were the Stars and Stripes, fine. But he should make his method clear to the audience. JFK needs to carry the warning: This is a drama based on fact and conjecture. Under its breath, the movie says as much. It prefixes some scenes with a "For all we know, it could have been . . ." or a "Let's just for a moment speculate, shall we?" Stone embraces contradictions, or maybe he just trucks over them. What Garrison tells his staff, Stone tells his viewers: "Now we're through the looking glass here, people. White is black, and black is white." But the film's true epigraph might be the counsel that "X" gives Garrison: "Don't take my word. Do your own work -- your own thinkin'." "Nobody is claiming that the movie is the truth," says Sklar, the editor of Garrison's book, On the Trail of the Assassins. "But Oliver wanted to find out as much as he could about the assassination and get close to the full truth, which he, like many people, thinks has never been told." Stone hired Sklar to work on the script, which was also based on Jim Marrs' study, Crossfire: The Plot That Killed Kennedy. He boiled Sklar's 550-page first draft down to 160 pages and interpolated extensive flashbacks, in the style of Rashomon and Z. By April 1991, when filming began, Stone, Sklar and co-producer A. Kitman Ho had interviewed more than 200 people. The actors became detectives too. "It's like being a journalist," Oldman said of his research into Oswald's character. "We all became assassination buffs. Marina [Oswald's Russian-born widow] had a tape that she let me see. It had a section leading up to the line, `I'm just a patsy.' Oliver saw it, and he said, `Let's restage that scene.' " Spacek spent time with Garrison's ex-wife Liz. "The sense I got from her," the actress says, "is of a woman living the life she wanted to live until her husband's obsession came through. She was proud of Jim, but his obsession went so far." On location in Dealey Plaza, actors and crew filmed the motorcade re-enactment with super-8 movie cameras. "The idea," says co-film editor Pietro Scalia, "was to create a point of view so that this section has an amateurish look." After much wrangling, the JFK company secured use of the Texas School Book Depository, from which shots were fired on Nov. 22. The sixth floor had become a museum, so the moviemakers used the seventh floor there and, for appropriate perspective of the motorcade, the sixth floor of an adjacent building. Stone also filmed at the Dallas police headquarters, where Jack Ruby killed Oswald. "The police were very cooperative," says production designer Victor Kempster. "They let us strip out computers in the offices and put in 1960s furniture. That included changing doorways to fit the film footage." The crucial historical footage was the Zapruder film, for a copy of which Stone paid $40,000. "It's the most important visual record we have of the assassination," says Sklar. "To make a movie without it is to miss a lot." Over and over, at the climax of JFK, Garrison plays the fatal shot -- tragedy as therapy -- to help solve the mystery and restore the fearful impact of the day that yanked a nation out of its cocoon of innocence. For all its cynicism, or even paranoia, about official venality, the film is a call for a kind of informed innocence. Stone says: Open your eyes wide, like a child's. Look around. See what fits. And Costner's summation is right out of an old Frank Capra movie in its declaration of principle in the face of murderous odds. Lost causes, as Capra's Mr. Smith said, are the only causes worth fighting for. To Stone's old enemies, JFK may be another volatile brew of megalomania and macho sentiment. To his new critics, the film may seem deliriously irresponsible, madly muttering like a street raver. But to readers of myriad espionage novels and political-science fictions, in which the CIA or some other gentlemen's cabal is always the villain, the movie's thesis will be a familiar web spinning of high-level malevolence. JFK is Ludlum or Le Carre, but for real. Or -- crucial distinction -- for reel. Memorize this mantra, conspiracy buffs and guardians of public respectability: JFK is only a movie. And, on its own pugnacious terms -- the only terms Oliver Stone would ever accept -- a terrific one. How Many Shots Were Fired, and from Where? THE MOVIE: Stone's theory is that there were six shots, fired by three teams of gunmen located in the Texas School Book Depository, behind a nearby grassy knoll and in front of the limo. Even if Oswald was involved, the shooting took less than six seconds, not long enough for him to have shot more than twice. THE EVIDENCE: Most witnesses testified that there were only three shots. Others said they heard four, at least one of which came from the grassy knoll. A House panel in 1979 analyzed a motorcycle-radio tape and concluded that a fourth shot did come from the knoll, but a subsequent study disputed this. The Warren Commission said the Zapruder film could be interpreted to mean the shooting took almost eight seconds, giving Oswald ample time to fire three shots. Could One Bullet Have Hit Both Kennedy and Connally? THE MOVIE: Garrison ridicules the Warren Commission's "magic-bullet" hypothesis by showing the impossible zigzag trajectory it would have had to take and by noting that the bullet in question was found in almost pristine condition. If he was right, there must have been more than three shots. THE EVIDENCE: The magic-bullet theory is one of the weakest parts of the Warren Commission's case; tests on animal and human cadavers were never able to show it was plausible. But subsequent studies by a skeptical House panel and by a Nova TV documentary indicate that Kennedy and Connally could have been positioned in such a way as to make it theoretically possible. Neutron- activation tests indicate that the fragments in Connally's wrist did come from the bullet in question. Where Did the Fatal Shot Come From? THE MOVIE: As shown in the Zapruder film, Kennedy's head lurched back when hit, suggesting that the bullet came from the front and not from the book depository. THE EVIDENCE: Kennedy's head does seem to snap back. Defenders of the Warren Commission argue that this does not prove the bullet came from the front; they say the autopsy report and photos make it clear the bullet entered from the rear. The bullet that hit Kennedy's head was found in the limousine, and tests indicated that it came from Oswald's rifle. Moreover, frame 313 of the Zapruder film clearly shows brain matter spraying forward. Did Oswald Know Ruby, Shaw and Ferrie? THE MOVIE: Shaw, Ferrie and Oswald are shown in New Orleans together, and Oswald and Ferrie are shown with Ruby at his Dallas nightclub. THE EVIDENCE: Over the years, some witnesses have come forward to say they saw the alleged conspirators together at parties and at a rally in rural Louisiana. This was Garrison's key contention in his 1969 trial of Shaw, but the jury rejected it. Even many conspiracy theorists doubt the credibility of the witnesses. Was the Autopsy Rigged? THE MOVIE: Kennedy is moved to Bethesda Naval Hospital near Washington over objections of a Dallas official, and the autopsy is supervised by top military commanders intent on covering up the evidence. The notes are then burned, and the President's brain disappears. THE EVIDENCE: Indeed, Kennedy's body was ordered moved to Bethesda Naval Hospital, some autopsy notes were destroyed, and the whereabouts of the brain is unknown. The autopsy photos taken at Bethesda indicate a shot from the rear, but they vary from the recollection of some doctors in Dallas. There have been lingering allegations -- but no hard evidence -- that someone tampered with the wounds on Kennedy's body. Was It a Military Plot to Keep the U.S. in Vietnam? THE MOVIE: A man identified as "X" tells Garrison that Kennedy was the victim of CIA and military officers who objected to his secret plans to withdraw from Vietnam and to scuttle plots against Fidel Castro. The movie implies that the masterminds were Allen Dulles, whom Kennedy fired as CIA director; General Charles Cabell, who was deputy CIA director and the brother of the mayor of Dallas; and a mystery man called "General Y." THE EVIDENCE: "X" is based on a former Air Force colonel named Fletcher Prouty, who was a director of special operations at the Pentagon in the early 1960s and is now a prominent conspiracy theorist. "General Y" is based on General Edward Lansdale, a celebrated CIA officer who ran the covert "Operation Mongoose" program to overthrow Castro and later served in Vietnam. Kennedy confided to certain antiwar Senators that he planned to withdraw from Vietnam if re-elected; but publicly he proclaimed his opposition to withdrawal. In October 1963 he signed a National Security Action Memo -- NSAM 263 -- that ordered the withdrawal of 1,000 of the 16,000 or so U.S. military "advisers." After the assassination, Lyndon Johnson let the 1,000-man withdrawal proceed, but it was diluted so that it involved mainly individuals due for rotation rather than entire combat units. A few days after taking office he signed a new action memo -- NSAM 273 -- that was tougher than a version Kennedy had been considering; it permitted more extensive covert military actions against North Vietnam. No one has come forward, however, with any direct knowledge of a military or CIA conspiracy. CAPTION: CONSPIRACY VICTIM? CAPTION: Stone meticulously re-created Kennedy's fatal motorcade in Dallas, even cutting trees so they matched the scene on Nov. 22, 1963 CAPTION: The famous home movie taken by dress manufacturer Abraham Zapruder shows Kennedy being hit in the throat CAPTION: Costner as Garrison making his case in court, with a model of Dealey Plaza CAPTION: The "magic bullet" CAPTION: Above, JFK's Oswald, Ferrie and Ruby; the real Oswald, Ferrie, Ruby and Shaw CAPTION: See above. CAPTION: See above. CAPTION: See above. CAPTION: See above. CAPTION: Sutherland as "X"; the real-life Prouty (the model for "X") and Lansdale CAPTION: See above. CAPTION: See above. Title: J.F.K. and "JFK." (historical accuracy of Oliver Stone's motion picture) (Beat the Devil) (Column) Authors: Cockburn, Alexander Citation: The Nation, Jan 6, 1992 v254 n1 p6(2) ------------------------------------------------------------- Subjects: Presidents_Assassination JFK (Motion picture)_Criticism, interpretation, etc. People: Stone, Oliver_Criticism, interpretation, etc.; Kennedy, John F._Assassination Reference #: A11665944 ============================================================= Abstract: The film "JFK" contends that Pres Kennedy's assassination was a right-wing conspiracy to stop him from withdrawing the US from Vietnam. Kennedy actually oversaw a massive military build-up, increased the US presence in Vietnam, and approved the destabilization of foreign governments. ============================================================= Full Text COPYRIGHT The Nation Company Inc. 1992 J.F.K. and JFK Whether J.F.K. was killed by a lone assassin or by a conspiracy has as much to do with the subsequent contours of American politics as if he had tripped over one of Caroline's dolls and broken his neck in the White House nursery. Of course many people think otherwise, reckoning that once it can be demonstrated that the Warren Commission was wrong and Oswald was not the lone killer, then we face the reality of a rightist conspiracy engineered to change the course of history. (The idea of Oswald as a leftist conspiracy of one or more has perhaps fortunately never had the popularity one might have expected.) This is the view taken by Oliver Stone, who has stated in interviews, such as one in Spin, that "Kennedy was really moving to end the cold war and sign a nuclear treaty with the Soviets; he would not have gone to war in Southeast Asia. He was starting a backdoor negotiation with Castro." Instead of which good things, there was "the first coup d'etat in America." In JFK, Stone leaves no doubt about the coup's sponsors. A sequence in grainy black-and-white, presumably designed for extra verite, shows L.B.J. planning the assassination with the Joint Chiefs of Staff. This is a $40 million equivalent of MacBird, though Stone's model is another Shakespeare play. The core of this vision of history is put by Kevin Costner in his role as New Orleans District Attorney Jim Garrison: We have all become Hamlets in our country, children of a slain father-leader whose killers still possess the throne. The ghost of John Kennedy confronts us with the secret murder at the heart of the American dream. He forces on us the appalling question: Of what is our Constitution made? What is our citizenship - and more, our lives - worth? What is the future, where a President can be assassinated under conspicuously suspicious circumstances, while the machinery of legal action scarcely trembles? How many political murders disguised as heart attacks, cancer, suicides, airplane and car crashes, drug overdoses, will occur before they are exposed for what they are? Stone wrote those words himself (and at one point even planned to have the ghost of J.F.K. appear to Garrison as he stood in his kitchen making a chicken sandwich while watching news of Bobby Kennedy's assassination). It's an important passage, for in its truly fascist yearning for the "father-leader" taken from the children-people by conspiracy, it accurately catches the crippling nuttiness of what passes amid some sectors of the left (admittedly a pretty nebulous concept these days) as mature analysis and propaganda: that virtue in government died in Dallas, and that a "secret agenda" has perverted the national destiny. With this demented optic, left ultimately joins hands with right, as happened during the Gulf War when the para-Birchist Craig Hulet won an enthusiastic following amid radical circles for his conspiratorial account of the Bush regime's policy even though anyone with half a brain could see after about thirty seconds exactly where he was coming from. Out the window goes any sensible analysis of institutions, economic trends and pressures, continuities in corporate and class interest and all the other elements constituting the open secrets and agendas of American capitalism. Title: Taking a darker view. (JFK assassination) Authors: Rosenbaum, Ron Citation: Time, Jan 13, 1992 v139 n2 p54(3) ------------------------------------------------------------- Subjects: Assassination_Research People: Kennedy, John F._Assassination Reference #: A11725103 ============================================================= Abstract: The film 'JFK' has revived interest in the assassination of John F. Kennedy, and with it the entire history of conspiracy theories that have been raised to explain the event. Almost 75% of Americans polled believe JFK was killed as part of a conspiracy. ============================================================= Full Text COPYRIGHT Time Inc. 1992 Three weeks after its release, Oliver Stone's film JFK continues to stir passions and debate, and to prompt calls for the release of secret government files on the Kennedy assassination. Last week the controversy drew a response from President Bush, who said while traveling in Australia that although he had not seen the movie, he had no reason to doubt the Warren Commission's finding that Lee Harvey Oswald acted alone in shooting Kennedy. While no new evidence has emerged, the film has focused attention on the band of mostly self-appointed experts who zealously pursue theories of a wider plot. This subculture is explored here by Ron Rosenbaum, a contributing editor of Vanity Fair and the author of Travels with Doctor Death, who has written extensively on conspiracy theories. Some years ago, during a telephone interview, I finally succeeded in badgering Jim Garrison into naming the Name. For years Garrison had been telling people he had the whole case cold: he knew who gave the orders, who fired the shots and from where. Still, though he had talked a lot about the Big Guys behind the plot -- intelligence agencies, the military-industrial complex and the like -- he had never publicly named the name of the man he believed fired the fatal head shot from the grassy knoll. I won't tell you that name, because Garrison didn't give me any evidence for singling out this person for historic infamy. On another day, I felt, he might have picked another name out of the hat. Still, for one guilty moment I had the kind of thrill that assassination buffs live for: I had the Name everyone else was looking for and no one else had. Of course, it wasn't an entirely unknown name. Garrison told me the person had been questioned extensively by Warren Commission investigators, and when I looked him up in the Warren Commission testimony, I found he plays a kind of Rosencrantz-and-Guildenstern-level role in the Warren Report, that of a peripheral figure in a key place: he was a live-in manager and janitor at Jack Ruby's sleazy strip joint, the Carousel Club. There's no doubt that the commission investigators were interested in his story -- the transcript of his testimony runs more than 200 pages -- but mostly because he was a source who might shed some light on the peculiarities of Jack Ruby's character (investigators repeatedly pressed the Name on whether Ruby had any sexual interest in his beloved dog Sheba). Though reading the testimony didn't give me much intimation of an assassination revelation, it was a revelation of another kind. In telling his life story, of how he wound up in the Carousel Club in 1963, the Name was telling a story of an American life -- of an America -- far different from the one I'd known in my suburban hometown. It was a story of a guy who made his living in the carnival world; he worked as a barker with small-time freak-show acts like "the two-headed baby" and "the snake girl," he told the Warren Commission. He bummed around looking for roustabout jobs, met his first wife at a Salvation Army mission. When she left him in the summer of 1963, he hitchhiked all the way from the West Coast to Dallas looking for her. Picked up some work at the Texas state fair in a carney sideshow called "How Hollywood Makes Movies," which featured some of Jack Ruby's strippers. Made some connections and soon found himself living in the back room of the Carousel Club in the midst of Ruby's strange menage, which included strippers, burlesque comics, stage hypnotists and, of course, the dog Sheba. I remember reading this testimony, mesmerized by my sudden immersion in a carnival-sideshow underbelly of American life. (The 26 volumes of Warren Commission testimony are like a vast, inchoate Great American Novel in that respect.) I didn't feel I was any closer to solving the Kennedy assassination, but I did feel I had learned more about the America that produced both Kennedy and his assassin than was conveyed by the bland, complacent sitcom image of the nation and its institutions that prevailed in November 1963. And that, I believe, is the real legacy of nearly three decades of revisionist Kennedy-assassination investigation. We may not ever know with certainty the Name or the Names. But we do have a much darker, more complex, less innocent vision of America, produced by the murk that has been churned up by the dissidents. Consider the FBI. In 1963 few dissented from the view that its director, J. Edgar Hoover, was a peerless, incorruptible leader, a gangbuster nonpareil. He said so himself. Now, we may not want to agree with the conclusion of the latest FBI-centered conspiracy-theory book Act of Treason: The Role of J. Edgar Hoover in the Assassination of President Kennedy. The author, Texas attorney Mark North, accuses Hoover of deliberately withholding knowledge of a Mafia assassination plot against J.F.K. because he hated the Kennedy brothers and had enough dirt on L.B.J. to control him. But North's accumulation of documentary evidence of the ugly blackmail intrigues Hoover was weaving in the cellars of Camelot is perhaps even more damning than the allegations of treason. Much of this has been reported earlier: the way Hoover pressured the Kennedys into letting him bug the bedrooms of Martin Luther King Jr.; how he subtly blackmailed the Camelot kids over their bedroom sports, including J.F.K.'s romps with the girlfriend of godfather Sam Giancana and (probably) with Marilyn Monroe. We know that while Hoover was passing around tapes of creaking bedsprings, he was letting the Mob grow unchecked and was going easy on deep sewers of Washington corruption like the Bobby Baker case to protect patrons like L.B.J. Or consider the CIA. To those who knew of it at all in 1963, it was still living off the glamour of its wartime OSS (Office of Strategic Services) legend -- the dashing blue-blooded oh-so-social spies, American James Bonds. Even the black eye of the Bay of Pigs fiasco could be attributed to Kennedy's failure of nerve rather than to the Harvard and Yale ole boys who drew up the plans. From almost the very beginning, the CIA has been a focus of Kennedy-assassination conspiracy theories (bitterness by some agents over Kennedy's Bay of Pigs "betrayal" was an obvious motive). This year the first and most relentless conspiracy theorist of them all, Mark Lane, has come out with a book, Plausible Denial, which targets high-level CIA figures as the plotters behind the assassination. Lane presents what he calls new and conclusive evidence that the CIA was setting up Oswald in the months before the assassination by having an Oswald impersonator meet with Soviet and Cuban agents in Mexico City, the better to frame him as a Commie assassin. Again, even if we don't buy Lane's conclusion about CIA complicity in the Kennedy assassination, 20 years of investigations have shown that the CIA was no stranger to complicity in assassinations. We know how the best and brightest blue bloods bonded with the bloodiest and dirtiest Mafia hit men in plots to kill Castro. We know the freak-show side of the agency that used damagng mind-control drugs on unsuspecting citizens; we know that the agency's own top counterspy, James Angleton, paralyzed the place with his paranoid suspicions that KGB moles and false defectors had penetrated the CIA in order to, among other things, conceal the Soviets' true role in the J.F.K. assassination. Even David Belin, the former Warren Commission staff member who is fighting what he calls a "David and Goliath battle" to defend the Warren Commission's lone-gunman conclusion, declares in his book Final Disclosure that the CIA blatantly deceived his beloved Warren Commission -- specifically that it "deliberately withheld evidence" of the CIA-Mafia plots against Castro. Now consider the Kennedys themselves. Inevitably the darker, carnivalesque vision of America that has emerged in the wake of post-assassination investigations has not exempted them. Curiously, otherwise skeptical assassination buffs are among the last misty-eyed believers in Camelot. They still hold to the primal scenario sketched in Oliver Stone's JFK: a Galahad-like John Kennedy gallantly battling the sinister right-wing military-industrial complex to bring the troops home, ban the Bomb and ensure racial equality on the home front -- a Kennedy killed because he was just too good to live. You can hear other echoes of this naive vision in such conspiracy-theory compendiums as Jim Marrs' Crossfire: The Plot That Killed Kennedy, which was a key source for Stone. Marrs sums up his account of the Bad Guys in the plot, laboring to leave no one out: "Who done it? . . . Powerful men in the leadership of the U.S. military, banking, government, intelligence and organized-crime circles ordered their faithful agents to manipulate Mafia-Cuban-agency pawns to kill the chief." But what's more interesting is Marrs' arcadian vision of what America might be like today if J.F.K. had lived: "No divisive Vietnam war . . . [no] Watergate, no other political assassinations, or the Iran-contra-Pentagon-CIA attempt at a secret government. Detente with communist Russia and China . . . [would have saved defense dollars] that could have been put to use caring for the needy and cleaning up the environment . . . no organized-crime control over drugs, gambling . . . even toxic waste . . ." One feels Marrs believes that if Kennedy had lived the toxic waste just wouldn't have been as toxic anyway, because of all the fine, purifying Camelot vibes in the air. By now, of course, an accumulation of sordid revelations has made J.F.K.'s Washington seem less like Arthur's Camelot than Capone's Chicago. J.F.K. himself, we know, was almost literally in bed with the Chicago Mob, sleeping with the godfather's mistress, for God's sake; his minions used Chicago mobsters as hit men against a rival head of state. He was enmeshed in sordid blackmail intrigues with Hoover; he was implicated in bugging King's bedrooms. Far from a noble peacemaker, he was a hawkish enthusiast for dirty tricks and covert ops, so Machiavellian that -- according to Michael Beschloss's new book, The Crisis Years -- he may even have given his blessing to Khrushchev's building of the Berlin Wall. In retrospect, J.F.K. resembles Marrs' Galahad less than a gang leader like The Godfather's Michael Corleone -- the well-meaning son of a shadowy godfather (Joe Kennedy, with his bootlegging connections to the Mob), who can't escape his father's legacy or his family's cutthroat character. In this respect the assassination theorists who seem most prescient, or at least realistic, are the odd couple of Malcolm X and L.B.J. It was Malcolm who provoked a storm of obloquy in the aftermath of the Dallas shooting when he said J.F.K.'s killing was "a case of the chickens coming home to roost." And it was L.B.J. who 10 years later gave a kind of gritty geopolitical substance to Malcolm's metaphor when he told an ex-aide that J.F.K. was "running a damned Murder Incorporated in the Caribbean" -- all those CIA assassination plots -- and that he believed one of these plots must have backfired, or doubled back on Kennedy, in Dealey Plaza. Perhaps this gets a bit too close to blame-the-victim. But could it be that the cumulative blackening of the sepulchers of Camelot is responsible for one of the most curious new trends in conspiracy-theory history -- the increasing number of people coming forward not merely to claim they know who did it but to confess they did it? One of the first to try this gambit was Charles V. Harrelson, the Texas hit man who happens to be the father of Cheers star Woody Harrelson. Cornered by cops seeking to arrest him for assassinating a federal judge in Texas, Harrelson, according to Marrs, told lawmen that he was the guy who killed Kennedy. By the time he backed off the story, assassination buffs had already convinced themselves that they had photographic evidence of Harrelson's presence in Dealey Plaza that day. They had "positively" identified him as one of the mysterious "tramps" arrested near the crime scene after the assassination -- conveniently forgetting they had previously "proved" that two of the tramps were actually Watergate burglars E. Howard Hunt and Frank Sturgis. Next to confess was Robert Easterling, a Mississippi ex-con who told journalist Henry Hurt in 1985 that he killed Kennedy on behalf of Fidel Castro. And then, in 1989, there was the son of a Dallas policeman who pushed his own (now dead) father forward as the grassy-knoll assassin, introducing some curious confessional documentation he claimed to have found in an attic. (The credibility problem of assassination buffs has not been enhanced by the double standard with which they seem to accept indiscriminately every self-proclaimed assassin or grassy-knoll eyewitness who comes forward, but tear to shreds any evidence or testimony that might support the lone-gunman theory.) Recently, after seeing JFK, I found myself curious about what had become of the man Jim Garrison once named as the hit man. I consulted some of the assassination buffs still speaking to me (though an agnostic on whether there was a conspiracy, I had written skeptically about the methodology of some of them), and one told me of a buff in Canada who made a specialty of tracking down lesser known figures in the case who might otherwise disappear into the mists of history. Yes, the Canadian researcher told me, he had traced the still wandering whereabouts of the Name. And he wasn't the only one interested, he said. A former Warren Commission attorney had told him he still couldn't figure out why the Name made such a hasty exit from Dallas: 36 hours after the assassination, he left town and hitchhiked 2,000 miles north to Michigan. Another buff had theorized that the Warren Commission was interested in the Name because he bore an eerie physical resemblance to Oswald -- which might have been an innocent explanation for some of the "Oswald" sightings in Ruby's Carousel Club. Other buffs wondered if he might not be one of the mysterious "Oswald impersonators" who was setting up the real, innocent Oswald to be the assassination patsy. Declining to be led into this labyrinth of suspicion, I nonetheless asked the Canadian buff what had become of the Name's life after he fled Dallas. It seems he couldn't really escape -- Nov. 22 continued to haunt him. The FBI followed him to Michigan and questioned him repeatedly; he had to go back to Dallas for Ruby's trial; he never found the wife he'd lost. And then in the early '80s, just when his life seemed to have settled down, renewed interest in the J.F.K. case made his name an object of speculation again: it appeared in a book on the organized-crime connections to Ruby and the assassination. His new wife read the book and began to get a little paranoid. She wondered about the serious car accident they had had: Was it really an accident? Eventually, things began to go awry: his marriage broke up, he lost his job. Last thing the Canadian buff heard, the Name was working as a night security guard in a mill, "boarding with some people," without a traceable phone number of his own. Looking back, it doesn't seem that much of a mystery why the poor guy fled Dallas so abruptly. His life took a wrong turn down there and never recovered. So did ours. We're all still fleeing Dallas, but it's too late to escape. CAPTION: Stone's movie re-creation of the assassination: a legacy of three decades of revisionism CAPTION: See above. CAPTION: Ruby shooting Oswald in 1963: a sleazy, carnival-sideshow vision of the nation's leaders Title: A ticking bomb at the movies. (Oliver Stone's motion picture 'JFK') (An American View) (Column) Authors: Bruning, Fred Citation: Maclean's, Jan 13, 1992 v105 n2 p11(1) ------------------------------------------------------------- Subjects: Assassination_Portrayals, depictions, etc. JFK (Motion picture)_Social aspects People: Stone, Oliver_Criticism, interpretation, etc.; Kennedy, John F._Assassination Reference #: A11796053 ============================================================= Abstract: Oliver Stone's motion picture 'JFK' adds nothing useful to the ongoing debate of the assassination of John F. Kennedy. The movie suggests the craziest conspiracy theory yet, since the assassination itself. ============================================================= Full Text COPYRIGHT Maclean Hunter Ltd. (Canada) 1992 Heading for the parking lot after a showing of JFK, a moviegoer in suburban New York City was hailed by someone awaiting the next performance. "How was it?" asked the ticket holder, full of anticipation. "Perfect," stated the first fellow without pausing to elaborate. It was a moment that would have cheered Oliver Stone, the rambunctious director who, amid stout pronouncements regarding his own bravado and the faintheartedness of most everyone else in government and mass media, dropped JFK like a ticking bomb in the pocket of the American public. "I just want to get the people to smell a rat," Stone told Robert Scheer of the Los Angeles Times. "I want people to be moved by it and have their consciousness shifted." Despite the exuberance of cinema fans who may oncur that JFK was "perfect," and notwithstanding Stone's claims for the peerless quality of his insights, the film is no more valuable to the continuing debate on the assassination of John F. Kennedy tha, say, the latest episode of Columbo. Using Stone's movie as a guide to understanding the Kennedy murder is like enduring a Guns n' Roses video with the intent of better appreciating Mozart. Not a chance. Perfect? As a movie, JFK has all the right stuff. The story is gripping--we are discussing a plot to murder a president of the United States, after all--and production values are superb. Stone melds authentic newsreel footage with his own staged material, so that many in the audience, particularly younger people, will not easily make the requisite distinctions. He uses location with such skill that by the time the movie is over, viewers may feel they have trudged many times up the grassy knoll of Dallas, that they have driven in that fated motorcade through Dealey Plaza--that, like the assassin, they have squinted through sights from the sixth-floor window of the Texas School Book Depository building. And surely Stone is gifted when it comes to integrating a particularly foreboding brand of background music--percussive strains that seem linked to familiar dreams of melancholy and madness. Yes, indeed, something awful is transpiring here, the music asserts, and if no one else in the country has enough mettle to shout a warning, Oliver Stone will not falter. Don't dare slip out to the candy counter. Soon you are going to learn who really killed Jack Kennedy! This approach might be acceptable if JFK weren't being marketed as gospel--if Stone stopped insisting that Americans accept perhaps the wackiest conspiracy theory advanced since Kennedy was cut down on Nov. 22, 1963. Stone has adopted, and even embellished, a hypothesis advanced by former New Orleans district attorney Jim Garrison, who argued, without success, that Kennedy--having alienated conservative elements at home and abroad--fell victim to an astonishing right-wing cabal embracing the CIA, FBI, anti-Castro Cubans, the Pentagon and elements of the Dallas police department. The district attorney failed in the only courtroom test of his theory when a jury acquitted businessman Clay Shaw, who Garrison said played a crucial part in the murder. "Most of the time you marshal the facts, then deduce your theories," one of Garrison's former assistants, Charles Ward, told the New Orleans Times-Picayune in 1983. "But Garrison deduced a theory, then marshalled his facts. And if the facts didn't fit, he'd say they had been altered by the CIA." In New Orleans and beyond, many considered Garrison a 24-karat kook on the question of the Kennedy assassination but, now, more than two decades later, Stone sells Garrison's superheated scenario as though it were divinely inspired. In perhaps its most shoking aspect, Stone's movie even holds out the possibility that lyndon Johnson, Kennedy's vice-president, had a hand in snuffing the chief executive. Johnson may have been crude, self-important and tragically mistaken about Vietnam. But an unindicted co-conspirator in a plot to murder the president of the United States? Please. Not surprisingly, anyone resisting Stone's conclusions is apt to be dismissed as a junior member of the same ugly conspiracy that doomed Kennedy in the first place--a tactic that Garrison, who also felt misused by the press, often employed himself. Stone complains that the film has made him fair game for "a thousand and one vultures out there," including "a lot of these paid-off journalistic hacks working on the East Coast." Stone indeed has been roundly criticized by many reporters for massaging the evidence, but, somehow, the director just doesn't get it. In his interview with the Los Angeles Times, Stone argued that he merely was concocting a "counter-myth" to the one peddled by the U.S. government. The Warren commission may have concluded that Lee Harvey Oswald killed Kennedy, but Stone prefers a more exotic reading. "Call me a guerrilla historian," says Stone. To say the least, Stone is not alone in suspecting the assassination was never adequately investigated. A Washington Post poll in May showed that 56 per cent of those responding thought Kennedy the victim of a conspiracy, while only 19 per cent bought the lone-assassin theory. Obviously, there are troubling issues still unresolved and the American people, at last, deserve to know precisely what happened on that extraordinary day in Dallas. Judging by his early work, Stone might have been the one to bring such volatile subject matter to the screen. He has made brave and important movies. Nourished by the director's Vietnam combat experience. Platoon is a film that should be shown in every social studies class. Salvador is a haunting piece linking U.S. policy to chaos in Central America. But, with JFK, Stone lapses into pure agitprop. The movie is based more on fancy than fact, and will prompt many to ask only the wrong questions about Kennedy's death. Whatever he intended this time, Stone did little more than inflict on American audiences a "perfect" movie that wasn't nearly good enough. Fred Bruning is a writer with Newsday in New York. Title: JFK: the myth. (Oliver Stone's motion picture) (Editorial) Authors: Kopkind, Andrew Citation: The Nation, Jan 20, 1992 v254 n2 p40(2) ------------------------------------------------------------- Subjects: JFK (Motion picture)_Criticism, interpretation, etc. People: Stone, Oliver_Criticism, interpretation, etc.; Kennedy, John F._Assassination Reference #: A11808875 ============================================================= Abstract: The vociferous reaction against Oliver Stone's movie "JFK" is rooted in the fact that the Kennedy assassination was a watershed event in recent American history that mythologized John Kennedy. Stone's film is propaganda, but his iconoclasm is to be commended. ============================================================= Full Text COPYRIGHT The Nation Company Inc. 1992 "He's hot, he's sexy-and he's dead." That memorable Rolling Stone headline referred to Jim Morrison, but it might well have been John F. Kennedy, the other subject of a major Oliver Stone release. Both men were American icons of the same generation, and in translating important aspects of their respective iconographies to the screen Stone was playing with fire. Though P.C. snobs may sneer at the fuss made over a couple of long-dead white men, the one a drug enhanced, sex-crazed, promising but unfulfilled rock star; the other a drug-enhanced, sex-crazed, promising but unfulfilled politician, nevertheless the cults around the fallen idols are larger than life or death, fervently followed and vigorously, indeed viciously, defended. Stone got off relatively easy with The Doors, an often rapturous movie that, unfortunately, not too many people went to see. (He told me last summer that he is especially angry at blacks, who apparently stayed away in droves for what Stone said were "racist" reasons.) JFK is a different matter. Even before it opened in mid-December it was a political event of phenomenal proportions: the story of the season between the Anita Hill-clarence Thomas hearings and the end of the Soviet Union. Future conspiracy theorists will surely note that Mario Cuomo defied all expectations and announced his decision not to run for the presidency on the very day that JFK opened nationwide ! Notwithstanding the particular assassination theory Stone propounds, and his rather adoring assessment of Kennedy's foreign policy, the furious arguments and attacks engendered by the movie have very little to do with the material of history but rather abound in the stuff of myth. For virtually every American alive and conscious of a social reality in November 1963, the assassination forms the central political myth of the public world. The myth is in the matrix of the national experience, etched by television and consecrated by ritual, and no amount of political science will demystify the memory of murder. Those dogged researchers who have dared over the years to deconstruct the myth have made hardly a dent in the national consciousness. Most have been labeled assassination maniacs, nuts and kooks, and their works have remained on the margins of legitimacy (and some really are nuts). Others (like myself, and more recently in these pages, my friend Alexander Cockburn) who have tried to debunk the part of the myth that insists that Kennedy was about to withdraw troops from Vietnam, achieve detente with Khrushchev and bestow peace on the world, have similarly made little headway with history. When the Prince of Peace is martyred, no one wants to hear that he was not a prince nor particularly pacific. Stone neither deconstructs nor debunks. His method is to substitute another myth-consistent, compelling and just a little unconvincing-for the "official" one that seems to have been a comfort for so long but is so shot full of holes by now that it can barely float. Certainly he has every right to do what he does. John Ford's December Seventh, recently reremembered as the fiftieth anniversary of Pearl Harbor came around, also mixed documentary footage with reconstructions and simulations, inserted historical speculations as ironclad fact and gave heroic (or villainous) dimensions to ordinary people. It was a great film and brilliant propaganda, which is to say, what movies ought to be. But reasonable columnists like Tom Wicker (who was in Dallas that day), cool commentators like Cokie Roberts (whose father, Hale Boggs, was a member of the Warren Commission) and what seems like the unanimous journalistic establishment are ready to burn every print of JFK they could because of the damage a countermyth, an alternative paradigm, is thought to do to the national spirit and, I guess, the collective will. Monolithic myths-the manifest decency of America, the infallibility of the church, the existence of historical truth-are more fascistic than any transient leader. In that case, a little narrative pluralism can be truly subversive. Now, it may be hard for some to admit that Oliver Stone, with $40 million per film at his disposal and virtually unlimited media access, can be a subversive force, but he has done a great service by recasting the idols in the heart of the temple. ANDREW KOPKIND Title: The conspiracy that won't go away. (assassination of John F. Kennedy) Authors: Oglesby, Carl Citation: Playboy, Feb 1992 v39 n2 p74(10) ------------------------------------------------------------- Subjects: Presidents_Assassination Assassination_Investigations People: Kennedy, John F._Assassination; Garrison, Jim_Investigations Reference #: A11797549 ============================================================= Abstract: Jim Garrison, a former New Orleans district attorney, believed that a government conspiracy was behind Kennedy's assassination. He believes that Lee Harvey Oswald was set up, and that CIA agents were responsible for the assassination. ============================================================= Full Text COPYRIGHT Playboy Enterprises Inc. 1992 WE ARE IN a screening room atop the Westin Hotel in New Orleans. It is July 1991 and Oliver Stone is in town filming JFK, his latest assault on establishment sensibilities, a movie with the premise that we do not yet know the truth about the assassination of President John F. Kennedy in Dallas on November 22, 1963. Stone has already filmed the Dallas scenes. He has brought his company to New Orleans because JFK is based on the work of Jim Garrison, a young and aggressive district attorney at the time of the J.F.K. murder. The lights dim and an image flickers to life on the screen. The clapper board reads JFK, SCENE 30. We are in a cell in the Dallas County Jail. It is June 1964, seven months after Dealey Plaza. The prisoner is Jack Ruby, a stocky, nervous middle-aged man whom the whole world watched murder accused J.F.K. assassin Lee Harvey Oswald on live TV two days after Oswald's arrest. Facing Ruby across a table, erect and somber in a black suit, sits Earl Warren, Chief Justice of the Supreme Court and the reluctant chairman of the Report of the President's Commission on the Assassination of President John F. Kennedy. It is a tense moment. Ruby has insisted on testifying even though no one wants him to, least of all Warren himself. "Do you understand that I cannot tell the truth here in Dallas?" Ruby says. "That there are people here who do not want me to tell the truth?" But Warren says only, "Mr. Ruby, I really can't see why you can't tell us now." Ruby's desperation is palpable. "If I am eliminated," he says, "there won't be any way of knowing." He waits for a reaction, but Warren seems a genius at not getting on Ruby's wave length. He does not ask, "Knowing what?" Finally, exasperated, Ruby blurts it out: "A whole new form of government is going to take over our country,' he says, "and I know I won't live to see you another time. My life is in danger here. Do I sound screwy?" And Warren's voice resonates in its most mournful basso, the words lingered over, tasted, given all their weight: "Well, I don't know what can be done, Mr. Ruby. Because I don't know what you anticipate we will encounter." Now the camera turns more closely on the heavy, solemn figure of Warren and, for a moment, it almost is Warren, the right age, the right look of stolid pride. But the figure isn't Warren at all, of course. It's Jim Garrison. Not Kevin Costner, who plays the part of Garrison in the film, but Garrison himself, the real Garrison, all six and a half feet of him. No soul in all creation stands more opposed to Warren on the question of what happened in Dallas than does Garrison, the embattled naysayer of New Orleans, who was one of the first to hold that J.F.K. was felled by conspiracy , that the same conspiracy acted through Ruby to kill Oswald and thus prevent a trial, and that the commission to which Warren gave his name was the front line of the most serious cover-up in American history. "Warren must have spun madly in his grave," mused Garrison the next afternoon as we talked about this scene. "I can only hope the afterlife has sharpened his taste for irony." Yet Stone was not just indulging his own taste for irony in casting Garrison in this role. "Between adversaries," Stone told me, "there can sometimes be great respect." Had Stone not seen in Garrison that respect for the adversary, his casting move could easily have backfired. Let Garrison's portrayal of Warren seem the least bit vindictive and the entire movie could come out looking like a cheap shot. Garrison leaned forward with delight. "I'll swear I never said it," he remarked in his soft New Orleans drawl, "but I think it was a minor stroke of genius for Oliver to offer me this role. The great thing about it is that the screenplay uses Warren's words. And the more I studied them, the more I could see that Warren had developed such empathy with Ruby that he couldn't control himself completely. Although I've never foreign Warren for what he did, he was a basically warm human being. You could tell he felt sorry for Ruby even as he evaded him. And in that final line, he told him more than he intended to. He confessed his own weakness." His smile brightened. "And I think I was just the actor to bring this out. If Warren could see it, I think he'd smile." Garrison enactment of Warren seems a perfect summation of a career that has been to an uncommon degree shaped by irony, by a relationship with the mass media predicated on equal parts of mutual need and rejection. JFK is based on Garrison's 1988 memoir, On the Trail of the Assassins. This in itself is satisfying to Garrison, now a retired Louisiana appeals-court judge. He finds it satisfying to see himself portrayed by an actor as convincing and warm as Kevin Costner in a movie directed with the artistry and drive of Oliver Stone. But the mere news that Stone was making this movie was enough to reawaken the media furies that have bedeviled Garrison since he first joined the great hunt for the J.F.K. conspiracy in 1966. As early as last May, when Stone had barely begun production, Chicago Tribune columnist Jon Margolis angrily assured his readers that JFK was going to be not just a bad movie but an evil one, "morally repugnant" because it sympathetically treated Garrison's "fantasies" that a conspiracy was responsible for the J.F.K. assassination and that federal agents were probably involved. George Lardner of The Washington Post entered the fray with two long diatribes in which he grudgingly admitted that "a probable conspiracy took place," while insisting that this was "not an acknowledgement that Garrison's investigation was anything but a fraud." Then came Time magazine to dismiss Garrison as somewhere "near the far-out fringe of conspiracy theorists." A man less confident of his vision may have been shaken, but Garrison long since has become inured. "Being attacked with such vehemence from so many sides and for such a variety of reasons, I admit, is not conclusive proof that one is right," he says with a smile and a shrug. "But surely it goes a long way." The controversy that rages around Garrison is set against the fact that he started out so all-American. He was born in 1921 in Denison, Iowa, to a family of tall lawyers that soon moved to New Orleans. At the age of 19, in 1940, he joined the U.S. Army and, in 1942, was commissioned as a lieutenant in the field artillery. He volunteered for flight training and spent the war on the European front flying light airplanes on low-level and often-dangerous spotter missions. He saw combat in France and Germany and was present at the liberation of Dachau. He came back to New Orleans, earned his law degree at Tulane and joined the FBI, which sent him to Seattle to check out the loyalty of defense employees, a job he soon found "greatly boring." He left the FBI and returned to New Orleans to go into private practice as a trial lawyer. Then he went to work in the district attorney's office. He ran for a judgeship in 1960 and lost, but then, in 1961, quarreled publicly with Mayor Victor Schiro--whom he accused of "laxity in law enforcement"--and District Attorney Richard Dowling, whom he called "the great emancipator" because he "lets everyone go free." This was the first burst of controversy in his career and it immediately propelled him to a higher orbit. He campaigned for D.A. in 1961, without the backing of the Democratic Party and without a big war chest. But he had the strong support of both blacks and blue-collar whites, a unique coalition in the South of the early Sixties. "To my surprise and to the astonishment of many others," he says, "I was elected." He moved immediately to make good on his election promises. "If this entitled raising the level of confrontation," he recalls, "my attitude was, well, let the good times roll." He clamped down on organized gambling and prostitution, made Bourbon Street safe for tourists, challenged police corruption and criticized eight criminal-court judges for refusing to approve funds for his fight against racketeering. The judges sued him for defamation of $1000; but he appealed, arguing that elected judges were not exempt from public criticism. He won a reversal. Jim Garrison was on the map. So was Fidel Castro. Castro overthrew Cuban dictator General Fulgencio Batista and took power in 1959. He announced a communist program. Cubans opposed to his government began flocking to Miami and New Orleans. Many of them formed counterrevolutionary organizations with such names as Alpha-66, the Cuban Revolutionary Council, Free Cuba, the Cuban Expeditionary Force and the Cuban Brigade. All were sponsored by the CIA. Their aim was to reverse Castro's revolution. This was the objective of their major military assault, Operation Zapata, organized by the CIA and the U.S. military. The world came to know Operation Zapata better as the Bay of Pigs fiasco of April 1961. This attempted invasion failed to inspire the mass uprising that was its major strategic premise. The Zapata guerrillas were pinned down on their beachheads without a chance to declare a provisional government. Instead of sending in U.S. military support, J.F.K. opted to cut his losses, standing by as the invasion force was captured and paying a humiliating ransom to rescue the prisoners. An angry self-pity soon gripped the anti-Castro militants and their U.S. supporters. They blamed Operation Zapata's failure on Kennedy. He had put them on the beach, then fled. Then J.F.K. betrayed them again, as they saw it, in October 1962, when a spy plane revealed Soviet missile bases under construction in Cuba. In the year and a half since the Bay of Pigs, the CIA had helped the exiles stage a series of commando raids against a variety of Cuban targets. But in the secret deal that ended the Cuban Missile Crisis with the dismantling of the Soviet bases, J.F.K. promised that this activity would end. This arrangement deeply affected an ultra-right-wing acquaintance of Garrison's named W. Guy Banister, a key player in the anti-Castro games of New Orleans. Banister served in the office of Naval Intelligence during World War Two and after the war joined the FBI, rising to head its Chicago bureau. He left the FBI to become deputy chief of police in New Orleans, then resigned in 1957 to set up a private detective agency. In 1962, at the time of the Cuban Missile Crisis, Banister was involved in running a CIA training camp for anti-Castro Cuban guerrillas on Lake Pontchartrain, north of New Orleans. Garrison had no idea at the time that Banister was involved in this activity. But he did know that Banister was not just another gumshoe for hire. Guy Banister Associates, Inc., hung out its shingle, according to Garrison, "across the street from the building that housed the local offices of the CIA and the FBI. And across from that building was the New Orleans headquarters of Operation Mongoose." Operation Mongoose was an array of anti-Castro projects being run by the CIA, the Defense Department and the State Department under the coordination of Air Force Major General Edward G. Lansdale. Its CIA component, called Task Force W, was dedicated to the assassination of Castro. Its deepest secret was the fact that the CIA had contracted out his murder to the Mafia. Its headquarters was the meeting place for Cuban exiles coming in from Florida. "They were sleeping in the hallways," says Garrison. Banister's key associate in these anti-Castro operations was a peculiar man named David Ferrie. Ferrie was an ace pilot, a kitchen-sink scientist, an omnivorous reader in the occult, a well-known denizen of the New Orleans gay scene, a militant activist against Castro and a great hater of J.F.K. His on-the-job homosexual activities had cost him his pilot's job at Eastern Airlines, but he had flown several clandestine flights to Castro's Cuba and was part of the training staff at the Lake Pontchartrain guerrilla camp. A rare chronic disease (alopecia praecox) having taken all his hair, he wore a wig made out of mohair and drew on his eyebrows with a grease pencil. He worked out of Banister's office, but he also served as a free-lance investigator for G. Wray Gill, a lawyer who represented Carlos Marcello, the Mafia godfather of New Orleans. Ferrie reputedly flew Marcello back into the United States after his deportaton by Robert Kennedy in 1961. On the day of J.F.K.'s murder, Ferrie was with Marcello in a New Orleans court as Marcello won a verdict against R.F.K.'s effort to deport him again. But far stranger still among Banister's associates in the summer of 1963 was a young ex-Marine named Lee Harvey Oswald. At first look, Oswald seems to be a creature of contradictions. On closer examination, the contradictions become complexities. There was, on the one hand, the patriotic Oswald, a true-blue if emotionally mixed-up American kid raised in and around New Orleans, New York City and Fort Worth by his widowed (and twice-divorced) mother with the help of aunt Lillian and uncle "Dutz" Murret, a bookie in the Marcello gambling net. As a teenager in New Orleans, Oswwald joined the local Civil Air Patrol and there met David Ferrie, its commander, in 1955. He tried to join the Marines but was rejected for being underage. He went home and memorized the Marine Corps manual, and cam back to try again as soon as he reached 17 in October 1956, this time succeeding. Oswald served his three years ably, rated "every competent" and "brighter than most" by his officers. The Marines cleared him for access to the performance characteristics of the top-secret U-2. They put him in a program of Russian-language training and instruction in the basics of Marxism-Leninism, as though he were being prepared for intelligence work. Indeed, a Navy intelligence operative named Gerry Hemming had thought as far back as 1959 that Oswald was "some type of agent." The House Select Committee on Assassinations noted that "the question of Oswald's possible affiliation with military intelligence could not be fully resolved." On the other hand, there was Oswald the traitor. With only three months to go in the Marines, rather than await the normal discharge process, he applied for a hardship discharge for no good reason (citing a minor and already-healed injury to his mother's foot), then hurried to the Soviet Union. After two and a half years of Soviet communism. Oswald recanted. Now with a Russian wife and a daughter in tow, he returned to the United States, explaining in a written statement that "the Soviets have committed crimes unsurpassed even by their early-day capitalist counterparts." So was he a good patriot again? No, now he announced himself to be a member of the Communist Party and became the founding and sole member of the New Orleans chapter of the Fair Play for Cuba Committee, three times passing out pro-Castro leaflets in New Orleans. w Orleans chapter of the Fair Play for Cuba Committee, three times passing out pro-Castro leaflets in New Orleans. Yet, paradoxically, Oswald's frequent companion that summer in New Orleans was the militant anticommunist David Ferrie,r with whom he had joined in loud public condemnations of Castro and J.F.K. During this same period, Oswald also spent time with Banister. He stamped Banister's office address on his pro-Castro leaflets and stored his extra copies there. He and Banister twice visited the campus of Louisiana State University and made themselves conspicuous in discussions with students in which their main theme was that J.F.K. was a traitor. Not once during this time did Oswald associate with anyone actually sympathetic to Castro. Oswald left New Orleans on September 25, 1963, and on the next day in Mexico City, according to the Warren reconstruction, registered as O. H. Lee at the Hotel del Comercio, a meeting place for anti-Castro Cuban exiles. He spent the next several days trying to get visas for travel to Cuba and the Soviet Union. In the process, he got into a prolonged row with a Cuban consular official. The CIA had the Soviet and Cuban embassies staked out. It was later able to produce several photos of Oswaldo taken at these sites--as well as to supply tapes of several phone conversions between a Soviet embassy official and a man calling himself Oswald. There was a problem with the photos: They showed a large, powerfully built man in his mid-30s not in the least resembling Oswald. And there was a problem with the tapes: The CIA destroyed them, and the transcriptions contained garbled Russian, whereas Oswald was considered to be fluent in Russian. Even the row with the Cuban official presented a problem: Interviewed by the Select Committee on Assassinations in 1978, the official said his Oswald was not the same one as the man arrested in Dallas. Moreover, two CIA spies working inside the Cuban consulate in 1963 agreed that "the real Oswald never came inside." They told the House Committee that they sensed "something weird was going on" in the Oswald incident. There is also abundant evidence that Oswald was often impersonated quite apart from the alleged Mexico City trip. Item: An FBI memo dated January 3, 1960, noted that "there is a possibility that an impostor is using Oswald's birth certificate." The real Oswald was in the Soviet Union at this time. Item: Two salesmen at the Bolton Ford dealership in New Orleans were visited on January 20, 1961, by a Lee Oswald in the company of a powerfully built Latino. Oswald was looking for a deal on the pickup trucks needed by the Friends of Democratic Cuba. On this date, Oswald was in the Soviet Union. Item: On September 25, 1963, a man calling himself Harvey Oswald showed up at the Selective Service office in Austin to request help in getting his discharge upgraded from undesirable. On this date, Oswald was supposedly in transit to Mexico City. Item: A highly credible Cuban emigree, Sylvia Odio, told the Warren Commission that she was visited in Dallas by Oswald and two other men recruiting support for the anti-Castro cause. On the date of this encounter, the Warren Commission placed Oswald either in New Orleans or en route to Mexico. Item: On November 1, 1963, a man later identified by three witnesses as Oswald entered a gun shop in Fort Worth and made a nuisance of himself while buying ammunition. The Warren Commission mad evidence that Oswald was at work in Dallas that day. Item: On November 9, 1963, when Warren Commission evidence placed Oswald at home in Irving, Texas, a man calling himself Lee Oswald walked into a Lincoln-Mercury showroom in Dallas and asked to take a car for a test drive. The salesman found the ride unforgettable in that Oswald reached speeds of 70 miles an hour while delivering a harangue about capitalist credit and the superiority of the Soviet system. Oswald, in fact, did not know how to drive a car. Curiouser and curiouser, this Oswald who was all over the map and all over the political spectrum, in New Orleans and Fort Worth and Austin and Mexico City all at once, here a radical and there a reactionary. What to make of this man? "This question became a very practical one for me," says Garrison, "on the day the President was killed and Oswald's picture was flashed around the world. As his resume filled in over the next day and we found that he'd spent that summer in New Orleans, it became my duty as D.A. to see what we could find out about him." Garrison soon discovered Oswald's ties to Ferrie. He brought Ferrie in for questioning on Monday the 25th, the day after Ruby murdered Oswald, then turned Ferrie over to the FBI for further questioning. "In those days," Garrison recalls, "I still believed in the FBI. They questioned Ferrie, found him clean and released him with a strange statement to the effect that they wouldn't have arrested him in the first place, that it was all my idea. Then they put a SECRET stamp on their forty-page interrogation report. But what did I know? I had burglaries and armed robberies to worry about. I went back to the real world. I was happy to do so." Garrison's happy file in the real world came to an end for good about three years later. He at first saw no problem when the Warren Report was published in September 1964, holding that Oswald was a lone nut and Ruby another one. "Warren was a great judge and, one thought, wholly honest." Here and there a few spoilsports--Mark Lane, Edward J. Epstein, 'Harold Weisberg, Penn Jones, Sylvia Meagher, Josiah Thompson--were discovering problems with Warren's double lone-nut thesis, but Garrison was inclined as most Americans were to go along with it. "It seems the easiest position to take," he says, "especially since the war in Vietnam was getting nasty and Americans of critical spirit were now caught up more in the mysteries of Saigon than in those of Dealey Plaza." Then in 1966 came a fateful chance meeting with Louisiana's Senator Russell Long. The conversation turned to the Kennedy case. Long astounded Garrison by saying, "Those fellows on the Warren Commission were dead wrong. There's no way in the world that one man could have shot up Jack Kennedy that way." Garrison immediately ordered the Warren Report plus the 26 volumes of its hearings and exhibits. He plunged in, dedicating his evenings and weekends to the case. He expected to find "a professional investigation," he says, but "found nothing of the sort. . . . There were promising leads everywhere that were never followed up, contradictions in the lone-assassin theory that were never resolved." In particular, he was troubled by evidence that: * Shots were fired from the so-called grassy knoll to the front and right of J.F.K. as well as from behind. * The maximum number of shots the alleged murder weapon could have fired was inadequate to account for the total number of bullet holes found in Kennedy and Texas Governor John Connally (who barely survived) unless one of the bullets had magically changed its direction in mid-flight. * Nitrate tests performed on Oswald when he was arrested supported his claim that he had not fired a rifle in the previous 24 hours. * Oswald appeared to have been trained as an intelligence agent in the Marines, which implied that his awkward display of sympathy for communism was phony. Any one of these possibilities, Garrison realized, was enough to reduce the Oswald-acting-alone theory to ruins. "I was stunned," he says. "There were nights I couldn't sleep." Finally, in November 1966, as he puts it, "I bit the magic bullet." Basing his jurisdiction on Oswald's 1963 summer in New Orleans, he secretly opened an investigation into the President's murder. Of the four New Orleanians of primary interest to Garrison, the most interesting of all was Oswald himself, since Oswald had in a sense become Garrison's client. But he was dead. Next most interesting was Guy Banister, clearly at the center of New Orleans' anti-Castro scene. But Banister had died, too, of a heart attack in 1964. Third came David Ferrie, quite alive in 1966. Garrison's investigators started compiling a portrait of Ferrie as a talented and impassioned anticommunist, a far-right soldier of fortune whose relationship with the reputedly procommunist Oswald during the summer of 1963 posed a question critical to the clarification of Oswald's purposes--namely, as Garrison puts it, "What the hell were these guys doing together?" By reconstructing the 1963 relationships of Oswald with Ferrie and Banister, Garrison hoped finally to make sense of the bundle of contradictions that was Oswald. But he never got a chance to do a proper job of it. A bright young reporter for the New Orleans States-Item, Rosemary James, was routinely nosing through the D.A.'s budget in February 1967 when she noticed some unusual expenses. Garrison's men had spent some $8000 during the previous three months on such things as trips to Texas and Florida. What could they be up to? A few questions later and she had the story. D.A. HERE LAUNCHES FULL J.F.K. DEATH-PLOT PROBE read the headline on the February 17 States-Item. MYSTERIOUS TRIPS COST LARGE SUMS. James's lead ran, "The Orleans parish district attorney's office has launched an intensive investigation into the circumstances surrounding the assassination of President John F. Kennedy." In the ensuing pandemonium, Garrison found himself under enormous pressure from city hall and the media. He felt he had begun to build a strong conspiracy case against Ferrie in that Ferrie clearly hated J.F.K. and clearly had a tie to Oswald, but that it was still not time to arrest him. His staff was meeting to debate the timing of Ferrie's arrest when word came that Ferrie had been found dead in this apartment, killed by a brain anenurysm. The coroner ruled the cause of death as natural, but Garrison saw indications of suicide: an empty bottle of Proloid--a medicine that could have pushed the hypertense Ferrie's metabolism over the red line--plus two typewritten and unsigned suicide notes. Within hours came a report that Ferrie's militant anticommunist comrade, Eladio del Valle, had been found in a car in Miami, shot point-blank through the heart and with his head hatcheted open. Now what? The stage was filled with enough dead bodies for an Elizabethan tragedy, and two of Garrison's key suspects were among them. Just one other was left. Clay Shaw, born in 1913, was one of New Orleans' best known and most impressive citizens, a charming, richly cultivated and cosmopolitan businessman, a much-decorated Army officer during World War Two detailed to the Office of Special Services and a founder and director of the International Trade Mart, a company specializing in commercial expositions. Shaw retired in 1965 to pursue interests in the arts, playwrighting and the restoration of the French Quarter, where he lived. He was a silver-haired, handsome bon vivant with high cheekbones, a ruddy complexion and an imposing six-foot-four frame. Garrison had come to believe that he was part of the J.F.K. conspiracy. Research had turned up indication that Shaw was the mysterious Clay Bertrand who had phoned New Orleans attorney Dean Andrews on the day after the J.F.K. hit to see if Andrews could arrange legal representation for Oswald. Garrison had found that Shaw led a double life in the New Orleans gay community and that Shaw was a friend of Ferrie's, who had been his pilot on at least one round trip to Montreal. Garrison had a witness, Perry Russo, who claimed to have been present when Ferrie, Shaw and a man Russo thought was Oswald discussed assassinating J.F.K. More important, one of the D.A.'s assistants, Andrew Sciambra, had discovered an Oswald-Shaw link in clinton, a rural Louisiana town. Dozens of people had seen Oswald in Clinton on two occasions in early September 1963, once as a passenger in a battered old car driven by a young woman and later in a shiny black cadillac with two other men who waited for hours while Oswald, the only white in a long line of blacks, tried unsuccessfully to register to vote. Five Clinton witnesses testified that the men with Oswald were David Ferrie and Clay Shaw. The local marshal, curious about strange Cadillacs in town, traced the license plate to the International Trade Mart. He talked to the driver and later, at the trial, identified him as Shaw. Garrison knew that such fragments didn't add up to an airtight conspiracy case. When I asked him if he was surprised to lose, he said, "Not really. I'm too good a trial lawyer. So why did I go to trial against Clay Shaw? Because I knew that somehow I has stumbled across the big toe of someone who was involved in one of the biggest crimes in history. And I was not about to become the person who did that and then let go and said, 'Oh, I might be violating a regulation.'" Looking back, does he think this was an error? "If it was an error, then it was an error that I was obliged to make." But Garrison did not leap blindy into the prosecution of one of New Orleans' leading citizens. He first presented his evidence to a panel of three judges. They told him he had a case. Then he presented the evidence to a 12-member gradn jury. The grand jury also ruled that there was sufficient evidence to try Shaw. And at that point, the decision was out of Garrison's hands: The law required him to proceed. Shaw's lawyers went all the way to the Supreme Court with an argument that the case should be thrown out, and they lost. After Shaw was acquitted, he filed a $5,000,000 damages suit against Garrison for wrongful prosecution; the Supreme Court dismissed it. But Garrison's case ran into many strange problems. One of his assitants provided the list of state's witnesses to Shaw's attorneys. An FBI agent with detailed knowledge of anti-Castro projects in New Orleans refused to testify for the prosecution, pleading executive privilege. The U.S. Attorney in Washington, D.C., "declined" to serve Garrison's subpoena on Allen Dulles, CIA chief at the time of the Bay of Pigs, who was in a position to clarify the relationship between Ferrie, Banister, Shaw and the CIA. The governors of Ohio, Nebraska and other states refused on technical grounds to honor Garrison's requests for the extradition of important witnesses. A federal agent told Garrison privately--but refused to testify--that Ferrie, Shaw and Banister were involved in handling Oswald. A witness critical to establishing that Shaw used the alias Clay Bertrand, a key issue, was not allowed to present his evidence. Some of these difficulties may have arisen because, as later became known, both Shaw and Ferrie were contract agents of the CIA. This was revealed in 1974 when a former aide to CIA director Richard Helms, Vitor Marchetti, noted he had heard Helms wonder aloud if the CIA were giving Shaw and Ferrie "all the help they need.: Without this knowledge, the jury got the case on March 1, 1969, two years to the day after Shaw's arrest. It took a little less than an hour to conclude unanimously that Shaw was not guilty of conspiring to kill Kennedy. In postrial interviews, some jurors said Garrison convinved them that a conspiracy existed but not that Shaw had been a part of it. The Garrison who two years previously had promised. "We to win this case, and everyone who bets against us is going to lose his money," could now sit down for a long, slow chew. The loss didn't hurt him at the polls. He recroded his most lopsided victory ever in the elections of 1969. But the story wasn't over. Garrison had just risen from his breakfast and was still in his pajamas and robe when the dorrbell rang. It was a posse of IRS men, there to arrest him on a charge of allowing pinball gambling in exchange for a bribe. This was June 30, 1971. About two years later, in August 1973, the trial was held, Garrison arguing his own case (with the donated help of F. Lee Bailey). His defense revolved around one powerful basic point, namely that the government's star witness against him, his former wartime buddy and colleague, Pershin Gervais, had been bribed by the government to make the accusation. Garrison was acquitted of the bribery charge as well as of a follow-up charge of tax evasion the government pressed against him in 1974. "A thing like that," he says, "can be enjoyable if you have a cause and you're wrapped up in it. I'd say it was one of the high spots of my life. It was nothing to feel sorry about. I never went to bed with tears on my pillow." But another kind of attack on Garrison began about this time, most often in the work of other conspiracy theorists who began to wonder why Garrison said nothing about Mafia involvement in the J.F.K. hit. There were Mobsters all around Jack Ruby. The New Orleans godfather, Carlos Marcello, was right in Garrison's back yard. A Marcello lawyer worked with Ferrie. Ferrie was with Marcello cello the day J.E.K. was shot. Yet Garrison seemed to ignore all this. The charge is raised by writes (notably G. Robert Blakey and John H. Davis) who champion a Mafia-did-it theory of the crime and who themselves spend little ink on the evidence pointing to renegade federal agents. But Garrison's position on Mafia involvement was reflected in the 1979 report of the Select Committee on Assassinations (Blakey was its chief counsel), which stated that "the national syndicate of organized crime, as a group, was not involved in the assassination." As for the presence of individual Mobsters, Garrison was among the first to see it. An FBI memo of March 28, 1967, reported that "Garrison plans to indict Carlos Marcello in the Kennedy assassination conspiracy because Garrison believes Marcello is tied up in some way with Jack Ruby." According to another FBI memo, June 10, 1967, "District Attorney Garrison believes that organized crime was responsible for the assassination," the memo going on to explain Garrison's fear that the Mafia wanted to blame the crime on Castro and thus spark a U.S. retaliation that would lead to restoration of the Mafia's control of Cuban casinos. More recently, Garrison has written that "Mob-related individuals do figure in the scenario." After all, the CIA and the Mafia shared an interest in Castro's overthrow, as is evident in their murderous alliance of Tast Force W. But Garrison does not believe that the Mafia could have set up Oswald, controlled the investigation of the crime and influenced the conclusions reached by the Warren Commission. "The CIA hired the Mafia," he points out, "not the other way around. If Carlos Marcello had killed J.F.K. on his own, he would never have gotten away with it." The merits of the CIA-vs.-Mafia debate aside, however, this was not a great time for Garrison. He lost a close race in the next election, and in 1974 left the D.A.'s office after 12 years of service. He spent the next few years in what he calls his interregnum, a period of relative quiet in which he wrote his one novel, The Star-Spangled Contract, a fictional treatment of his view of the J.F.K. hit. That period ended in his successful campaign for a seat on the Louisiana court of appeals in 1977. He was inaugurated to a ten-year term in 1978 and reelected in 1987. He reached mandatory retirement age of 70 in November 1991. During the Seventies, the J.F.K. case suddenly shot forward. Watergate and the resignation of President Nixon had already put the country in mood to listen to conspiracy theories when Mafia boss Sam Giancana was shot down in his home on June 19, 1975, five days before he was to testify to a Senate committee. On July 28, 1976, mafioso John Roselli was asphyxiated, dismembered and dumped into Miami's Dumfounding Bay. Giancana and Roselli had both been deeply involved in the CIA-Mafia plots. The atmosphere created by these events persuaded the House of Representatives by a vote of 280-65 to enact H.Res. 1540, which established the Select Committee on Assassinations. That was September 17, 1976. Two and a half years and $6,500,000 later, this committee reported its findings: that conspiracy was "probable" in the death of J.F.K. and a "likelihood" in the 1968 death of Martin Luther King, Jr. In neither case could the House committee offer a solution. But then came the Reagan years. The new Justice Department found the conspiracy evidence unconvincing and decided not to bother about it. And there the case has stood for the past decade--"stuck," as Garrison says, "not for want of something to do but for want of a government with the will to do it." But Garrison is not resigned. "Who killed President Kennedy?" he demands, just as though he still expected an answer. "That question is not going to disappear, no matter what the government does not do. It may fade into the background sometimes, but something will always evoke it again, as Oliver's movie is about to do now. It's basic to who we are as a people. We can no more escape it than Hamlet can escape his father's ghost." But what can Hamlet do three decades later? "There's a lot to do," says Garrison, "and since well over half the American people still gag on the lone-nut theory, there would appear to be a supportive constituency." Garrison's program: "First, open the files that the Warren Commission and the House committee classified as secret until the year 2039. "Second, declassify the House committee's so-called Lopez Report, a 265-page document on Oswald's supposed trip to Mexico. Lopez himself has said he believes Oswald was set up. Why is this report still secret? "Third, declassify all the files on Operation Mongoose and the CIA-Mafia murder plots. The Mongoose group seems to be at the center of the J.F.K. conspiracy. We need to know every detail about it. "And, no, these steps will not crack the case, but they will help us understand it better, and we can move on from there." Someone else who had put so much into such a cause and who had so often been abused for his pains might feel defeated to have to settle for such small demands as these, and to realize that, small as they are, they are almost certainly not going to be met. But Garrison doens't see it that way. "The fight itself has been a most worthy one," he say quietly. "Most people go through their lives without the opportunity to serve an important cause. It's true that I've made some mistakes and had some setbacks. But who knows? To man-handle a line from The Rubaiyat: The moving finger has not stopped moving on yet. The full story's not in." His smile becomes a beam. A light dances in his eyes. "Clarence Darrow lost the Scopes trial," he says. "But who remembers that today?" Title: Full disclosure. (cold-war secrets) Authors: Ferguson, Greg Citation: U.S. News & World Report, Feb 3, 1992 v112 n4 p15(1) ------------------------------------------------------------- Subjects: Germany, East. Office of National Security_Investigations United States. Central Intelligence Agency_Investigations Communist Party (Soviet Union)_Investigations People: Kennedy, John F._Assassination Reference #: A11839899 ============================================================= Abstract: New cold-war information may be coming to light concerning the John Kennedy assassination, the Soviet communist party, CIA activities and the activities of the East German secret police. ============================================================= Full Text COPYRIGHT U.S. News and World Report Inc. 1992 JFK's assassination. There are still 848 sealed boxes of evidence from the 1977 congressional investigation into the murder, with more at the CIA and FBI. Spurred by the furor over Oliver Stone's movie "JFK," Reps. Louis Stokes and Henry Gonzalez, who chaired the probe, and House Speaker Thomas Foley are calling for the release of all the government files. Stokes warns that the documents will offer little new information, but he hopes they will quell speculation about an official coverup. Former Soviet Union. A British company has bought the rights to market all of the Soviet Communist Party's documents, 70 million items chronicling nearly all of Soviet history. The first batch of 300,000 files, due out next fall, covers the lives of early leaders and includes supersecret files on Leon Trotsky, the Red Army leader who was later exiled and murdered by Communists. CIA. The recently created "Openness Task Force" is likely to yield new details about the 1961 By of Pigs invasion and the CIA's assassination attepmts on Cuba's Fidel Castro. the CIAA's role in the 1953 return of the shah to Iran could also come to light. Stasi. Since early January, 300,000 residents of eastern Germany have applied to see the dossiers that the secret police kept on them. The Stasi, with 90,000 agents and up to a million informants, assembled an estimated 6 million files. Germans are now learning that family and friends were informers. Teachers were even enlisted to spy on schoolchildren. Title: Open minds, closed files. (Kennedy assassination files) (Brief Article) Citation: Time, Feb 3, 1992 v139 n5 p25(1) ------------------------------------------------------------- Subjects: United States. Congress. House. Select Committee on Assassinations_Records and correspondence People: Kennedy, John F._Assassination; Stokes, Louis_Political activity Reference #: A11859529 ============================================================= Full Text COPYRIGHT Time Inc. 1992 After the House Select Committee on Assassinations concluded its 1979 investigation of the death of John F. Kennedy, its files were stored away in 848 cartons deep within the National Archives. Most were supposed to remain sealed there until the year 2009. But as a result of the fuss created by Oliver Stone's film JFK, researchers may be able to sift through the boxes much sooner. Ohio Congressman Louis Stokes, the Democrat who chaired the committee, pledged last week to push a House resolution lifting the 30-year secrecy rule. The committee concurred with the Warren Commission's finding that the President was shot by Lee Harvey Oswald. But it also concluded that Kennedy's assassination was "probably" the result of a conspiracy because a controversial acoustic analysis of audiotapes from the shooting seemed to indicate that a second gunman had fired a shot at the President. What would conspiracy theorists find if the files were opened? Not much that has not already been made public except for some classified documents that contain CIA and FBI sources and methods. "There's no smoking gun in there," scoffs G. Robert Blakey, the assassination committee's chief counsel. CAPTION: Kennedy's grave: Could secrets be sealed in the National Archives? Title: Minority report. (Column) Authors: Hitchens, Christopher Citation: The Nation, Feb 3, 1992 v254 n4 p114(1) ------------------------------------------------------------- Subjects: Assassination_History United States. Central Intelligence Agency_Political activity JFK (Motion picture)_Criticism, interpretation, etc. Mafia_Political activity People: Stone, Oliver_Criticism, interpretation, etc.; Kennedy, John F._Assassination Reference #: A11849663 ============================================================= Abstract: Oliver Stone's portrayal of John Kennedy as idealistic in the film "JFK" is false. Kennedy was actively involved with the CIA and Mafia in destabilization plots in Cuba, and it is likely that his death came at the hands of the same forces he himself set in motion. ============================================================= Full Text COPYRIGHT The Nation Company Inc. 1992 I shall never be able to forget where I was standing on that dramatic day when President John Fitzgerald Kennedy nearly killed me. It was during the nuclear confrontation that arose out of his war on Cuba. In 1968 I visited the island in question and went to see a movie by the revolutionary director Santiago Alvarez. It was an agitprop piece called LBJ. The L, B and J of the title turned out to stand for "Luther, Bobby and Jack," and the whole film consisted of a none-too-elegant suggestion that Lyndon Baines Johnson was the usurping despot who had profited by, if not instigated, these three shattering American murders. In October 1976, a Cuban civil airliner was blown up in midair as it left Barbados. All those aboard were killed. Among the flight attendants was the wife of Santiago Alvarez. The man arrested and jailed for organizing this then-unprecedented atrocity was a Cuban exile of the extreme right named Luis Posada Carrilles. He was and is a friend of Felix Rodriguez, another ultrarightist and a C.I.A. agent who assisted in the murder of The Guevara and who, by dint of yeoman service in Vietnam and El Salvador, became a trusted friend of Donald Gregg. Mr. Gregg, who now serves as Ambassador to South Korea, was national security adviser to George Bush during the latter's shady vice presidency. Bush was also Director of Centrla Intelligence at the time of the slaughter of the crew and passengers of the Cuban airliner. You would have to be a complete paranoid to see any connection between any of the above facts. There is, in the strict sense of consciousness and organization, no "connection" between then at all. They merely describe one aspect, and not the prettiest one, of the way things happen to be. It was highly likely, but not at all predetermined, that George Bush would be sitting in Langley at a time when a deniable subordinate of one of his deniable subordinates "went too far" in the execution of a policy--the destabilization of Cuba--that had been approved and sanctioned at a superior level. It would have taken a conspiracy to prevent such coincidences--an open conspiracy to contain the national security state and subject its agents to the rule of law--and such conspiracies, as we know, never occur. I don't know if Oliver Stone ever saq LBJ, but if he did it helped give him the wrong idea (as well as the notion of a hieroglyphic three-letter film title). The dated, reactionary concept of President Kennedy as some young Siegfried of idealism is as stupid and ahistorical as the narcissistic pretense that a post-Hiroshima, post-McCarthy America was a country with "innocence" to "lose." Johnson himself, who was by no means a man of scruple, was shocked to receive a C.I.A. briefing on the Kennedy brothers and their Cuba policy, and exclaimed that his predecessor had been "running a god-damned Murder Incorporated in the Caribbean," which was no more than the truth. But the fact that Kennedy was a howling little shit doesn't prove that there wasn't a plot to do him in. Indeed, like many a godfather before him, he may have been slain by precisely the same forces that he himself set in motion. If you run with the Mafia and with the scum of the Havana underworld, as Kennedy did and as "rogue elements" in his own C.I.A. were ordered to do, you run with people who believe in revenge. You also run with people who are irrational. It makes no sense for a thinking person to conclude that Kennedy wanted to end the cold war racket, but the cold war racketeers themselves were certainly crazy enough to see him as a traitor, and we happen to know that the Cuban exile/Mafia leadership did think this way. The goons, of course, would not on their own have had the power to order a cover-up. But those who had covertly used the goons would have every reason to conceal even a rumor of their part in an assasination of the head of state. Allen Dulles (who served both as C.I.A. overseer of the Mafia operations in Cuba and as a member of the Warren Commission) went to great lengths to prevent the Warren Commission from finding out what the Church Committee was, twelve years too late, to make public. If Congress and the press had known of the Kennedy-Giancana-Rosselli connection in 1963, they obviously could not have been tranquilized so easily. On this analysis, and given Lee Harvey Oswald's ties to the Cuban exile and criminal milieu, it doesn't matter whether he acted alone or not. As Eric Ambler puts it in A Coffin for Dimitrios, in these cases it's not who pulls the trigger but who pays for the bullet. Obviously it would be disappointing to find that Arlen Specter, now the ghastly Senator from Pennsylvania, was forensically accurate when he devised the idea of the "magic bullet." But a conspiracy doesn't need more than one assassin. The question is not did Oswald act alone but whom did he act for? Why would a liberal icon like Earl Warren lend himself to such an exercise in concealment? For the same reason that people like him always do--namely to insure the Establishment version of "domestic tranquility." Once admit the C.I.A./Mafia/Kennedy triangle and, straightaway, the history of the Cuban missile crisis is rewritten with Cuba as the victim of aggression. Furthermore, public confidence in the probity of government is badly shaken. A Warren Commission staffer named Melvin Eisenberg recalls Warren saying, after a meeting with L.B.J., "The President stated that rumors of the most exaggerated kind were circulating in the country and overseas" and "if not quenched, could conceivably lead the country into a war which could cost 40 million casualties. No one could refuse to do something which might help prevent such a possibility." By a nice coincidence, this was exactly the rationale offered by Arthur Liman for his own role in muffling the Congressional iran/contra inquiry. As he said at Brown University on March 1, 1988: "Even if you concluded that the President was involved in the diversion, an impeachment process has a huge price. In a nuclear age it's something to be used sparingly. We were all very mindful of the fact that there was an opportunity for the negotiations with the Soviet Union . . . that if an impeachment process was started, that opportunity would be lost." Stone would have made a more radical and authentic film if he had only depicted what we already know. Title: Where can I get the Warren report? (on the John F. Kennedy assassination) (Brief Article) Authors: Castro, Janice Citation: Time, Feb 10, 1992 v139 n6 p15(1) ------------------------------------------------------------- Subjects: Assassination_Reports United States. President's Commission on the Assassination of President John F. Kennedy_Reports People: Kennedy, John F._Assassination Reference #: A11791294 ============================================================= Full Text COPYRIGHT Time Inc. 1992 Oliver Stone's film JFK has triggered a fresh outpouring of interest in the Kennedy assassination and the conspiracy theories challenging the official findings of the Warren Commission Report. Hundreds of Americans have called federal offices asking where they can get the book. So where is it? Produced in 1964 by the Government Printing Office, the Warren Report was also published by Bantam, Doubleday, McGraw-Hill and Popular Library (which collectively sold more than 1 million copies). But even though a snazzy edition might move smartly up the charts about now, none of the publishers are printing a fresh batch. Check your local library. Title: Stone's opening. (Oliver Stone's 'JFK') (Editorial) Citation: The Nation, Feb 17, 1992 v254 n6 p184(2) ------------------------------------------------------------- Subjects: JFK (Motion picture)_Public opinion People: Kennedy, John F._Assassination Reference #: A11862202 ============================================================= Abstract: 'JFK,' the motion picture by Oliver Stone, has had a powerful impact on public opinion. The Dallas, TX police are releasing their files on the John Kennedy assassination, and legislation is being introduced to release the files of all government agencies. ============================================================= Full Text COPYRIGHT The Nation Company Inc. 1992 Recently, the Dallas Police Department ann it would release its files on the Kennedy assassination. Representative Louis Stokes, who was Chairman of the Select Committee on Assassinations, is drafting a House resolution to authorize the release of the remaining files of the committee's 1977-79 inquiry, as well as the release of the files of all government agencies. All this suggests that whatever one thinks of the ins and outs, ups and downs, highways, byways and cul-de-sacs of the conspiracy theory that dramatically unfolds in Oliver Stone's JFK, the movie is a powerful one and has already had a profound sociopolitical impact. Ransacking our literary, theatrical and cinematic history for works that caused similar rufflings of the Zeitgeist (though in different ways) one comes up with Uncle Tom's Cabin, The Birth of a Nation, Waiting for Lefty and The Grapes of Wrath. Stone's film posited a counterimage to the Warren Commission's findings with such force that the public is now ready to take a fresh look at the evidence, old and new-indeed demands it. Whatever one thinks of the real-life Jim Garrison, his movie incarnation, played by Kevin Costner, embarks on a cinematic quest that takes him into back alleys and dark corners of the national life-places where many believe the Warren Commission refused to go. Or so the lingering residue of popular skepticism about its findings strongly suggests. Stone's job was not to "solve" the actual crime; it was to make effective cinema of the political forces that were, in the words of one of the film's characters, "in the air." In this he has succeeded and the culture is the richer for it. We have received scores of letters taking issue with this or that Nation contributor's theory about what John E Kennedy would or would not have done in Vietnam had he lived. The debate on these issues will be played out on our Letters page in a future issue. For now, we salute Oliver Stone and his co-writer, Zachary Sklar, for doing what assassination buffs and conspiratologists of all stripes had previously been unable to do-rivet popular attention on a murky event in American history and create the pressure needed to disgorge the documents that can help illuminate it. Title: Who killed JFK? (new documentary 'The JFK Assassination: The Jim Garrison Tapes') (Brief Article) Authors: Wells, Jeffrey Citation: Entertainment Weekly, Feb 21, 1992 n106 p9(1) ------------------------------------------------------------- Subjects: Motion pictures_Production and direction The JFK Assassination: The Jim Garrison Tapes (Motion picture)_Production and direction People: Barbour, John_Production and direction; Kennedy, John F._Assassination Reference #: A12516288 ============================================================= Full Text COPYRIGHT Entertainment Weekly Inc. 1992 And the conspiracy bandwagon rolls on. The latest movie to hitch a ride on Oliver Stone's coattails is The JFK Assassination: The Jim Garrison Tapes, a documentary that stakes the same claim as Stone's - that Garrison (played by Kevin Costner in JFK) had a credible case against New Orleans businessman Clay Shaw for involvement in President Kennedy's murder. "The truth about Garrison and the trial has never really been told, not even in JFK," says the documentary's writer-director, John Barbour, a former Los Angeles TV news-man and host of the hit television series Real People from 1979-82. Barbour taped his Garrison interview in 1981 but was unable to obtain funding for a complete feature until Stone's JFK began to stir interest last summer. Tapes, which includes an interview with controversial former Pentagon-CIA liaison officer Fletcher Prouty (on whom Donald Sutherland's "Mr. X" character in JFK was loosely based), will see some big screens but will mostly play on video. The film is sure to draw a lot of flak from Garrison critics, though Barbour insists that it "deals only with facts, with hard evidence." Title: In defense of the Warren Commission. (U.C.L.A. law professor Wesley J. Liebeler)(Beat the Devil)(Column) (Interview) Authors: Cockburn, Alexander Citation: The Nation, March 9, 1992 v254 n9 p294(3) ------------------------------------------------------------- Subjects: Presidents_Assassination Assassination_Investigations United States. President's Commission on the Assassination of President John F. Kennedy_Reports People: Liebeler, Wesley J.; Kennedy, John F._Assassination Reference #: A12053041 ============================================================= Abstract: U.C.L.A. law professor Wesley J. Liebeler, former staff counsel on the Warren Commission, defends the Warren Commission report on the assassination of Pres John F. Kennedy. ============================================================= Full Text COPYRIGHT The Nation Company Inc. 1992 In Defense of the Warren Commission In mid-February, for the benefit of television viewers in Australia, I found myself squaring off on the subject of JFK against Fletcher Prouty and Carl Oglesby. Perched on a stool beside me in a Los Angeles studio was Wesley J. Liebeler, a 60-year-old professor of law at U.C.L.A. Originally from North Dakota and conservative/libertarian in political outlook, Liebeler was one of the staff counsels on the Warren Commission. Later, in a week when JFK got eight Academy Award nominations, and when Richard Heffner, a Rutgers professor who is also chairman of the motion picture industry's film rating system, announced in the Los Angeles Times that JFK marked the end of the Gutenberg era and the dawn of a new way of telling history, I drove up to Zuma Beach and interviewed Liebeler. AC: What about the speed at which Oswald would have had to fire his Mannlicher-Carcano? Critics of the Warren Commission say Oswald could never have loosed off the shots in so short a time. WJL: The clock for the whole thing is the Zapruder film, which runs at 18.3 frames a second. The film shows only two shots striking the people in the car. A time fix on the first shot can't be precise, for reasons I'll come back to. But the time of impact of the second shot that struck is precise. That was at frames 312-313 of the Zapruder film. At frame 313 the head just explodes. So either at 312 or 313, which is practically the same instant. And that's the last shot for which there is any evidence of anything in the car being struck. The first shot hit, in the view of the Warren Commission, between frames 210 and 225. The commission came to that conclusion based on the Zapruder film, which shows that at a certain point Kennedy was reacting to a shot. He raises his hands up. During part of that time the limousine is behind a road sign, so it can't be seen for about .9 of a second. So you can't tell how long before the reaction the shot actually struck. The House Assassination Committee 1978) said the first shot struck around frame 190, which is a little sooner, about a second. So to establish the time frame the Warren Commission subtracted either 210 or 225 from 312, and divided that by 18.3. Let's say 210. This gives us 5.6 seconds. Take 313 and subtract 225, and divide that by 18.3 and that gives 4.8 seconds. So the commission said that the time lapse between the first shot that hit and the second shot that hit was between 4.8 and 5.6 seconds. If we assume that three shots were fired, you have the question of which shot missed. The House committee concluded that the first shot missed. The Warren Commission never decided on the matter. The evidence is consistent with the proposition that the first shot missed. If so, all Oswald had to do was fire one more shot. So in fact he would have had from 4.8 to 5.6 seconds to fire one shot, not three shots. AC: So, on that explication, he's waiting with his gun aimed The car comes along, he shoots and misses. But there's no time fix as to when he might have fired that shot. It wasn't in the famous 4.8 to 5.6 second interval He reloads and then fires the shot that hits the President in the neck between frames 210 or 225 according to the Warren Commission, or 190 according to the House committee. WJL: Right. Now he has to reload (which takes a minimum of 2.3 seconds), work the bolt once and fire the third shot that's fired (the second shot that strikes). And he has, according to the Warren Commission, 4.8 to 5.6 seconds. That is even time enough to fire twice, which he would have had to do if the second shot missed. If, as the House committee said, the first shot that hit was fired at frame 190, then Oswald had 6.72 seconds to fire either one or two shots. That is 313 minus 190, divided by 18.3. There was enough time. You know, people harp on about the Warren Commission, which is fine. But the House Assassination Committee confirmed every single finding that the Warren Commission made-every one, except on the conspiracy question. AC: Well, what about that? WJL: The only evidence for conspiracy that the House committee had was a Dictabelt tape that recorded police radio transmissions. That was discovered long after the event in a file cabinet in the Dallas Police Department. There were two different radio frequencies that the Dallas Police Department used to transmit messages back and forth among the police. Both those frequencies were separately recorded. The Warren Commission didn't know anything about this evidence. When you listen to the Dictabelt there's no sound of shots at all. But the House committee took this Dictabelt and gave it to an audio consulting firm in Boston that did an analysis and found some pulses. The Dictabelt had been recording from a motorcycle somewhere that had its microphone stuck open. The consultants claimed they could distinguish four different pulse phenomena, three of which could be made to correspond to the shots we've just talked about, if you pushed the first shot back to frame 190. And there was a fourth pulse. So the consultants went down to Dealey Plaza, set up microphones, fired off rifles and established what they called an audio footprint, and said initially that there was a 50-50 probability of a shot fired from the grassy knoll. This was in September of 1978. Then in December, right before the House committee closed up shop on the hearings, the audio consulting firm came up with a 95 percent probability on this same shot. So on the basis of that evidence the 1978 House committee concluded there was probably a conspiracy, that there was a guy on the grassy knoll shooting, though he didn't hit anybody. Robert Blakey, the committee's chief counsel, then gave the Dictabelt to the Justice Department to be analyzed further. Later he wrote a letter to National Review saying that if the Justice Department's investigation of the tape didn't bear out the 95 percent probability of another shot, he'd retract the whole conspiracy theory. Well, the Justice Department turned all this over to a panel of acoustic experts set up by the National Research Council. They figured out that sounds on both Dictabelts could be matched, and since the one had a time reference, they could fix the time frame on the other Dictabelt as well. The N. R.C. acoustic committee then concluded that the sounds on the second Dictabelt were recorded more than a minute after the assassination occurred. So they didn't have anything to do with the shots in Dealey Plaza. AC: The other thing that seems to cause people a lot of problems is the single-bullet theory" -the first shot that hit Kennedy and also John Connally. WJL: The first shot that hit went through the top of Kennedy's back, came through the throat to the right of his trachea, didn't hit any bones. Governor Connally was struck right below the right armpit in the back. The bullet went down through his chest cavity, came out just below his right nipple, struck him on the back side of his right wrist at the joint, broke the wrist and came out the front of his wrist and entered his thigh, making a very shallow hole. The pathology panel of the House committee and also the Warren Commission concluded that the damage to Connally was done by one bullet. Work it backwards. If his hand was on his thigh, which is consistent with the Zapruder film, you know that the bullet wasn't going very fast when it came out the underside of the wrist, which has implications about how fast it was going when it entered the wrist. If it had already gone through Connally's chest cavity and the President's neck it had been slowed down. A wounds ballistic expert testifying to the House committee established that there's a range of velocity within which a bullet will break a bone without hurting the bullet, provided it's not going too fast. Warren Commission Exhibit 399 is the so-called "magic" or "pristine" bullet. It is neither one. It is in good shape, but eight of the nine forensic pathologists on the House committee medical panel agreed that it had gone through the President's neck or upper back and then inflicted all of Connally's wounds. Ask yourself where the bullet went after it came out of the President's neck if it didn't hit Connally. After coursing downward through the President's body, where it hit no bone to deflect it, either it's got to hit Connally, who is sitting right in front of him, or it's got to hit the car. It didn't hit the car. The Warren Commission did a re-enactment of the assassination which showed that the President and Governor were located in a way that the bullet would have gone directly from the exit wound in the President's neck into Connally's back, The House committee used a different method of calculating the trajectory and unequivocally confirmed the Warren Commission findings that one bullet-CE 399-did go through the President and inflict the Governor's wounds. The House committee said flatly that the trajectory it established supported the single-bullet theory. Oliver Stone's treatment of this question is simply a lie, and he knows it. The House committee confirmed the Warren Commission's findings on this point without qualification. But with the conspiracy Stone has fabricated, the addition of the House of Representatives won't cause any further problems. He's got half the country in on it now. I have challenged him to debate the validity of the Warren Report. Naturally he issued a press release saying he'd be happy to do it, but he never responded to me. He's engaged in scholarship by press release. I repeat my challenge. AC: In the Zapruderfilm, at frame 313, when the second bullet strikes, Kennedy's head jerks back convulsively, and people have reckoned this implies a shot from the front. WJL: If you look at Kennedy's head, right at frame 313, just as the bullet strikes it, it doesn't move backward. It moves slightly to the left and downward, just for two or three frames, which is consistent with a bullet striking it from behind and nowhere else, because the momentum of the bullet is imparted instantly. Then shortly after frames 312-313 the President's body goes backward. The House committee said there are two explanations. One is the jet effect, caused by the skull and brain exiting and forcing the head back and to the left. Combined with that effect, the committee said, was a neuromuscular reaction. The medical evidence is the best way to determine the direction of the shots that hit the President. Take the skull. The entry wound in the back of his head is "coned" on the inside of the skull. What can be constructed of the exit wound from the skull is coned on the outside. The House medical panel all agreed to these conclusions, and also that the wound on the President's upper right back could only be an entrance wound. Eight of the nine pathologists on that panel concluded that the President was struck by two and only two shots. The medical evidence excludes the possibility that the President was struck by a shot fired from any direction other than behind him. AC: Why didn't the Warren Commission have access to the autopsy photographs and X-rays? WJL: Warren didn't want to press Bobby Kennedy, who controlled them, for their release. The worst consequence was the idea that someone was trying to hide something. Without these materials the autopsy surgeons described to the commission their recollection of the wounds, and their medical artist drew the diagrams showing the entrance wounds in the wrong place. AC: What happened to Kennedy's brain? WJL: The brain was under Robert Kennedy's control when it disappeared. it is widely believed that he destroyed it. He was afraid that these materials might end up on public display. AC: Do you think the Warren Report was flawed? WJL: It was too oracular, overwritten. Also I think it relied too heavily on eyewitness testimony. The problem is that people will testify to damn near anything. So the commission had one eyewitness testifying that he saw Oswald sticking a rifle through the sixth-floor window - AC: But there was another witness next to him who saw Oswald and another man beside him. WJL: Right. That's the problem. The only way you can avoid that is to look at evidence that can be replicated. Evidence that is here today, will be here tomorrow and 100 years from now: the autopsy photographs; the autopsy X-rays; the ballistics tests. The bullet that was found on the stretcher was fired from Oswald's rifle to the exclusion of all other rifles; the two big fragments in the car were fired from that rifle to the exclusion of all other rifles; that rifle was on the sixth floor of the School Book Depository; it had Oswald's print on it; there was a brown paper bag there that had Oswald's palm print on it; it was a long bag that would have held a rifle. At this point it would be nice to have an eyewitness who said that when he gave Oswald a ride to work that morning he had the bag with him, and there was one. But fine, never mind how the bag got there. We know it was Oswald's rifle because he rented a post office box and his handwriting is on the application; he ordered the rifle and his handwriting is on the paper he ordered the rifle with; he wrote out a money order and his handwriting is on that; and the rifle was sent to his post office box. There are a number of pictures of Oswald with a rifle. The House Assassination Committee, with improved enhancement techniques that the Warren Commission didn't have, was able to prove it was the same rifle. The negative was found and it had been taken from Oswald's camera to the exclusion of all other cameras. George de Mohrenschildt had a copy of that picture with Oswald's handwriting on the back. There's no evidence of tampering on the negative; the scratch marks are the same. The picture was taken six months before the assassination. We have photographic evidence, like the Zapruder film. On the Tippit shooting, we've got forensic evidence that shows clearly Tippit was killed by bullets from the gun Oswald was carrying when he was arrested. So you can make out a pretty good case just on the basis of the physical evidence. Why did Oswald kill the President? The man was a malcontent, not happy, not stupid by any stretch of the imagination, but unhappy and discontented. I guess your typical liberal [laughs). Not that. I guess he would have as much contempt for liberals as you or I. He was a revolutionary of one form or another. I drafted a psychological profile of Oswald for chapter seven of the report. It was reviewed by a panel including the chief of psychiatry at the Mayo Clinic, who threw my draft down and said, "This is very interesting stuff, but it tells me a lot more about you, Liebeler, than it does about Oswald." So how the hell do I know why Oswald killed the President? Title: Recapturing the past. (panel discussion on Oliver Stone's film "JFK") (Editorial) Citation: The Nation, March 23, 1992 v254 n11 p361(1) ------------------------------------------------------------- Subjects: JFK (Motion picture)_Criticism, interpretation, etc. People: Kennedy, John F._Assassination Reference #: A12112515 ============================================================= Abstract: The panel discussion "Hollywood & History: The Debate over 'JFK'," held at Town Hall (New York, New York), ranged over more subjects than that of the accuracy of the film. Historical films often are attacked more for their politics than for inaccuracies. History is vitally important and should be debated. ============================================================= Full Text COPYRIGHT The Nation Company Inc. 1992 Panel discussion, symposium, political psychodrama, historical inquest? The March 3 event at Town Hall in New York City, sponsored by The Nation Institute, the Center for American Culture Studies, Columbia University and the Writers Guild of America, East, was certainly all these. The ostensible subject was Hollywood & History: The Debate over JFK," but the talk covered far more ground than the media-framed issue of the factual accuracy of Oliver Stones movie. And, as noted by panelist Nora Ephron, co-screenwriter of Silkwood, which was attacked in much the same way as JFK, a movie's politics rather than a reverence for history is often the real raison d'etre of such assaults. As far as Oliver Stone was concerned it was history-and the politics thereof-that was on trial rather than his movie. He regarded the official version of the assassination as typical of the pervasive untruths in received American history. But Stone's version of events in Dallas was challenged by writer Edward Jay Epstein and a panel of questioners. The director had answers, not all of them satisfying to his inquisitors or the audience. This is the Kennedy assassination, after all. For every "fact" there is a counterfact, and opinions among the illuminati run strong and deep. Still, the dialectic informed, if it did not synthesize. As panelist Norman Mailer observed, the assassination is the great unresolved question of our time, and doubts about the official story have left people in a Umbo "between apathy and paranoia." He made an impassioned call for the formation of a commission to find what answers remain to be found. The event in Town Hall was about the politics of history-how it is written, how it is interpreted, how it is conveyed and portrayed. The moral is that history is not bunk. It is so crucial that we must keep on debating it. Title: Did J.F.K. really commit suicide? (books on the assassination of John F. Kennedy) Authors: Ellis, David Citation: Time, April 13, 1992 v139 n15 p64(1) ------------------------------------------------------------- Subjects: Assassination_Bibliography People: Kennedy, John F._Assassination Reference #: A12120963 ============================================================= Abstract: Several new books have been released which espouse a myriad of theories as to who killed Pres Kennedy. The theories range from the reasonable to the bizarre, but all hope to capitalize on the renewed interest in the Kennedy assassination. ============================================================= Full Text COPYRIGHT Time Inc. 1992 So you think America has lost its creative edge, that its citizens can no longer devise innovative solutions to what ails the country and the world? Well, stroll through your local bookstore and think again: no fewer than seven new books on the Kennedy assassination have recently been published. Several have made it to the best-seller lists, where they joined two paperbacks: On the Trail of the Assassins by Jim Garrison and Crossfire by Jim Marrs, both of which inspired Oliver Stone's film JFK. The latest addition to the shelf is JFK: Conspiracy of Silence (Signet; 205 pages; $4.99 paper) by Charles A. Crenshaw. It is the first account written by a doctor who was part of the Parkland Memorial Hospital trauma team that tried to save Kennedy and, two days later, his assassin (sorry, alleged assassin), Lee Harvey Oswald. Crenshaw says that until now, he and his colleagues refused to "rock the boat" by publicly disputing the Warren Commission's finding that Oswald was the lone assassin. But he is adamant that the head wound suffered by the President came from the front of the motorcade, thus making it impossible for Oswald to have murdered Kennedy from a sixth-floor rear perch. The physician says it is clear that "someone had tampered with the body" during its extralegal transfer from Texas to the autopsy room at Bethesda Naval Hospital in Maryland, presumably to support a single-gunman scenario. The injuries shown on autopsy photos, Crenshaw says, "are not the same wounds I saw at Parkland." That theory isn't new, but Crenshaw's account contains a vivid anecdote that will no doubt be seized upon by those who argue that there was a government conspiracy. When Oswald, shot by Jack Ruby, wound up at Parkland, Crenshaw noted the presence of a heavyset armed man in the operating room. Moments later came a telephone call from Washington. On the other end of the line, according to Crenshaw, was Lyndon Johnson, who demanded that the medical team obtain "a deathbed confession from the accused assassin," to be recorded by the mysterious agent. When Oswald died minutes later, the man disappeared. In The Texas Connection (Texas Connection Co.; 323 pages; $21.95), Craig I. Zirbel claims to provide the "final answer" on Johnson's role. Zirbel says Johnson probably organized the murder with a group of right-wing oilmen as a shortcut to the Oval Office. The author provides no persuasive evidence to support the allegation, relying instead on the argument that Johnson was a murderer because he had the turpitude to behave like one. Zirbel ticks off Johnson's egomania, drinking habits and philandering as examples of his "violations of moral rules." The author dismisses opposing speculations of why Kennedy was killed, saying the Mafia did not participate in the assassination because "for a hit to have been made against the President, [Chicago Mob boss] Sam Giancana would have had to consent." Surprise. Double Cross (Warner Books; 366 pages; $22.95), written by Giancana's brother Chuck and godson Sam, says that is exactly what happened. Chuck Giancana played the role of underworld Candide, charting his brother's rise as the most powerful Mob boss west of the Mississippi and taking note of his snuff work for the CIA. "It's beautiful," says Sam. "The Outfit even has the same enemies as the government." But the government soon became the enemy. Although Giancana boasted that he fixed votes, funneled thousands into the 1960 Democratic campaign and picked up girlfriend Judith Campbell from J.F.K., the Kennedys forgot their debts to the Mob. In 1961 New Orleans crime boss Carlos Marcello was deported in Robert Kennedy's crackdown on organized crime. An outraged Giancana began monitoring the private lives of both brothers. Along the way, the book says, Marilyn Monroe was murdered in a Mafia attempt to blow the lid off her affair with R.F.K. When that didn't play out, Giancana spent a year planning the assassination, which was carried out by a loose association of professional killers. According to the book, Oswald was a former spy sacrificed by anti-Kennedy elements in the CIA to take the fall. Then Ruby, Giancana's "Dallas representative," dispatched Oswald. The CIA turns up in Mark Lane's Plausible Denial (Thunder's Mouth Press; 393 pages; $22.95), which claims Watergate burglar E. Howard Hunt played a key role in killing J.F.K., who intended to disband the spy agency. For readers who want just a little spice added to the Oswald-did-it scenario, there is Bonar Menninger's Mortal Error (St. Martin's Press; 361 pages; $23.95). According to Howard Donahue, a Baltimore ballistics expert, Kennedy was killed by a Secret Service agent in the presidential motorcade who accidentally discharged his AR-15 rifle. But Donahue says that Kennedy probably would have died anyway from the neck wound inflicted by Oswald. Among those unconvinced by this scenario is Menninger's publisher, who added a 17-page disclaimer to the book. CAPTION: THE MOB or ... A Mob hit, a betrayal, a crazed zealot or a tragic accident -- readers can chose from many scenarios. Among those in the conspiracy theorists' lineup: crime boss Sam Giancana, L.B.J., the "lone assassin," E. Howard Hunt and a nervous Secret Service agent. CAPTION: JOHNSON or ... See above. CAPTION: OSWALD or ... See above. CAPTION: THE CIA or ... See above. CAPTION: THE SECRET SERVICE ... KILLED KENNEDY See above. Title: Assassination expert. (Atlanta Hawks vice president Pete Babcock)(Inside The NBA) (Brief Article) Authors: McCallum, Jack Citation: Sports Illustrated, April 13, 1992 v76 n14 p74(2) ------------------------------------------------------------- Subjects: Assassination_Investigations Atlanta Hawks_Officials and employees People: Kennedy, John F._Assassination; Babcock, Pete_Conduct of life Reference #: A12124357 ============================================================= Full Text COPYRIGHT Time Inc. 1992 Actually, for conspiracy theories, the man to talk to in the NBA is Pete Babcock, the vice-president/general manager of the Hawks. Over the years Babcock has become an expert and an occasional lecturer on the assassination of President John F. Kennedy. A closet in Babcock's house in suburban Atlanta is filled with hundreds of slides, autopsy photos, index cards, charts and magazine and newspaper articles relating to the assassination. And his bookcases are filled with more than 50 tomes on the subject, as well as the 26 volumes of the Warren Report, with which he is not in agreement. Babcock was teaching American history at a Phoenix high school in 1973 when he saw a film called Executive Action, a fictionalized account of the assassination. It started him thinking, which led to study, which led to extensive research, which led to obsession. Babcock's lecture appearances have increased recently, since the public's interest in the subject has been rekindled by Oliver Stone's movie JFK, which Babcock has seen twice. Babcock does not subscribe to all of Stone's conspiracy theories, but he also rejects the finding of the Warren Commission that Lee Harvey Oswald acted alone. He believes there had to be a second gunman, a conclusion he reached largely by studying the Zapruder film, several copies of which are part of his research materials. "One reporter wanted to know how I had the answer to the Kennedy assassination when I haven't figured out how to win an NBA championship," says Babcock, who has held scouting or executive positions with the Bucks, Clippers, Jazz, Lakers and Nuggets as well as the Hawks, without earning a ring. "My answer," he says, "is that I don't have all the answers to either one." Title: JFK, the sequel. (danger of re-opening FBI files on the John F. Kennedy assassination) (Editorial) Citation: National Review, May 25, 1992 v44 n10 p14(1) ------------------------------------------------------------- Subjects: Assassination_Investigations United States. Federal Bureau of Investigation_Reports People: Kennedy, John F._Assassination Reference #: A12270075 ============================================================= Abstract: Oliver Stone's motion picture 'JFK' has generated interest in examining classified FBI files maintained during the investigation into Kennedy's death. If they are opened to public scrutiny, innocent witnesses could be hurt and future FBI reports would be written with too much caution. ============================================================= Full Text COPYRIGHT National Review Inc. 1992 OLD conspiracies never die, they simply snowball. In JFK Oliver Stone went whole hog: it wasn't just a little cabal of men who plotted to kill the President, it was the entire government of the United States. Even the liberals found it hard to believe that government could operate so efficiently, and Stone was skewered for his fantasies. Inside the Beltway, alas, fantasies all too often have political consequences, and sure enough there was Oliver Stone testifying the other day about opening the JFK assassination files. This has attracted the support even of folks who don't think the entire United States was behind Lee Harvey Oswald. Before we start opening our secret files, it's probably worth knowing what those files are. Most of them are statements taken by FBI agents. Every time an FBI agent interviews a witness, he fills out what's called an SD-302 form. Essentially it is a blank piece of paper on which the agent records the interviewee's name, address, etc.--and then the FBI agent's summary of what he has been told. The witness neither swears to nor signs the statement; only the agent's name appears. As might be imagined, witnesses vary in credibility, and they offer information that might be true, false, or fantastic. Making it public would often hurt innocent people, an act of irresponsibility akin to publishing a reportor's notes without checking their accuracy. It will also guarantee that in the future agents will put nothing of importance in their files. In the old days, we got around this problem by allowing the people's elected representatives on special committees to review all the secret files--in full context, and that's important-to make sure nothing was amiss. But then some members of these committees started to take it upon themselves to release highly confidential information. This in no small part contributed to the debacle of Vietnam and its aftermath. If Mr. Stone really wants a juicy scandal to put on the silver screen, there's one just waiting for him: Congress. Title: Not the grassy knoll? (coroners who examined John F. Kennedy after his assassination maintain that both bullets came from the rear) Citation: Time, June 1, 1992 v139 n22 p21(1) ------------------------------------------------------------- Subjects: Assassination_Investigations People: Kennedy, John F._Assassination Reference #: A12277435 ============================================================= Full Text COPYRIGHT Time Inc. 1992 CONSPIRACY BUFFS HAVE MADE MUCH OF THE FACT that the pathologists who performed the autopsy on President Kennedy never discussed their findings, except with House investigators and the Warren Commission. Last week the doctors broke their silence, reasserting publicly that they believe J.F.K. was shot by a lone gunman from the rear. Their belated postmortem report will not end the debate, but those who believe otherwise now have to contend with the detailed description of a "beveled" hole punched in Kennedy's skull that could have been made only by a bullet coming from above and behind. CAPTION: THE BULLET'S PATH: Doctors found bone fragments and a telltale beveled crater Title: Examining 'JFK.' (motion picture) Authors: Breo, Dennis L. Citation: People Weekly, June 8, 1992 v37 n22 p49(2) ------------------------------------------------------------- Subjects: Assassination_Investigations JFK (Motion picture)_Criticism, interpretation, etc. People: Kennedy, John F._Assassination Reference #: A12289293 ============================================================= Abstract: The movie 'JFK' presents the idea that the assassination of Pres Kennedy was a conspiracy and that the evidence was suppressed. The Navy pathologists who examined Kennedy's body refute conspiracy theories 29 years after Kennedy's death. ============================================================= Full Text COPYRIGHT Time Inc. 1992 IT 7:30 P.M. ON NOV. 22, 1963, U.S. NAVY pathologists James Joseph Humes, then 39, and J. Thornton Boswell, then 41, entered the newly built morgue of the Naval Medical Center in Bethesda, Md., and watched as a bronze coffin with one broken handle was carried into the chamber. Opening the casket, the two men found, swaddled in sheets, the naked body of John F. Kennedy. They lifted the President's corpse onto an examination table and, for the next four hours, studied the wounds that caused his death. Turning in their findings, Humes and Boswell then kept their silence for the next 29 years. The multiplicity of conspiracy theories given new life recently by Oliver Stone's JFK, however, has broken their patience. "I am tired of being beaten upon by people who are supremely ignorant of the scientific facts of the President's death," Humes says. Last week the respected Journal of the American Medical Association published articles based on extensive interviews with Humes and Boswell as well as four doctors who attempted to save Kennedy's life in Dallas. They paint a compelling portrait not only of the medical evidence but of the doctors' own feelings and of the sorrow and courage of Jacqueline Kennedy. Humes and Boswell take particular umbrage at theories that the President was killed by two shots from the front and not from behind as their autopsy examination -- and the Warren Commission Report, which was based on it -- concludes. Pointing toward a glass pane, Humes says, "If a bullet or a BB were fired through that window, it would leave a small hole where it entered and a beveled crater where it exited. That is what [we] found when we examined the President's skull. There was a small elliptical entrance wound on the outside of the back of the skull, where the bullet entered, and a beveled larger wound on the inside of the back of the skull where the bullet tore through and exploded out the right side of the head." He adds, "If we stay here until hell freezes over, nothing will change this proof. It happens 100 times out of 100, and I will defend it until I die." Humes and Boswell dispel other myths as well. The President did not arrive in a body bag, as some accounts claim. Neither was the examination at the morgue stage-managed by generals. "The President's military aides from the Air Force, Army and Navy were all present [in the viewing theater]," says Humes. "But they were not generals, and their influence on the autopsy was zero." As for the restaging of the episode in Oliver Stone's JFK, Humes tells his friend Boswell, "If you see this movie, believe me, you'll need heavy sedation. The autopsy bears no relation to reality; the man they have playing me looks older than I am now." Humes confirms that he burned his notes -- but only after copying their contents verbatim at his home. The original paper, he says, was stained with the President's blood. "I did not want them to become a collector's item." All the doctors recall the pathos around them. In Bethesda, says Boswell, "the people who accompanied the President's body to the morgue were the most disturbed and distressed people I had ever seen." Adds Humes: "These people thought they had let the President down, and now their hero was gone." Boswell had wondered why the body had come to Naval Medical Center in Bethesda instead of the more advanced Walter Reed Army Medical Center in Washington, D.C. "Later I was told that Jackie Kennedy selected Bethesda because her husband had been a Navy man." In Dallas, Dr. M.T. "Pepper" Jenkins, who had been at the President's side in Parkland Memorial Hospital's trauma room, remembers the First Lady still reeling from the shooting, which had occurred just five minutes earlier. With blood gushing down his jacket and onto his shoes, the chief of anesthesiology noticed "Jacqueline Kennedy was circling the room, walking behind my back. The Secret Service could not keep her out of the room. She looked shell-shocked. As she circled and circled, I noticed that her hands were cupped in front of her, as if she were cradling something. As she passed by, she nudged me with an elbow and handed me what she had been nursing in her hands -- a large chunk of her husband's brain tissues. I quickly handed it to a nurse." At 1:00 P.M., a Catholic priest was called in to perform the last rites, and the President was declared dead. As the room cleared and Jenkins disconnected tubes and ECG leads, he saw the First Lady come back in. "I retreated to a corner of the room. She kissed the President on the foot, on the leg, on the thigh, on the abdomen, on the chest, and then on the face. She still looked drawn, pale, shocked and remote. I doubt if she remembers any part of this. Then the priest began last rites in deliberate, resonant and slow tones, and then it was over." CAPTION: Dr. James Humes describes the movie JFK as "absolutely false." CAPTION: President Kennedy was pronounced dead 25 minutes after his limousine arrived at Parkland Memorial Hospital in Dallas. CAPTION: Dr. J. Thornton Boswell says nobody interfered with the autopsy. CAPTION: During her husband's funeral at Arlington National Cemetery, Jackie Kennedy was consoled by her brothers-in-law Bobby and Ted. Title: The Sixth Floor recalls fateful November day. (Dallas, Texas museum dedicated to John F. Kennedy) Authors: Fish, Peter Citation: Sunset, Nov 1992 v189 n5 p32B(1) ------------------------------------------------------------- Subjects: Historical museums_Texas Presidents_Exhibitions Assassination_Exhibitions Dallas, Texas_Galleries and museums People: Kennedy, John F._Assassination Locations: Dallas, Texas Reference #: A13618021 ============================================================= Abstract: The Sixth Floor is a $3.5 million museum exhibiting photographs, documentary films and recreated displays tracing John F. Kennedy's presidency and assassination in Texas. Located in the Dallas County Administration Building, it was the same floor from which Lee Harvey Oswald supposedly shot Kennedy. ============================================================= Full Text COPYRIGHT Sunset Publishing Corporation 1992 IT IS AN UNSETTLING PLACE. The brick warehouse is not like Ford's Theatre or the Tower of London or other shrines to historic crimes. It lacks the safe distance of tragedy long past; it retains the power to wound. After all, most people who come here will remember where they were and what they were doing when the building earned its notoriety. That is why, if you're in Dallas, you'll probably feel compelled to visit. Not for pleasure, exactly, but to see where American life irrevocably changed. Today the brick warehouse is called the Dallas County Administration Building. You probably remember it as the Texas School Book Depository. You remember that on November 22, 1963, at 12:30 P.M.--so all official, though still debated, accounts maintain--Lee Harvey Oswald stood at a sixth-floor window and with a Mannlicher-Carcano rifle assassinated President John F. Kennedy. OUT OF TRAGEDY, A MOVING MEMORIAL In the assassination's aftermath, many Dallasites would have liked the depository and the memories it carried erased from their skyline. But visitors from around the world thronged to the site, and in 1989, Dallas County acceded to their wishes, turning the building's sixth floor into a $3.5-million museum documenting JFK's death and legacy. Because most actual assassination evidence remains in the National Archives in Washington, D.C., The Sixth Floor exhibition depends on photographs, documentary films, and recreated displays to trace Kennedy's presidency and his fateful Texas trip. Next to a Teletype machine is the bulletin sent over the UPI wire at 12:34 P.M.: "Three shots were fired at President Kennedy's motorcade today in downtown Dallas." On a video screen, a shaken Walter Cronkite announces, "From Dallas, Texas--the flash apparently official--President Kennedy died at 1 P.M." The exhibit isn't designed to answer every objection of conspiracy buffs. But it does present alternative theories about the shooting. You can see the infamous landmarks for yourself: look out the windows and there are Dealey Plaza and the grassy knoll. The Dallas County Administration Building is at Elm and Houston streets. Hours are 10 to 6 Sundays through Fridays, 10 to 7 Saturdays. Admission costs $4, $2 for students 6 through 18, free for ages under 6. For more details, write or call The Sixth Floor, 411 Elm St., Dallas 75202; (214) 653-6666. Title: The second coming of Jim Garrison. (motion picture 'JFK') Authors: Epstein, Edward Jay Citation: The Atlantic, March 1993 v271 n3 p89(5) ------------------------------------------------------------- Subjects: JFK (Motion picture)_Criticism, interpretation, etc. People: Stone, Oliver_Criticism, interpretation, etc.; Kennedy, John F._Assassination Reference #: A13279007 ============================================================= Abstract: Oliver Stone's film 'JFK' is based on a conspiracy developed by district attorney Jim Garrison that failed to stand up in court. The film further distorts reality by misrepresenting fiction for fact. ============================================================= Full Text COPYRIGHT Atlantic Monthly Company 1993 More than a century before the advent of the Hollywood pseudodocumentary Karl Marx suggested that all great events and personalities in world history happen twice: "the first time as tragedy, the second as farce." Oliver Stone's film JFK is a case in point. In 1969, when the conspiracy-to-kill-kennedy trial brought by New Orleans's District Attorney Jim Garrison collapsed, his entire case that the accused, Clay Shaw, had participated in an assassination plot turned out to be based on nothing more than the hypnotically induced story of a single witness. This witness Perry Raymond Russo, testified that he had had no conscious memory of his own conspiracy story before he had been drugged, hypnotized, and fed hypothetical circumstances by the district attorney and his staff about the plot he was supposed to have witnessed. To the dismay of his supporters, this was the essence of Garrison's show trial: a witness who acknowledged he could not, after his bizaffe treatment, separate fantasy from reality. After that, Garrison's meretrious prosecution of the case was considered by the press to be, as The New York Times said in an editorial, "one of the most disgraceful chapters in the history of American jurisprudence." In this debacle Garrison was exposed as a man who had recklessly disregarded the truth when it suited his purposes. Then, in 1991, a generation later, in the film JFK, Garrison re-emerged phoenixlike from the debris as the truth-seeking prosecutor (played by Kevin Costner) who brilliantly solves the mystery of the Kennedy assassination. In this version there is no hypnosis: Garrison resourcefully uncovers cogent evidence that Clay Shaw, in New Orleans, participated in the planning of the Dallas ambush of President Kennedy along with two confederates: David William Ferrie (played by Joe Pesci), a homosexual soldier of fortune, and Lee Harvey Oswald (played by Gary Oldman). Garrison establishes that this trio all worked for the CIA, and were recrulted into a conspiracy to seize power in Washington. Partly filmed in a grainy semidocumentary style, with newsreels and amateur footage incorporated into it, JFK appears to reveal the truth about the Kennedy assassination. From the moment it was released, its director, Oliver Stone, so passionately defended its factual accuracy that he became, for all practical purposes, the new Garrison. What could be more appropriate in the age of media than replacing a crusading district attorney with a crusading filmmaker as the symbol of the truth-finder in society? In this capacity Oliver Stone - Garrison played out his case on television news programs and talk shows, in magazines, and on the op-ed pages of newspapers. He met with congressional leaders and, as the original Garrison had done a quarter of a century before, used his visibility to locus attention on the possibility that the government was hiding the truth about the Kennedy assassination. In exploiting the official secrecy, Stone proved far more successful than his predecessor at rousing interest in releasing the classified files pertaining to the assassination. Where Jim Garrison failed to build a plausible conspiracy case against Clay Shaw, how did Oliver Stone succeed? The answer is that whereas Garrison attempted only to coax, intimidate, and hypnotize witnesses into providing him with incriminating evidence, Oliver Stone fabricated for his film the crucial evidence and witnesses that were missing in real life@ven when this license required deliberately faisifying reality and depicting events that never happened. Consider, for example, the way stone fabricated Ferrie's dramatic confession to Garrison in a hotel room only hours before Ferrie died. In reality, and also in Jim Garrison's account of the case, David Ferrie steadfastly maintained his innocence, insisting that he did not know Lee Harvey Oswald and that he had no knowledge of any plot to kill Kennedy. The last person known to speak to Ferrie was George Lardner, of The Washington Post, whom Ferrie met with from midnight to 4:00 a.m. on February 22, 1967. During this interview Ferrie described Garrison's investigation as a "witch hunt." Several hours later Ferrie died of a cerebral hemorrhage. In JFK, Oliver Stone invents his own version of Ferrie's last night. JFK shows Ferrie not being calmly interviewed by a reporter in his home but being doggedly interrogated by Jim Garrison and his colleagues in a hotel suite until he breaks down and confesses. Ferrie names his CIA controller and, in rapid-fire succession, admits in the film everything he denied in real life. He acknowledges that he taught Oswaid 'everything." He then explains that not only does he know Clay Shaw but also he is being blackmailed by him and controlled by him. He admits that he still works for the CIA - along with Oswald, Shaw, "the Cubans," and the "shooters" in Dallas. He displays intimate knowledge of the conspiracy by explaining that the shooters were recruited without being told whose orders they were carrying out. He tells Garrison that the plot is "too [expletive] big" to be investigated, implying that powerful figures are behind it, and that, because they know Ferrie is now talking, they have issued a "death warrant" for him. After Ferrie leaves Garrison and returns to his apartment, he is shown being chased, held down, and murdered by a bald man who forces pills down his throat. The murderer is shown in other fictional scenes to be associated with Shaw, Oswald, and the anti-Castro Cubans. When Garrison arrives at the murder scene and finds the empty bottle of pills, he concludes that Ferrie was murdered, which gives Ferrie's earlier revelations to Garrison the force of a deathbed confession. In reality the coroner ruled that Ferrie had died from natural causes-a verdict that Garrison, as the empowered authority, did not contest.) Oliver Stone's transformations, as seen in the table below, involve more than some trivial cinematic contrivances. They provide the critical linkage for the conspiracy. Ferrie's confession connects the team of anonymous shooters in Dallas with Clay Shaw and Lee Harvey Oswald in New Orleans, and other CIA "untouchables." It changes the entire story - just as a story about the execution of Julius and Ethel Rosenberg would be changed if a film fabricated a fictional scene showing the Rosenbergs confessing to J. Edgar Hoover that they were part of a Communist conspiracy to steal atomic secrets. Ferrie's false confession is not an isolated bit of license. Throughout JFK, in dozens of scenes, Oliver Stone substitutes fiction for fact when it advances his case. He freewheelingly uses facts from the two books he represents as being the bases for JFK (On the Trail of the Assassins, by Jim Garrison, and Crossfire.- The Plot That Killed Kennedy, by Jim Marrs). He makes especially effective use of this substitution technique when it comes to witnesses. Here, like all fictionalizers, he has an advantage over fact-finders: he can artfully fashion his replacement witnesses to meet the audience's criteria for what is credible. His substitution of the fictional Willie O'Keefe (played by Kevin Bacon) for Garrison's flawed witness, Perry Raymond Russo, is a case in point. Russo, it will be recalled, was the sole witness Garrison had to the plot that was allegedly planned in Ferrie's apartment. But his credibility suffered from three problems. First, there was the memory lapse. Not until four years after the assassination did Russo tell his incriminating story, and then only after he had been rendered semiconscious with sodium pentothal and instructed by a hypnotist to imagine that he was watching an important discussion about assassinating somebody." Second, there were inconsistent identifications. According to the statement from his interrogation, Russo, when shown photographs of Shaw, said that he had seen him from afar but had never met him. Subsequently he changed his story to say that he met was Shaw. Third, there was his misidentification of Oswald. Russo claimed that the man introduced to him as "Leon Oswald" had a beard in September of 1963 and was Ferrie's roommate. Oswald was clean-shaven at that time, at the roommate of his wife, Marina. (Ferrie's roommate at the time did have a beard.) Whereas Garrison was stuck with this contradictory testimony, Oliver Stone was not. He simply substituted Willie O'Keefe, who had none of the real witness's deficiencies. Unlike Russo, a heterosexual with no plausible means of access to Shaw's secret life, O'Keefe is fashioned as a handsome male prostitute who has been Shaw's lover and drug partner for more than a year. Moreover, he is a fascist and a Kennedy-hater-a political stance that might explain why he would be privy to a discussion on a topic as sensitive as the assassination plan. Also unlike Russo, who popped up only after Ferrie's death, seeking publicity on local television, O'Keefe contacts Garrison before Ferrie's death - even before Garrison's investigation has become public - from state prison. He is serving time for prostitution, and he offers to cooperate with Garrison (whom he finds physically attractive) because he has "no reason to lie" and presumably because doing so might lead to a reduction in his prison sentence. O'Keefe displays no memory lapses requiring drugs or hypnosis. He voluntarily relates a coherent story: Ferrie introduced him to Shaw in the summer of 1962, and Shaw immediately hired him to participate in elaborate orgies with him and Ferrie. In the course of this relationship O'Keefe met Shaw's associates, such as Oswald, whom he has no problem identifying as beardless, and the anti-castro Cuban mercenaries, including the bald one who murders Ferrie. At one late-night meeting in Ferrie's apartment, after the Cubans depart, Ferrie, Oswald, and Shaw discuss the plan for killing Kennedy, including the "triangulation of crossfire." The fictional O'Keefe's story is supported by Ferrie's fictional confession, which is then given weight by Ferrie's fictional murder by the fictional bald Cuban introduced in O'Keefe's story. Since Oliver Stone's audience is not apprised of the substitutions of fiction for fact, this cross-corroboration makes the New Orleans plot plausible. The New Orleans Conspiracy is a relatively low-level one, involving homosexuals, anti-Castro Cuban killers, Oswald, and CIA employees. To link it to the central conspiracy in Washington, D.C., Oliver Stone resorts to a deus ex machina: a fictional Deep Throatstyle anonymous source who meets with Garrison and Identifies himself only as "X." X is a cynical man of militarv bearing (played by Donald Sutherland). He meets Garrison just after Ferrie's death, on the steps of the Lincoln Memorial. When asked by Garrison whether he is with the CIA, X refuses to idenntify the agency he represents but tells Garrison he is "close - closer than you think." After describing the Warren Commission report as "fiction," X launches into a remarkable fifteen-minute exposition of the assassination. He discloses that Kennedy was executed by a device "as old as the crucifixion - a military firing squad." It was not some low-level plot but a full-blown coup d'etat." Its purpose was to prevent Kennedy ftom withdrawing from Vietnam and ending the Cold War with the Soviet ttnion. Since the military-industrial complex could not afford to lose the business from both conflicts - "a hundred billion dollars" in war contracts was at stake - it ordered the assassination. The secret team of generals and officials who carried out this coup also arranged the cover story, that framed Oswald as the lone assassin, and they sabotaged the telephone system in Washington after the assassination so that no news would leak out. "Nothing was left to chance," X adds. X explains that two weeks before Kennedy was due to arrive in Dallas, X was ordered by his superior, "General Y," to accompany a group of officials on a trip to the South Pole. If he hadn't been sent away, he would have had among his "routine duties" that of arranging "additional security" for the President in Dallas - which would have made the assassination impossible. When he returned and realized what had happened, he deduced that there could have been only one reason for Y to send him away at this critical time: to prevent him ftom interfering with the assassination plan in Dallas. X tells Garrison that he cannot publicly reveal these secrets, because before he could testify he would be "arrested and gagged and maybe sent to an institution, maybe worse," but he urges him to "make arrests" anyhow. With the New Orleans conspiracy now connected to the Washington conspiracy, Garrison returns to New Orleans and arrests Clay Shaw. In reality Garrison never met such a source. Rather than going to Washington, D.C., he spent the week between Ferrie's death and Shaw's arrest filling in the lapsed memory of the new witness, Russo. Even though the original Garrison never met X, Oliver Stone, the new Garrison, retained X as one of his technical advisers for JFK. This supersource, whose story was anachronistically slipped into JFK, is based on Colonel L. Fletcher Prouty. Before his retirement from the Air Forcc, in January of 1964, Colonel Prouty worked in the Pentagon in the Office of Special Operations - which provided planes and other equipment for covert activities. In November of 1963 Prouty was sent to the South Pole, but here the similarity between the real and the fictional X ends. Unlike the character in the film, Prouty did not count among his duties providing "additional security" for the President's motorcades - according to the Secret Service, which did have that responsibility. There is no record that he served as a liaison with the Secret Service. In his essay "The Anatomy of Assassination," in Uncloaking the CIA (1978), edited by Howard Frazier, Prouty alleged that the President's security had been withdrawn not because he had any personal knowledge that it actually had been but simply because the Secret Service had failed to make sure, as is required by its "manual," that all windows on the parade route were sealed and to post countersniper teams on the roofs. The Secret Service also neglected, according to Prouty, to maintain the speed of the President's car at "the usual 44 miles per hour." In fact these procedures were not required by the Secret Service, the CIA, or the Air Force Military Police. And X's logic that there was a connection between his pre-retirement trip and the events in Dallas has no apparent basis in reality. Aside from advising Oliver Stone, Prouty has maintained extremely active involvements with other conspira hunters. He has served, for example, as a consultant to Lyndon LaRouche's far-right National Democratic Policy Committee, at a conference of which he provided a presentation comparing the U.S. government's prosecution of LaRouche (for conspiracy and mail fraud) to the prosecution of Socrates; as a board member of the Populist Action Committee, where he joined Roben Weems, a former activist in the Ku Klux Klan, and John Rarick, a prominent figure in the White Citizen's Council; and as a featured speaker for the Liberty Lobby, the anti-civil-rights organization whose founder, Willis Carto, also set up the Institute for Historical Review, which has disseminated books and videotapes alleging, among other things, that the Nazi death camps in Europe were fictions devised by Zionist propaganda to justify the donation of tax money to Israel. (It also distributes Prouty's own book, The Secret Team: The CIA and Its Allies in Control of the United States and the World".) Prouty has exposed the machinations of putative global conspiracies, too. For example, at the Liberty Lobby's annual Board of Policy Convention in 1990 he presented a special seminar, "Who Is the Enemy?" Prouty laid the blame for the high price of oil on a cabal that had systematically plotted to shut down oil pipelines in the Middle East. Why?" he asked, and explained to the seminar: "Because of the Israelis. That's their business, on behalf of the oil companies. That's why they get $3 billion a year from the U.S. taxpayers." His enemies list also includes the CIA, usurers, school textbooks, the media, political parties, banks, federal crisis-planning exercises, and the U.S.-USSR Trade and Economic Council (which, according to Prouty, stage-managed, along with David Rockefeller, the liquidation of the Berlin Wall to profit from "the rubles and the gold"). This is the intellectual provenance of the man Oliver Stone chose as one of his technical advisers - and of the man called X. In JFK, X displays secret knowledge about the ultimate conspiracy behind the Kennedy assassination when he tells Garrison that the "how" and the "who" of the shooting are "just scenery" to hide the why." The "why" proceeds from the unbreakable rule of the power elite that "the organizing principle of any society ... is for war." Because Kennedy violated this rule by taking steps to end the war, he had to die. The Secret Knowledge that Prouty/X had about the elite's organizing principle and the war system" derives from a very special source a study supposedly suppressed by the Kennedy Administration, which Prouty discussed on the Liberry Lobby's Radio Free America on December 14, 1989. He explained then that this study was so secret that the group of power brokers" who conducted it met "in an underground storage and security area," called "Iron Mountain," in the Hudson Valley of New York. The explosive issue they addressed was: Could America survive "if and when a condition of permanent peace should arrive"? Their conclusion, which X would echo almost word for word in JFK two years later, was that "the organization of a society for the possibility of war is its principal political stabilizer"; without a believable possibility that it would engage in war "no government can long remain in power," and consequently "the elimination of war ... implies the inevitable elimination of national sovereignty." Prouty explained on the radio program and in a subsequent issue of Spotlight, the newspaper of the Liberty Lobby, that these conclusions came directly from the report by the Iron Mountain group-of which he had obtained a copy (and which the Institute for Historical Review wanted to sell but couldn't, for copyright reasons). He concluded the program by talking about the "high cabal ... calling the shots." Prouty quoted from the Report From Iron Mountain on the Possibility anddesirability of Pe"e-and he failed to realize that it was a complete hoax. There was no group meeting in an underground storage vault in Iron Mountain, no study of the elimination of the threat of war, no report from power brokers. The Report? From Iron Mountain was a brilliant spoof of think tanks written by the political satirist Leonard Lewin in 1967. Victor Navasky, then the editor of the satiric magazine Monocle, who thought up the idea, persuaded Dial Press to put Lewin's book on its nonfiction instead of its fiction list, a choice that resulted in a front-page news story in The New York Times about the "suppressed" report. Subsequently it was revealed by the author for what it was. What neither the author nor Navasky could foresee was that this hoax would re-emerge a quarter of a century later, first in radical-right radio broadcasts and Liberty Lobby publications, and then as the connective logic of Oliver Stone's film. Not only did Prouty prove unable to distinguish a mirthful hoax from somber reality but Stone himself proved unable to separate the false scenes in JFK from the reality of Garrison's case. At a Town Hall meeting in New York in March of last year he again compared himself to Gaffison, saying that they were two of four people libeled by the media for representing an "unofficial history" of the assassination (the other two in this quartet are, according to Stone, Oswald and President Kennedy). The panel at Town Hall included Norman Mailer, Nora Ephron, and me, and it was moderated by Victor Navasky, now the editor of The Nation. When I pointed out to Stone that his depiction of Ferrie's confession to Garrison was false history, he replied that even though such a meeting never happened, he had "sketched" it into Ferrie's last night because Feffie was at an eartier point "raving and ranting' to one of Garrison's investigators. Stone saw no problem in having misrepresented fiction as fact in this way in his unofficial history." A series of seven fictitious scenes in the filrh depicted someone pasting Oswald's head on a photograph of another gunman's body in order to frame Oswald; to a person who questioned this fiction by meticulously citing the actual photographic evidence, Stone responded, 'I don't know where you get your facts." Moreover, he later not only vouched for the bona fides of Proury but also presented as pure truth X's thesis that the "military-industrial complex" killed Kennedy so that he would not end the war in Vietnam. Oliver Stone demonstrates yet again how easily pierced is the thin membrane that separates the mainstream media from the festering pools of fantasy on their periphery. What he allowed to ooze into JFK from these fringes, with the help of his technical adviser, is the tormenting concept that 'secret teams' and "high cabals" fabricated entire historic events to fool Stone, Prouty, and us - a concept that incorporates into its schema even the Iron Mountain hoax. In doing so, Oliver Stone organized a flight from reality. JFK thus completcs the journey from fact to fantasy that began with the flawed Warren Commission report in 1964. What has been lost en route is the truth. [TABULAR DATA OMITTED] Title: Marina's story. (widow of Lee Harvey Oswald) Authors: Casey, Kathryn Citation: Ladies Home Journal, May 1993 v110 n5 p156(3) ------------------------------------------------------------- People: Kennedy, John F._Assassination; Oswald, Lee Harvey_Investigations Reference #: A13618660 ============================================================= Abstract: Marina Oswald visited the Texas Book Depository and Dealey Plaza in Dallas, TX, thirty years after Pres John F. Kennedy was assassinated. She maintains that her husband was simply a pawn of a conspiracy and is not guilty of the assassination. ============================================================= Full Text COPYRIGHT Meredith Corporation 1993 For the first time ever, the widow of Lee Harvey Oswald has come to the places that have haunted her for the past thirty years: the Texas School Book Depository and Dealey Plaza, where President John E Kennedy was killed on November 22, 1963. "Sooner or later you have to face something; you have to conquer it," she says shakily. "I wanted to come here." Marina peers nervously out a window on the sixth floor of the book depository - the very bank of windows from which her husband allegedly fired. "I hate to look," she says, her voice still thick with the accent of her native Russia, as she surveys Dealey Plaza and the path of Kennedy's motorcade. "If only these walls could talk. It would take a miracle for someone to tell what really happened." For many years, Marina, too, kept silent. It wasn't until 1988, in an exclusive interview with Ladies' Home Journal, that she first spoke publicly about the pain of being a twenty-two-year-old mother, a foreigner in a strange country and the widow of the most infamous man in America. She also revealed that although she once believed that her husband was guilty, she had grown to doubt the Warren Commission findings that branded Oswald the lone gunman. The article caught the eye of Hollywood producers, and later this year, NBC will air a movie of Marina's story starring Helena Bonham Carter, of A Room with a View and Howards End. Haunted by the past Marina met Lee Harvey Oswald, a high school dropout and an ex-Marine who had applied - but been turned down - for Soviet citizenship, in the city of Minsk, where he was working. They were married, and in 1962, Oswald brought his young wife to America. Marina remembers being very much in love with her husband. "Yes, I loved him," she says. "They ask me, ~How can you love an assassin?' I didn't fall in love with the assassin, I fell in love with the man." And it was Oswald the man she grieved for when, just two days after Kennedy's assassination, he was gunned down by Dallas nightclub owner Jack Ruby. Although Marina, fifty-four, remarried twenty-seven years ago, raised three children and is the grandmother of five, she admits that day in Dallas never left her. She sometimes has flashbacks, usually of walking in slow motion through a crush of reporters shouting questions in o language she can't understand. For many years, she accepted the role of widow of the assassin, but it cost her dearly. "I'm all crumbled inside," she says, explaining how the disgrace ate away at her. "Lee was buried, but I was [buried] even deeper by [the weight of my] humiliation." But in 1978, after Congress reopened the investigation into Kennedy's death, Marina began reevaluating the evidence, studying books and movies on the assassination. "It has been like a heavy object, a hammer in my mind," she says. Perhaps buoyed by projects like Oliver Stone's movie JFK and the new interest it spawned in a possible conspiracy, Marina now maintains: "Lee never fired a shot. He was a patsy." Narrowing her haunted blue eyes, she concludes, "It was a political assassination. Very professionally done." The fact that her husband was shot only strengthens her belief. "If he were guilty, he'd still be alive," she says. "There would have been no need to kill him, to shut him up." Pointing out of one of the sixth-floor windows at the alleged path of Oswald's shots, Marina scoffs, "Let intelligent people come and judge for themselves. I'm not an expert, but it's obvious to me [that it is impossible]." Though the sixth floor has been open to the public as a museum since 1989, this is Marina's first visit, and she has been dreading it. Everywhere, images of the post surround her: Jack and Jackie Kennedy on their wedding day; a vibrant Kennedy taking the oath of office; Jackie, her smart pink suit bloodied, crawling back over the trunk of the presidential limousine; John-John saluting his father's casket. These reminders both frustrate and obsess her. "I don't want to live in the past," Marina says. "I want to live right now, but it's not in my power." As she talks, a black-and-white video plays. In it, Oswald, guarded by police escort, is led down a long hall while reporters shout questions. A narrator says, "In Dallas, Lee Harvey Oswald has been arrested for the assassination of President Kennedy." Marina stares resolutely out the window. If she hears, she doesn't react. A need to speak Voicing her beliefs - and opening herself up to criticism - has been difficult for Marina. "You don't know how many times I talk to myself, "Why am I doing this?'" she says, shaking her head. "Sometimes I want to throw in the towel." It has been painful for her family, too. Marina admits her children (June, thirty-one, and Rachel, twenty-nine, by Oswald, and son Mark, twenty-seven, by her second husband, Kenneth Porter, a carpenter) are not happy with her decision to allow the TV movie to be produced. "I think they want to be left alone," she says. "It's their right." Despite the pain, Marina says she is compelled to tell others what she believes. "You try to put things behind and go on with your life, but it's on television, in the papers. Lee Harvey Oswald - assassin. It just slaps me in the face," she whispers. "I have the opportunity to put on record my beliefs . . . that is the best I can do." Understandably, Marina's relationship with America, her adopted country, has been uncomfortable. "For many years, I felt I loved this country; this country did not love me," she says. Although she's lived in the U.S. for nearly thirty-two years, she become a citizen only three years ago, when she wanted to travel as an American while accompanying filmmakers who were shooting part of her story in Russia. Her pilgrimage to her native country was on emotional experience. She says she felt like a stranger in her homeland. "When I flew back to Dallas, I knew I belonged here," she says. "I love America with all my heart." In Dallas, Marina is still something of a curiosity. From the beginning she was approached by strangers eager to voice their opinions. For years she'd draw away, afraid of what they might say. These days, they often shore her view that there is much Americans still don't know about who killed JFK and why. "One woman came up to me and said, ~Honey, your husband didn't do it,' "Marina says, smiling. "I wanted to run after her, to ask, ~What do you know? On what grounds do you base that?'" Unless someone is able to prove to her satisfaction that Oswald fired the shot that killed Kennedy, Marina says she'll continue to believe her husband's story is a historic miscarriage of justice. "I would like in my lifetime that the name Lee Harvey Oswald not be something ugly and dirty," she says. And if she's wrong about her husband's innocence? "Even if Lee is guilty, I'm not responsible," she says with newfound understanding. "I'm not going to live with guilt for the rest of my life. I am entitled to life. I want to have hope." Title: What might have been. (John F. Kennedy assassination) (excerpt from 'History's Shadow') Authors: Connally, John B. Citation: Time, June 28, 1993 v141 n26 p44(2) ------------------------------------------------------------- Subjects: Governors_Biography History's Shadow (Book)_Excerpts People: Kennedy, John F._Assassination Reference #: A13968848 ============================================================= Abstract: Former Governor John Connally of Texas believed that John F. Kennedy would have served a second term if he had not been assassinated. Among other results, this could have changed the course of the Vietnam War. The events of Nov 22, 1993 are described. ============================================================= Full Text COPYRIGHT Time Inc. 1993 John Connally played out his life on the national stage, but never quite in the center spotlight. He helped elect Eisenhower, Kennedy and Johnson, yet saw his own presidential ambitions fizzle. Last week Democrats and Republicans alike gathered in Austin, Texas, to mourn the passing of Connally, who was dead at 76. A three-term Texas Governor and Democrat turned Republican who served as Richard Nixon's Treasury Secretary, Connally nonetheless will be best remembered as the man who sat in front of John Kennedy in a Dallas motorcade on the afternoon of Nov. 22, 1963. As burial preparations were under way, FBI officials sought permission from the Connally family to extract fragments of the bullet that tore through Connally's chest that bleak November day. Their aim was to settle once and for all the perennial question of whether Lee Harvey Oswald had acted alone in Dallas. Instead, the request only unsettled Connally's kin. "It's an appalling attempt to capitalize on Governor Connally's death to gain publicity for worn-out theories," said Julian Read, a family spokesman. Shortly before he died, Connally finished his memoirs, In History's Shadow. In the following excerpts from the book, he ponders the what ifs and what might have beens. If nothing else, I have become an expert on fate, possibly bad judgment, too. I helped elect three Presidents, watched from inches away the murder of one of them, experienced the bloody madness of war, lost a beloved daughter, was tried and acquitted on a criminal charge, went broke, watched my wife Nellie defeat breast cancer, and endured. I have witnessed more history than any school can teach. But I have kept a secret from the public at large. That John Connally changed forever on Nov. 22, 1963. In the weeks after the assassination, the weeks spent in Parkland Hospital, my temperament changed. John Kennedy's death gave me a different perspective on life, its frailties and its meaning. It made me impatient with trivia and egos and self-aggrandizement. The fires of ambition had been considerably banked by the tragedy. Not out of personal fear but out of a new awareness, I no longer had any irresistible desire to subject myself or my family to a continuing political career. Today I have no regrets that there was never a President Connally. It is a sad but compelling assignment to imagine how the world would be today if John Fitzgerald Kennedy had lived. Would the world be vastly different? Different, yes, but perhaps not vastly so. The world, I feel sure, would still be as dangerous and unstable a place. I don't doubt for a moment that Kennedy would have been re-elected in 1964. The major changes would have been in the management of the Vietnam War and the presidential succession. If Kennedy had lived, Lyndon Johnson would have run again in the second spot on the ticket, and he would never have been elected President. By 1968, his health and age -- and the diminishing effect of eight years as Vice President -- would have eliminated him. The intriguing question relates to Robert Kennedy. He could have been nominated to succeed his brother and would have been elected. But while this country may lust after royalty and might not have been troubled by the idea of a dynasty, I believe Bobby Kennedy might have been. I think he would have wisely resisted the kind of rock stardom that was building around the brothers. He could easily have waited four years or eight. My guess is that Jack Kennedy would have withdrawn American troops from Vietnam shortly into his second term. Although he did hesitate to raise the ante, he was less charmed by the generals than Johnson and less susceptible to their pressures. I believe he had already concluded that the war was unwinnable and had found his pitch: we wanted to help, but in the end the sons of South Vietnam had to fight for their own country. If Kennedy had lived, I assume my own attitude would not have changed, and it is conceivable I might have presumed to run for President myself in 1968. My political ambitions would almost certainly have taken on more steam. If not the presidency, I would have run for a fourth and even a fifth term as Governor of Texas, if for no other reason than to set a record. That goal is one I now regard as ignoble, but there is a time in your life when records matter. I am often asked if I regard my switching parties as a mistake. In terms of making a difference, of changing the country or even the Republican Party, I have to say that it did not. Some of my friends still entertain themselves by speculating that I could have been elected President as a Democrat. I do not subscribe to this theory for reasons that by now need no repeating. One excuse works as well as another, but, in my time, the Democrats were not going to nominate a Texas conservative. In politics, something is always wrong: the year, the opponent, the issues. Think of how few people actually run for President; only one gets elected every fourth year. For most, it is like a romance that is never in sync; one of the parties is always free when the other is married. In any event, my switching had nothing to do with presidential ambition. At the time, in 1973, I was just a wild card. I was too long a Democrat, too soon a Republican, to hold any such lofty ideas. But it long ago became clear to Nellie and me that we were at least as comfortable among our old friends as our new ones. "I think you have to be born into the Republican Party," said Nellie, "before they will accept you at something other than entry level." In 1979, the year before I ran for President, I spoke at Republican fund raisers in 46 cities. I campaigned once for Ronald Reagan and supported him twice, but I conclude with regret that in 12 years Reagan and Bush turned the clock back and wasted their separate mandates to improve our society in a profound and lasting way. In the summer of 1991, as a result of Desert Storm, the popularity of George Bush remained at an all-time high. I was among an almost invisible minority who believed this support was transitory and illusory. I thought his numbers would drop like a rock down a rain pipe, and his support would erode and fade as quickly as it had soared. I expressed that opinion to a number of people, although I am not sure I convinced any of them. One in particular who rejected my forecast was Lloyd Bentsen, the senior Senator from Texas, who had gained enormous respect across the country as the running mate of Michael Dukakis. He won praise despite the defeat of the ticket and the campaign strategy of Dukakis, which was virtually beyond comprehension. Well before the 1992 campaign began, I sent word to Senator Bentsen that I thought Bush would slip, and on three separate occasions I urged him to announce his candidacy. Like many Democrats, at the height of the Desert Storm celebrations, he thought they needed to worry about retaining control of the Senate. Through the summer of '92, as Bush's popularity shrank and the Clinton campaign gathered momentum, I wondered many times what might be going through Lloyd Bentsen's mind. With the possible exception of the race by Dukakis, the Bush campaign in 1992 was probably the weakest, dumbest and most out-of-touch campaign waged in modern times. My own view is that it was worse than the Dukakis effort because Bush was an incumbent President and had every conceivable advantage. I think I have the capacity to be objective in looking at a political operation, but I must admit to some prejudice as far as the Bush campaign is concerned. I never thought that he had the vision or the wisdom to be President in the first place. What he had was a great resume, largely because Presidents Nixon, Ford and Reagan had appointed him to positions that kept him alive politically. Then, largely on the coattails of Ronald Reagan, he succeeded to the presidency. I cannot say that I think about the assassination every day, but I don't miss by much. There is an endless stream of letters, and questions from students, occasionally from strangers and even friends. Richard Nixon has asked people around me about that day in Dallas, but never put a question to me directly. The long-term effects of my injuries have been mixed. I have a slight rigidity in the right wrist. I am now plagued by a pulmonary fibrosis, which results in a shortness of breath whenever I undertake any physical exertion. My doctors attribute this condition to the assassin's bullet that ripped through my lung. As I neared the end of this book, I returned to the Warren Report to verify a passage of my testimony. And a feeling of awe welled up inside me. So much was changed, so much destroyed, in so few ticks of time. I looked up from my desk and through the windows of my office I could see the roofs of a tree-shaded neighborhood in Houston. Here we are, I thought, 30 years later, still speculating about what did or did not happen. And no one will ever know the complete truth. On May 17, Connally developed severe breathing problems and was admitted to Methodist Hospital in Houston. He died last week of complications of pulmonary fibrosis. CAPTION: The former Governor at his ranch in 1979: "I have witnessed more history than any school can teach." CAPTION: The Kennedys and Connallys on Nov. 22, 1963: "I don't doubt for a moment he would have been re-elected." Title: The Kennedy clan: JFK's murder still draws conspiracy buffs. (John F. Kennedy) Authors: Deacon, James Citation: Maclean's, August 30, 1993 v106 n35 p58(2) ------------------------------------------------------------- Subjects: Conspiracy_Investigations People: Kennedy, John F._Assassination Reference #: A14360973 ============================================================= Abstract: Two hundred people attended a symposium that explored possible conspiracy theories into the assassination of former Pres Kennedy. Some of the attendees were historians or authorities in the field, but many were amateurs. Marina Porter, former wife of Lee Harvey Oswald, addressed the gathering. ============================================================= Full Text COPYRIGHT Maclean Hunter (Canada) 1993 Two researchers into the assassination of John F. Kennedy are chatting with a reporter before a symposium on conspiracy theories. When the reporter admits that he is attending the Sudbury conference in place of someone who was sent elsewhere, one researcher turns conspiratorially to the other and says: "He was probably sent to Antarctica." The two nearly collapse in laughter. Steeped in assassination minutiae, the researchers know that the man in charge of security for Kennedy's ill-fated visit to Dallas in November, 1963, had been sent to Antarctica at the last minute. It was a joke. Get it? The 200 symposium delegates certainly would. They came from near and far, descending on Sudbury's Laurentian University late last week, intent on examining who really killed Kennedy that day in Dallas, and who was behind it, and why. They do not buy the Warren Commission's official explanation--that Lee Harvey Oswald acted alone. But their pursuit is not easy. Most official documents have been kept secret until recently; last week, the CIA announced that it would release another 23,000 pages--less than 10 per cent of what it has. And while buffs were buoyed by the 1991 movie JFK which depicts a wide-ranging conspiracy--and polls showing that 80 per cent of Americans suspect a plot as well--they are still treated with the respect accorded those who claim to have seen Elvis aboard a UFO. But for them, the snickers are a small price for seeking the truth. Don Scott, 69, a former Sudbury teacher who organized the symposium, says that he finds the JFK case endlessly fascinating. "The more you learn, the more there is to learn," he says. It is also something to do. "I used to play golf and curl in bonspiels," says Tony Centa, a retired shop teacher from Richmond Hill, Ont. "Now, I do this." The conference coup was Oswald's widow, now Marina Porter, who flew up from Fort Worth, Tex., where she lives with her current husband. When Porter, 52, arrived at Laurentian's Alphonse Raymond Building, she was led through the foyer where a recording of Walter Cronkite intoned, "the President has been shot," and past a home-made model of Dallas's Dealey Plaza, with multicolored strands of wool denoting the path of bullets. "Hell, I never expected to ever meet Marina," said Centa. "This is unbelievable." Wading through the crowd, Porter admitted that she is uncomfortable at meetings of assassination scholars. Yet, Scott said, she demanded no appearance fee. "I'm not doing this to help myself," Porter said in her still-thick Russian accent. "The issue is much bigger than just me. This business should have been resolved 25 years ago." Few of the delegates have anything but amateur credentials as conspiracy hunters. Martin Shackleford, who drove up from his home in Saginaw, Mich., is a social worker who collects photographic and film evidence. Peter Whitmey, who flew in from Abbotsford, B.C., is a social studies teacher. But others, such as John Newman, a historian from Odenton, Md., have brought intense scholarship to the subject. Newman, a major in U.S. army intelligence, is the author of JFK and Vietnam, which draws a link between Kennedy's death and his supposed plan to withdraw U.S. troops from Vietnam. "It's debatable whether he was killed to enable the United States to get into the war," said Newman, "but it seems clear that we only went to war because he died." For some, the trip was personal. Beverley Oliver, 47, was a would-be singer who, in 1963, worked at the Dallas nightclub owned by Jack Ruby, who would later gun down Oswald. And she was filming the presidential motorcade on a home movie camera when Kennedy was shot. But Secret Service agents confiscated her film, she says, and the Warren Commission did not ask her to testify. So when she heard about the Sudbury symposium, she and her husband and daughter loaded up their 36-foot motor home and drove up from west Texas. "I want my story to be recorded accurately," Oliver said, "and not played with to fit somebody's assassination theory." If he could, Kennedy himself might say the same thing. Title: The death of a president. (John Kennedy) Citation: The Economist, Oct 9, 1993 v329 n7832 p95(1) ------------------------------------------------------------- Subjects: Presidents_Assassination Assassination in mass media_Analysis Case Closed: Lee Harvey Oswald and the Assassination of JFK (Book)_Criticism, interpretation, etc. People: Kennedy, John F._Assassination Reference #: A14513293 ============================================================= Abstract: As the 30th anniversary of the assassination of John F. Kennedy approaches interest in the case grows. A new book written by Gerald Posner entitled 'Case Closed' defends the Warren Commission findings but it uses the same dubious approach as some conspiracy theorists. ============================================================= Full Text COPYRIGHT Economist Newspaper Ltd. (UK) 1993 ON THE eve of the 30th anniversary of John Kennedy's assassination the flow of books on the subject is, if anything, increasing. All who were more than toddlers on November 22nd 1963 can remember where they were when they heard about it. The photographic images are indelible. The president and the first lady arrive at the airport, shaking hands before entering the limousine. Jackie Kennedy, wearing a pink suit with matching pillbox hat, holds a bouquet of roses. The president pushes aside a stray hair as he waves and smiles. The motorcade passes through cheering crowds as it approaches Dealy Plaza. "You can't say Dallas doesn't love you, Mr President," says Texas's first lady, Nellie Connally, as the car makes the sharp turn from Houston to Elm Street in front of the Texas School Book Depository. The next six seconds are the most studied and disputed in American history. More than 2,000 books have dealt with the assassination, as have many television programmes and several films. Fascination with the shooting has even gone high-tech, with assassination discussion groups on computer networks. Their hot topic, debated over their modems, is the new theory that Kennedy was shot by accident from the front by a secret-service agent. As the 30th anniversary approaches, the controversy is more heated than ever. In 1991 "JFK", a brilliant piece of film-making by Oliver Stone, was based on the only assassination theory ever tested in court (and rejected by a jury after less than an hour's deliberation). It brought the controversy to a post-Kennedy generation and put pressure on the federal government to open the remaining files. Recently, in compliance with a campaign promise, the Clinton administration released 185,000 previously classified documents. Nonetheless, many thousands of FBI and CIA documents remain secret and many of those released were heavily censored, fuelling the contention that the cover-up continues. The publication of "Case Closed" by Gerald Posner* is another milestone in the examination of this great American mystery. Along with "The Death of a President" by William Manchester, it is one of the rare books on the subject that defends the Warren Commission's finding that Lee Harvey Oswald was the lone assassin and that Jack Ruby acted alone in killing him. As the antithesis of "JFK", "Case Closed", has received much attention in the press, including a cover story in US News and World Report. The book, however, does little more than smugly slant every piece of disputed evidence in favor of the lone-assassin theory--an approach exactly opposite to that of conspiracy writers, who follow every inference in the evidence to their own illogical conclusions. "Case Closed" no more closes the case than the many volumes inspired by conspiracy theories over the past 30 years. Mr Posner devotes many pages to attacking these ideas. The theories range from the serious to the absurd, and often invite attack or ridicule. One popular book, "Best Evidence" by David Lifton, claimed that Kennedy's body was surgically altered on Air Force One on the return flight to Washington, DC. Although this theory is nonsense, it is generally agreed that the Kennedy autopsy is one of the poorest on record. Several writers have argued that there was a second Oswald or that a KGB agent took the real Oswald's place when he (the real Oswald) defected to the Soviet Union. Others contend that Oswald was an agent for the CIA or the FBI or the KGB or the Mafia or the Cubans or a right-wing cabal or any combination of the above. Many theorists link Oswald to Ruby, who may also, they contend, have been a hitman for the Mafia. Some go further by bringing into the conspiracy J. D. Tippit, the Dallas police officer whom Oswald was charged with killing after the assassination. Jim Garrison, the hero of "JFK", claimed that Oswald spoke the truth when he said at the Dallas police headquarters that he was "just a patsy" who had tried to prevent the assassination. The people and events surrounding the assassination are an inexhaustible mine for conspiracy theories--which even managed to implicate Lyndon Johnson. In "The Texas Connection", Craig Zirbel reasons that Johnson was from Texas, the murder took place in Texas, ipso facto Johnson was behind the assassination. The assassination has become a business. The JFK Assassination Information Centre in Dallas offers books, videotapes, research material and key rings and buttons, some with photos of Oswald under the caption: "I didn't shoot anyone . . . I'm just a patsy". The centre maintains a museum, as does the converted Texas School Book Depository, now renamed the Sixth Floor. Visitors to Dallas can take a bus tour of Dealy Plaza, Oswald's rooming house and the Texas cinema where he was apprehended, along with other sites. Assassination researchers, who disdain the term "buffs", hold regular conventions and publish newsletters such as JFK Today. The Assassination Archives and Research Centre in Washington, DC, is a more serious focal point for amateur and professional historians. Besides "JFK" the assassination was featured in two B movies, "Executive Action" and "Ruby", and figured in this summer's hit "In the Line of Fire". November 22nd 1963 and its aftermath play through the American mind like a recurrent nightmare. Only a handful of true believers cling to one theory or another. Most Americans do not fully believe any one version and despair of knowing the truth. It is unlikely that the search will ever end. Down the shelves from the books on Kennedy's assassination books are others claiming a conspiracy and cover-up in the assassination of Abraham Lincoln. Title: Remembering JFK. (John F. Kennedy) (Bazaar Passage) Citation: Harper's Bazaar, Nov 1993 n3384 p213(1) ------------------------------------------------------------- Subjects: Presidents_Assassination People: Kennedy, John F._Assassination Reference #: A14536602 ============================================================= Abstract: John F. Kennedy, Jr. died on Nov 22, 1963 but theories and controversies regarding his assassination continue to circulate. Prominent Americans could still recall the disbelief that was their initial reaction to the incident. ============================================================= Full Text COPYRIGHT Hearst Corporation 1993 Thirty years ago the world mourned the loss of America's young, charismatic president, John F. Kennedy. Today his memory is kept alive, not only by the theories and controversies that continue to circulate about his assassination but also by his prominent family by our current administration, and in the hopes and dreams he had for America's future. Putting aside all of the contemporary Kennedy speculations, Bazaar asked a few friends to share their personal recollections of November 22, 1963. Gore Vidal, author: I was in Rome, at the movies, watching David and Lisa. At the interval the screen actor Jerome Courtland came down the aisle and told me that Jack had been shot. My first reaction was disbelief: That is not the way that story is supposed to end. I never did see how David and Lisa turned out. Lauren Hutton, model and actress: I was 18 and living in New York for the first time. My girlfriend came over and told me the news. I didn't cry, because I didn't cry back then, but we were really frightened. The world was just starting for us, and he was our shining hope. Howard Stringer, president of CBS: I was at dinner in my college dining room at Oxford University. Two things immediately occurred to me: The first one was a feeling of profound shock and sadness. The second was to reflect on America's love affair with guns. It was inconceivable to someone living in England that the right to carry arms takes so much priority in American life. Sally Jessy Raphael, talk-show host: I was on the air as a radio announcer in Puerto Rico. I had to stay on the air for almost 22 hours, constantly waiting for more updates, ad-libbing when necessary. For anybody in broadcasting, it was the most awesome moment. Robbie Conal, guerrilla artist: I joined a group of people watching the news on a TV in a pawnshop window. I arrived just in time to hear a man clutching a brown paper bag say, "He was so clean. How could that happen to a man who was so clean?" It never occurred to me that "clean" was one of John Kennedy's defining characteristics. But then again, I had never thought of assassination as a form of politics until that moment, and I'm still thinking about that one. Paula Zahn, anchorperson: I was in second grade. I remember the principal getting on the intercom and asking teachers to come to his office for a brief meeting. Ten minutes later my teacher came back in tears.... Title: The blackest Sunday. (after John Kennedy assassination) (Column) Authors: King, Peter Citation: Sports Illustrated, Nov 22, 1993 v79 n21 p76(1) ------------------------------------------------------------- Subjects: Football (Professional)_History National Football League_History People: Kennedy, John F._Assassination Reference #: A14567184 ============================================================= Abstract: The NFL played its scheduled games just two days after John F. Kennedy was assassinated, a decision which league commissioner Pete Rozelle called the biggest mistake of his career. Players who had to play that day describe their recollections. ============================================================= Full Text COPYRIGHT Time Inc. 1993 THIS WEEK MARKS THE 30TH ANNIVERSARY OF THE assassination of President John Kennedy. When Pete Rozelle retired as NFL commissioner in 1989, he said that the biggest mistake of his career had been his decision to go ahead with the games that were scheduled to be played only 48 hours after Kennedy was pronounced dead on Friday afternoon, Nov. 22, 1963. The three-year-old American Football League postponed its games that weekend, and many NFL players were bitter that Rozelle ordered the show to go on as Kennedy's body lay in state in the Capitol. "Worst mistake Rozelle ever made," says Hall of Fame linebacker Sam Huff. Over the years, few have disagreed with that view. Rozelle's decision was not made lightly. That weekend, he consulted with presidential press secretary Pierre Salinger, who thought that the games should be played. "Absolutely, it was the right decision," says Salinger. "I've never questioned it. This country needed some normalcy, and football, which is a very important game in our society, helped provide it." Of course, there was nothing normal about that Sunday. Less than an hour before kickoff of the early games, Jack Ruby shot Lee Harvey Oswald. In Pittsburgh, the Bears and the Steelers played to a 17-17 tie. "Before the game you're usually talking about picking up blitzes," says former Pittsburgh running back Dick Hoak. "Instead, we were saying, `Did you hear that Oswald was shot?' " In Cleveland, Brown owner Art Modell, fearing that someone might try to seek revenge on the visiting Cowboys, ordered extra security for Dallas owner Clint Murchison. At Yankee Stadium, Cardinal safety Larry Wilson had two interceptions to lead St. Louis to a lackluster 24-17 win over the Giants. "I had two interceptions?" says Wilson. "I would never have known unless you'd told me. All I remember about the game was how emotional the anthem was." Huff, then with the Giants, had campaigned with Kennedy in Huff's home state of West Virginia before the 1960 primary. Of the game that was played on the Sunday after the assassination, Huff recalls, "That was the only game I ever played on any level that I didn't care about at all. There was no desire, no determination. I kept thinking, This is America? America was a safe haven. Then, all of a sudden, it wasn't. It lives with me to this day." In Philadelphia, before a 13-10 Washington win, Eagle president Frank McNamee announced that he would not attend the game in protest of Rozelle's decision, and many players were in tears during the national anthem. "When they got ready to kick off," recalls wide receiver Tommy McDonald of the Eagles, "I was still bawling like a baby." Emotions were raw the night before the game. During a team meeting at which the players set up a fund for the family of slain Dallas policeman J.D. Tippit, 185-pound Philadelphia defensive back Ben Scotti and 260-pound defensive tackle John Mellekas went behind closed doors for a brutal fistfight that put both men in the hospital for three days. "The game was the strangest thing I've ever been involved in," says King Hill, an Eagle backup quarterback to Sonny Jurgensen on that Sunday. "Officials were officiating it to get it over with. The fans were absolutely dead. It was emotional for me because I was from Texas, and I was ashamed to be from Texas. After the game, I went out to my car, which had Texas plates, and somebody had smashed the windows. That gives you some idea of the frustration of the people that day." That spring, McDonald was driving somewhere in Philadelphia, and he heard on the radio that he had been traded to Dallas. "You want to know my first reaction?" says McDonald. "I didn't want to go. I thought, Oh, no! They traded me to the place that destroyed the President!" And Hill has a final recollection -- a visit by Robert Kennedy in the '64 preseason to the Eagle locker room. Apparently, like Salinger, the Kennedy family had felt that the games should be played. "He came into our locker room," says Hill, "and went around shaking our hands. He said he appreciated us playing the games that weekend." CAPTION: As Kennedy lay in state, the Giants paused for the national anthem. CAPTION: See above. CAPTION: Never one to spurn the spotlight, Morty Davis strikes a centerfold pose in D.H. Blair's conference room. CAPTION: Family warmth was missing in Morty Davis's early life, but now at X home he's submerged in family: his wife, Rozy, four daughters, two sons-in-law, and six grandchildren. Title: An American tragedy. (John F. Kennedy's assassination; includes related article on Lee Harvey Oswald) (Special Report) Authors: Corelli, Rae Citation: Maclean's, Nov 22, 1993 v106 n47 p44(5) ------------------------------------------------------------- Subjects: Assassination_Investigations People: Kennedy, John F._Assassination Reference #: A14592972 ============================================================= Abstract: Nov 22, 1993, is the 30th anniversary of Kennedy's assassination and there is still controversy over whether Lee Harvey Oswald was the lone gunman. Over 200 books and scores of movies and television programs have put forth evidence that the Kennedy assassination may have been a conspiracy. ============================================================= Full Text COPYRIGHT Maclean Hunter (Canada) 1993 History, after all, is the memory of a nation. --John F. Kennedy, 1917-1963 He moved west along Main Street in an open convertible, basking in the late-autumn Dallas sunshine, smiling his movie-star smile and waving to the cheering lunch-hour crowds. President John F. Kennedy had come to Texas to reconcile feuding Democrats and make a speech at the Dallas Trade Mart. Beside him sat his glamorous wife, Jacqueline. Ahead of them on the jump seats were their hosts--Texas governor John Connally and his wife, Nellie. At 12:29 p.m., the motorcade turned north off Main onto Houston Street. Nellie Connally, raising her voice over the noise of the crowd and the police motorcycles, said: ``Mr. President, you can't say Dallas doesn't love you.'' At 12:30 p.m., as the procession swung around Dealey Plaza towards the Stemmons Freeway on-ramp, shots were fired from a sixth-floor window of the nearby Texas School Book Depository. The president was hit and so was Connally. A Secret Service agent flung himself protectively over the slumping Kennedy and stayed there, sprawled on the convertible's rear deck, as the motorcade sped to Parkland Memorial Hospital. There, Kennedy was pronounced dead at 1 p.m. Around the world, the news of America's fourth presidential assassination in a century froze millions in disbelief and seemed almost to suspend reality. Crowds stood vigil at U.S. embassies in Europe, Asia and Latin America. In the United States and Canada, people in thousands of shops, factories and offices quit working and gathered around radios and TV sets. Tears ran down the face of CBS anchorman Walter Cronkite and viewers cried with him. Prime Minister Lester Pearson offered condolences and prepared to join global dignitaries in Washington for the funeral. The leader of the free world was dead, Camelot had vanished in the crack of a rifle shot and, for a shaken America, the grieving had only just begun. Ahead lay the murders of Bobby Kennedy and Martin Luther King, the appalling torment of Vietnam, Kent State, riots and burning cities. For the Dallas police, there was no time for mourning. An hour and 15 minutes after Kennedy was pronounced dead, they barged into a movie theatre showing War is Hell and arrested a luckless one-time defector to the Soviet Union called Lee Harvey Oswald, wanted for the fatal shooting moments before of patrolman J. D. Tippit. When police retraced Oswald's flight from the book depository where he worked, they decided they had Kennedy's assassin as well. But less than 48 hours later, Jack Ruby, a small-time hoodlum and strip-club owner, shot and killed Oswald in the basement of Dallas City Hall. Convicted and sentenced to death, Ruby died in jail of cancer. In September, 1964, the Warren Commission concluded that Oswald, acting alone, had killed both Kennedy and Tippit and had not known Ruby. But as the years passed, millions of Americans grew profoundly skeptical. Some 200 books, dozens of TV documentaries and the blockbuster 1991 movie JFK have alleged conspiracies or coverups: Oswald was not the only shooter; Oswald was a scapegoat; Oswald was in the pay of Cuba's Castro, the CIA, the FBI, the Pentagon, the Mafia, the Soviets, left-wingers, right-wingers; Oswald was not really Oswald but a shadowy somebody else; Ruby, who claimed to be Jacqueline Kennedy's avenger, was really hired by the people who hired Oswald and did not want him to testify. Repeated official denials and rebuttals have not discouraged the conspiracy theorists or reduced public fascination. The murder of John Kennedy has become America's greatest ever whodunit, its origins preserved in the memories of those who were in Dallas that fateful day. By 10 a.m., hundreds of people had gathered along the chain-link security fence at Love Field in a light rain, hoping to catch a glimpse of the Kennedys. Moments before Air Force One came into view, the rain stopped and as the plane landed, the sun came out. ``I still to this day remember Jackie getting off that plane,'' says Jim Ewell, then The Dallas Morning News police reporter and now the public relations spokesman for the Dallas County Sheriff's Department. ``Kennedy went up to the fence, and I'm sure it was making the Secret Service nervous, but the people were reaching over the fence to shake his hand, to touch him, and he was reaching out to them.'' Shortly after the presidential motorcade left for downtown Dallas, Ewell was on the freeway heading back to his office when Dallas Police Chief Jesse Curry sped past in the opposite direction. ``Then, I saw the open Kennedy limousine and I knew something was out of order because there was this man stretched across the turtle deck.'' At police headquarters, a detective hurried past him to a waiting patrol car. ``I said, `Gerry, what the hell's going on?' His exact words were, `Some son of a bitch just shot Kennedy.' I jumped in the back seat and went with them.'' The schoolbook building was like a disturbed anthill, Ewell says in his flat Texas drawl. ``There were squad cars and cops everywhere, cops still training shotguns up at the windows. A few minutes later, Gerry leaned out of the window on the sixth floor and said, `Well, we know what he had for lunch--fried chicken.' You know what? All this time, I'm not sure just what the hell I'm doing. I'm not taking any notes, I'm just kinda, you know, in a twilight.'' When word came that a policeman had been shot in the city's Oak Cliff district, Ewell joined police who were tracking his assailant. ``So I end up in the Texas Theatre when they catch him. As I looked over the balcony railing, it was at that moment that the cops reached Lee Harvey. When he tried to shoot one of them, there was a scuffle and they fell between the seats and the rest of the cops rushed up and piled in. I will always remember that somebody was trying to poke the barrel of a shotgun down among all the heads and arms and shoulders of those cops fighting Lee Harvey.'' Henry Wade, former FBI agent and Second World War U.S. navy veteran, was Dallas County district attorney from 1950 to 1987 and, by 1963, had successfully prosecuted 25 murder cases. Now 79, he has been a widower for six years, has switched from smoking tobacco to chewing it and is counsel to a law firm in north Dallas. He was in the crowd awaiting Kennedy at the Dallas Trade Mart when word came that the president and governor Connally, a longtime friend, had been shot. At about 5 p.m., he went to Parkland hospital where he sat for a time with Nellie Connally while her husband underwent surgery. ``Then, I went home,'' Wade recalls, ``and shortly after, I got a call from Cliff Carter, who was a right-hand man of [vice-president Lyndon] Johnson's and he said it's come over the television that y'all are going to claim the Russians conspired to kill the president. I said I didn't know where that came from because as far as I knew we had no evidence that there were any Russians involved. Johnson apparently was hung up on that and was scared to death the Russians were going to release the atomic bomb.'' At Carter's insistence, Wade drove to police headquarters at city hall to meet Oswald. ``I asked him if he had a lawyer,'' Wade says. ``He said he did and named a New York City lawyer prominent in the civil liberties movement who called back and said that he did not know Oswald and had no intention of representing him. Oswald was defiant. I asked him questions about where he was at the time of the shooting. He answered practically everything with `I want a lawyer' and `Police brutality.' '' Henry Wade believes he could have won a conviction and that Oswald would have been sentenced to death. But death, as it turned out, was imminent. Jim Leavelle is 73 and comes from a village called Detroit in Red River County, Texas. ``I think my wife married me because she thought I'd take her to the big city,'' he chuckles. Their children grown and long gone, they live beside Lake Ray Hubbard in the Dallas suburb of Garland. In 1963, Leavelle was a Dallas police detective and on Sunday, Nov. 24, was about to become one of the most widely recognized players in the assassination drama. That morning, police were preparing to transfer Oswald from the city hall police lockup to the better-equipped and more secure cells at the Dallas County Courthouse across town. Chief Curry, angered by rumors that Oswald had been beaten, was determined to move him publicly so that the TV cameras would display him undamaged. Shortly after 11 a.m., Secret Service, FBI and other law enforcement agents had finished questioning Oswald. ``He had two different sweaters there and he said he wanted the black one, a pullover, so we let him put it on,'' Leavelle says. ``I put two sets of handcuffs on him, one set on both his wrists and then I handcuffed his right arm to my left. I was kind of kidding him. I said, `Well, Lee, if anybody shoots at you, I hope they're as good a shot as you are.' He kind of laughed, the only time I saw him smile or laugh when he was in custody. He said, `Aw, ain't nobody going to shoot at me. You're just being overdramatic or something.' I said, `Well, if anybody does shoot at you, you know what to do.' And he said, `The captain said to follow you so I'll go wherever you go.' I said, `In that case, you'll be on the ground pretty quick if anyone starts shooting.' '' Oswald and Leavelle, wearing a pale gray Stetson and his only Neiman Marcus suit, rode the elevator from the third floor to the basement and walked along a short corridor to the parking garage. ``All the floodlights from the TV cameras came on and we were blinded momentarily, couldn't see a thing,'' Leavelle recalls. ``Out of the corner of my eye, I saw Ruby standing there with a gun at his side. About that same instant, he made two short steps and double-actioned that .38 into Oswald's stomach. I had Oswald by the belt in addition to being handcuffed to him, and I tried to jerk him behind me but all I succeeded in doing was turning his body a little bit so that instead of hitting him dead centre, it hit him about four inches to the left of the navel.'' Leavelle grabbed Ruby with his free hand and shoved him backward. Other policemen seized both the gun and Ruby. An ambulance took Oswald to Parkland hospital, where he was put in the same emergency operating room that had received Kennedy, and Dr. Malcolm Perry, part of the team that had tried to save the president, operated in vain on the accused assassin. At 1:07 p.m., Oswald was pronounced dead. Leavelle had had enough of televised police work. The next day, Monday the 25th, he whisked Ruby from City Hall to the county courthouse without telling even his lieutenant--``and he got huffy about that.'' Ruby was badly frightened. ``On the way down in the elevator,'' Leavelle remembers, ``he was wanting to wear my hat and my coat and everything because he was afraid somebody was going to shoot him. I said, `Jack, you ain't worth killin', nobody's going to shoot you.' Then, I said, `In all the years I've known you, you've never done anything to hurt the police, but you didn't do us any favor on this.' And he said, `All I wanted to do was be a hero.' He'd figured we'd charge him with murder but the grand jury would say, `Jack, that's a bad thing you done shootin' Oswald, but since he needed killin' anyhow, we going to excuse you this time but don't do it again.' And he could stand at the front door of his club and people would come from far and wide to shake the hand of the man who shot the assassin.'' That same day, while kings, emperors and prime ministers bowed their heads in homage to the memory of a murdered president at Arlington National Cemetery near Washington, Lee Harvey Oswald was buried in Rose Hill Cemetery at Arlington, Texas, between Dallas and Fort Worth. There were five mourners--Oswald's wife, Marina, his brother Robert, his mother and his two infant children. The Rev. Louis Saunders, secretary of the Fort Worth District Council of Churches, says that he had called five different clergymen to perform the service but all had made excuses. Saunders, who had not conducted a funeral service in eight years, nervously recited scripture from memory: ``The Lord is my Shepherd, I shall not want; he maketh me to lie down in green pastures. . . .'' Now 84, retired and living in Dallas, Saunders says that he eventually got more than 1,000 letters and postcards, only one of them critical. But Lee Harvey Oswald did not stay buried. In 1981, British author Michael Eddowes, who had written a book contending that the body in the Arlington grave was that of a Soviet spy, got a court order for exhumation. Fort Worth funeral director Paul Groody, who had put Oswald into the ground 18 years before, returned to dig him up. Now 74, Groody says that he found somebody had been there ahead of him. The steel-reinforced concrete vault containing the casket had been broken, probably when it fell while being lifted from the grave, Groody surmises. In any event, he delivered the body to the Baylor Medical Center in Dallas where, two years later, a pathologist confirmed that the teeth were indeed those of Lee Harvey Oswald. However, says Groody, the body he collected from Parkland hospital in 1963 had undergone an autopsy that included a craniotomy--opening the skull. ``But when we dug him up,'' he says, ``I didn't see any evidence that the skull had been autopsied.'' ``You think the guy wasn't Oswald?'' ``Yup, I'm kind of convinced of that.'' ``So what did they do, replace the teeth?'' ``Replaced the head. Somebody went in, changed heads and put the head of the real Lee Harvey in there.'' ``So who did you originally bury?'' ``Some guy who was groomed to look like him, but remember, it's only a dumb old undertaker talkin'.'' For years after Kennedy's murder, Dallas was reviled across America. Some newspaper stories called it ``Murder City'' and dwelled on its crime and violence and loony right-wing extremists. People from Dallas told tales of being refused service in other cities if they mentioned where they were from. ``You know what I think cured that?'' says Henry Wade. ``When they killed Bobby Kennedy in Los Angeles and Martin Luther King in Memphis. People began thinking, `Why, this can happen in any city.' '' On the drive in from the airport, the city's soaring, sculpted skyline--made famous by the Dallas TV series--appears suddenly in the distance, like a mirage on the north Texas plain. But it is more a colossal monument to fading oil-fed prosperity than to progress--Dallas is a troubled community. As happened in other big U.S. cities following desegregation, most of the white population fled to the suburbs; in 100 square blocks of downtown, there are, by and large, only office buildings and hotels. No shops, no movie houses, no grocers, no department stores, only one apartment building. ``There's a lot of racial strife--more so, I would say, than in the late Sixties,'' says Darwin Payne, a journalism professor at Southern Methodist University in Dallas. ``There's a lot of fear about what's happening. Dallas, for years, felt it was immune to all the problems of the big cities of the East. But now, we have all the problems and I can't see a turnaround.'' No matter where the future takes the 152-year-old city on the Trinity River, it will never quite shake its past. In the history of high-level murder and intrigue, Dealey Plaza has joined the senate steps of Caesar's Rome, the Ford Theatre of Lincoln's Washington, the streets of Archduke Ferdinand's Sarajevo. And the tourists come to stare at the grassy knoll and the triple underpass, to take pictures of the old Texas School Book Depository--now the Dallas County Administration Building. On the sixth floor, there is a broadloomed museum called simply The Sixth Floor. There are huge wall-mounted photographs of the Kennedys in Washington, in Berlin, in Dallas, driving, waving, smiling. In the gloom, people watch videos of the fateful motorcade, of the president's 1961 inaugural address (``Ask not what your country can do for you, ask what you can do for your country. . . .''). The corner containing the window from which Oswald is said to have fired the fatal shots has been boxed off behind glass, and people stare at the original bare wooden floor inside. Downstairs, a tasteful souvenir shop sells a huge assortment of books about Kennedy and the assassination, plastic-wrapped front pages of 1963 newspapers, and audio and video tapes--JFK in Ireland; JFK: The Day the Nation Cried; Camelot: The Kennedy Years. Outside, there is a metal plaque on the front of the building that reads, in part: ``On Nov. 22, 1963, the building gained national notoriety when Lee Harvey Oswald allegedly shot and killed president John F. Kennedy from a sixth-floor window as the presidential motorcade passed the site.'' Over the years, the word ``allegedly'' has been underlined by repeated gouging. RELATED ARTICLE: AMERICA'S ENDURING MYSTERY WAS OSWALD A LONE ASSASSIN? The second-floor reading room at the U.S. National Archives in Washington is crammed most days with conspiracy buffs, poring over papers that, in some cases, consist of nothing more than newspaper clippings that the CIA inexplicably stamped ``secret.'' There are 800,000 pages of documents in all, including 120,000 from the CIA. Released in August in accordance with a 1992 act of Congress, they amount to the largest disclosure ever of material related to the assassination of president John F. Kennedy; more papers are still to be made public. Those released so far--yellowing, creased, often dog-eared and contained in 1,053 cardboard file boxes--reveal much evidence of official incompetence and coverups of wild schemes. But there is no smoking gun--nothing that proves the Warren Commission wrong in its basic assertion: that lone gunman Lee Harvey Oswald killed the president. Still, recent polls show that between 72 and 80 per cent of Americans believe there was a conspiracy. The major arguments for that view: * One gunman fired three shots from a sixth-floor window of the Texas School Book Depository. One missed the motorcade, the other two hit the president. However, at almost the same instant that Kennedy was hit, so was Texas governor John Connally, sitting in front of him. If Connally was struck by a separate bullet, there had to be a second gunman and thus a conspiracy. For one bullet to pass through Kennedy's neck, zigzag through the car, hit Connally in the back, exit the front of his chest, smash through his right wrist and come to rest in his left thigh, it had to change course several times. It had to be a ``magic bullet.'' * Autopsy notes were inexplicably destroyed almost immediately after Kennedy's body was first examined. However, doctors and nurses testified to the Warren Commission that they saw an exit-type wound in the back of the president's head. Such a wound could only have been caused by a gunman shooting from in front of the motorcade. That ties in with a frame from the famous film, shot by amateur cameraman Abraham Zapruder, which shows the president's head snapping backwards, as though being hit from the front. And at least half a dozen serious witnesses say they heard a shot coming from the grassy knoll ahead of the motorcade. * The Zapruder film indicates that all the shots were fired in less than eight seconds. Oswald's Mannlicher-Carcano bolt-action rifle, fitted with a telescopic sight, was hardly a precision, fast-action weapon. Whoever fired it that day was an expert; most of the crack snipers brought in by the Pentagon have failed to reproduce the feat. But in the U.S. marines, Oswald was remembered as a poor shot, and friends who hunted with him say he was mediocre. * The Warren Commission worked under such time pressure and bureaucratic constraint that it was often sloppy. Chief Justice Earl Warren told his colleagues that it was important to world peace that the American public not believe that the Soviet Union or Cuba were involved. He was predisposed to find a lone assassin. On the other hand: * The most recent and thorough investigation of the ``magic bullet'' included a computerized reconstruction. Unlikely though it seems, the investigation concluded that one bullet could indeed have passed through the president and continued on to hit Connally. * In recent years, panels of doctors have examined the autopsy photographs and X-rays of Kennedy's body. All but one of the doctors said the shots came from the rear. * The Zapruder film, and still photographs taken at the time, have been computer enhanced. They show the grassy knoll in detail. Not only is there no sign of a second gunman, but many of the witnesses who claim to have been on the knoll and heard shots coming from behind them were not where they said they were. * Nearly all the conspiracy theories point to at least one more gunman and a backup force of plotters and planners. And yet, in the 30 years since the shooting, no one has produced proof that anyone other than Oswald was involved. If there really had been a conspiracy, something would almost certainly have leaked by now. Either Oswald acted alone, or it is the best coverup in history. Title: Secrets from the C.I.A. archives. (John F. Kennedy assassination)(The J.F.K. Files - II) (Cover Story) Authors: Corn, David Citation: The Nation, Nov 29, 1993 v257 n18 p656(5) ------------------------------------------------------------- Subjects: United States. Central Intelligence Agency_Records and correspondence People: Kennedy, John F._Assassination Reference #: A14699319 ============================================================= Abstract: The motion picture 'JFK' increased the pressure to release government files relating to the assassination of Pres Kennedy, and over half a million pages of new documents have been released. However, they contain no shocking new evidence. Various documents are discussed. ============================================================= Full Text COPYRIGHT The Nation Company Inc. 1993 THE J.F.K. FILES--II First came the movie. Then the cry, "Release the files." Now, more than half a million pages of newly released government documents related to John F. Kennedy's assassination are sitting in boxes in the National Archives, available to all who have the patient to plow through them. But don't expect the files to yield startling evidence on the premier national death. The assassination material is mostly familiar, and even contains papers that undermine some conspiracy theories, including the one posited by Oliver Stone in JFK. The real value of the new releases lies instead in what they reveal, through episodes not explicitly connected to the assassination, about the cold war and the Central Intelligence Agency. For the student of this hidden history, they are a mother lode. The core of the collection in the 554 slim gray archival boxes from the House Select Committee on Assassinations, which in the late 1970s probed the Kennedy slaying, and fifty boxes of records from the C.I.A.'s personal file on Lee Harvey Oswald. For non-assassination buffs, however, the most fertile territory is another group of records the C.I.A. sent the archives: about sixty large cardboard boxes crammed with once-classified memorandums, correspondence, personnel files, cables and operations reports assembled during the House inquiry. There is no equivalent set of C.I.A. records publicly available. Their contents recount government activity usually kept secret and not integrated into public history. Because the House committee was examining persons, groups and events linked to assorted conspiracy theories--such as the potential tie between Oswald and anti-Castro activists--the agency rounded up papers on a host of subjects. The papers document a failed attempt by some senior C.I.A. officers in the 1970s to prevent the publication of case officer David Phillips's autobiography, which was utterly sympathetic to Langley. (The C.I.A.'s secret-keepers believed no information, not even of the flattering variety, should be let out.) One dispatch from the 1960s shows a C.I.A. officer boasting of how he turned a Miami-based American journalist into a propaganda asset. A memo reports that the agency monitored. J. Edgar Hoover's attempts to intimidate Martin Luther King Jr. by threatening to release information on King's sexual activities. Other papers show that after three C.I.A. officers were arrested in Havana in 1960 for bugging the office of the Chinese news agency, the agency attempted unsuccessfully to use Mafia contacts to spring them from jail. Many documents in the C.I.A. collection are censored, and thousands of pages have been withheld on security grounds. Nevertheless, the set overflows with material that illuminates absurdities and excesses of the cold war, provides a rare view of the world of intelligence and unveils portions of the secret past. Hence are a few of those finds. The Case of the Mad Exile Dimitri Dimitrov, a 29-year-old Bulgarian exile, headed a small political party in Greece in the early 1950s. He was also working with the C.I.A. station in Athens. Local agency officers, however, learned that French intelligence was attempting to bribe Dimitrov into becoming a double agent, and they discovered that their man was interested in the French offer. The C.I.A. hatched a plan to preserve its control of his asset. The station lied to Dimitrov and told him he was the subject of an assassination plot. Supposedly for his own protection, it placed him in the custody of the Greek police, who tossed him into prison. Six months later, the Greeks decided Dimitrov was a brother and demanded the C.I.A. take him back. "Since our people were unable to dispose of [Dimitrov] in Greece," an agency memo notes, "they flew him to Panama where . . . he was placed in a U.S. Military Hospital as a psychopathic patient. . . .[Dimitrov] is not a psychopathic personality." Dimitrov was locked up in the hospital for several months and, not surprisingly, became so troublesome that the hospital insisted the agency reclaim him. The brainstormers of the C.I.A. needed to resolve this mess. They considered sending Dimitrov to a friend of his in Venezuela. But Dimitrov had become hostile toward the United States and its intelligence operations; freed, he might embarrass the agency. With that in mind, agency officers weighed what they termed the "Artichoke" approach--using drugs and hypnotism "to see if it would be possible to re-orient [Dimitrov] favorably toward us." If that failed, the agency might try to induce total amnesia in Dimitrov with electro-shock treatments. But C.I.A. higher-ups mixed the reprogramming. Dimitrov was removed from the hospital and incarcerated at Fort Clayton, Panama, for three years. He then was returned to Greece and later permitted to enter the United States. In 1961, Dimitrov approached Parade magazine with an account of his confinement at the hands of the C.I.A. An agency officer apparently squelched parade's interest in the story by telling the magazine that Dimitrov was disreputable, unreliable and full of false tales about the agency. Dimitrov captured Langley's attention again sixteen years later--this time under his new name, Donald Donaldson. With the House assassination committee investigation in the limelight, Donaldson told a leading conspiracy theorist that he knew who had killed Kennedy. He claimed he had hob-nobbed with Kennedy, Harry Truman and Franklin Roosevelt, who, he said, had made him a general by presidential decree. The "General" maintained that Kennedy had asked him to investigate an earlier murder plot and that C.I.A. operatives had been involved in the November 22 assassination. His unsubstantiated charges of C.I.A. connivance were publicized on Good Morning America, but it was pitiful payback. Dimitrov/Donaldson indeed now seemed a psychopathic personalit. The true horror tale he possessed-that of the C.I.A. robbing him of years of his life through imprisonment and hospital confinement--went untold. The Case of the Unheeded Warning On June 22, 1976, C.I.A. headquarters received a cable noting that an officer in the field had learned from a source--a businessman deemed a "usually reliable reporter"--that a Cuban exile extremist group active throughout Latin America planned to bomb a Cubana airliner flying between Panama and Havana. The group's leader was a baby doctor named Orlando Bosch. That attack did not occur, but on October 6 a bomb exploded on a Cubana airliner in flight between Barbados and Cuba. The plane crashed into the sea; all seventy-three people aboard were killed. Bosch's shadowy network of exile terrorists claimed responsibility. The existence of the June cable, which Langley shared with other U.S. agencies, prompts a few obvious questions. What did the agency do with the information it received? Did it further monitor Bosch and his group? The cable shows that the C.I.A., at least in June, had the means to penetrate the organization. Did the agency or any other part of the U.S. government bother to warn Havana that Bosch was out to destroy a civilian airliner? None of the documents in the Bosch file supply clues as to how the C.I.A. reacted to this tip. Bosch was arrested in Venezuela days after the bombing, along with fellow Cuban expatriate Luis Posada Carriles. They were held there for more than ten years without trial and were then released. Posada went on to become a key operator in El Salvador for Oliver North's secret contra supply operation. Bosch, who claims his role in the bombing was never proved, returned to the United States in 1988. (Bosch had previously lived in Miami, where in 1968 he was convicted for firing a bazooka at a Polish freighter.) The Justice Department initiated deportation proceedings, citing a past parole violation, but the State Department insisted it could not find a country willing to accept Bosch. There are no indications that the U.S. government is currently pursuing his deportation. In yet another parole violation Bosch is now, according to The Miami Herald, organizing a group to raise money to buy and ship arms to Castro's foes in Cuba. Is anyone in U.S. intelligence watching his outfit today? The Case of Diego Rivera's Housekeeper In the early 1960s the C.I.A. mounted an anti-Cuban operation of such sensitivity that Langley later refused to provide the full story to House committee investigators, even as it was turning over reams of information on other clandestine activities. During the heady days of the C.I.A.'s covert crusade against Fidel Castro, agency plotters sought to exacerbate the tension in his government between old-line Communist Party members and other revolutionaries. One of their targets was Maria Teresa Proenza. In 1957, Proenza was housekeeper to the Mexican artist Diego Rivera. After Castro assumed power in Cuba in 1959, she beca,se the cultural attache of the Cuban Embassy in Mexico City, where she handled propaganda. To the C.I.A. she was now a major enemy. One report describes Proenza as "dangerous . . . a cold-blooded emotionless woman who is nicknamed the Mummy. . . . She is also believed to be a lesbian." Above all, Proenza was a longtime, prominent Communist. In November 1963, the agency's Mexico City station initiated an operation against her. The details are censored from the released documents--as they were withheld from the committee--but it seems that the agency may have engineered a way to slip false information about Proenza to the Cubans. She was removed from her post and recalled to Havana. A C.I.A. memo notes that the "first reaction to the operation inside Cuba" was the trial in March 1964 of a junior member of the Communist Party. This official was sentenced to death for informing on several Castroites who had been killed in a prerevolutionary police raid. The connection between the Proenza operation and the trial is not clear from the documents. But months after the proceedings, Proenza was arrested along with the vice minister of defense andd his wife, also old-line Communists. One C.I.A. memo crows that the earlier trial evolved--supposedly due to unseen C.I.A. intervention--into an attack on the vice minister. Proenza was sentenced to prison. After serving what was probably several years--the C.I.A. documents do not include this detail--she was placed under house arrest. Eventually Proenza was allowed to work as a librarian in Havana. Exactly how this all happened remains another cold war mystery. It was a classic effort. Across the globe during the cold war, the agency endeavored to undermine foreign Communist officials via disinformation. In its strike against Proenza, the agency slyly managed to cause the Cubans to lock up at least three of their own. It did so by exploring, and encouraging, the paranoid and totalitarian aspects of the regime. A 1978 C.I.A. memo states, "The ramifications of the operation are extensive. . . . This particular operation continues to have considerable sensitivity." The Case of the Muffled Memoir Winston Scott was an agency legend. He served as the lordly chief of station in Mexico City from 1956 to 1969--before retiring and going into business with the former head of British intelligence in Mexico. He also began to work on an autobiography, provisionally titled It Came to Little. Scott was by then disillusioned with the agency, believing it had not done enough to combat Communism. In 1971, Scott shared a copy of his manuscript with John Barron, an editor at Reader's Digest who was then writing a book on the K.G.B. It was a likely match, and Reader's Digest Press conveyed its interest in publishing Scott's reminiscences. Then, in April of that year, Scott died. Senior C.I.A. officials who were aware of the existence of the manuscript--including James Jesus Angleton, the agency's infamous counterinteligence chief--rushed to his Mexican home to speak to his widow, Janet, and to grab the memoirs. In a cable to H.Q. the Mexico City station reported that one kindly agency official had advised the grieving Janet Scott not to read the draft because it related intimate matters pertaining to Scott's previous marriage. He persuaded her that the manuscript was the property not of Scott's estate but of the government, and that its publication would harm Scott's reputation. She agreed to cooperate with the agency and handed over all copies of the unfinished autobiography. John Barron, whose literary efforts the agency was assisting, informed the C.I.A. he would forget about the manuscript and that Reader's Digest would not publish it. "The book was not in publishable form," Barron says today, "and I told Scott we would have to have clearance from the C.I.A." Janet Scott also allowed an agency officer to rifle through her husband's study, which contained safes, file cabinets and valises filled with classified documents and tapes Scott had retained. (The pliant widow hid the officer from a lawyer for Scott's estate, who dropped by during the search.) The C.I.A. hauled away the material. "We have found [the] Huey Newton and [Eldridge& Cleaver tapes, but these [are the] only tapes so far," the Mexico City station informed headquarters, in a likely reference to an eavesdropping operation against the Black Panthers. In one of the safes, the C.I.A. man discovered a locked box. "We suspect," his cable said, "this may contain missing tapes on [deleted] case and 'lesbians.'" Perhaps this was an allusion to the Proenza affair. Or perhaps the Mexico City station had a roster of lesbian-related operations. The only part of Scott's manuscript that has been made public is a chapter that covers Lee Harvey Oswald's trip to Mexico City weeks before the assassination. (Scott suggests unconvincingly that Oswald was a Soviet agent.) Everything else has been kept successfully under wraps. A 1976 C.I.A. memo boasts that the C.I.A. "deep-sixed" the manuscript. Scott's son is currently attempting to force the agency to release it under the Freedom of Information Act. His lawyer ought to examine the C.I.A. records that show how the agency wheeled the manuscript away from his mother. The Case of the Lucky Senator In this case, an old agency file is of more than mere historic interest. C.I.A. officer Jack Kindschi composed a memo on August 10, 1973, about a conversation he had within an associate of Robert Bennett, owner of the Mullen Company. Mullen was an unorthodox public relations firm. It provided cover to C.I.A. people around the world, and it employed E. Howard Hunt, the mystery writer and ex-spook who joined the Nixon White House's secret "pulmbers" unit and helped devise the Watergate break-in. Kindschi wrote that his source--whose name is deleted from the memo--reported that "Hunt early-on had informed Bennett of the existence of the 'plumbers group' as well as the projected plan to break into the safe of Hank Greenspun." The source was referring to a pre-Watergate Hunt plan to crack the safe of the publisher of the Las Vegas Sun, who supposedly possessed material damaging to Democratic president aspirant Edmund Muskie. Hunt, according to Kindschi's source, let Bennett know that Greenspun's safe also held information that might concern billionaire Howard Hughes, one of Bennett's clients. Bennett checked to see if Hughes was interested in the safe job. He wasn't happened. But the memo implies Bennett schemed with Hunt to commit a crime. Bennett was questioned by aides of the Senate Watergate committee, and, Kindschi's source said, the experience left him shaken. Conveniently, Bennett's father, Wallace, was a senator. The elder Bennett contracted Howard Baker, a Republician on the committee, who assured his colleague that he believed in the younger Bennett's intergrity and would see that he was treated evenhandedly. Senator Bennett then talked to Senator Sam Ervin, the committee chairman, and obtained from him a pledge that Bob would not be subpoenaed or grilled on national television. Bob Bennett thus remained in the shadows of Watergate. In the years since, Watergate-ologists have wondered about his knowledge of Hunt's illegal activities. Hunt, far from a credible source, has argued that Bennett initiated the Greenspun operation. Bennett maintains he did no wrong. He contends that Hunt presented the operation to him as a legel component of a larger inquiry being conducted by then-Attorney General John Mitchell. Last year Bennett said of Watergate, "I was never part of the mess. I was close to it, I saw it firsthand, but I didn't do anything illegal, improper or immoral." Bennett was running for the job of U.S. senator from Utah when he made that assertion. As a candidate, Bennett profesed he was "appalled" when he learned of Hunt's plans to break into Greenspun's safe. His denials were effective. He won the election. The Kindschi memo suggests Bob Bennett was a willing participant in the conspiracy. Today he makes laws. The Case of the Laughable Denial In 1973 Lucien Conein, a legendary C.I.A. veteran working for the Drug Enforcement Administration, was talking to Mitchell WerBell 3d, a scurrilous arms dealer who had associated with U.S. intelligence. WerBell told Conein that he had been asked to help arrange a coup in Panama that entailed the murder of its President, Gen. Omar Torrijos. The goal was to install as leader a former president who had served in office for only several days--probably a reference to Arnulfo Arias, a onetime admirer of Hitler and Mussolini who was elected in 1968 but quickly deposed by Torrijos and others. WerBell asked Conein to clear the operation with the C.I.A. He desired a guarantee that the United States would not interfere. Conein carried WerBell's request to the Washington field office of the C.I.A. An officer there told Conein that his information on WerBell's plans would be conveyed to the appropriate agency officials. But, he added, the C.I.A. did not engage in plots of overthrow foreign governments. Conein must have chuckled. he was not someone to be issued the standard denial. As a C.I.A. man in Saigon in 1963, he was the U.S. liaison to the South Vietnamese generals who, with Washington's blessing, overthrew and murdered President Ngo Dinh Diem. Torrijos survived whatever came of WerBell's plotting--if anything. But eight years later he died in a plane crash that resulted in the rise to power of C.I.A. star Manuel Noreiga. The Case of the Soviet Sheet Sniffers The cold war drove spies on both sides to peculiar extremes. In early 1964, Yuri Nosenko, a K.G.B. official, defected to U.S. intelligence and asserted he had handled the K.G.B. file on Lee Harvey Oswald. The K.G.B., he said, had no connection to the assassin. But Nosenko had other sensitive secrets to spill. In the first days of his defection, while being shown around Washington by F.B.I., agents, Nosenko shared with his American hosts the clandestine techniques the K.G.B. employed to determine which Americans stationed in the Moscow embassy were spies. Most C.I.A. officers are posted abroad under State Department cover. But the K.G.B. observed that a C.I.A. man was less likely than a genuine Foreign Service officer to accept an invitation to socialize alone with a Russian woman. The spy presumably feared a trap. The K.G.B. believed that by targeting Russian women against male U.S. officials, it could discern who was an agency officer. But tangible evidence was required. Operating under the premise that the solitary and more cautious intelligence officers were sexually frustrated, K.G.B. operative gained entrance to the residence of the male embassy officials and studied their bed sheets and towels. If the Soviets detected signs of masturbation, they concluded the fellow was C.I.A. The results sof this intelligence collection program may be available deep within the K.G.B.'s archives. With the end of the cold war, it is time to reclaim history. Both the C.I.A. and the K.G.B. now trumpet their institutional devotion to "openness." Since releasing these J.F.K. records, processed in a short time by an overwhelmed office in Langley, the C.I.A. has begun re-examining the documents withheld, and senior C.I.A. officers say that at least 90 percent of those records will be released soon. The agency also has announced it will declassify thousands of intelligence estimates and analytical papers, and disclose material related to decades-old covert actions in France, Italy, Iran, Guatemala, North Korea, Indonesia, Laos, the Congo and the Dominican Republic. At a recent hearing of the House intelligence committee, Republican legislators complained the C.I.A. might be going too far. The J.F.K. papers show that the C.I.A. can go further. The cardboard boxes at the National Archives overflow with the sort of records--cables, memos and operations--that the C.I.A. long has objected to releasing under the Freedom of Information Act. Langley has fiercely claimed that divulging such material endangers sources and methods, the lifeblood of an intelligence service. Yet here are tens of thousands of such pages, with purportedly still-sensitive information censored. And the agency survives. Langley and C.I.A. director R. James Woolsey deserve encouragement for the endeavors to fill gaps in the historical record. But the C.I.A. brass should not be the only ones to decide which subjects warrant openness. The public should have a say. It can if Langley loosens the restraints it attaches to the Freedom of Information Act. The law allows the agency to be exceedingly stingy in responding to requests from historians, journalists and citizens for documents. On its own or in concert with Congress, the C.I.A. should adopt a more expansive approach. "Release the files" is a call to be applied beyond the Kennedy assassination and topics of Langley's choosing. The ultimate significance of the J.F.?K. records is the proof they offer of the C.I.A.'s ability to expose safely the dark matter of U.S. history. Title: Cuba, Kennedy and the cold war. (John F. Kennedy)(The J.F.K. Files - I) (Cover Story) Authors: Holland, Max Citation: The Nation, Nov 29, 1993 v257 n18 p649(8) ------------------------------------------------------------- People: Kennedy, John F._Assassination Reference #: A14699317 ============================================================= Abstract: One of the primary aims of the John Kennedy administration was the elimination of Fidel Castro in Cuba. Castro, in an Sep 1963 interview, warned that US leaders themselves would not be safe from such actions. It is likely that Cuba-supporter Lee Harvey Oswald read that interview. ============================================================= Full Text COPYRIGHT The Nation Company Inc. 1993 Just when you thought you deserved a respite, here comes the thirtieth anniversity of the Kennedy assassination. More than 450 books and tens of thousands of articles have been published, and numerous documentaries and features films produced, about November 22, 1963. Yet this aniversary will yield a bumper crop of offerings in very medium. The persistent disbelief attached to the Warren Report, the ceaseless re-examinations, have to be grounded in unfinished business, some yearning that goes will beyond narrow questions such as whether all pertinent government documents have been released. In a letter to The New York Times, William Manchester skillfully identified this unrequited need last year. Manchester skillfully identified this unrequited need last year. The author of Death of a President wrote: There is an esthetic principle here. . . . if you put the murdered President of the United States on one side of a scale and that wretched waif Oswald on the other side, it doesn't balance. You want to add something weightier to Oswald. It would invest the President's death with meaning, endowing him with martyRDOM. He would have died for something. A conspiracy would, of course, do the job nicely. If great events demand great causes, as Manchester argues, thirst for a conspiracy will never be slaked. As he stands, Oswald is unequal to the task to assassinating a President who, fairly or not, is sometimes rated higher than Abraham Lincoln or Franklin Roosevelt. But perhaps this anniversary ought to be an occasion to re-examine that imbalance, if possible adjust the scales and make the assassination coherent. In addition to marketing thirty years, this November is the first major anniversary since the geopolitical rules changed and exaggerated passions and fears abated. It is more than possible that our understanding of the assassination, like so much else, has been obscured by cold war exigencies. New documentary evidence, not only about the assassination but also about Kennedy's Cuba policy, has been released, and principal offocials are talking, some after a long silence. In his first Weekly published after the assassination, I.F. Stone wrote a passionate and piercing column on the fallen President title "We All Had a Finger on That Trigger": Let us ask ourselves questions. How many Americans have not assumed--with approval--that the CIA was probably to find a way to assassinate Castro? How many would not applaud if the CIA succeeded? . . . Have we not become conditioned to the notion that we should have a secret agency of government--the CIA--with secret funds, to wield the dagger beneath the cloak against leaders we dislike? Even some of our best young liberal intellectuals can see nothing wrong in this picture except that the "operational" functions of [the] CIA should be kept separate from its intelligence evaluations! . . . Where the right to kill is so universally acccepted, we should not be surprised if you young President was slain. Drawing a rhetorical, unproven connection between the cold war mindset and Oswald's stunning act was vintage Izzy Stone. With virtually every American still in shock, it took a journalistic dissenter to hold up the assassination against a backdrop of political violence contributed to by the United States. In retrospect, I.F. Stone was closer to understanding the context of the assassination than almost anyone at the time. The full story is a bipartisan one. The Eisenhower Administration was hardly shy about subverting unsympathetic Third World regimes, and uncounted soldiers and civilians died during C.I.A.-backed shadow wars and coups in the 1950s. But ostensibly adverse trends apparent in 1959 raised a new question: If thousands of deaths were acceptable, why not the murder of particular person? It might be a less costly way to nip unfriendly regimes in the bud or oust a pro-Western but repressive ruler who might engender a Communist takeover. "Executive action," the assassination of actual or potential leaders deemed inimical, was added to the C.I.A.'s bag of covert tactics. In fragmented and frequently violent Third Wold polities, executive action appeared quite feasible, the rewards worthwhile, the risks tolerable. In 1960, four political murders were authorized as elements of wider covert operations designed to influence outcomes in the Congo, Iraq, the Dominican Republic and Cuba. The respective targets were Patrice Lumumba, Abdul Karim Kassem, Rafael Trujillo and Fidel Castro, who was a quarry of special urgency. If Castro's radicalism succeeded, the Administration believed, Cuba promised to become a model for other Latin American revolutionaries and a bridgehead for Soviet subversion in the hemisphere. A major Soviet operational base and intelligence platform in America's backyard was Washington's worst nightmare. Kennedy required little convincing about the need to act with similar dispatch. During the 1960 campaign, he had suggested that Castro's rise to power was a symbol of America's decline under Eisenhower. And uprooting Castro's Cuba while simultaneously preventing another one in this hemisphere was to be a centerpiece of Kennedy's foreign policy from the moment he took office. Kennedy was also highly enamored of the C.I.A.'s proven ability to bend events in countries like Iran and Guatemala, and covert operations were in keeping with the action-oriented prosecution of the cold war he favored. "Neutralizing" Castro was only one element, of course, in a far larger effort to land Cuban exiles in the spring of 1961 and foment a counterrevolution. Bur the Bay of Pigs invasion was an utter debacle and left Kennedy livid over the embarrassment caused his infant Administration. As significant, Castro was no longer simply an enemy inherited from Eisenhower, and Kennedy became adament about getting rid of him. As then-Secretary of Defense Robert McNamara later testified, the Administration was "hysterical about Castro at the time of the Bay of Pigs and thereafter." In the wake of this rout, the President toyed with the idea of replacing Director of Central Intelligence Allen Dulles with Attorney General Robert Kennedy. Instead, he ordered R.F.K., his most trusted confidant and adviser, to poke around the agency and find out what had gone wrong. Operating with his usual zeal, Robert Kennedy immersed himself in agency affairs, and as he came to understand the C.I.A.'s capabilities he emerged its most ardent champion. By November 1961 the covert effort to eliminate Castro resumed in earnest. Code-named Mongoose, the campaign aimed to destabilize Castro's regime rather than to overthrow it suddenly. Every possible tactic would be brought to bear, including hostile diplomacy, the trade embargo, paramilitary sabotage, psychological warfare and assassination. President Kennedy installed his brother as a kind of czar over the entire, uniquely compartmented operation, in effect the unofficial but unmistakable overseer of the C.I.A.'s Directorate of Plans with respect to Cuba, the covert action shop then run by Richard Helms. As Senator Harris Wofford (then a White House aide) wrote in his 1980 book, Of Kennedys & Kings: For the first nine months of 1962, Mongoose was the Administration's top covert priority and Castro practically a fixation for Robert Kennedy. At one of the first meetings, he told the assembled offocials that his brother "really wanted action" and that "no time, money, effort, or manpower is to be spared." Robert Kennedy made field trips to Mangoose facilities in Florida, and if a sabotage raid was scheduled he insisted on knowing such unimportant details as what side-arms the exiles would be carrying. His micro-management extended to almost daily telephone conversations with Helms, during which Kenedy applied "white heat" pressure. Although Mongoose did not envision U.S. military intervention until an internal revolt erupted, this distinction was lost on Castro. He found a sympathetic ear in Nikita Khruschev. Initially, the Soviet had been wary of supporting Castro. He was not a card-carrying member of the Cuban Communist Party when he rode into Havana, and the Kremlin doubted his staying power. But a combination of factors persuaded Khruschev in 1962 to order a Soviet military buildup in Cuba. Nothing about the October 1962 Cuban missile crisis need concern us except the endgame. In its wake, some Kennedy advisers advocated trying to wean Castro from the Soviets because he was smarting over their "betrayal." Ultimately, however, a modest program of convert subversion was put into place in 1963. As before, it included the goal of eliminating Castro. And thought it strains credulity, plotting Castro's demise in 1963 was at once the most sensitive secret in Washington and the most talked about. Because Helms operated directly under Robert Kennedy, even C.I.A. chief who replaced Dulles, John McCone, was in the dark. (*1) Yet simultaneously, as I.F. Stone hinted, doing away with Castro was a favorite topic at Georgetown dinner parties. By late 1963, Castro had been the target of almost a dozen assassination atempts. Several had varying degrees of C.I.A. involvement, while Cuban exiles acting independently were responsible for the balance. All the attempts were plagued by informers, incompetence and Fidel's plain good luck. Still, Castro did not like the odds. On September 7, 1963, he gave a three-hour interview to the Associated Press during an embassy reception. Largely devoted to vehement denunciations of U.S. policy and its maker, Castro included a pointed comment about assassination plots. "United States leaders should think that if they are aiding terrorist plans to eliminate Cuban leaders, they themselves will not be safe," he warned. A leading newspaper in New Orleans, the Times-Picayune, was among the U.S. papers that picked up Castro's unusual interview with an American wire service. His warning was the lead paragraph in a four-column, page 7 story on September 9. In all New Orleans, no one was more likely to be interested and believe in what Castro had to say than the city's most ardent supporter of the Cuban revolution, a 24-year-old ex-Marine named Lee Harvey Oswald. Ascribing a political motive to Oswald doesn't hinge on whether he read one newspaper article, though in all likelihood he did. Because of his politics he was extraordinarily sensitive to the hostile U.S. policy toward Cuba, as author Jean Davision painstakingly points out in Oswald's Game, an underservedly neglected biography published in 1983. In a profound sense Oswald was only marginally less informed than, say, John McCone, about the furious effort to overthrow Castro. Diplomatic attempts to isolate Cuba--such as throwing it out to the Organization of American States in 1962--were a matter of public record. So was the trade embargo, tightened considerably by Kennedy in 1961 and again in 1962. The Bay of Pigs proved U.S. antipathy went well beyond conventional containment, while Mongoose and subsequent operations generated a lot of "noise" in the press, particularly in the left-wing periodicals Oswald devoutly read. Anyone who monitored Radio Havana, organized his very own Fair Play for Cuba Committee chapter and marched around New Orleans with a placard that read "Viva Fidel" and "Hands off Cuba," was aware of all this. Of equal moments, by mid-1963 Oswald had twice demonstrated the psychological capacity to commit life-threatening acts. The first act occurred in 1959, when he slit his left wrist after the Soviet government initially refused to accept him as an important defector. The second, even more suggestive incident occurred in the spring of 1963. Oswald had returned to America in June 1962, having left the Soviet Union because it turned out to be no better than his homeland. But in his own mind he remained a committed Marxist, with a decided taste for self-spun intrigue and drama. Upon his return Oswald moved to Dallas, coincidentally the home of one of the most outspoken American opponents of Communism, Edwin Walker, a former Army general. Wal ker had resigned in November 1961 after distributing John Birch Society literature to U.S. troops in West Germany. He subsequently chose Dallas as the most appropriate command post for anti-Communist speaking tours and other right-wing activities. The Cuban missile crisis had given an extra boost to Walker's already prominent profile, and in February 1963 the Dallas media were full of stories about his decision to join evangelist Billy James Hargis in "Operation Midnight Ride," a five-week national tour dedicated to fighting Communism. Oswald put Walker under surveillance after these news stories appeared, and in late March ordered a rifle through the mail under an alias. Over the next few weeks he quitely stalked the general. When the Mannlicher-Carcano arrived his wife, Marina, took the infamous picture of Oswald posing with rifle in hand; he was "ready for anything." On April 10, he attempted to assassinate Walker as the general sat in his living room, working on his taxes. The next morning Oswald turned on the radio fully expecting to hear that Walker was dead. He was still alive. Oswald was only sorry that he had missed. That summer Oswald moved with his wife and daughter to New Orleans to make a fresh start. There his concern for Castro became all-consuming. Cuba was the embodiment of Communist ideology, the truly revolutionary country. And for the first time in years, his political efforts brought him the attention he thought he had deserved all along. Oswald started his Fair Play for Cuba Committee chapter, forging signatures to make it look like the chapter had more than one member. He leafleted and walked the streets of New Orleans with his "Viva Fidel" placard, and to his immense satisfaction a local TV news show aired his protest for two minutes. He was even arrested for getting into fracas with an anti-Communist Cuban, Carlos Bringuier, whose group he had tried to infiltrate days earlier. In September, the Times-Picayune published Castro's denunciation of U.S. policy and his warning. It was one of the most prominent news articles then published about renewed U.S. hostility to Cuba after the missile crisis, but far from the only one. Oswald developed a new impusle--he had to get to Cuba immediately to help defend the revolution. He arranged to send his family back to Irving, Texas, and on September 25, left for Mexico City and the Cuban Embassy there. Oswald presented himself as a "friend of Cuba." But justifiably suspicious of all Americans--especially one who appeared unstable--the Cuban consul refused to issue a visa. Oswald returned to Dallas on October 3, embittered at not immediately being recognized for who he truly was. After two weeks he got a job through a friend of Marina's as an order filler at the Texas School Book Depository. By now, Dallas newspapers were full of daily reports about the impending visit of President Kennedy to Texas. While the President's itinerary was still sketchy, an opportunity for another violent act was slowly forming itself. When the precise route of the motorcade was published on Novembere 19, Oswald, having failed to kill Walker, was "suddenly faced with the possibility of having a much greater impact on history," as Gerald Posner writes in his book Case Closed. What finally catalyzed Oswald into action is impossible to prove. Bit in the two earlier instances when he actually took violent action--as opposed to imagining or talking about it--his proximate motive was manifestly political. When he acted out his internal demons violently, it was on a political stage. Nor was his ddrive to be recognized as a revolutionary capable of daring acts inconsistent with his desire to prove his importance to family and friends. In fact, they must have seemed terrifyingly reinforcing. All his life was a rehearsal for this moment. Call it a tragic demonstration of the principle of unintended consequences. Or as journalist Daniel Schorr later put it, "an arrow launched into the air to kill a foreign leader may well have fallen back to kill our own." As Lyndon Johnson announced the formation of a presidential commission to investigate the assassination, no one had more reason to suspect this awful truthm and be burdened by it, than the slain President's brother. Making sense of the assassination requires making the aftermath as coherent as the act itself. Clearly, the Warren Commission is the most difficult aspect to comes to terms with. On the one hand, President Johnson created the commission with an express mandate to get to the botton of the assassination. It was headed by then-Chief Justice Earl Warren, whose reputation for probity was nearly unblemished, and several commissioners were singularly versed in intelligence and national security affairs, notably Allen Dulles and John McCloy. On the other hand, a decade after publication of the Warren Report it became known that government officials who had pertinent information had purposely and willfully deceived the commission. (*2) It is possible to square this circle, and still arrive at the same basic findings as the Warren Commission? First, the logic of those officials who withheld critical secrets must be understood. From their perspective, nothing about the assassination--neither the magnitude of the national trauma nor the commission's mandate--superseded normal C.I.A. procedures. Plausible deniability and compartmentalization of information still applied to the plots against Castro as well as to other authorized, ongoing covert activities directed against his regime. If the commission were to demonstrate an unambiguous need to know about the assassination plots, the question of what to do would have to be faced. But until and unless that happened, pertinent information was never going to be volunteered. The C.I.A. would have faced a genuine delemma only if the withheld information pointed to someone other than Oswald, or someone acting in concert with him. The Warren Commission could not deliver to the American people and the world, as its fundamental finding, a false conclusion. But if the withheld information proved congruent with the finding that Oswald was a lone assassin--and it only bolstered that conclusion--the agency had every reason to adhere to its ingrained practices. Consequently, the C.I.A. was quite cooperative about responding to specific requests submitted by the Warren Commission staff. On more than one occasion it volunteered information the commission was unaware existed had a demonstrated need to know, even if the information came from such highly secret means as eavesdropping or mail intercepts. And when a K.G.B. lieutenant colonel named Yuri Nosenko defected in early 1964 with important testimony about Oswald's (nonexistent) links to the K.G.B., the commission was thoroughly informed. (*3) But Richard Helms, who was both knowledgeable about the anti-Castro plots and the highest-ranking C.I.A. official in close contact with the commission, refused to volunteer anything. At times, he even deflected commission staff from leads that threatened to get into sensitive areas. As Helms later explained to a Congressional committee, he did not believe that the plots were "relevant" to the commission's inquiry. When the Warren Report was published in September 1964 it presented a portrait of the assassin as a resentful loner: Oswald, though highly politicized, acted upon inchoate feelings of alienation but without acute political reason. Absent his confession, and denied insight into an important part of the equation by the C.I.A. and others, the commission staff had decided that it could not ascribe to Oswald "any one motive or group of motives." The report gave ample details about Oswald's political activities in a detached, clinical manner. In the end, he was left to become Manchester's wretched waif: a callow hater trying to elbow his way into history by striking out at a President who had it all--looks, youth and power. Not untrue, and perhaps the commission had little alternative. But the explanation rings hollow given Oswald's extraordinary political beliefs. As staff member (now Ohio state judge) Burt Griffin later remarked, "The fact that we could not come up with a motive for Oswald was a great weakness in the report." What did Robert Kennedy, who remained Attorney General, do while the Warren Commission conducted its investiation? As David Belin, a counsel to the commision, recounts in Final Disclosure, the Chief Justice personally wrote Kennedy in June 1964 informing him of the commission's progress and asking him if he was aware of "any additional information relating to the assassination" of his brother "which has not been sent to the Commission." In particular, Warren emphasized the importance of information bearing on the question of a domestic or foreign conspiracy. When Kennedy responded, he was no more forthcoming than the C.I.A. All the information in the possession of the Justice Department (emphasis added) had been sent to the commission, Kennedy wrote, which was a restrictivde interpretation of Warren's request and inaccurate anyway, since Kennedy knew the F.B.I., was aware of some of the plots against Castro. R.F.K. went on to say that he had "no suggestions to make at this time regarding any additional investigation which should be undertaken by the Commission prior to the publication of its report." Kennedy's outward mien during these months comports with what might be expected of a man tortured by the knowledge that he, almost alone, carried. William Manchester reports that many in the Kennedy clan were crushed by the assassination, then righted themselves after the funeral. But during the spring of 1964, a "brooding Celtic agony ... darken[ed] [Kennedy's] life." What genuinely sent him reeling? The "tragedy without reason" of his brother's death, as R.F.K.'s biographer Arthur Schlesinger Jr. put it? Or was it the death, topped by the shattering realization that somehow the Kennedy's fixation on Castro had inadvertently motivated a political sociopath? Belin provides a suggestive answer in Final Disclosure. He recounts a conversion with John McCone in 1975, after news of the assassination plots finally surfaced along with Robert Kennedyhs knowledge of those plans. As Belin describes: McCone replied that for the first time he could now understand the reactions of Kennedy right after the assassination when the two of them were alone. McCone said he felt there was something troubling Kennedy that he was not disclosing, although they did have a close relationship.... [It was McCone's] belief that Robert Kennedy had personal feelings of guilt because he was directly or indirectly involved with the anti-Castro planning. If the C.I.A. is to be blamed for lying by omission to the Warren Commision, then certainly Robert Kennedy deserves similar censure. He helped prepare the stage for later revelations that condemned the Warren Report to disbelief. Given all this, how should the commission and its 888-page final report be remembered? Can the deficiencies be put into perspective, and the Warren Commission given it due? The fact is that no information that has come to light since 1964, when carefully examined, leads to any conclusion other than the one the commission drew. If the word "conspiracy" must be uttered in the same breath as "Kennedy assassination," the only one that existed was the conspiracy to kill Castro and then keep that effort secret after November 22. Initially, the Warren Report reassured the American public in 1964. After its release, 56 percent of Americans believed Oswald was the lone assassin, largely because of the widespread praise the report won in the media, including from this magazine. Over the next three decades, however, belief in the report fell dramatically. Like the assassination itself, the Warren Report could not exist apart from history. General acceptance of its conclusions was susceptible to evision, especially as Americans' general attitude toward the federal government underwent a sea change. Over a period of ten years, the Vietnam War and Watergate turned the public's attitude from one of trusting predisposition into skepticism. Watergate then spawned a wave of investigations that finally touched therefore sacrosanct security agencies. Press revelations forced Congress to launch its first genuine investigations of the F.B.I. and the C.I.A. Eleven years after the Warren Report, Senator Frank Church's Select Committee revealed the extent of anti-Castro covert operations, including the assassination plots, and the no less damning fact that the F.B.I. and C.I.A. had withheld relevant information from the commission. It is hard to over-estimate the impact of these findings. The notion that the C.I.A. had dissembled in the midst of a national trauma was incomprehensive to Americans not schooled in the niceties of compartmented information and the "need to know." If the government could lie to itself in this situation--let alone to the public--then anything seemed possible. The Warren Report, of course, had been dogged by critics since its 1964 publication. But as healthy skepticism became corrosive cynicism, a milestone in Americans' disbelief passed by, almost unnoticed. Now the burden of proof shifted decisively and unfairly from critics to defenders of the official story. The difficulty of parsing the truth was compounded by a new round of historical dissembling and denial. This time the exigency was not so much the continuing cold war but the reputation of the Kennedy's. In the midst of his own hearings, Senator Frank Church floated the notion that the C.I.A. was a "rogue elephant rampaging out of control," even though the anti-Castro operations had been under the tightest presidential control imaginable. "I will have not part in pointing a finger of guilt toward any former President," said Church. Perhaps the capstone in this effort to blur the Kennedy brother's driving role came with the publication of Schlesinger's R.F.K. biography in 1978. Wrote Schlesinger, "The available evidence clearly leads the conclusion that the Kennedys did not know about the Castro assassination plots...." Given this confusion, another official inquiry into the assassination could hardly be expected to allay suspicion. Thus, it scarcely mattered when a House Select Committee, formed in 1976 to reinvestigate the assassinatoons of J.F.K. and Martin Luther King Jr., corroborated every salient fact developed by the Warren Commission.(*4) After a thorough exploration, the Select Committee concluded that the sins of the C.I.A. and F.B.I. stopped at omission (the role of Robert Kennedy being typically glossed over). Nevertheless, a Pandora's box had been opened. A Newsweek poll taken on the twentieth anniversary of the assassination showed that 74 percent of Americans believed that "others were involved," while only 11 percent believed Oswald acted alone. Almost any claim or theory, regardless of how bizarre, could now be presented in the same sentence as the Warren Report's conclusions and be half-believed. The 1990s opened with the film JFK, a reprise of New Orleans District Attorney Jim Garrison's theories with the added suggestion that Kennedy was murdered because he wanted to end the arms race and U.S. involvement in Vietnam. Hollywood is one thing, but even reputable magazines like Tikkun and The Atlantic lent some respectability to the conspiracy choir. Today, debates about the assassination resemble epistemological discussions. One salutary development occurred as a consequence of JFK. In 1992 Congress passed a sweeping law that placed all remaining government documents pertaining to the assassinaton in a special category, and simultaneously loosened the normal classification guidelines. About 98 percent of the documents assembled by the Warren Commission were open by 1991, but 2 percent remain closed. Why? Has the government all along been hiding some piece of information that contradicts the Warren Report. In fact, according to knowledgeable sources, the 2 percent doesn't contradict the Warren Report; like the information omitted in 1964, it only helps to affirm Oswald's sole guilt. Among the 2 percent gathered by the commission is important information derived from signals intelligence and human intelligence sources.[dagger] After the assassination, as Helms says, the U.S. government's immediate inclination was to wonder if the Soviet and/or Cuban governments were somehow involved. The National Security Agency, which monitors communications, went into overdrive to decipher intercepts of conversations, cable traffic, radio and telephone communications at the highest levels of the Soviet and Cuban governments. Together with the information from human sources, the intercepts showed beyond any reasonable doubt that borth the Soviet and Cuban leaders were as shocked as anyone by the news from Dallas. "They were frightened," says one knowledgeable source; "we knew that." The intelligence community's ability to penetrate Castro's government was particularly impressive. Within days, it knew that Castro's public reaction (he was being interviewed by a French journalist when the news come) was a genuine one. Castro was aghast at the possibility of being blamed for the assassination. As important, the role these concepts undoubtedly played in the decisions by Helms and Robert Kennedy to withhold information from the commission staff cannot be overemphasized. If no link existed between Oswald and the Soviet and/or Cuban governments, the staff had absolutely no need to know of covert operations directed against Cuba, regardless of how relevant they were to Oswald's motivations. It was an institutionally convenient, and very human, act of denial and dismissal. The original act of disbelief, in other words, was committed by officials who disbelieved Oswald's capacity to comprehend the full extent of U.S. hostility toward Cuba. Anyone familiar with classification rules during the cold war will recognize why this information was and is deemed extraordinary sensitive. The N.S.A.'s capabilities and the methodology of its intercepts are among the most highly guarded of secrets; rightly or wrongly, information gleaned from intercepts is just as zealously protected on the ground that content inevitably reveals methodology. Even a long essay cannot capture all the naunces of the assassination. For that, interested readers should turn to the Warren Report itself, or Gerald Posner's Case Closed, which patiently debunks every canard subsequently posited about the assassination. Unfortunately, as admirable as his book is, Posner fails to integrate the assassination and its aftermath into history. He perpetuates the pattern of bifurcated books about the Kennedy years: those about the assassination on one side, those about the presidency on the other. His obligatory criticism of the Warren Commission includes no explanation of why the C.I.A. lied to that body, and no mention of Robert Kennedy's role. He misses a big point when he writes that the C.I.A. did not keep President Kennedy "fully informed about the assassination plots." The whole elaborate system of plausible deniability was geared to leave no evidence linking the President to such plots. The thread common to all three acts in this drama--the events leading up to and including the assassination, the Warren Commission's investigation and the aftermath--is clearly the cold war. Paul on that thread and primary mysteries unravel. Kennedy's pursuit of the cold war led him to embrace policies initiated under Eisenhower, including the extreme instrument of assassination, and Castro was pursued with demented vigor. Presidential decisions provoked actions, and actions led to consequences, not all anticipated and intended. Castro didn't ask for a champion, but one came unexpectedly in person of Lee Harvey Oswald, a bent personality consumed with ambition and political insight into how the cold war was being waged against Cuba. To Oswald, fair play ultimately meant subjecting Kennedy to the same dangers plaguing Castro. Afterward, the cold war provided the exigency for withholding pertinent information from the Warren Commission, creating a near-mortal wound to its credibility when Senator Church finally revealed that one arm of government had deceived another. And cold war classifications still keep secret thousands of documents that ultimately will prove only one thing: The Warren Commission got it right. Altogether, the cold war mindest created, then perpetuated, the ambulance between Kennedy and his assassin by always denying political coherence to Oswald. When the scales are righted, John F. Kennedy tragically emerges as a martyr after all-- a martyr to America's hubris, to its sense of omnipotence and immunity from consequences during the height of the cold war. The profound costs of the Soviet Union for waging the cold war are often noted, but equally penetrating assessments of the costs of the United States are hard to find. Once Kennedy's assassination is understood as another defining event in the cold war, it becomes remarkedly clearer that the costs to this country were not only economic. Every nation is sustained by its own myths, which may occasionally collide with reality. But when a nation is gripped by a myth so divorced from reality--when some 80 percent of Americans refuse to accept their own history--that myth is enfeebling, or worse. In this instance, Americans are encouraged to feel nostalgic for a past that never was, to wax dreamy about what might have been or to be paranoid about their own government. None of these is a rational or progressive basis for addressing problems at home and imaging a different leadership role for America in a new world. (*1) When Helms had to tell him in August 1963 of the C.I.A.'s involvement in a Mafia plot, McCone denounced assassination as a policy instrument. Helms didn't tell him that other plots were still afoot. (*2) Dulles, McCloy, Representative Hale Boggs, then-Representative Gerald Ford and Senator Richard Russell Knew in varying degrees about anti-Castro operations, and Dulles in addition knew that assassination had been attempted. But the commission staff was kept in the dark, and they were the ones who researched and wrote the Warren Report. References to withholding information from the commission should be understood as applying to the staff only. (*3) Because his veracity was not habitual, the agency was not then able to establish whether or not Nosenko was a bona fide defector; the F.B.I. believed he was. Today his bona fides are beyond doubt. His description of the K.G.B.'s attitude toward Oswald ("They didn't want him from day one") was confirmed in 1992 by Izvestia, which published a four-part series on Oswald based in part of his K.G.B. file. (*4) In a sudden flip-flop weeks before its release, the House report was rewritten to allegate that a fourth shot was fired, thus indicating a conspiracy. The acoustic evidence for this allegation was subsequently discredited by experts; thus all the new scientific and forensic tests commissioned by the Select Committee corroborated the Warren Report. [daggar] The 2 percent also includes the autopsy records, Secret Service methods, Oswald's tax records and some slanderous but relevant statements. Title: Thirty years on: Lee and Mom. (Lee Harvey Oswald and his mother)(Beat the Devil) (Column) Authors: Cockburn, Alexander Citation: The Nation, Nov 29, 1993 v257 n18 p647(1) ------------------------------------------------------------- People: Kennedy, John F._Assassination Reference #: A14699313 ============================================================= Abstract: The John F. Kennedy assassination is discussed, and a 1973 visit with Lee Harvey Oswald's mother, Marguerite, is described. It is possible that Lee Oswald shot the president to help relieve the pressure on Cuba and on Fidel Castro. If so, the assassination had the desired effect. ============================================================= Full Text COPYRIGHT The Nation Company Inc. 1993 Samori Marksman calls from WBAI in New York. He wishes me to attend "a special showing of Oliver Stone'e JFK in New York, and them participate in a round-table discussion." I tell him that I wouldn't cross the road outside my house in Humboldt Country, California, to participate in a round-table discussion of JFK, since we are not talking about logic here but religious faith. Marksman tries to lure me with the suggestion that I could discuss the prallels between the young J.F.K. as President and Bill Clinton. In fact here are parallels. Both were seen at equivalent stage of their tenure as performing poorly. but if Clinton were to be shot dead outside a McDonald's Hamburger Depository tomorrow, would he be lamented as the lost paladin of the Western world? Perhaps one day Lee Harvey Oswald be properly recognized as a leftist who come to the conclusion that the only way to relieve the pressure on Cuba and obstruct the attempts to murder Castro was killing President Kennedy. In this calcuation he was correct. A year and a half after the killing in Dallas, L.B.J. suspended the C.I.A.'s assassination bids. He privately denounced the "Murder Inc." that the Kennedys had been running in the Caribbean. Oswald's ambush was one of the few effective assassinations in the history of such enterprises. Too bad that this radical exponent of the propaganda of the deed should now be traduced by assassination buffs as a creature of the right, the pawn and tool of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. In 1973, for the tenth anniversary of the Kennedy assassination, the BBC commissioned me to interview all the "women of the assassination," starting wiht Jackie O. I exlained that it was unlikely Mrs. O. would accede to my requests for a tete-a-tete, and most of the others might also resist. In the end I interviewed Judge Sarah Hughes, who swore in L.B.J. on the plane back to Washington, and Oswald's mother, Marguerite. Mrs. Oswald told me on the phone that she would consent only to be photographed--three times, three exposures, that is, without changing posture, for a price of $100. A photographer called Bob flew out from London at the expense of the BBC. Like many press photographers, he talked tirelessly and grossly about sex. When we checked into the motel in dallas he addressed the woman behind the desk: "Say, where can we get some pussy in this town?" When we met Mrs. Oswald at her modest house in Fort Worth, Bob bowed low, kissed her hand and told her that the last person of such note he had captured on film was the Pope. He asked "as a privilege" whether he could make her portrait. He sounded lide a bishop saying his prayers. Marguerite was charmed. Bob took hundreds of shots, in scores of poses. I interviewed her at length. Money was not mentioned. Then Bob suggested some exterior shots. Mrs Oswald brigntened. "The neighbors on my disguise, like when I go out researching. "The neighbors won't like it, but what the hell. I like you boys. I'll put on my disguise, like when I go out researching. My Jackie Kennedy disguise, with the head scarf." She was hefty. Her second husband had divorced her, saying she used to knock him about. Her third husband, Lee's father, died in 1964. Marguerite herself passed on in 1981. The next day Bab suggested we stake out Marina Oswald and then confront her with camera and notebook. But I'd had enough. We flew back to New York, Passing over Memphis, where, Bab advised me, there was "great pussy" for those who knew the ropes. Title: Big Dealey: Dallas - postcard. (Third Assassination Symposium on John F. Kennedy) Authors: Smith, Doug Citation: The New Republic, Dec 13, 1993 v209 n24 p11(2) ------------------------------------------------------------- Subjects: Assassination in mass media_Texas Assassination Symposium on John F. Kennedy_1993 People: Kennedy, John F._Assassination; Mailer, Norman_Addresses, essays, lectures Reference #: A14743067 ============================================================= Abstract: The conference keynote speaker, Norman Mailer, gently suggested that Americans need to think Lee Harvey Oswald was a conspirator. The Dallas media ignored the gathering, which featured many detailed seminars on assassination evidence. ============================================================= Full Text COPYRIGHT The New Republic Inc. 1993 You don't need a calendar to know when it's late November in Dallas. Dealey Plaza, the city's only tourist attraction, fills up with those who come to mourn. The Hyatt Regency, home to the Third Assassination Symposium on John F. Kennedy (ask), fills up with those who come to investigate. I attended the first ask convention and it left me seeing my hometown as a sinister, gloomy landscape peppered with unknown men carrying half-hidden rifles in their raincoats, flashing false Secret Service and cia i.d.s--a City of Shadows in which lurk (all safely out of range) beady-eyed Mafia thugs, rogue agents, Cuban counterspies, crooked policemen, Dan Rather and Richard Nixon. This year's ask, however, left a different impression. Despite continued foot-dragging by the various federal agencies in complying with the 1992 Assassination Materials Review Act, the "Who Killed jfk?" controversy has moved up a couple of notches in texture and density. Oliver Stone's scattershot "everybody did it" approach is being supplanted by a general field theory in which, well, the mob did it, but nobody else was sure that they themselves didn't do it because they did do damned near everything else. There's no question that the subject attracts its fair share of kooks, but most of those couldn't afford the conference's $175 admission price. The Hyatt lobby was populated primarily by sober-looking professional types in suits, with a smattering of liberals in sweaters and eyeglasses, cowboys in blue jeans, housewives, hippies and computer geeks. What a surprise this assemblage must have been to the media vampires, who have so stoutly embraced Gerald Posner's Case Closed, which makes conspiracy theorists look like well-meaning loons. The newspeople didn't let facts get in their way, though. The Dallas Observer treated ask condescendingly, as if it were a "Star Trek" convention; The Dallas Morning News reported only on the concessions room. Although something like 80 percent of the American public thinks there was a conspiracy, only a few journalists want to admit to having been fooled. Channel 8 News in Dallas didn't mention the symposium, with its array of forensic experts, eyewitnesses, etc., but it did do a nice report on the all-American grandfatherly convention of Dallas press boys who covered the assassination the right way, without any of those prickly questions. At the seminars--Intelligence Community & Defectors Panel; Oswald in Mexico City; New Leads and Revelations; A Celebration of the Women's Contributions-- there were some impassioned outbursts, directed as frequently at rival researchers as at Warren Commission apologists. Alas, no chair-throwing. Most of the sessions involved interminable descriptions of evidential minutiae, most of it valid if somewhat trance-inducing. One heard phrases like "how much blood was dripping through the sheets, that's the discrepancy." It's a weird jargon, with assassination buzzwords such as "wcr" (Warren Commission Report), "mgt" (Multiple German Theory) and "sbt" (Single-Bullet Theory). There was more nitpicking over the details of head injuries here than one finds at most conventions. Where else would you find people arguing over the precise angle at which a flap of ruined skin and cranium was dangling in what frame of which home movie? One is also treated to the presence of the surviving witnesses, the "royalty" of the symposium, sounding like they have told their stories a million times. And many tend to talk as if everybody has always lived in Dealey Plaza his or her whole life; its geography has the familiarity of a shared home in their conversations. The witnesses, participants, victims, agents and mystery characters sometimes sound like old friends at a high school reunion. In his keynote address, Norman Mailer, who is researching a new book on the assassination, suggested that Oswald might have been too crazy to have been employed by the cia, fbi or the Russians--but, because those agencies were so culpable of so many other crimes, and a full investigation of Oswald would have opened up such a can of worms, the lone nut theory had to be etched in stone. (Immediately after Mailer's speech, a total stranger approached me to assure me that Mailer must be a paid dupe of the cia.) In other words, documents were hidden away because the feds weren't sure they weren't guilty. The establishment feared the worst--that Oswald might be traced to them. They didn't know, and they didn't want to know. Mailer admitted this was an "answer" he didn't want to find. We demand a conspiracy, he said, because we're angry, and we have been manipulated. He scolded the conspiratorialists (his term) for cutting corners to serve preconceived theses. "You've all been intoxicated by the combination of vertigo and fog that accompanies study of the conspiracies." The assassination is mostly questions and few answers, he went on, but some questions are better than others--and some researchers have lost sight of that, chasing clues that lead nowhere. To Mailer, Stone's movie jfk was great but wrong; a conspiracy so all-encompassing could not possibly have been kept secret. The movie offered the paradigm, not the solution. Stone mislabeled it as history, Mailer says; it's instead a treatment of "the great paranoid myth of our times," the great myth that forced Americans into either apathy or paranoia. Even compared to Pearl Harbor and Hiroshima, the assassination is the largest event, the mystery that forced us to decide whether life was simply absurd, or outright evil. It doesn't matter that Stone's "facts" are flawed, or that he overshot the mark, Mailer said, because there is no "accurate" version possible. Mailer's thesis made a lot of sense--not that it can't be shot down, too. Whereas he thinks Oswald may have been too crazy to be used by the fbi, cia, etc., plenty of ex-agents will tell you that's practically a prerequisite for lower-level tools like Oswald. Moreover, Mailer didn't benefit from the new, unpublished information disclosed on the last day of the symposium by researchers Lamar Waldron and Thom Hartmann, who presented evidence that Oswald, while being used as "bait" for the kgb by the feds, was in fact a patsy for the organized crime syndicates that had jfk killed (by two other gunmen) in revenge. Mailer is right about one thing: we want a conspiracy. We don't trust the government, and nothing would make us happier than to see the bastards raked over the coals. As Robert Groden, the author of High Treason, pointed out, the Zapruder film makes us all witnesses to the assassination. If there's an answer, it won't come from the feds or the media; we'll have to find it ourselves. Title: A rivalry that wrote U.S. history. (John F. Kennedy and Richard M. Nixon) (column) Authors: Matthews, Christopher Citation: U.S. News & World Report, Dec 15, 1986 v101 p15(1) ------------------------------------------------------------- Subjects: Politics, Practical_Social aspects Campaigns, Political_Case studies Politicians_Case studies Presidents_History United States history_1945- People: Kennedy, John F._Political activity; Nixon, Richard M._Political activity Reference #: A4550839 ============================================================= Full Text COPYRIGHT U.S. News and World Report Inc. 1986 A rivalry that wrote U.S. history In her new book, Pat Nixon: The Untold Story, Julie Nixon Eisenhower gives us a rare glimpse of her father's personal regard for his longtime rival, John F. Kennedy. She recounts the secret White House evening in 1971 that the Kennedy family came to visit. The occasion was a private unveiling of Jacqueline Onassis' portrait on the White House diplomatic floor. It was the Kennedys' first return since the weeks after Dallas. It was Richard Nixon's chance to share one brief shining moment with the survivors of Camelot. The President's daughter tells how her father took his old rival's children for a walk to the Oval Office, where they so often played. She describes how the others held back and let the President take the Kennedys into his office alone. They knew what the moment meant. We don't think of these men on a human level because it is their political rivalry that has marked the course of postwar America. It's not just the parts they played but the story they wrote. Vietnam, surely the era's most searing event, is a case in point. In '54, it was Vice President Nixon beating the drum for sending U.S. reinforcements to the beleaguered French at Dien Bien Phu. Senator Kennedy seemed to sense the trap. "We are [entering] the jungle to do battle with the lion.' His perspicacity did little good in the end. While slipping past Nixon in the 1960 presidential election, Kennedy had been tagged hard on the issue of Communist aggression in Asia. When his opponent raised the need for a tough U.S. containment policy toward the mainland Chinese, Kennedy had flinched. As President, he was again forced to the defensive by Soviet pressure in Laos, Cuba, the Congo and by a right wing that did not believe him tough enough. By 1963, America was in Vietnam. Five years later, Nixon returned to pick up the pieces. Ironically, it was an earlier war in Asia that brought both men into politics. Forty years ago, a reception was held in Washington for new congressmen just back from the service. One honoree was Representative John F. Kennedy (D-Mass.), who had rescued the crew after his PT boat had been rammed and sunk by an enemy destroyer. Thanks to his wealthy, well-connected father, everyone in America knew about the hero of PT-109. Yet it was another veteran of the Pacific who had stolen the recent headlines. Representative Richard Nixon (R-Calif.) had pulled the year's big political upset, defeating the prominent New Dealer Jerry Voorhis. It was Kennedy aide Billy Sutton who first spotted Nixon across the room and brought the two men together for the first time. "I've read about you. You're the guy who beat Jerry Voorhis,' Kennedy began. "How does it feel?' "Well, I guess I'm elated,' said the man never renowned for small talk. Nixon was then 33; Kennedy not quite 30. Within the month, the two found themselves on the same committee, Education and Labor, "like a pair of unmatched bookends,' Nixon recalled. But their first real competition was in catching Communists. It was Kennedy who drew first blood. Only a few months after taking office, he caught a labor leader lying under oath, denying he took signals from Moscow. It was Kennedy who hit him with a perjury motion. Nixon had a bigger fish to fry: Alger Hiss. He not only won the case, but it propelled him to the Senate in 1950. His opponent was the liberal Helen Gahagan Douglas, who, as JFK put it, was "not the sort . . . I'd like working with me on committees.' Nixon apparently was. During the campaign, Kennedy stopped by with a $1,000 check from his father. It was Nixon's graduation to the Senate, Sutton said, that shook Kennedy from the easy allure of congressional bachelorhood. "It gave him the initiative to go for the Senate himself. It was time . . . to go ahead.' But Nixon's selection in 1952 as Ike's running mate and probable successor altered the mix, putting him directly in JFK's path--the ultimate obstacle to the Presidency. As Adlai Stevenson prepared to campaign in Massachusetts, he was handed a memo by Sargent Shriver. "This anti-Communist thing is big up there.' Stevenson was told to give Kennedy, not Nixon, credit as premier Communist catcher. Then, in 1960, came the campaign itself, the Great Debates and Kennedy charisma. A televised memory remains of a desperate Nixon standing trench-coated in the rain. "You know, it's not Jack's money they're going to be spending,' he implored the crowd. "It's your money.' Even Dallas did not end the rivalry. Nixon speech writer Ray Price recalls that his boss liked Kennedy, even admired him. To Price, it was not JFK the man who haunted the White House. "The ghost that disturbed [Nixon's] nights was less that of Kennedy himself than it was of Camelot.' The 100th Congress soon arrives in Washington. Like college freshmen moving into empty dormitories, the newcomers will face the perils of orientation. Yesterday, they were hometown hotshots. Now they will be among peers. Even as they claim their room keys, they will begin taking each other's measure. Alliances will be struck, not in so many words, but in the towel snapping of young competitors playing the same game. And before long, there will be rivalries, the kind that drive some people to the top and have a way of defining the country's future. Photo: After '60 election: Later, the loser admired the winner Title: 'The best and worst of presidents.' (opinions of Stephen Ambrose) (interview) Citation: U.S. News & World Report, May 4, 1987 v102 p67(2) ------------------------------------------------------------- Subjects: Historians_Interviews Ex-presidents_Evaluation People: Eisenhower, Dwight D._Evaluation; Kennedy, John F._Evaluation; Ambrose, Stephen_Interviews; Nixon, Richard M._Evaluation Reference #: A4787681 ============================================================= Full Text COPYRIGHT U.S. News and World Report Inc. 1987 "The best and worst of Presidents' From his election to Congress fromCalifornia in 1946 to his resignation from the Presidency in 1974, Richard Nixon was vilified and lionized--and he still provokes controversy. Stephen Ambrose, who just published Nixon: The Education of a Politician, 1913-1962--the first volume of a two-part biography--is also the author of a biography of Dwight Eisenhower in two volumes. He discussed Nixon's career with Senior Editor Alvin P. Sanoff. Richard Nixon is full ofwonderful contradictions. He spent his career in a profession in which the vast majority of participants are gregarious. But Nixon doesn't like or trust people and doesn't have a close friend. He did a series of interviews in 1959 with columnist Joe Alsop and said, "In my job, you can't afford to have friends; you can never afford to open yourself up.' At one time or another hecame down squarely on both sides of nearly every issue. He attacked executive privilege in the Alger Hiss case--and then in Watergate he was its greatest defender. He led the argument against recognition of Red China--and then as President he did a complete turnaround. He was Lyndon Johnson's chief critic on Vietnam, calling for a much greater effort--and then as President he took us out. Nixon would argue that hewas pragmatic enough to change with the times. Critics say he simply did whatever it took to get into power. Nixon reminds me of the opening lines of A Tale of Two Cities: He was the best of Presidents; he was the worst of Presidents. But his reputation in history is going to go up and up--with the opening to China and his extraction of the U.S. from Vietnam considered among his greatest accomplishments. All our Presidents start to look better after we've lived with their successors, and we have reached a point where you hear increasingly of nostalgia for Nixon. On civil rights Whatever Nixon's inconsistencies, hewas consistent on a few issues--most notably, civil rights. Long before civil rights became a powerful political force, he was foursquare for it to the point that, in 1956, Martin Luther King, Jr., and Ralph Abernathy told him, "We voted the Republican ticket because you're on it.' His record on the issue was much better than that of any other contender for national office in that decade. I believe Nixon's support for civilrights reflects his Quaker upbringing and his growing up in a community with many Mexican Americans and a number of blacks. He went to school with them, and he just didn't have any racism in him. But Nixon being Nixon, he couldn't make the case on moral grounds; he had to find pragmatic justification and did so by pointing out that racism cost us influence in the Third World. On the 1960 campaign It's ironic that Jack Kennedy, whonever worked a day in the private sector, convinced millions of people that he was a friend of the common man. Nixon, who had worked at manual labor for his survival until he got his law degree, impressed everyone as a candidate of the rich and the well-off, who didn't care anything for the common man. In his own way, Nixon did have a lotof feeling for the common man. For years he'd get up at 4 in the morning, go to Los Angeles, pick up fruits and vegetables, bring them back to his father's grocery in Whittier and set them up. He once said that he never could go by a fruit stand without feeling sorry for the guy who had to pull the rotten apples out of the barrel. On Eisenhower Nixon and Eisenhower hadan ambiguous, complex relationship. Eisenhower knew that Nixon provided him with a link to the right wing of the Republican Party--bringing access to campaign funds and workers. Nixon was also exemplary at the time of Ike's heart attack, handling a delicate situation much better than did Alexander Haig in a somewhat analogous circumstance when Reagan was shot. But Ike thought Nixon wasthere to be used, not appreciated. Ike always regretted Nixon's partisanship; yet he was quite cynical and insincere about this. Every single election year he would tell Nixon to go after the Democrats and then midway in the campaign call him in and tell him that he had gone too far. Nixon would be chastised; then Ike would end up telling him to go after the Democrats again. He put Nixon in a can't-win situation. Nixon's style was never Eisenhower's.There was the dissimilarity of backgrounds--the professional soldier and the professional politician--but the heart of the whole thing was Nixon's partisanship. You had the least partisan of our modern Presidents in office with the most partisan Vice President. Ike also fretted that Nixon didn'thave experience running a big institution. He thought this was a shortcoming in his preparation for the top job and wanted very much for Nixon to get administrative experience. In 1956, Ike suggested that he move over to Secretary of Defense. Nixon resisted with all his might because he thought that Ike was trying to do to him what Franklin Roosevelt had done to Henry Wallace. But Ike thought going into the Defense Department was the best thing Nixon could do to prepare himself for the Presidency. Ike proved to be right. Nixon's big weakness as Presidentwas that he did not know how to administer government. He was what Lyndon Johnson said he was--a chronic campaigner: He knew how to get elected but not how to govern. His administration was replete with crossed purposes and people keeping secrets from each other. All this sounds terribly modern, but nothing like Watergate could have happened with a well-run staff whose members met regularly and informed one another of what they were doing. On writing about Nixon I like Nixon more now than when Istarted the biography. I've come to have an appreciation of him not unmixed with many of the feelings I had when he was an active politician and I was a Nixon hater. Now I see him do things, chuckle and say, "Go get 'em, Dick!' He's got a couple of famous traits.One is saying he's going to make everything "perfectly clear.' Every time he says that, he makes things more opaque than ever--and that's his intent. He also often denies that he has said what everyone has just heard him utter. In the 1960 campaign, he said: "Look, in this century this country has been at war three times, and all three times the Democrats were in power. A Republican President has never started a war. Now, I'm not saying that the Democrats are the war party.' Nixon had the best memory of anymodern President and the best ability to absorb facts and keep them in his head. So whenever a situation presented itself, he had input from a jillion different directions. There was a lovely complexity of motives in every decision he made. Photo: Leaving the White House after Watergate. Nixon "knew howto get elected but not how to govern,' says Ambrose Photo: From 1952 on, Eisenhower used Nixonto attack the Democrats Title: Shrinking the Oval Office. (history of the presidency since WWII) Authors: Elfin, Mel Citation: U.S. News & World Report, Dec 7, 1987 v103 n23 p26(4) ------------------------------------------------------------- Subjects: Executive power_History Presidents_Powers and duties Television and politics_Analysis People: Carter, Jimmy_Evaluation; Kennedy, John F._Evaluation; Nixon, Richard M._Evaluation; Reagan, Ronald_Evaluation; Truman, Harry S._Evaluation; Johnson, Lyndon B._Evaluation Reference #: A6135097 ============================================================= Full Text COPYRIGHT U.S. News and World Report Inc. 1987 Shrinking the Oval Office The life cycle of the American Presidency ordinarily resembles the life cycle of the American male. In midpassage, both become out of breath, out of time and out of sorts. Somehow the Reagan Presidency managed to skip the midlife crisis. Instead, it went directly from its prime to its dotage. Ronald Reagan, of all people in Washington, should have realized an essential truth about the Presidency: Second terms in the White House, like movie sequels in Hollywood, rarely are as good as the original. For the passionate veterans who followed him on the Long March from Sacramento, the symptoms of second-term sclerosis--Bork, Ginsburg, the Twin Deficits and Iran-Contra --must evoke a special poignancy. For in the aftermath of the 1984 electoral landslide, many truly believed the second term would bring final, if belated, victory for deep-in-my-heart conservatism. So far, however, the concluding chapters of the Reagan Presidency have brought not triumph, but embarrassment; not prayer in the schools or a return to the gold standard, but a White House run by that devout pragmatist, Howard Baker; a tax program worthy of Nelson Rockefeller, and a Soviet policy engineered, heaven forbid, by George Shultz. Little wonder those whose ideological landscape is bound by Darwinian economics on one side and Weinbergerian Angst on the other ask: "Who lost Ronald Reagan?' Aura vs. substance The answer is no one. The truth of late-20th-century American politics is that the disparity between presidential aspirations and presidential achievements involves less the policies, personalities or performance of individual Chief Executives than it does the changing nature of the office itself. During the past two decades, the American Presidency has become trapped between television, which exaggerates the aura of the President's power, and post-Vietnam, post-Watergate anxieties, which erode the substance of that power. In short, it is a time when Presidents are expected to do more but are given the authority to do less. No doubt, the most potentially awesome of the President's powers--the power to inspire --remains unimpaired and, indeed, has been enhanced by a technology that can reach deep into the obscure crevasses of the nation. At the appropriate moment, and under the appropriate circumstances, even the most personally uninspiring of Chief Executives can alter a national mood, as Lyndon Johnson did so dramatically in the grieving aftermath of the Kennedy assassination, when he proclaimed, "Let us continue.' But it was John Kennedy himself who helped transform the President from constitutional chief of state and sometime folk hero into a mythic superstar whose televised image more closely approaches those of Rambo, Redford and Mother Teresa than it does any of the sculpted heads on Mount Rushmore. Since JFK brought new meaning to the word "telegenic,' every White House staff has recognized the extraordinary reach of the "Electronic Presidency,' but not until Michael Deaver, the now departed and much troubled former Reagan family retainer and presidential aide, choreographed the first Reagan term with such Balanchine brilliance had anyone exploited its full potential. Deaver realized that what matters on television are visual images, not verbal content. The White House is a visual story. The Congress, the Supreme Court and the cabinet are not. As a result, the TV paparazzi fixate on the President, pursuing the minutiae of his days and the detritus of his thoughts so relentlessly that the resulting picture of the political process only occasionally approximates constitutional truth. In the era of the Electronic Presidency, the three branches of government are no longer equal. To the viewing public, the White House has become altogether synonymous with the government. But if television obsessively focuses on the Presidency, the President, in turn, often focuses obsessively on television. Jimmy Carter, for example, tended to use TV the way some doctors prescribe aspirin--as a cure for almost everything. Television gave Carter a pulpit from which to preach to a national congregation, often in order to reach over the heads of the Congress. Unhappily for that most deeply religious of Presidents, the electorate not only was uninspired by his sermonizing but the Congress resented his end runs to the public. Yet tlevision presents a still greater danger to the Presidency. As GOP consultant Doug Bailey explains: "The expectations the President creates on TV one day, unfortunately, can be easily disappointed the next.' What kind of expectations? In letters often addressed simply to "Ronnie, c/o The White House, Washington, D.C.,' each year more and more citizens importune the President the way they might importune Ann Landers or a rich relative. For example, presidential pen pals have asked "Ronnie' for a $10,000 loan ("Hope to hear from you soon'); rare additions to a teenager's beer can collection ("You get to more places than I do') and even to help save a faltering marriage ("My wife has now left me and the children'). Surely, the dispensing of political favors is one of the world's older professions, but because TV has made the President an almost nightly presence in America's living rooms, never before have so many sought so much from someone so singularly ill-equipped to save marriages, lend money or discover exotic brands of beer. Explains former Carter adviser Stuart Eizenstat, now a Washington lawyer: "People interpret a President's access to the media as meaning he has far greater influence than he actually has.' Needed now: "A vision' Television also gives presidential speech writers the same impression, and the result is even more rarefied expectations. Once it was enough for a White House candidate to have a coherent platform and/or a catchy campaign slogan. Harry Truman, for instance, gave 'em hell, promised a "Fair Deal' and then ambushed Tom Dewey on Election Day. That no longer suffices. The modern President needs a syntax that goes well beyond mere sloganeering--he needs "a vision.' Truman, who managed to convey his aspirations for the nation in the most basic--and salty--Missouri patois, probably thought a "vision' was something you got at Lourdes or at the optician in downtown Independence. But that was before political speech writers decided the Electronic Presidency required an elegance of phrase to warm up the coolness of the TV screens. So, LBJ simply didn't promise a new era of moral and social justice; he set out to create a "Great Society,' Richard Nixon told the country it needed "the life of a driving dream'--whatever that meant--and Ronald Reagan, misquoting Puritan elder John Winthrop, contemplated making Washington "a shining city on a hill.' No President, of course, was ever impeached for committing rhetorical excess in public; yet lofty language, however vague, tends to create lofty--and unfulfillable--expectations about the Chief Executive's influence on the affairs of state. "Despite TV's aura of power,' says Eizenstat, "the President still can't bring world peace overnight; he can't wipe away inflation or unemployment and he can't immediately get his program through Congress.' Similarly, no degree of fireside chatting will enable a President to buck a public that holds strong and firm opinions, as Carter learned when he tried to raise capital-gains taxes in 1978, or as Reagan did in the Bork-confirmation fight. In truth, the rise of the Electronic Presidency has tended to obscure the fact that the White House has been the big loser in the zero-sum game of Power-in-Washington. The tumultuous 1960s and early 1970s further weakened an institution that, as Richard Neustadt pointed out in his classic treatise on the Presidency, was never a model of managerial efficiency. Ever since 1974, Congress consistently has nibbled away at White House prerogatives, imposing new restraints on what had been singular presidential powers both at home and abroad. But while the President was being treated like a political version of Clark Kent on Capitol Hill, TV was remaking his image into "Superpol' who seemingly could leap tall buildings in a single bound. Where the real power rests The fact is Paul Volcker never made the evening news nearly as often as Ronald Reagan, but the then chairman of the Federal Reserve had as much, if not more, power to shape the economy as did the President. In the long run, so, too, do America's collective corporate and union chieftains, its research scientists and its many entrepreneurs from Silicon Valley to Wall Street. For all the President's specific and implied powers, recent history is jampacked with examples of Chief Executives who tried--and failed--to cajole reluctant private interests to bend to both the presidential and public interest. Moreover, as the domestic economy has grown intricately entwined with the rest of the world, presidential power has slipped further still--witness all the cajolery that has been heating up the international phone lines between Washington and Bonn and Tokyo since October 19. When confronted by fundamental economic, social and demographic movements whose time has come, the President can no more resist history's tides than King Canute could have turned back the sea. And if the President is reduced to working at margins at home, he must feel like Richard Nixon's "pitiful, helpless giant' when he considers America's problems beyond the continental shelves. Before Ronald Reagan's election as the so-called leader of the free world, he scroned the wimpishness of some of his predecessors. But for all the Clint Eastwood rhetoric, the President often has been forced by economic and diplomatic realities to behave with Mr. Peepers restraint. All in all, the White House has become a place where, in the words of Reagan's ousted chief of staff, Donald Regan, "situations are imposed upon the President,' not the other way round. History is not like a personal computer. Even a President with approval ratings as high as Bill Cosby's can't "undo' the Panama Canal treaties, Chinese normalization, food stamps, school busing and affirmative action or change the orientation of the Supreme Court simply by pressing the "delete' button. The Presidency is a 200-year-old continuity, not a quadrennial clean slate. By the same measure, even if a McGovern-like Democrat wins the White House next year, he will no more be able to bring back the 1960s than the Reaganauts were able to re-create the 1950s. What the next President should be able to do--and apparently what the public would like him to do--is to govern with competence. After two terms of the Great Communicator, the electorate seems in a mood for a Great Administrator, someone who can control the baser political instincts of his staff, arbitrate the squabbling of his cabinet and manage a Capitol Hill agenda with pokerplayer skill, knowing when to raise and when to fold. Necessarily, all that requires Washington experience, and it is no accident that most of the dozen candidates who would be President are "insiders' who can find their way down Pennsylvania Avenue without a D.C. street map. Unlike recent elections, the candidates in this campaign probably won't be fulminating about Washington like revivalists fulminating about Sodom and Gomorrah. Ironically, while the American people profess faith in a democratic Presidency, most find it hard to accept that the President is just like everyone else. They want to believe there really is a Great Wizard controlling events in the Oval Office, not just a latter-day Frank Morgan pumping smoke and rolling thunder drums. Unfortunately, Great Wizards never seem to make it past the New Hampshire primary. So the President pumps smoke, rolls the drums and prays no one discovers his secret: He really is just like everyone else. An evening at the White House That was brought home to me rather vividly back one summer evening in 1967, when I sat in the White House listening to Lyndon Johnson explain to me why he was right and then Michigan Governor George Romney was wrong about the imposition of military force to quell the Detroit race riots. After almost an hour and a half in which the President put the White House case in exquisite detail, LBJ, who exercised political power with the same dedication that some people exercise Nautilus machines, turned a baleful Texas eye in my direction and complained: "Ah've got Vietnam. Ah've got riots in the streets. Ah've got those [expletive deleted] on Capitol Hill. Why did ah have to get into a [expletive deleted] match with that Romney fellow?' LBJ, of course, was not above serving a little whine to gain the sympathy of a young journalist. But when I finally left the White House that evening, it suddenly struck me that Lyndon Johnson, who, if he were so inclined, could have ordered World War III for breakfast, had had to spend most of his day in an unexpected and unproductive political squabble. In the end, it came down to this: The President of the United States, the single most powerful man on earth, is as much hostage to fortune in the conduct of our public affairs as his average constituent is in the conduct of his private life. With the U.S. Constitution now entering its third century, whatever it was the Founding Fathers had in mind, the modern Presidency clearly is not it. Their taste in government ran mostly toward Bork-like strict constructionism and their taste in men was a bit more patrician than the representative sampling of human frailty that has been on display at the White House in recent years. Nevertheless, the most remarkable aspect of the American Presidency is not its obvious failures, but its underrated successes. If, for example, Lyndon Johnson was a crude frontier politician who raised the stakes in Vietnam to an unbearable level, he also produced medicare and medicaid and made the White House a moral command post in the civil-rights revolution. If Richard Nixon's insecurities transformed the Watergate from an apartment-office complex into a synonym for political disgrace, he also opened the door to China and negotiated the first nuclear-arms-reduction agreement with Moscow. If, as LBJ said, Gerald Ford couldn't walk and chew gum at the same time, he still managed to end the long national nightmare of Watergate. If Jimmy Carter was a luckless as well as hopeless politician, he still pursued the Camp David peace accords when most everyone else suggested he not even try. And if Ronald Reagan seems to know only as much about the processes of government as he can glean from staff-prepared index cards, he still has made the nation feel that it is once again morning in America. The Presidency, built upon Jeffersonian bedrock and graced by Hamiltonian majesty, ranks as one of the Constitution's most imitated creations. What emerged from all the bickering that hot summer in Philadelphia in 1787 endures as an office suited not alone to the well-born, well-bred and well-heeled, but to all manner of men and, hopefully in the future, women. True, it suffers from excessive hype, hoopla and a distressing combination of raised expectations and diminished powers. Yet the American Presidency, despite its limitations, remains a vibrant stage for democracy, one that rewards success, tolerates failure, encourages growth and, after 200 years of evolution, is still redolent with possibility. Not unlike America itself. Photo: KENNEDY MEETS THE PRESS With his charm and good looks, John Kennedy gave new meaning to the word "telegenic' and helped to create the "Electronic Presidency.' The question now, however, is whether there is too much emphasis on presidential communications and not enough on presidential competence. Photo: PRESIDENTS MEET AT WHITE HOUSE In the aftermath of Vietnam and Watergate, Congress nibbled away at what once were considered presidential prerogatives. But while Congress was treating the President like Clark Kent, TV was building him into a "Superpol.' Photo: HARRY TRUMAN ON CAMPAIGN TRAIL He "gave 'em hell,' promised the voters a "Fair Deal,' ambushed Tom Dewey on Election Day, and probably thought a "vision' was something you got at Lourdes or the optician. Photo: NIXON TOASTING CHOU IN CHINA Richard Nixon, who made the Watergate development a symbol of disgrace, also created the dramatic opening to China in 1972. He is one of the best examples of an essential truth about the Presidency: Its underrated successes are more remarkable than its obvious failures. Photo: LBJ GREETS VIETNAM TROOPS Such are the powers of the Presidency that, if he had been so inclined, LBJ could have ordered World War III for breakfast. But such is the role of luck in the conduct of our national affairs that even the President is as much a hostage to fortune as is his average constituent. Photo: JIMMY CARTER IN A FIRESIDE CHAT TV gave the most deeply religious of U.S. Presidents a pulpit from which to preach to a national congregation, often over the heads of Congress. But the electorate was uninspired by his sermons, and Congress resented the end runs. Title: Trying to go all the way with JFK. (Michael Dukakis) (column) Authors: Kramer, Michael Citation: U.S. News & World Report, Oct 3, 1988 v105 n13 p21(1) ------------------------------------------------------------- Subjects: Presidential candidates_Military policy People: Dukakis, Michael S._Military policy; Kennedy, John F._Influence Reference #: A6670652 ============================================================= Full Text COPYRIGHT U.S. News and World Report Inc. 1988 Here is Michael Dukakis being tough: "We are united in our commitment to a strong and credible and effective nuclear deterrent. [We want a] strong, well-equipped, well-trained America that isn't No. 2 or No. 5 or No. 7, but is No. l." Sound familiar? It should. In 1960, John Kennedy said: "Let us make certain . . . we will have in fact as well as word a military establishment not only second to none, but first period. I mean first in military power across the board." Nineteen-sixty has become an interesting historical analogue to this year's presidential campaign because both Dukakis and George Bush want the nation to see them as JFK. Each is scared to death that someone might think him soft on defense and foreign policy. Each borrows freely from Kennedy's muscular rhetoric to prove his machismo. Dukakis so dreads the "Mr. Softy" tag that he has recently issued his own list of most-favored-weapons systems and even agreed to inane stunts like riding in tanks. (Doesn't he look like Mad magazine's Alfred E. Neuman in that M1?) But in this phony battle, Bush begins with a distinct advantage, gilt by association, cleverly exploited to the hilt. Not even Kennedy could match Ronald Reagan's ardent anti-Communism. Today, however, we are witnessing a grand historical switch. Back in 1960, the incumbent Vice President, Richard Nixon, cleaved to the line of his immensely popular chief, Dwight Eisenhower, and told the nation not to worry. Then as now the debate raged around "sufficiency vs. supremacy" argument that has dominated geostrategic discussions since the end of World War II, and it was the challenger, Kennedy, who sought to scare us. As concerned then with "toughness" as Dukakis is today, Kennedy invented a fictitious "missile gap," declared it unacceptable and took off from there. "Nor is containment . . . adequate," said Kennedy. "We must move forward to meet Communism, rather than waiting for it to come to us and then reacting to it." This, of course, was a call to advance. Holding Communists at bay wouldn't do. They had to be rolled back. Today, a similar policy is known as the Reagan Doctrine. The echoes of Ike. Before his early lead evaporated, Dukakis didn't mask his distaste for increased military spending. "We can already obliterate the Soviets 10 times over," said Dukakis late last year. "How much more do we need?" The echo was clear, and it wasn't Kennedy; it was Eisenhower, "What you want," Ike said almost 30 years ago, "is enough, a thing that is adequate. A deterrent has no added power once it has become completely adequate." The real test, Eisenhower said, "is to provide security in a way that effectively deters aggression and does not itself weaken the values and institutions we seek to defend. This demands the most careful calculations and balance, as well as steadfastness of purpose, not to be disturbed by any noisy trumpeting." That was an argument worth of discussion at the highest level. Today, we rarely get anything but noisy trumpeting. A search for "standing." With Bush virtually home free on the "toughness" issue, it's Dukakis who has a problem. As a nation, we want to be No. 1. We believe we can be; we believe we should be. Only a person of impeccable military credentials can convince us that sufficiency is sufficient. And then, only if he has proved his willingness to use the force he has deemed adequate. Ike could do it. Dukakis lacks what lawyers call "standing." What's more, Dukakis still doesn't seem to get it. Shortly after trotting out his litany of acceptable tools of war, Dukakis reportedly told an aide "There, I've done it. What more do they want?" That's easy. "They" want proof of what Ike called "steadfastness of purpose," some credible indication that the use of force isn't anathema to him, a tall order given Dukakis's qualms about the Grenada invasion, the Libyan bombing and America's unilateral action in the Persian Gulf. O.K., said Dukakis recently, you want an example. Here's one. Rather than make deals with terrorists, I would use military force against them; I would strike at their base camps. Sounds good, right? But then you get to thinking that terrorists aren't dumb. They normally do not hang out in remote locations waiting to be hit. They hide among innocent civilians, a fact the Joint Chiefs acknowledged when they rejected a 1985 plan to launch cruise missiles at a Beirut meeting site of Lebanese and Iranian terrorist leaders. O.K., says the Dukakis campaign staff. You want more, something "generally reflective" of the candidate's views. Read Graham Allison's "Testing Gorbachev" in the current issue of Foreign Affairs. There, Dean Allison of Harvard's John F. Kennedy School of Government sets out a series of "challenges" to "test" Moscow's supposedly softer line. Among them is one that can only be interpreted as a trade, an end to American support for the Contras in exchange for a cessation of Soviet-bloc assistance to the Sandinistas and a Nicaraguan promise to forgo "all material support for insurgency movements." But Allison's candidate favors abandoning the Contras unilaterally. Obviously, this is one of those areas where an adviser's views are not "generally reflective" of the candidate's thinking. Incoherence, then, is a great part of Dukakis's problem. There are two ways out, He can play Kennedy and try to match Bush's tough-guy talk. Or, Ike-like, he can tell us what he really thinks, that America is strong enough as is. The latter would permit him to sleep more comfortably at night, although perhaps not in the White House. Title: Idealism's rebirth. (JFK: 25 Years Later special section) Authors: Moore, Thomas Citation: U.S. News & World Report, Oct 24, 1988 v105 n16 p37(3) ------------------------------------------------------------- Subjects: Idealism, American_Analysis College students_Attitudes Voluntarism_Analysis People: Kennedy, John F._Attitudes Reference #: A6722910 ============================================================= Full Text COPYRIGHT U.S. News and World Report Inc. 1988 The concluding note to John Kennedy's inaugural address still rings bells more than a quarter-century later, but it no longer resonates clearly. At the end of the sleepy, materialistic 1950s, he gambled that he could rekindle Americans' sense of idealism to tackle the challenges of a new era. The strategy worked better than he imagined. Today, another materialistic decade is ending and the same contrarian dynamic is at work. Just when the evidence suggests that traditional American idealism is languishing, countervailing signs are cropping up. After the Me Decade and the Gimme Decade, many Americans are starting to feel uncomfortable with the unbridled pursuit of their private interestsand are volunteering for a widening array of community-service activities. But this time neither presidential candidate has tried to channel this energy into polities in a major way as Kennedy did, nor do the new volunteers seem disposed to government service. There is much evidence that unbridled idealism has not yet returned. More college students than ever say that being financially well-off is very important. Political activism among young people is off sharply, and among their elders not much better. Some pollsters predict that for the first time since the 1920s fewer than half the citizens eligible will vote next month. Yet far from indicating the death of idealism, such apathy marks the transition from a period of self-absorption to a new era of public action, according to historian Arthur Schlesinger, Jr. One small sign that the transition has begun, he allows, is that his own liberal message attacking the ethos of greed is much more popular on campuses these days: "A few years ago, during a commencement speech at a college in New Jersey, I cited Ivan Boesky's line about how greed is good. Boesky's words produced great applause. But I don't get that reaction any more." The most measurable change has been a turnaround in volunteerism across the country, most notably among students. The percentage of young and single people who volunteered for some service activity dropped sharply between 1980 and 1985. But a Gallup-Independent Sector survey released this week shows that the trend has reversed in the past two years, especially on campus. Nearly 60 percent of Harvard's graduating class last year participated regularly in some community-service activity during their four years of college, up from only 35 percent in 1983. The Campus Outreach Opportunity League (COOL), a loosely knit operation based at the University of Minnesota in Minneapolis, was formed three years ago to develop and coordinate community-oriented programs at universities and has now spread to over 450 campuses. In 1985,the presidents of Stanford, Georgetown and Brown, alarmed at the singleminded careerism and public apathy of their student bodies, agreed to make community-service programs core parts of the student experience at their colleges. Their organization, Campus Compact, has now been joined by more than 150 other college presidents, and students have responded by overwhelming campus volunteer centers. From Harvard to Stanford, and Northwestern to the University of Texas, students are coming up with new service ideas, like collecting unused food from dormitory cafeterias and local restaurants to give to the homeless. Students at Brown have organized a clothing bank for the poor, provide round-the-clock staffing for a center for battered women and children, run a garden project during the summer in a desolate section of the Bronx and have become mentors for problem kids from the housing projects. High schools are also pushing community service. For instance, the Atlanta school system now makes 25 hours of volunteer service a requirement for graduation. At the same time, volunteer activities are thriving outside the schools, sponsored by local governments, corporations, churches and other nonprofit organizations. On Chicago's skid row, the Rev. Jack Wall took over Old St. Patrick's Church in 1983 when it had only four registered parishioners and boosted membership to 775 by appealing to the social consciences of young professionals who lived in nearby high-rises. His promptings led participants to create a tutorial program for poor children and a surge of volunteers at a homeless shelter. At the other end of the economic scale, Joseph Flom, 65, the top takeover lawyer in the country, is one of 150 millionaires who responded to philanthropist Gene Lang's "I Have a Dream" program by agreeing to underwrite counseling and a college education for every member of an inner-city sixth-grade class. Flom has donated nearly $500,000 so far, but the project involves more than writing checks. "There's a lot of skepticism among these kids about what a fat cat like me is doing here in the first place," says the lawyer. "But we're building up their confidence, and they are becoming a tightknit group." The 27-year-old Peace Corps, Kennedy's most enduring creation, is making a comeback itself after years of confusion at the top and low morale at the bottom. Today, it is more pragmatic and useful to the countries it helps, recruiting fewer generalist liberal-arts graduates and more older and specialized volunteers who know something about agriculture and small business. In 1985, Congress approved of the changes and agreed to double the number of volunteers to 10,000. Compared with the Kennedy idealists, today's volunteers are ardently individualistic, largely apolitical and remarkably hostile to government. Run JFK's ask-not line by them and the reaction most often matches that of Lisa Pritchard, 22, a senior at Harvard who helps run a volunteer program teaching dance and theater in Boston's inner-city schools: "It never once entered my mind that I am doing something for my country. I'm doing something for this community, but I would never think of it as doing something patriotic." Her objection reflects a strong antigovernment feeling completely alien to John Kennedy, who championed public service and saw the government as a primary vehicle for tackling the biggest national problems. "What is different about idealism among students today is that it does not take the form of wanting to work for governmnet." says Harvard President Derek Bok. "Government does not look like a very promising place to get things done or lead a very rewarding career." Many volunteers, like the Peace Corps' first wave, are only beginning to wrestle with the larger political questions that surround the social problems they tackle. Some already question whether their work amounts to mere Band-Aids for problems that have accumulated during the benign neglect of the Reagan years and in the end may require governmental effort to solve. "To really help, you have to get involved in the larger political issues," says Kathleen Kennedy Townsend, 37, Bobby Kennedy's eldest child and director of Maryland's public-school volunteer program. "It's not enough to teach just one person to read." But Harvard's Bok is not optimistic. He points out that the current college generation has experienced only Presidents who have denigrated govemment and public servants and has yet to witness a major government accomplishment comparable to the New Deal, the Marshall Plan or putting a man on the moon. What they saw was the Challenger explosion. "I don't see the beginning yet of a real upturn in idealism," he says. "What I see is a heartening uptum in community service, which indicates there is a spirit that could be challenged by government. Rhetoric, however, won't be enough. We need some important successes by government that show what it can do." George Bush and Michael Dukakis have both made appeals to the idealism Kennedy tapped, but neither has done so with gusto. Dukakis, the obvious heir, has so far refused to embrace the centrist Democratic Leadership Council's proposal for a national service corps, in which young people could earn tuition or a down payment on a house in return for community-service work. "He doesn't think people are ready for it," says AI From, the DLC's director. Ted Sorensen, the Kennedy speech writer who is trying to inject some of the old magic into Dukakis's pronouncements, signals frustration that Dukakis has not hit idealistic themes harder. "When people say the country is not ready for such an appeal the way it was in 1960, they forget that Kennedy won by only one quarter of I percentage point," he says. "He had to lead the country to get a massive breakthrough." Bush has tiptoed closer to the fire, and his image has warmed as a result. He followed up on his ethereal talk of 1,000 points of light with a modest but well-received proposal to establish a publicprivate foundation to promote volunteer ventures. Both candidatesdodge any suggestion of something that might aim high or cost real money, hardly the kind of daring or conviction that helped Kennedy win the closest upset election yet. In an essay on "the national purpose" published in Life magazine during the 1960 campaign, Kennedy wrote: "We remember too seldom that survival is threatened not only by ever more awesome weapons of death and destruction but also by a lack of aim and aspiration. Outside the walls of every nation that has grown fat and overly fond of itself has always lurked a lean and hungry enemy." It's that kind of hard-edged idealism that is haunting us this election year, more than the memory of the President who last conjured it. Pierre Salinger: "I am painfully aware that 1,000 days is a lamentably short period in which to prove your real worth in the most powerful office in the world. But in those 1,000 days, I submit, he had already laid the groundwork for a world very different from, and very much better than, the one we live in today. It is clear to me that Lee Harvey Oswald did much, much more than kill a man. He killed a dream shared by all mankind." J.K. Galbraith: "I look back on the Kennedy period as a bright, shining light in my life. There was enormous pride in public service, and many things seemed possible. The Kennedy administration had a sense of youth and purpose. Part of my pleasure was being with this younger generation." doing something for this community, but I would never think of it as doing something patriotic." SARGENT SHRIVER "The people who volunteer today are even more aware of the difficulties and the need for them to be more skillful than the original volunteers may have been. Does that make them more idealistic? I guess you could make a pretty good argument that it does. The original ones had the opposite challenge. Nobody knew what it would be like. The spirit of those in the beginning was just as great, but different." Title: A time for self-interest. (military policy in the U.S. since 1960) (JFK: 25 Years Later special section) Authors: Stanglin, Douglas Citation: U.S. News & World Report, Oct 24, 1988 v105 n16 p35(2) ------------------------------------------------------------- Subjects: Military policy_Analysis People: Kennedy, John F._Military policy; Reagan, Ronald_Military policy Reference #: A6722694 ============================================================= Full Text COPYRIGHT U.S. News and World Report Inc. 1988 On April 17, 1961, as Cuban exiles splashed ashore at the Bay of Pigs, John Kennedy sought to shoulder the first heav burden of his young Presidency. He equivocated, then decided to hold back U.S. air cover for the invasion teams. Fidel Castro pushed the hapless emigres into the sea. It was a rude lesson for the new President in the application of rhetoric to reality. But like generals, political leaders are often doomed to fight the last war one more time. As he spoke from the east front of the Capitol, Kennedy's inaugural pledge "to pay any price, bear any burden" was already obsolete in military terms. His vision of a new mandate for America was born in the glow of World War 11, the world of Normandy beachheads and American invincibility. It spoke romantically to a generation eager to take charge, to lead the world. But what Kennedy took as the passivity of the Eisenhower years, and what he sought to transcend, may have been simply America's painful adjustment to a world regaining its economic and political footing after the devastation of war, and America's wariness of being too aggressive in a new age of nuclear rivalry. These were the first signs that America's role in the world was shrinking, but Kennedy portrayed it differently. Nor did he at first acknowledge that new rules of combat were at work. These weren't forged at Omaha Beach, but at the Yalu River when Gen. Douglas MacArthur was barred from taking his fight with the North Koreans into China. In a world of U.N. "police actions" and no-go zones, let alone nuclear weapons, the grand idea of bearing any burden had lost meaning. Kennedy never reconciled the bold promise of his inaugural with the hard limits to America's reach and the constraints on its behavior. The U.S., despite the scope of its World War II achievements, could no more live beyond the limits of self-interest in the early '60s than it had done since its creation. Kennedy, though, envisioned America as the new bulwark for freedom in Southeast Asia, picking up the torch from the fallen French. George Ball, his undersecretary of state, decried the "excessive, exuberant sense of mission and power." But Kennedy, then Lyndon Johnson, tried to ignore the restraints and pushed deeper and deeper into Vietnam at a cost of 58,000 U.S. soldiers and eventual defeat. And in a final, bitter twist, America turned inward as the failed venture sapped its vigor. Kennedy's best moments, like those of his successors, grounded American policy in pure selfinterest. He cherished West Berlin as an island of freedom, saying: "Today, in the world of freedom, the proudest boast is, 'Ich bin ein Berliner"' But his face-off with Soviet tanks in that divided city in 1961 was over America's power and presence in postwar Europe, not the fate of noble West Berliners. And his demand that the Kremlin remove its missiles from Cuba was a fight over U.S. national security, not over the spread of Communism in the hemisphere. In both cases, Kennedy left little doubt he was prepared to "pay any price" when the most fundamental American interests were at stake, and Nikita Khrushchev knew it. In Vietnam, JFK simply got it wrong. Americans are not willing to bear any burden. They first want to ask, as Ike did, but what will it cost? The yardstick is clear: Americans will support high-intensity conflicts for short periods, or lowintensity conflicts for long periods, but not highintensity conflicts for long periods. Unless America's own interests are directly threatened, it is the viability of the fight that counts. Reagan learned that lesson well, but added a critical new dimension: The illusion of power is often as important as the exercise of it. It was Jimmy Carter who started America's military buildup, but Reagan who rightly gets credit for finishing it. Carter will always be remembered as a weak President, defeated at Desert One amid the wreckage of burned-out choppers on Iranian sand dunes. For eight years, Reagan has nurtured the illusion of American invincibility by never subjecting it to an enduring test. His dispatch of U.S. Marines to Lebanon was Kennedyesque in its goal of peacemaking. But when a car bomb destroyed the Marine barracks in 1983, the mission was abruptly canceled. The troops, though, were not withdrawn, only "redeployed offshore," a bit of wordplay that knocked the hard edge off the American defeat. More important, the U.S. invasion of Grenada two days later muted the impact of the Lebanon debacle as the U.S. used the overwhelming firepower of 2,700 to rout 1,100 ha ess Cubans. Reagan never let his cautious use of military power translate into a picture of U.S. weakness or retrenchment that could jeopardize the illusion. Nor did he abandon the idealism of Kennedy's pursuit of liberty abroad; he simply shifted the heaviest part of the burden to others. He fashioned the Reagan Doctrine, a tough, anti-Communist policy that did not bear the burden of American lives but gave material support instead to rebels in Angola and Afghanistan. It was a cost-effective, painless version of burden bearing. In support of "freedom fighters," America indeed is still willing to pay any price, as long as what it's buying is Stingers and payment is in dollars, not blood. Still, the pursuit of simple self-interest often enhances, not contradicts, an American leadership role in the world. Reagan's gutsy go-it-alone decision to escort Kuwaiti oil tankers in the Persian Gulf quickly won over its critics through a show of raw strength and determination. It not only kept the Soviets out of the Gulf, it spawned a coordinated Western policy that shortened the war. Likewise, the U.S. raid on Libya was nothing less than punishment and revenge. Yet Europe, its harshest critic, benefited equally from the cowing of Qadhafi. America's schizophrenia over its military mission is particularly striking in Central America, its own back yard. Polls repeatedly show that Americans are lukewarm over support for the Nicaraguan Contras. Yet there is an uneasy feeling every time Daniel Ortega flies to Moscow. So the payany-price issue became a nickel-and-dime debate over lethal vs. nonlethal aid for the rebels until Reagan simply gave up last week in frustration. This ambivalence, ironically, is at sharp odds with another passage in Kennedy's inaugural warning outside powers that "this hemisphere intends to remain the master of its own house." In the end, America's painful defeat in Vietnam is the sobering bench mark for all foreign ventures to follow. It taught that when America strays from self-interest, regardless of the worthiness of its quest, it enters a treacherous world with no guidelines and no promises. Perhaps a fitting counterpoint to the eloquence of John F. Kennedy in the 1960s is the prose of former Defense Secretary Caspar Weinberger in the 1980s, who reduces to six pedestrian points what America must determine before committing its forces to combat: 1. Our vital interests are at stake. 2. The issues involved are so important for the United States' and our allies' future that we are prepared to commit enough forces to win. 3. We have clearly defined political and military objectives, which we must secure. 4. We have sized our forces to achieve our objectives. 5. We have some reasonable assurance of the support of the American people. 6. U.S. forces are committed to combat only as a last resort. Lest an one forget. TO INTERVENE OR NOT TO INTERVENE? Key military movements since 1960 Arril 17, 1961 Bay of Pigs invasion fails to overthrow Castro Oct. 22-28, 1962 U.S. blockade of Cuba ends the missile crisis Aug. 7, 1964 Congress approves Gulf of Tonkin resolution April 24, 1980 Iranian hostage-rescue mission fails Oct. 25, 1983 U.S. troops evacuate Americans in Grenada Feb., 1984 CIA secretly mines Nicaraguan harbors Oct 10, 1985 U.S. captures Achille Lauro hijackers April 14, 1986 Air strike in Libya retaliates for West German disco bombing May 19, 1987 U.S. agrees to escort ships in the Persian Gulf July 3, 1988 U.S. shoots down an Iranian Airbus Title: Beyond the generations. (JFK: 25 Years Later special section) Authors: Elfin, Mel Citation: U.S. News & World Report, Oct 24, 1988 v105 n16 p32(2) ------------------------------------------------------------- Subjects: Presidents_Evaluation People: Kennedy, John F._Evaluation Reference #: A6722672 ============================================================= Full Text COPYRIGHT U.S. News and World Report Inc. 1988 He spoke to us from the near side of the generational divide and flaunted his youth with self-assured charm. His was to be a special sort of Presidency, or at least that was what John Fitzgerald Kennedy envisioned as he prepared to rule with his band of tough, smart, cocky loyalists. Today, many of their names ring not with the echoes of Camelot but with the ironies of the generation that came to be called the best and the brightest. Among them, Robert MeNamara, Robert Kennedy, Dean Rusk, McGeorge Bundy, Ted Sorensen, John Kenneth Galbraith. In time, many would be denounced by the true catalysts of generational change as defenders of an immoral status quo. Yet in the chill of that first Washington winter, they poured forth new plans and announcement of plans for new plans as fast as campaign position papers could be translated into Pierre Salinger press releases. Historian Arthur Schlesinger, Jr., recalls: "Intelligence at last was being applied to public affairs. Euphoria reigned; we thought for a moment that the world was plastic and the future unlimited." But were the 1,000 days of the New Frontier all that different from what came before and what was to come afterward? Had the generational torch really been passed? The Kennedy years no longer seem the embodiment of generational change but merely the overture to that change. After Kennedy's death, the presidential torch was, in fact, passed backward. Four of the next five occupants of the White House were older than JFK, and even now, 25 years later, the incumbent is a man bom only six years before Kennedy. Forces heading toward critical mass Rather than a new beginning, these three years were merely a brief interlude between the selfconfident America of the postwar years and the bitterly turmoiled America of the decade after Dallas. For one thing, historians like Ike far more today than they did in the immediate aftermath of his seemingly slumbering Presidency. They now see the '5Os not as a time simply "I Love Lucy" culture and an "I'm All Right, Jack" economy, but a period when social upheaval was brewing beneath a deceptively tranquil surface. When JFK vowed to "get America moving again," it was already on the move: Martin Luther King, Jr., and Rosa Parks were in the throes of their historic upheaval; Jackson Pollock and Elvis Presley were transforming the high and low ends of American culture; the Pill and DNA were irredeemably remaking the larger world, and abroad Ho Chi Minh was beginning to acquaint the nation with an obscure corner of the world called Vietnam. It was only after the horror of Dealey Plaza in Dallas that all these forces came together in a critical mass that exploded later in the decade and still scars the body politic. Somehow, the Kennedy men, who arrogantly thought themselves the chosen instruments of generational change, never quite got the point of what was 'happening before they arrived in Washington. They also never quite understood that the Presidency is a continuity, not a page of history that can be swept clean every fourth or eighth January. New Presidents' power to chart totally new courses or to ignore older ones is sharply limited by precedents, public opinion, the Constitution and the world beyond our shores. Still, what Kennedy bequeathed to his countrymen should not be judged by pages of legislation passed or numbers of treaties agreed upon. The way to measure a myth like that of John Kennedy is to ask the young (and the no-longer-so-young) about presidential greatness. In almost every poll, JFK ranks at or near the top, outrunning, for example, Harry Truman, who served twice as long and accomplished twice as much but who probably will never get his face on the half dollar. Obviously, the question is "Why?" One explanation is that Kennedy looked, acted and behaved as if he had prepped for the White House in Hollywood, not Harvard, and undoubtedly set the stage for the election, 20 years later, of a real movie star as President. Ironically, in an era when national politics has become a series of MTV-like photo opportunities, it is Ronald Reagan, so different in style, intellect and vision from JFK, who is the true heir to his Electronic Presidency. In the end, his most enduring legacy is stylistic, not substantive. Since JFK, the medium truly has become the political message and presidential elections a duel not of new ideas but of escalating visual images. With unashamed presumption, gaggles of pseudo JFK's, from Gary Hart on .the left to Dan Quayle on the right, have learned to face the TV cameras with their hands thrust in the pockets of tightly buttoned jackets, with their shoulders hunched forward and with their managers praying the voters somehow will get the subliminal point. And the JFK legend reached its zenith this month when one vicepresidential nominee stared at the other and sneered: "Senator, you're no Jack Kennedy." Assuredly, some of Kennedy's continuing hold on the national psyche also rests on the lingering national guilt spawned in Dallas on Nov. 22, 1963. To be sure, it still seems a form of posthumous lese majesty to talk about the darker sides of John Kennedy's years in the White House. In truth, Kennedy was transfigured by the horror of his assassination. He achieved in death a mystical communion with generations then unborn that he couldn't achieve with his own. What matters is that the Kennedy myth, however much a distortion of historic truth, continues to animate, to rouse and to motivate. And in the age of George Bush and Michael Dukakis, when so few possess the power to kindle the inspirational fires, the Kennedy myth still stirs the passions of those who find little inspiration in other symbols, other men, other Presidents. What John Kennedy was unable to do for his country in life, he has been able to do for his country in memory. In that sense, the torch he grasped more than a quarter-century ago has never passed to a new breed of leaders. Magically, he now transcends the generations. THEODORE SORENSEN "People will remember not only what he did but what he stood for. He had confidence in man and gave men confidence in the future. Just as no chart on the history of weapons could accurately reflect the advent of the atom, so it is my belief that no scale of good and bad Presidents can rate John Fitzgerald Kennedy." ARTHUR SCHLESINGER JR. "Lifting us beyond our capacities, he gave his country back to its best self, wiping away the world's impression of an old nation of old men, weary, played out, fearful of the future; he taught mankind that the process of rediscovering America was not over. He transformed the American spirit." Title: JFK; his vision: then and now. (John F. Kennedy) (JFK: 25 Years Later special report) Authors: Boorstin, Daniel J. Citation: U.S. News & World Report, Oct 24, 1988 v105 n16 p30(2) ------------------------------------------------------------- Subjects: Presidents_Evaluation People: Kennedy, John F._Evaluation Reference #: A6722660 ============================================================= Full Text COPYRIGHT U.S. News and World Report Inc. 1988 The role we give to the great players in history is subtly shaped by the hour of their death. We remember Julius Caesar as a military strategist, a conqueror, prototype of the dictator and author of the Gallic Wars. But if he had not been cut off at age 5 6, he would have been given the opportunity to complete his planned reforms: A comprehensive code of laws, a new city from the Pontine Marshes, an enlarged Ostia harbor, a canal through the Isthmus of Corinth and perhaps also a book, this time on the virtues and strategies of peace. Then might we not have cast him in another role? The tragic assassination of our youngest elected President, John F. Kennedy, at the age of 46 saved him from crucial and perhaps frustrating tests of his policies in Vietnam, in Cuba and on civil rights. His untimely death also reminds us of how history assesses public figures who die too soon. In the making of historical reputations, there are advantages and opportunities in brevity. A short life, unfulfilled in action, is commonly and disproportionately judged by the eloquent utterance. John F. Kennedy is now remembered for the unforgettable phrases in his inaugural address. His rhetoric stirs us more than his record. We will not soon forget his declaration that the torch had been passed to a new generation born in this century or his defiant announcement that we would bear any burden in defense of liberty or his plea for the patriotic question, "What can you do for your country?" These ringing words will long outlive the partisan clamor of his time. Posterity is charitably reticent about the authorship of the memorable utterances of public heroes. Washington (not Hamilton) receives the credit for his farewell address. And we know, of course, that many aides collaborate on a President's inaugural address. Still, Kennedy's phrases somehow take the place of a critical scrutiny of his achievements and in their own way enrich our tradition. Martin Luther King, Jr., assassinated at the age of 39, also lives conspicuously in the spoken word. The nation, of course, changes in its grieving. It must absorb the trauma. But its course is attered. The accidents of death find assassins' shots change history as powerfully as a living leader could. The first generation of American statesmen grew old gracefully and with increasing wisdom. In our pantheon, Franklin, Washington, John Adams, Jefferson and Madison are figures of gray-haired eminence. Only Alexander Hamilton, killed in his duel with Aaron Burr when he was 47, must be judged not only by his solid achievements in fiscal policy but by his brilliant unfulfilled promise. Still, the wise-counseling elder statesman has been rare in our public life, except on the Supreme Court. The Founding Fathers gave us a Constitution with no Council of Elders or democratic House of Lords where politicians could rest from campaigning while they appealed to posterity. Our history gives us two examples of how the fortunes of death and longevity have shaped historical reputations. When Abraham Lincoln was assassinated at the age of 56, he was luckily spared the frustrations and trials of Reconstruction. And he lives on, credited with his eloquent pleas for charity which he never had to put to the political test. What if he had been plagued with the task of enacting his own conciliatory policy? It was that policy that brought Andrew Johnson impeachment by the House of Representatives and within one senatorial vote of removal from office. Then might Lincoln have become our first impeached President? Just as assassination can sometimes preserve reputations, longevity can disintegrate them. The unhappy anticlimax of Woodrow Wilson's life was due to his survival beyond his ability to exercise the powers of the Presidency. While strenuously campaigning for ratification of the Treaty of Versailles, including the Covenant of the League of Nations, he was gravely stricken at Pueblo, Colo., on Sept. 25, 1919. If he had died at that moment, his successor might very likely have agreed to the compromises needed to secure Senate ratification of the treaty and the League Covenant. Or, if Wilson had recovered, he might himself have mellowed and been able to revise his image of obstinacy and intransigence. This could have led to the Senate's ratification of Wilson's plan for the League of Nations, which he had made his keystone for world peace. Instead, the invalid Wilson was impotent to budge. The Senate majority, sticking to its guns, rejected the treaty and the Covenant by a mere seven votes. Since then, Wilson has become the textbook prototype of the unmellowed preacher-statesman. Might he in good health have changed this in the remaining year and a half of his administration? Or, to reverse the question, how would it have affected Ronald Reagan's role in history if he had served only one term? To those who have the misfortune to die young, history assigns the role of inspirer. Eloquenci is their magic ingredient. Looking back, we can say that they had a brilliant future behind them. It is their good fortune to be judged less by their fulfillment than by their promise. Would we not all like to be so judged? Title: The story that will not die. (Assassination Symposium on John F. Kennedy) Authors: Anson, Robert Sam Citation: U.S. News & World Report, Dec 2, 1991 v111 n23 p16(1) ------------------------------------------------------------- Subjects: Presidents_Assassination Assassination_Social aspects Conspiracy_Social aspects People: Kennedy, John F._Assassination Reference #: A11569663 ============================================================= Abstract: The 'Assassination Symposium on John F. Kennedy' was held on Nov 14-16, 1991 in Dallas, TX and attracted 400 conspiracy buffs. The continuing credence that people give to the idea that there was a conspiracy behind the assassination of Kennedy shows that many Americans distrust their government. ============================================================= Full Text COPYRIGHT U.S. News and World Report Inc. 1991 The COMDEX for conspiracy buffs," one participant called it, and in truth, the first annual "Assassination Symposium on John F. Kennedy," held in Dallas, November 14-16, had much of the appearance and a lot of the hubbub of the Las Vegas electronics trade show. There were booths for hawkers peddling their waves ("coup d'etat trading cards," at one; a monograph arguing that a six-gun-toting Lyndon Johnson was the assassin at another); crowded conferences on industry arcana (the "magic bullet" theory; the nuances of forensic pathology); movies and slide shows (computer-enhanced versions of the Zapruder film; grisly photos of the Kennedy autopsy); guided tours of notable local spots (the sixth floor of the Texas School Book Depository; Dealey Plaza's infamous "grassy knoll"); technical breakthroughs (an "image processing" camera that, it was claimed, discerned a sniper in a policeman's uniform) and startling discoveries (one plotter was, supposedly, a nuclear physicist who dismembered his parents and stored their body parts in the family fridge); even a Steve Jobs-like eminence grise in the person of veteran assassinologist Mark Lane, claiming -- not for the first time and probably not for the last -- that he had cracked the case. To wit: The CIA done it. Hot theories. The hoopla, though, was not what seemed to attract most of the 400 who came from 30 states and four foreign countries to be at the scene of the century's most famous crime. For some, like Baltimore musician Gus Russo, who has been researching JFK's death for two decades, the lure was the chance to "sit in on buzz groups" and learn the latest developments in the case. For others, such as history Prof. David Wrone, who teaches a course in the assassination at the University of Wisconsin, it was hope that he'd be able to answer a bedeviling question: "Why do we not know what we don't know?" For still others, like Los Angeleno David Lifton, author of the best-selling conspiracy tome "Best Evidence," it was the opportunity to air a hot new theory: that Kennedy was murdered because of his intention to withdraw from Vietnam. What all had in common, regardless of motive or ideology, was a burning conviction: that for 28 years their government has been lying to them. According to the polls, they are not alone; a majority of Americans still disbelieve the Warren Commission's finding that a single assassin, Lee Harvey Oswald, shot and killed the 35th president of the United States. Nor are they without a growing number of allies, most notably Oscar-winning Oliver Stone, whose $40 million conspiracy epic, "JFK,; starring Kevin Costner as New Orleans District Attorney Jim Garrison, debuts in late December. With a slew of similarly themed books and movies in the works, the mood in the corridors of the Dallas Hyatt Regency was relentlessly upbeat--"like a combination religious revival and Amway sales meeting," as one attendee described it. So, on occasion, it appeared. The stormiest of applause went often to the wildest of accusations. Watergate prosecutor Leon Jaworski in league with Nazis? Rocket pioneer Wernher von Braun a plotter? Hollywood controlled by the CIA? At the JFK Assassination Symposium, all--and worse--were given public airing, invariably to cheers and whistles. Without question, however, the most insidious enemy was the "establishment press," whose ongoing support for the Warren Commission's findings was characterized variously as a "CIA plot," a 'military-industrial-complex plot" and, well, a "press plot." Signs began sprouting on symposium bulletin boards. "Please be careful when talking to the L.A. Times," warned the first. "They are actually involved with the CIA and were sent here to keep the tabs on us." Within hours, the Washington Times joined the "controlled by the CIA" list, as by the end of the gathering did the Austin Chronicle and the "Sally Jessy Raphael" show. But if there was some paranoia, there was also reason for it. "A lot of the people who are here weren't even born when John Kennedy was killed," noted Texas journalist Jim Marrs, author of "Crossfire," a well-regarded compendium of conspiracy theories. "All they've known is Vietnam, Watergate, Contragate, ABSCAM and CIA scandals. Instinctively, they are going to believe the worst about government, even that it's capable of murdering the president." It was all the more remarkable, then, how earnest and unwavering was the belief that with just one more break, the truth would win out. For Andrew Winiarczyk, a Notre Dame graduate who operates the conspiracy-focused Last Hurrah Bookshop in Williamsport, Pa., spreading the word of John Kennedy's assassination is more than a business; it is his life and obsession. "The first thing I remember seeing on television was President Kennedy accepting the Democratic nomination in Los Angeles," he explains. "I was 10 when he was killed, and they say that your life is shaped by what happens to you when you were 10 years old. President Kennedy's assassination is what happened to me. That's why I have got to know. "Someday," he says, "I think we'll all know what really happened. One of the people who killed him will tell us the true story. I'm sure of it." And will that end the pursuit? a reporter asks him. "No," Andrew smiles sadly. "By then, you see, no one will believe the truth." Title: Full disclosure. (cold-war secrets) Authors: Ferguson, Greg Citation: U.S. News & World Report, Feb 3, 1992 v112 n4 p15(1) ------------------------------------------------------------- Subjects: Germany, East. Office of National Security_Investigations United States. Central Intelligence Agency_Investigations Communist Party (Soviet Union)_Investigations People: Kennedy, John F._Assassination Reference #: A11839899 ============================================================= Abstract: New cold-war information may be coming to light concerning the John Kennedy assassination, the Soviet communist party, CIA activities and the activities of the East German secret police. ============================================================= Full Text COPYRIGHT U.S. News and World Report Inc. 1992 JFK's assassination. There are still 848 sealed boxes of evidence from the 1977 congressional investigation into the murder, with more at the CIA and FBI. Spurred by the furor over Oliver Stone's movie "JFK," Reps. Louis Stokes and Henry Gonzalez, who chaired the probe, and House Speaker Thomas Foley are calling for the release of all the government files. Stokes warns that the documents will offer little new information, but he hopes they will quell speculation about an official coverup. Former Soviet Union. A British company has bought the rights to market all of the Soviet Communist Party's documents, 70 million items chronicling nearly all of Soviet history. The first batch of 300,000 files, due out next fall, covers the lives of early leaders and includes supersecret files on Leon Trotsky, the Red Army leader who was later exiled and murdered by Communists. CIA. The recently created "Openness Task Force" is likely to yield new details about the 1961 By of Pigs invasion and the CIA's assassination attepmts on Cuba's Fidel Castro. the CIAA's role in the 1953 return of the shah to Iran could also come to light. Stasi. Since early January, 300,000 residents of eastern Germany have applied to see the dossiers that the secret police kept on them. The Stasi, with 90,000 agents and up to a million informants, assembled an estimated 6 million files. Germans are now learning that family and friends were informers. Teachers were even enlisted to spy on schoolchildren. Title: JFK: the untold story of the Warren Commission. (President's Commission on the assassination of President John F. Kennedy) (includes related article) (Cover Story) Authors: Gest, Ted; Shapiro, Joseph P. Citation: U.S. News & World Report, August 17, 1992 v113 n7 p28(11) ------------------------------------------------------------- Subjects: United States. President's Commission on the Assassination of President John F. Kennedy_History People: Warren, Earl_Investigations; Oswald, Lee Harvey_Investigations; Kennedy, John F._Crimes against Reference #: A12522215 ============================================================= Abstract: The Warren Commission's investigation of the assassination of former Pres J.F. Kennedy is one of the most misunderstood criminal investigations in US history. The investigation is discussed in detail. ============================================================= Full Text COPYRIGHT U.S. News and World Report Inc. 1992 In a dark Capitol Hill basement in early 1964, only the hum of a movie projector breaks the tense silence. On screen, 14 seconds of a grainy home movie flicker over and over, beginning with John F. Kennedy waving from his limousine and ending with his head exploding in a bloody spray. As they watch, staffers of the Warren Commission feel their first theory of the assassination evaporating: that a lone gunman hit Kennedy with one shot and Texas Gov. John Connally with a second. From the instant JFK clutches his throat to Connally's first wince, there is too little time for Lee Harvey Oswald to have fired his rifle twice. There must have been two assassins, the staffers think. One, David Belin, even calls his wife to say there was a second gunman. That Warren Commission investigators considered a second-gunman theory is one of countless overlooked or never revealed details about their work. Today, one of the most important criminal investigations in U.S. history is also one of the most misunderstood; critics think the commission either hid the real circumstances of JFK's assassination or negligently disregarded the truth. And the past year, filled with conspiracy accusations popularized by Oliver Stone's movie "JFK," has so deepened public skepticism that, 28 years after it concluded its work, only 10 percent of Americans believe the commission's central findingthat Oswald acted alone. Under pressure, Congress will soon establish a panel to screen for release the million-plus pages of federal files on the assassination. And this week, the American Bar Association is staging a mock trial of Oswald to test whether a jury - had one had the chance-could have reached the same conclusion as the commission. Yet for all the doubt, the record of how the commission did its work is thin. To tell the untold story of the Warren Commission, U.S. News reviewed thousands of pages of members' papers and interviewed the surviving 12 attorneys who conducted the probe, the one living ex-commissioner (former President Gerald Ford) and numerous starlets who had roles. Spurred by the new criticism, participants shared previously undisclosed memories and papers. Critics may charge that their version of the investigation is self-serving. But the fact remains that, despite flaws, the principal findings of the Warren investigation have withstood virtually every assault. A lawyerly beginning. "Our only client is the truth." With that somber statement - very much in keeping with his personality - Warren welcomed his staff on Jan. 20, 1964, in the new Veterans of Foreign Wars building near the Supreme Court. Seven Establishment pillarswere to run the investigation-Warren, Sens. Richard Russell of Georgia and John Sherman Cooper of Kentucky, Reps. Ford of Michigan and Hale Boggs of Louisiana, former Central Intelligence Director Allen Dulles and diplomat-banker John McCloy. As it turned out, the staffers, not the great men whose names the world recalls, were the real Warren Commission. President Lyndon Johnson had to pressure some commissioners to take the job, and in fact, these busy men ignored most day-to-day operations. The retired Dulles dropped by, often merely to shoot the breeze. Russell drafted a letter of resignation to LBJ, furious at not being notified of an early meeting. Even when notified, he came to fewer meetings than any other commissioner. Warren was the exception; he arrived at 8 a.m. before going to the Supreme Court, returning late in the day for a few more hours. Warren never considered hiring anyone outside the legal profession for the main staff. In some ways, that decision was crucial. Lawyers, by inclination and training, were drawn to unified explanations for the assassination. Accustomed to ordering vast universes of facts, they found it difficult to imagine the murky conspiracy theories that might have come more easily to private investigators. J. Lee Rankin, a top Eisenhower Justice Department official and the commission's general counsel, chose two main aides. Norman Redlich, a 38-year-old New York University law professor, oversaw the investigation; Howard Willens, a 32-year-old Justice Department criminal-division lawyer, ran day-to-day operations. Resumes flooded the commission, but few, if any, of the unsolicited applications led to a job. Instead, Redich and Willens surveyed friends for bright young lawyers. "It was an old-boys network," says Wesley Liebeler, who got his job through law-school classmates. The principal staffers were divided into five pairs - one older and one younger lawyer-each assigned to particular issues. Some of the senior lawyers, like the commission members, tended to keep a distance. Francis Adams, a former New York City police commissioner, was so often absent that when he showed up in the middle of March, Warren mistook him for a witness. In old-fashioned brake. The lawyers, stunned like the rest of the nation by the assassination, had left behind jobs and families to come to Washington. To them, the 72-year-old Warren was a giant whose reputation for integrity gave weight to their elforts. Yet his sense of propriety also served as a brake on the staffs ability to solve the mystery. He tended to see the job as a homicide investigation much like the cases he had handled as a young California prosecutor. He thought it was enough to establish beyond a reasonable doubt that Oswald shot Kennedy. There were humorous examples of Warren's stern influence. In May, on his 33rd birthday, the tall, red-headed Liebeler began growing a beard. Warren, who wanted to avoid criticism that the commission was harboring "beatniks," expressed his displeasure. Liebeler, a Goldwater Republican and hardly the bohemian his beard suggested, shaved the whiskers under protest. But Warren's ways also created more serious problems. His memory of McCarthyism was still fresh, and, contrary to "JFK's" portrayal, his fear of big'government abuses made him an unlikely conspirator. Still, some staffers thought him too concerned about the feelings of witnesses. He allowed no back-room deals to pry loose evidence, no private interrogations without a stenographer, no polygraphs. Accustomed to debriefing witnesses before depositions, the staff's criminal lawyers chafed at the precautions. (Apparently, no one told Warren of the Secret Service agent who shoved a gun into the back of a Dallas store owner who objected when investigators brought Oswald's wife Marina into his shop to refresh her memory for testimony.) Warren relented on a polygraph for Jack Ruby because Oswald's killer insisted on a test. But staff lawyer Arlen Specter, now a U.S. senator from Pennsylvania, says Warren later regretted the decision, remarking on a flight from Dallas to Washington that he disliked "Big Brother paraphernalia." Warren's sense of hierarchy created tension over who would question witnesses. The junior staff had the best grasp of the facts, but with figures like Marina Oswald, Warren allowed only commissioners or Rankin to participate. He made an exception for Specter, who was in Dallas the day of Ruby's interview. Excluded from the session, Specter went to the sheriffs office to watch a Philadelphia Phillies-San Francisco Giants baseball game. Suddenly a Secret Service agent announced that Ruby, who had said he shot Oswald partly to show that "Jews have guts," wanted someone in the room who was Jewish. Specter spoke privately with Ruby, who said he wanted Warren to take him back to Washington, away from the Texas authorities, whom Ruby suspected of antisemitism. Though it might have been an impediment, Warren's fairness was also a bulwark for the investigation. Starting in February, for instance, critics, including Rep. John Anderson (later a presidential candidate) and radio commentator Fulton Lewis Jr., assailed Redlich for his membership on a civil-liberties panel and because his name had appeared as coauthor with an alleged Communist sympathizer on a magazine article. (Redlich had never worked with the other author; the magazine had merged separate articles, giving joint credit.) The protests led to an intensified FBI check that included interviews with elevator operators in Redlich's New York apartment, his vacation neighbors in Vermont and even the obstetrician who had delivered him. Warren responded to the barrage of mail he received with form letters insisting that anticommunist commissioners McCloy and Dulles would "protect the national interest." The storm continued until May, when Republican congressman Ford sought dismissal of Redlich, though the FBI had cleared him. An angry Warren urged the commission to keep Redlich, which it did. The conspiracy conundrum. "If we find out it was the Russians, will it mean World War III?" a lawyer would ask. "And if LBJ had a role, will we be allowed to say so?" This was a familiar game, played often over dinner at the Monocle, a Capitol Hill restaurant. The lawyers were joking, but they knew this was more than a simple criminal investigation. Corporate lawyer David Slawson, assigned to explore foreign conspiracy possibilities, leaped into the mirrored world of espionage. Rankin had warned him to rule out no one, "not even the CIA." If that led anywhere, Slawson joked, he would be found dead of a heart attack at 33. The conspiracy theories had swirled from the moment shots rang out in Dealey Plaza. Rumors often determined which witnesses the commission called (such as conspiracy theorist Mark Lane), which leads it investigated and even how it wrote its report, heavily emphasizing a re-creation of Oswald's life as an insignificant loser driven to leave his mark on history. Oswald's shadowy past-defection to the Soviet Union, marriage to a Russian wife, involvement with a pro-Castro group, mysterious 1963 trip to Mexico--fed the theories. The conspiracy theories inevitably raised questions about the commission's dependence on the CIA and FBI. The lawyers admired their sophisticated CIA contacts, many from the same Ivy League schools they had attended. The FBI men, by contrast, seemed plodding. After the FBI came under fire for failing to protect JFK, its agents knew their reputation was on the line and tended toward overkill responding to staff requests. At one point, Redlich says, a Dallas store owner insisted that the Oswalds had been in his shop on a day when investigators were convinced he was elsewhere. The tipster recalled a customer who had discussed with Marina the coincidence that both gave birth on the same day. In an unsuccessful search for the customer, FBI agents researched every baby born in the Dallas-Fort Worth area on that particular day. Redlich sent out the request late one week. By Monday morning, he had a stack of reports on his desk. But the lawyers wondered whether the agencies were manipulating them. Early on, the staff learned the FBI had hidden the fact that agent James Hosty's name was in Oswald's address book. Marina had written the name when Hosty visited her house a few weeks before the assassination asking about Oswald. The lawyers quickly realized that Director J. Edgar Hoover would do whatever it took to shield the FBI from criticism. The CIA, too, was guilty of selective disclosure. Along with Robert Kennedy and even Commissioner Dulles, the agency never revealed details about its botched. assassination attempts on Fidel Castro. An even bigger problem arose in February 1964 when a prize KGB official defected and dropped a bombshell: Yuri Nosenko claimed to have handled Oswald's defection in 1959. Nosenko said Oswald was not a Soviet agent. But James Jesus Angleton, the agency's counterintelligence chief, concluded Nosenko couldn't be trusted. Slawson and William Coleman, investigating Oswald's foreign forays, thought this explained the CIA's refusal to let commissioners interview Nosenko. But there was another reason. After a brutal polygraph test on April 4 at a Virginia safe house, two CIA agents locked Nosenko in a 10-by-10-foot cell. He spent the next four years under illegal CIA house arrest. Later, Angleton indirectly helped undermine the commission's credibility by leaking detailed suspicions about Oswald's KGB connections. Ironically, such doubts spawned theories about CIA complicity in a coverup. The lawyers tried to use conspiracy theorists, who were themselves trying to use the probe as a stage for their own accusations. In a secret meeting, Howard Willens listened to journalist Thomas Buchanan, who was soon to publish an early conspiracy-theory book, lay out his suspicions. Willens and Alfred Goldberg, the commission's historian, then wrote an appendix casting doubt on 127 "speculations," including Buchanan's. The lawyers also relied on the work of many spy agencies. Wiretap transcripts and spy photos are part of the secret files Congress may soon open. All the cloak-and-dagger activity-as well as the intense public interest in the investigation - required a level of secrecy that even the lawyers found onerous. Liebeler recalls being summoned to see Rankin and Redlich. On one of his weekly flights to his Vermont vacation home, Liebeler had taken a transcript of Marina's testimony. A retired military-intelligence officer on the plane noticed the classified documents and reported the breach to the FBI. Stone-faced, Rankin told Liebeler that "Edgar" [Hoover] was concerned. Then, Rankin and Redlich started laughing, knowing that Liebeler was chastened enough by that point. Yet the very agencies responsible for keeping the secrets seemed to apply varying standards. Autopsy doctors at Bethesda Naval Hospital at first refused to speak to Specter because he had no commission ID card. Meanwhile, in Mexico City, CIA agents took Slawson and Coleman into a bunker to report what they knew from a Cuban Embassy "asset"-a CIA spy. Above ground, the agents gave the lawyers a tour of surveillance devices trained on the Soviet and Cuban embassies. No one cared that neither lawyer had security clearance. From the beginning, the lawyers found it hard to deal with conspiracy theories. The problem, as Willens and Redlich discussed, was that pursuing leads based on limited information often meant entering black holes of conjecture. It was far easier to use hard facts to blunt such speculation. To check out the hypothesis that some entity-perhaps the FBI or Cuba-had paid Oswald, the lawyers traced 17 months of Oswald's income and expenditures. Richard Mosk, a junior starlet, even double-checked Oswald's $3.87 Time magazine subscription (when Mosk called the magazine, a confused subscription supervisor asked, "Where is Mr. Oswald now?"). The discrepancy between income and expenditures came to $164.10. That, with Marina's tales of Lee's frugality, was enough for the staff to accept that Oswald had no patrons. Indeed, the solid chain of physical evidence convinced the lawyers there was no need to obsess about a conspiracy. A rifle with a telescopic sight was at the Texas Schoolbook Depository. Handwriting experts tied Oswald to the rifle order form. Ballistics experts linked the bullet fragments and cartridges to the rifle. An eyewitness identified Oswald at the window with the rifle. And Marina revealed that her husband had tried to shoot retired Army Maj. Gen. Edwin Walker, a Dallas right-wing figure. Redlich, regarded as an intellectual presence on the staff, recalls realizing that photos found among Oswald's possessions were of Walker's house. Later, tests proved they were taken with Oswald's camera (box, Page 31). The evidence, the staff believed, was too good to refute. A single bullet. Nothing is more symbolic of the enduring controversy over the assassination than the single-bullet theory. There was no magic moment when the theory was hatched. Poring over slides of Abraham Zapruder's home movie one winter weekend, staff lawyer David Belin could see Kennedy's hands rising to his throat at frame 225 and the impact of a fatal shot at frame 313. But it was unclear when Connally was hit. Belin asked Secret Service agents in Dallas and the governor's doctors to reconstruct his position in the limousine. Comparing their drawings with the Zapruder frames, FBI photo expert Lyndal Shaneyfelt determined that Connally had been hit by frame 240. It seemed there was not enough time for one gunman to fire three separate shots, the first and third striking JFK, the second Connally (box, Page 36). Moreover, if JFK had been hit in the neck before his fatal wound, what had happened to the bullet? On Friday the 13th of March, Specter asked the Navy physicians who conducted the JFK autopsy whether the same bullet could have passed through JFK's body and hit Connally. Yes, they answered. Following up, agents constructed separate animalmeat and gelatin models approximating the consistency of Kennedy's neck. Because the models barely slowed test shells, staffers concluded that the bullet in Dallas could have caused damage after passing through JFK (box, Page 30). Unable to prove the theory on a large diorama of Dealey Plaza, staffers urged reluctant commissioners to stage an assassination re-creation in Dallas. Fearing a circus, Warren resisted. In late April, Redlich wrote Rankin, "All we have is a reasonable hypothesis which appears to be supported by the medical testimony but which has not been checked out against the physical facts at the scene." "Do you think we ought to visit Dallas?" McCloy asked historian Goldberg. Struggling to restrain himself, Goldberg replied: "How can you not?" Inevitably, the commission had some macabre moments. During one session, commissioners and staffers were examining JFK's clothing as it had emerged from the futile emergency surgery. The surgeons had cut Kennedy's necktie directly above the knot. As he passed the clothes, Alien Dulles remarked, "By George, the president wore a clip-on tie." It was a sign of how eccentric the former CIA director seemed that no one was sure whether he was serious or making a ghoulish joke. In another odd episode, Dulles questioned a ballistics expert's testimony on three tiny bullet fragments recovered from Connally's wrist. Dulles asked to take a closer look at the piece of paper on which the fragments rested. While puffing on his pipe, he exclaimed, "There are four!" All heads turned, as the stunned expert scrambled to find that the extra "fragment" was a piece of Dulles's tobacco. The staff finally persuaded the commissioners to re-enact the assassination. On May 24, staffers and federal agents swarmed Dealey Plaza at dawn. Redlich peered through the rifle's gunsight, out the window of the schoolbook depository, and was delighted to see the Kennedy and Connally stand-ins lined up perfectly. "Why am I so elated?" he asked himself. "We're still investigating the assassination of the president." Two weeks later, Specter went to Dallas with Warren. His assignment: Take exactly five minutes at the schoolbook depository to explain the single-bullet theory to Warren. When Specter finished, the chief justice walked away from the window without a word. It was the only time Specter recalls his being totally silent, as he apparently absorbed the theory for the first time. Still, it wasn't until the report was being drafted during the summer that most of the other commissioners focused on the theory. A horrible reminder. In an April 30 memo to Rankin, Specter warned that the autopsy photographs and X-rays were "indispensable" to the commission's report. But the Kennedy family resisted releasing images of JFK's mutilated corpse, in part to avoid further pain. Indeed, Robert Kennedy refused invitations to testify. "I don't care what they do," he told an aide. "It's not going to bring him back." With no photos to show the paths of the bullets, Warren decided to use drawings, based on the autopsy surgeons' recollections. Staffers complained that he was being too deferential to the Kennedys. Unknown to the young lawyers, Willens, who worked for RFK at Justice, kept pushing for access to the photos and X-rays. RFK has often been portrayed as blocking their release. But in mid-June he agreed to let Warren, Rankin and the autopsy doctors review them. Three years later, in a letter to Specter, Warren wrote that "the other members of the commission had no desire to see them." But Warren did see the photos before the report was written. "[T]hey were so horrible that I could not sleep well for nights," he noted in his memoirs. His horror made him reluctant to push the matter. Collectors were offering money for Kennedy's bloodied shirt. Warren feared that if the commission had the ugly photos, they might slip out. Staffers responsible for the accuracy of the bullets' paths could only throw up their hands. "Someday someone may compare the films with the artist's drawings and find a significant error which might substantially affect the essential testimony and the commission's conclusions," Specter wrote Rankin. Indeed, the drawings did turn out to be inaccurate, with the fatal head wound about 4 inches lower than autopsy photos showed and the back wound 2 inches higher. No one discovered these mistakes until a 1968 review panel (box, Page 37). As it turned out, the actual photos and X-rays bolstered the conclusion that two shots had hit JFK from behind. Concerns about the Kennedys arose again. In May, historian William Manchester,'writing the authorized history of JFK's presidency, came to see Rankin, Willens and Redlich. According to Willens, Manchester said he wanted to satisfy the family that the probe was adequate, although Manchester says he was only researching his book. Willens and Rankin say Manchester asked to sit in on the closed hearings and to review chapter drafts, a request Rankin says he resisted and that Manchester denies making. The lawyers, says Willens, felt that Manchester was trying to dissuade them from calling Jacqueline Kennedy as a witness, saying she had little to offer, an assertion the historian also denies, although he admits that he confided to the three top lawyers that JFK's widow had made very frank comments about some public people, whom he did not name. Warren feared something embarrassing might emerge, and he oversaw Mrs. Kennedy's testimony himself in her Georgetown living room, with Rankin asking the questions and RFK looking on. Nicholas Katzenbach, RFK's deputy at Justice, edited gruesome details from the transcript. The long, hot summer. Tempers flared as pressure mounted to write the report. Warren's old-world manner was still an issue. Lawyer John Hart Ely was reprimanded for noting in a memo Oswald's treatment for a venereal disease in the Marines. And many thought Marina Oswald had snowed Warren (box, at right). But the greatest problems arose over completing the report. Warren had kept the probe moving briskly. But the pace sometimes meant preparations were too hasty. Warren insisted, for instance, on hearing the autopsy doctors during a break in the Supreme Court schedule, although some lawyers said they were not ready. The problem emerged most notably as July 1 approached: That was the deadline Warren had set to keep his promise to LBJ of finishing before the 1964 political conventions. Every lawyer except Specter and Joseph Ball missed the June 1 first-draft deadline. MOst were still wrapping up their fact-finding. Warren blew up when Redlich and Willens told him the last week of June that they were late. The chief became so agitated during the meeting that Willens momentarily feared Warren might have a heart attack. After his anger subsided, Warren grew quiet. "Well, gentlemen," he said in a resigned voice, "we are here for the duration." He realized their work might go on for months. McGeorge Bundy, a Johnson aide, summoned Rankin to the White House on July 14 to restate LBJ's desire for a report at least before the August 24 Democratic convention. Johnson, who otherwise remained at arm's length, worried about speculation that the White House had political reasons for a delay. Rankin agreed to an August 10 deadline, although he knew it was unreasonable. Later, he,returned to the White House to tell Bundy the commission would need an extension until mid-September. Even with this delay, the lawyers worked an exhausting 14 hours a day, seven days a week. Junior lawyers Liebeler and Burr Griffin emerged as the inhouse critics (box, at left). Liebeler said that they had taken shortcuts that would later haunt them. Drafts of the report read too much like a prosecutor's brief, he argued, and had omitted information or overemphasized rebuttable evidence, such as eyewitness accounts. Liebeler lost his bid to include a psychological profile of Oswald. Redlich argued it was impossible to psychoanalyze a dead man, getting support from three psychiatrists who testified on July 9. Liebeler lost another battle when Rankin ordered his section rewritten to tone down emphasis on Oswald's Marxism and his possible desire to impress Castro- and to earn the right to defect-by killing JFK. Rankin worried that conservatives would seize on the passages to support their anti-Havana agenda, even as others argued that this fear was an undue political concern. The report's silence on these motives opened the door to conspiracy theorists obsessed with unresolved "whys" about Oswald. The commissioners remained distant during the final weeks of writing. When the crucial conspiracy chapter was submitted to the panel on August 14, Russell complained he was too busy with budget hearings to read it. He asked the staff to seek another two-week extension from the White House. Willens told Redlich he didn't know whether to cry or shout profanities. But the delay was granted. The problems of the two-tiered investigation-with little exchange between the commissioners and the lawyerswere evident in the vote on the report. Russell, Boggs and Cooper, the commissioners with the least contact with the inquiry, had the most doubts about the single-bullet theory. Russell refused to sign a report stating flatly that one bullet had pierced JFK's throat, then injured Connally. So McCloy took out his yellow legal pad, according to biographer Kai Bird, and wrote there was "very persuasive evidence" of it. A similar fight developed over the staffs draft that there was "no conspiracy." Ford said it was "very difficult to disprove a conspiracy" and suggested saying there was "no evidence" of conspiracy. As the end came, Willens told Redlich that some staffers thought questions. were unanswered. Griffin worried aloud that commissioners and staff should make plans to defend the report publicly, lest critics misrepresent it - what today might be called "spin control." Liebeler agreed to stay for rewriting chores, but the plan fell through. It became clear that once the commission folded it would be unable to defend itself. Warren, who had no use for public relations, decided to let the report stand on its own, like a Supreme Court decision. Others did not. Ford used transcripts and his copious notes to write a magazine article, then a book. Warren was furious. Later, he felt betrayed again when Liebeler gave documents to author Edward Jay Epstein, who was writing "Inquest," a seminal critique of the commission's work. When the "Report of the President's Commission on the Assassination of President John F. Kennedy" was released on Sunday, Sept. 27, 1964, it seemed to reopen a wound in the nation's psyche. Robert Kennedy told Nicholas Katzenbach he would not read it. On Monday, New England crowds surged to greet a campaigning LBJ "as if," wrote journalist Theodore White, "the nation hungered to see a president, real, live, healthy, in the flesh." Perhaps no one would have a harder time leaving the assassination behind than the commission staff, which had sought to comprehend that cold-blooded act for an entire nation. Liebeler and Griffin left the VFW building together on the last day-convinced that they and their colleagues had solved the mystery of the assassination. The staff had engaged in searing but open debate, had avoided many distractions that might have destroyed their efforts and had emerged, by and large, with deep respect for one another and for Warren. And yet both men shared lingering fears that the report provided fodder for diligent critics. There, on the steps they had trod for many months, the two men embraced. And before they parted, they broke into tears of pride and frustration. Regardless of how future generations judged their work-probably the most important they or their colleagues would ever undertake - their roles in that chapter of history were at an end. BY TED GEST AND JOSEPH R SHAPIRO WITH DAVID BOWERMASTER AND THOM GEIER FOR THE DEFENSE Update on the staff: What a difference 28 years can make I t has been a rough year for the former staff of the Warren Commission. From Oliver Stone's "JFK" to congressional hearings, they have been characterized as conspirators and dupes. But the turmoil has had some positive sides. For the first time since they made their bittersweet goodbyes in 1964, some of the starlets are collaborating to defend their work. Last January, 13 of them wrote to the National Archives asking that their private files be opened. Critics say the papers veil secrets. The lawyers insist they will show they did their job well. Rescuing their reputations is important to them all, but few have as much on the line as U.S. Sen. Arlen Specter. He has had to campaign for re-election in Pennsylvania this year under a cloud about the single-bullet theory and a reference to him in "JFK" as "an ambitious junior counselor." One reputation in particularthat of their hero; the late Earl Warren- is on the minds of many of the lawyers. After director Oliver Stone dismissed Warren as "senile" before a congressional panel, former aides Richard Mosk of Los Angeles and David Belin of Des Moines protested to Chairman John Conyers of Michigan, who allowed rebuttal testimony by Belin. "We all tend to think about ourselves [regarding the controversy]," says Norman Redlich, former dean of New York University Law School and now a New York lawyer. "Earl Warren's legacy is much more important than those of all the rest of us put together." One lesson the staffers have learned from this year is how little, in some ways, they have changed. They still disagree about how best to defend themselves. Belin, Burt Griffin, an Ohio judge, and Wesley Liebeler, a UCLA law professor, favor an aggressive defense- in part for the sake of histories yet to be written. Last weekend, seven of the lawyers met at Howard Willens's law office in Washington, D.C., to discuss whether to cooperate with documentary film and oral history projects. But Redlich fears the staffers will appear "selfserving" if they defend themselves too much. For years, he has urged skeptics simply to read the report; he bought 30 new copies this year to give to nonbelievers. The lawyers have learned about another constant. The letter they wrote in January was only 160 words. But in writing it, old idiosyncrasies cropped up again. The same men who challenged each others' words and commas in writing the commission report still fought over them 28 years later. Title: The lost world of John Kennedy: the country that elected him, watched him govern and mourned his death was a very different America. (Cover Story) Authors: Barone, Michael Citation: U.S. News & World Report, Nov 15, 1993 v115 n19 p38(6) ------------------------------------------------------------- Subjects: Presidents_Biography Nineteen-sixties decade_History People: Kennedy, John F._Biography Reference #: A14509154 ============================================================= Abstract: America has changed radically since the assassination of Pres John F. Kennedy on Nov 22, 1963, and many of the changes resulted from Kennedy's election, his performance in office and his assassination. Political, cultural and social differences between the 1960s and the 1990s are examined. ============================================================= Full Text COPYRIGHT U.S. News and World Report Inc. 1993 Thirty years after his death, John F. Kennedy is fading from focus. Once, all Americans could remember where they were when they heard the awful news on Friday, Nov. 22, 1963. But today the majority of Americans have no memory of 1963 at all. Kennedy remains the nation's most admired president, and the Kennedy family has remained at the center of politics like none other--not the Adamses, not the Roosevelts. Yet, today, Kennedy's magic and the era he inhabited are difficult to recall. Part of the difference between then and now involves the public's emotional connection to its leaders. In this embittered and cynical time, it is almost impossible to conjure the public infatuation with Kennedy's charm: No other political leader, not even Franklin Roosevelt or Ronald Reagan, has been such a master of rapid repartee and self-deprecating humor. How did he become a hero in World War II as captain of the PT-109? "They sank my boat." Was his multimillionaire father spending too much on his campaigns? "Don't buy a single vote more than necessary," he read from a mock telegram. "I'll be damned if I'm going to pay for a landslide." Also magic was his self-assurance. As a 43-year-old senator, he effortlessly gained the psychological upper hand over the vice president of the United States in televised debates. As president, Kennedy had an air of command that kept his job rating at an average of 71 percent. He was an exotic figure to most Americans: a young veteran of World War II when the White House had been held for 28 years by men born in the last part of the 19th century; a speaker with a butterscotch-thick Boston accent, thrusting his hands in his suit pockets like an English lord in a country whose favorite entertainment at the time was television Westerns; a Roman Catholic in a nation over two-thirds non-Catholic. Today, it is not just Kennedy but the America that elected and then mourned him that is unfamiliar. Historian Daniel Boorstin's first book, The Lost World of Thomas Jefferson, explained the third president by trying to "recapture" a vanished "Jeffersonian world of ideas." Three decades later, Kennedy's America is equally distant. And it is "lost" to us in some measure because of the changes that took place as a result of the way he was elected, the way he governed and the way he died. The religion issue. For starters, the social divisions in the country were differently arrayed in many respects than they are now. Kennedy's Catholicism was a dominant issue in his campaign. Catholic Americans in 1960 lived almost in a nation apart. The descendants of Irish, German, Italian and Polish immigrants were still concentrated in industrial cities. They ate fish on Friday and attended mass every Sunday, shunned birth control and boasted of large families and sent their children to schools run by celibate priests and nuns. In this Catholic America, John Fitzgerald Kennedy was an aristocrat, grandson of the mayor of Boston, son of one of the richest Catholics in America. In 1916, the year before JFK was born, his grandfather John "Honey Fitz" Fitzgerald ran for senator against the Yankee Protestant Henry Cabot Lodge and lost. Exit polls, had they existed, surely would have shown 80 percent of Catholics for Fitzgerald and 70 percent of Protestants for Lodge. Thirty-six years later, when Honey Fitz's grandson John Kennedy ran for the Senate, not much had changed. The Catholic-Protestant split was still strong, though a shrewder campaign and a good portion of Joseph Kennedy's money helped JFK beat Sen. Henry Cabot Lodge Jr. This religious split had roots in 17th-century religious wars. Many Protestants remembered that America was founded by settlers trying to gain their liberties from Catholic kings, and many liberals feared what they considered an "authoritarian minded" Catholic hierarchy. Anti-Catholic voters cost Al Smith several Southern and border states in the 1928 presidential election against Republican Herbert Hoover, but Smith also carried some heavily Catholic big cities that had previously been Republican. As the nation's Catholic percentage slowly rose, Joseph Kennedy noticed. "This country is not a private preserve for Protestants," he told his son John in 1956. "There's a whole new generation out there, and it's filled with the sons and daughters of immigrants and those people are going to be mighty proud that one of their own is running for president. And that pride will be your spur, it will give your campaign an intensity we've never seen in public life." And so it did. Kennedy's support from Catholics made him a front-runner in polls before he declared. On the campaign trail, he was cheered by nuns and Catholic schoolchildren and greeted by heavily Catholic crowds that waited hours to throng him, like one in Waterbury, Conn., till 3 o'clock in the morning. But suspicions among Protestants remained. Kennedy had to win primaries in mostly Protestant Wisconsin and almost entirely Protestant West Virginia before the big-city bosses--almost all of them Catholic--would back him. In the fall, popular Protestant minister Norman Vincent Peale questioned the loyalty of Catholics. In Houston, Kennedy faced down 300 Protestant ministers and assured them he would resign the presidency if he found any conflict between his public duties and religious faith. But religion was still a critical issue. Bare majorities of Protestants and voters over 50 said they were willing to vote for a Catholic. Religious fears as well as enthusiasms swelled 1960 voter turnout to the highest levels since 1908, 64 percent of those eligible, compared with 55 percent in 1992. Kennedy won 78 percent of Catholics' votes but only 38 percent of Protestants'. For many Catholics, Kennedy's victory was a symbol of their full acceptance. For all Americans, it narrowed the rift between Catholic and Protestant. Catholic rites, especially in the tragic majesty of the president's funeral, became familiar to all, even as American Catholics, influenced by the reforms of the Second Vatican Council, began abandoning traits and customs--from eating fish on Fridays to having large families--that had once distinguished them from their fellow citizens. The leadership issue. Kennedy's government, too, had a different role in the nation's life and in people's hearts than government has today. As a Democrat, he benefitted from the popularity of government spending programs and by association with labor unions, which were near their peak enrollment--31 percent of the work force. Kennedy kicked off his 1960 fall campaign with a Labor Day rally before over 40,000 in the great auto-factory metropolis of Detroit; he named the United Steelworkers' lawyer as his labor secretary; he reaped political profit from the heavy-handed tactics, including predawn FBI interrogations, he used to roll back the big steel companies' price increases in April 1962. Kennedy shared the view of Keynesian economists and CIA analysts that the Soviet Union was growing faster than the United States and would dwarf the U.S. gross national product by the year 2000 and that socialist planning was more productive than market capitalism. But his own major economic policies proved just the opposite. The free-trade bill, the major domestic achievement of his first two years, and the Keynesian tax cut he promised in 1962 and proposed in '63 led to six years of robust economic growth. In Kennedy's phrase, "A rising tide lifts all the boats": Sons and daughters of factory workers were going to college and getting white-collar jobs; renters were using federal housing and veterans' programs to become homeowners; kids who had grown up playing in city streets were giving their kids green lawns in the suburbs. The upward trajectory of the young people of the Kennedy years was obvious. Statistically, young people, responding to the pill and prosperity, were waiting longer to get married and were more likely to go to college. The baby boom ended in 1962, and the teenage music of the early 1960s--songs like "Soldier Boy," "Uptown" and "Navy Blue," geared to the experiences of boys who went into military service and girls who got married soon after high school--was replaced just after the Kennedy years with the British invasion and psychedelic rock more appealing to the college-bound. As young people went upscale, class-warfare economic politics became obsolete. The bomb issue. Overhanging everything when Kennedy became president was the threat of nuclear war. Schoolchildren huddled under their desks in regular air-raid drills, and homeowners were urged to build backyard shelters to withstand nuclear attack. Kennedy's inaugural speech committed the nation to "pay any price, bear any burden," in a "long twilight struggle"; only two words referred to domestic policy. They were "at home." Candidate Kennedy charged the United States was on the wrong end of a "missile gap" and called for more defense spending; in office, he quickly found that the United States was far ahead in missiles and warheads but stepped up spending nevertheless. Soviet leader Nikita Khrushchev seemed impetuous, even unstable, as he shut down the Paris summit in May 1960 after Soviet defenses downed a U-2 spy plane and banged his shoe on his desk at the United Nations. Kennedy's show of weakness and indecision in the Bay of Pigs invasion--when he refused to disapprove a refugee invasion of Castro's Cuba but also refused to give it the military support it needed to succeed--didn't help. Khrushchev bullied him at the June 1961 Vienna summit and threatened to close down allied access to West Berlin, which could have triggered nuclear war. The threat eased when the Communists built the Berlin Wall in August 1961. But when the Soviets secretly shipped nuclear missiles to Cuba in 1962, Kennedy felt he must respond and in October declared a "quarantine" of the island. After days of tension, in which the superpowers came closer to nuclear war than at any other time before or since, Khrushchev ordered ships containing Soviet warheads to turn back in return for secret promises to remove U.S. missiles from Turkey and a renunciation of plans to invade Cuba. In June 1963, in a speech at American University, Kennedy proclaimed a new era of what would come to be known as detente. The sense of relief was audible in the popular culture. Movies like Fail Safe and Seven Days in May, which took seriously the possibility of nuclear war and military crisis (just as Kennedy himself did), were replaced within a few years by The Russians Are Coming, The Russians Are Coming, which took them not seriously at all. The intervention issue. Kennedy's America remembered that Americans had fought to save Korea from Communists and rued that it had lost China to them. Kennedy himself was fascinated by guerrilla warfare; he created the Green Berets and prepared for brush-fire wars to prevent Communist advance. The president told reporter James Reston that the nation had to demonstrate its firmness after the Vienna summit and the only place to do it was Vietnam. He sent 15,000 troops to South Vietnam. Then, over an August weekend in 1963, his government set into motion the October coup against Ngo Dinh Diem that killed Diem and made South Vietnam an American responsibility. Many Kennedy admirers have argued that he would have withdrawn U.S. forces after the 1964 election, but little in his words or deeds supports that: Kennedy was the first hawk, not the first dove. The civil rights issue. Back home, Kennedy, like most Americans, disliked the system of legally enforced racial segregation in the South. But he wanted to change it slowly and regarded civil rights efforts like the freedom rides of the early 1960s as a political nuisance. He was acutely conscious that no Democrat had been elected without Southern electoral votes, and he calculated, correctly, that strong support of civil rights would cost him the Deep South. So he tried to accommodate governors of those states when federal courts ordered them to desegregate public universities; he met Martin Luther King Jr. only secretly at the White House, and he never considered appearing at the March on Washington in August 1963. For years, he delayed signing a promised order desegregating public-housing units. But like no previous president, Kennedy was alert to the impact of the new medium of television. For the first time, technology was allowing TV to show pictures of events in every corner of the nation the day they occurred. So, in May 1963, most Americans found themselves watching the police dogs and fire hoses Police Commissioner Bull Connor of Birmingham, Ala., was sending against King's peaceful civil rights demonstrators. Segregation was no longer distant and abstract; it was vivid, close at hand and unacceptably brutal. Kennedy was pressed to support a civil rights bill by Vice President Lyndon Johnson, who advised it could pass Congress and would be accepted in the South, and Attorney General Robert Kennedy, who said it was morally necessary. The president agreed. He went on television, ad-libbing in the rocking chair he used for his bad back. The principle in question, he declared, "is as old as the Scriptures and is as clear as the American Constitution." Kennedy's civil rights bill was on its way toward passage when he died. The country was forever changed. Reluctantly, only after prodding by others, Kennedy helped to end a system of segregation that today few Americans would defend. The privacy issue. Kennedy harbored very few illusions. He well knew how much of his good fortune was owed to others--including his Machiavellian father. Yet he achieved his success in a country that loved its illusions, that yearned to believe in its leaders and great institutions, that happily suspended disbelief in the great spectacles of politics and entertainment. From his years in Hollywood, Joseph Kennedy knew how gossip columnists like Louella Parsons and Hedda Hopper catered to a public that wanted to see its movie stars as ordinary family people, despite their divorces and the gaudy glamour of their lifestyles. Similarly, political reporters suppressed any evidence of departure from middle-class mores, never investigating or reporting on politicians' drunkenness or dalliance. John Kennedy could flaunt his family's wealth and glamour and yet be so confident that his sexual affairs would never be made public that he greatly enjoyed Marilyn Monroe, the nation's most sultry movie star and evidently one of his paramours, singing "Happy Birthday" to him in Madison Square Garden in 1962. Americans understood their nation was not perfect. But they cherished a version of history that showed how the country was specially blessed, with a special mission to promote freedom and democracy in the world. They also trusted their institutions. More than 70 percent in Kennedy's time thought the federal government would do what is right most of the time or always; just 29 percent felt the same by 1992. Americans in the early 1960s found it easy to regard the cool and cynical John Kennedy as warm and idealistic, to overlook his mistakes and appreciate his successes, to give him the highest job ratings of any president, despite a performance that even his admirers admit had important flaws. At the time, he seemed the latest in a line of great leaders who had come forward from odd corners of the country to lead it to victory in time of crisis. Kennedy's presidency thus seemed to follow a familiar American pattern. But his death made no sense at all. Americans had seen their country led to victory in two terrible wars by leaders of great genius, who, drained of energy by their efforts, were struck down just at the moment of victory. There was Abraham Lincoln a century before and Franklin Roosevelt within living memory. By contrast, John Kennedy's death in November 1963 seemed utterly dissonant. He died not at the moment of triumph but in the middle of battle. He seemed not drained of life but young and vital--killed by an odd loner or, some thought, a sinister conspiracy. It was the first of many shocking events of the 1960s-- urban riots and campus rebellions, defeats in war, the assassinations of King and Robert Kennedy--that made it seem that all the old rules no longer applied and every source of order had vanished. Kennedy, often incidentally or against his inclinations, transformed the country that elected him. It had lived with racial segregation and class-warfare politics, in fear of nuclear holocaust and mistrust of differing creeds--but it was also confident of its own goodness and the worthiness of its great institutions. Only in that older America could John Kennedy, a Catholic Democrat preoccupied with foreign policy and willing to make accommodations with segregationists, have been elected. Only Kennedy could have changed that nation so thoroughly, for the better while he lived and for the worse by the way he died. Title: The weathering of Camelot. (characteristics of John F. Kennedy) (Column) Authors: Leo, John Citation: U.S. News & World Report, Nov 22, 1993 v115 n20 p19(1) ------------------------------------------------------------- People: Kennedy, John F._Portrayals, depictions, etc. Reference #: A14547450 ============================================================= Abstract: Pres John F. Kennedy was a smart, impatient, unorganized man who focused on foreign policy and the threat of communism. The press paid a great deal of attention to Kennedy, but reporters did not tell the story of Kennedy's medical problems, which included Addison's disease. ============================================================= Full Text COPYRIGHT U.S. News and World Report Inc. 1993 Trying to write a fresh book on a stale subject like the Kennedy presidency is certainly a high-wire act. All sorts of historians, acolytes and debunkers have been pounding around on this well-worn turf for 30 years. What else is there to say? Well, for one thing, what the White House years looked like through the eyes of its primary occupant, Jack Kennedy. Using that angle of attack, Richard Reeves's well-researched book, President Kennedy, is a remarkable achievement. As portrayed by Reeves, Kennedy was a man of decent instincts; he was a cold warrior, preoccupied with foreign affairs and the Soviet threat--particularly in Berlin--and devoted to working the grain of America's obsession with communism. Arthur Schlesinger once called the Kennedy regime a "fluid presidency." In Reeves's account, that fluidity and lack of organization look almost slapdash. He was a quick study, a very bright and impatient man with a very short attention span. He hated meetings, preferring hallway conversations and phone calls. Sometimes briefings amounted to whispered words on the way in the door. He was contemptuous of the State Department and the rest of the executive bureaucracy and cut most lines of command. This helped produce a highly personalized presidency, heavily dependent on one man's style and charm. Kennedy was browbeaten and shocked by Khrushchev at the Vienna summit. British Prime Minister Harold Macmillan said it was the first time Kennedy had met a man impervious to his charm. Kennedy had no use for the dons of American liberalism--the "honkers," he called them. He had to be "tough," because soft Democrats always seemed to lose elections. Besides, Kennedy avoided honking himself. He was a cool and detached man, saved from coldness only by self-deprecating humor and a movie-star charisma that warmed others no matter what he said or did. The Kennedy style was, as Reeves says, "cool objectivity, pure information-gathering, dispassionate analysis, a decision-making mechanism unswayed by sentiment, unmoved by subjective and moral argument." Affair of the head. The refusal to make a moral argument makes the civil rights section of Reeves's book excruciating to read. Time and again, Harris Wofford and others pushed him to back the Freedom Riders and demonstrators, but Kennedy said no. Blacks would have to wait until public opinion formed behind them. Though no bigot, he viewed the Freedom Rides primarily as irritating distractions from cold-war business and as something the Communists could use to embarrass the United States. Four times Kennedy struck the name of Sammy Davis Jr. from an invitation list, because he thought a photo of a black man at the White House with a white wife would have been a political disaster. At one point in the book, he tells the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. that two of King's aides are high officials of the Communist Party. King says dryly of one: "I don't know how he's got time to do all that--he's got two jobs with me." Press fawning over Kennedy was excessive, even by the lax standards of the day. Chalk much of this up to the bedazzlement of the Washington press corps. Reporters tend to be ironic, detached outsiders, like Kennedy, and many thought they saw a kindred spirit, raised to the level of American royalty. Many fought to bask in Kennedy's sunshine, doing small favors, letting him know what was coming up about him in their magazines and papers. Their bosses liked the arrangement, too. Reeves tells the story of Hugh Sidey of Time, writing about Kennedy's speed- reading ability. Sidey called an institute where Kennedy had started but not finished a speed-reading course, and was told that the president could read about 700 to 800 words a minute. Kennedy didn't like the number. "How about 1200?" Sidey asked. OK, Kennedy said, and that became the standard statistic on Kennedy's allegedly phenomenal reading abilities. One story that the press managed to miss, although it was virtually dumped in their laps by Lyndon Johnson's people at the 1960 Democratic convention, was that Jack Kennedy was virtually a cripple. He had serious spinal problems, Addison's disease, recurrent infections, persistent venereal disease and fierce fevers. He took medicine daily, sometimes hourly, consuming large quantities of cortisone, Novocain and amphetamines. Four times in his life he received the last rites of the Catholic Church. Despite all the photographs of touch football and "vigah," he lived with intense pain and very low energy all his adult days. The wonder of it was that such a sickly, detached and cautious president, filled with old cold-war ideas and only tepidly promoting change, should have released such energy among the young. But he did. When blacks in the South began pushing hard for change, Kennedy asked a black politician where they were getting such ideas. "From you," the politician said. When Robert Kennedy told the Freedom Riders to stop and asked for a cooling-off period, Reeves writes, the protesters "were not listening to Robert Kennedy's words. They thought they had heard John Kennedy's music." The music was his legacy, even though he was probably only half aware of playing it. Washington Times (WT) - Thursday, November 17, 1994 WT (c) 1994 Washington Times. All rts. reserv. 07821004 Washington Times (WT) - Thursday, November 17, 1994 Edition: Final Section: M WASHINGTON WEEKEND CALENDAR TOP PICKS Page: M9 Word Count: 413 TEXT: LECTURES The National Archives never stops coming up with interesting ideas for lectures on American history. Richard Reeves, author of the celebrated and compelling "President Kennedy," discusses "The Young Presidents: The Perils of John F. Kennedy and Bill Clinton" at noon on Nov. 22, the 31st anniversary of the Kennedy assassination. The Archives is located at Pennsylvania Avenue and Seventh Street NW, and the program is free. For information, call 202/501-5000. CAPTION: Photo, Bill Clinton and John F. Kennedy - seen here as student and president in 1963 - will be discussed in a National Archives lecture on Nov. 22. Memory of JFK waning in Dallas Conspiracy buffs seem less in WT (c) 1994 Washington Times. All rts. reserv. 07825011 Memory of JFK waning in Dallas Conspiracy buffs seem less intense Washington Times (WT) - Monday, November 21, 1994 By: Hugh Aynesworth - THE WASHINGTON TIMES Edition: Final Section: A Page: A1 Word Count: 908 TEXT: DALLAS - DALLAS - Millions of people have trekked through Dealey Plaza, the place where John F. Kennedy was murdered on Nov. 22, 1963. They've taken thousands of photographs of the "grassy knoll" and the Texas School Book Depository. This past weekend, unlike some previous anniversaries, there seems a perceptibly more subdued tone. "It's because these people don't really remember," says Bob Douglas, an assassination buff from Los Angeles, as he peddles a $3 tabloid newspaper that purports to give "the real truth" about the assassination. "They weren't even born yet, most of them," he says. "How could they really feel it?" Two conventions, just blocks from the site, have fueled this year's influx of searchers. One group is composed of hard-core conspiracy theorists, the other a national conclave of high school journalism students. Six blocks to the east, the Assassination Records Review Board held an all-day session Friday to elicit speculation about what of the still-embargoed records of the assassination investigation should be released, and how and when. The board asked for testimony concerning the existence of relevant records, but was inundated by authors and self-styled investigators who wanted to promote their own theories. One participant said he had been told that an Army intelligence unit from Fort Hood had killed the president and had set up videotaping operations beforehand at several sites surrounding Dealey Plaza. Asked to name his informant, he demurred, saying he's afraid of getting the person in trouble. He urged the panel to get President Clinton to rescind any orders of secrecy so that his informant could come forward. A Houston television producer, whose TV documentary, with a version on CD-ROM for computers, is due out soon, told the board he believes a federal prison inmate who had confessed to him was "one of the assassins." Beyond these speculations, the 31st anniversary walk-up is calm compared with earlier years. Despite the fact that Oliver Stone's fiction-as-fact 1992 movie, "JFK," bred a new generation of doubters of the official investigation, there no longer remains an overwhelming presence in Dealey Plaza. Absent is an intensity once readily apparant. Two JFK assassination "museums" that peddled coffee mugs, ashtrays, conspiracy books and autopsy photographs, have folded, leaving only vendors like Mr. Douglas and assorted experts and theorists to hawk their own history of the events. The author of one of the most successful pro-conspiracy books is said to be trying to sell a UFO treatise as well. Says one bemused Fort Worth reporter: "That alone should tell you there's not much more money in this quest." Not so long ago, they came to Dealey Plaza with a purpose - and a vengeance. In the mid-1960s, fired up by the first of the conspiracy theorists, most seemed certain the accused assassin, Lee Harvey Oswald, couldn't have fired three shots from that sixth-floor perch. There was widespread talk of multiple assassins. One could feel the boundless energy and intensity of the searchers as they slowly traversed the layout, peering this way and that, often taking notes, taking pictures of each other, usually tape-recording thoughts and measurements. Often the groups of threes and fours would splinter off, as if to grab a bit of solitude and one-on-one reverence. To many, it was close to a religious experience. There were always the promoters - those who claimed they knew what the government had covered up. For a couple of dollars, they would tell their story, showing disdain of any who questioned their scenarios, some more fanciful than others. On Nov. 22, 1974, one peddler carried an armload of tabloids with huge headlines that read, "KENNEDY ALIVE, HELD PRISONER AT PARKLAND!" Reaching into his large duffel bag, he offered two books postulating that CIA and Russian KGB agents had killed JFK. He was asked to explain how these two stories - one with JFK alive, the other with JFK dead - could both be true. "I don't ask questions," he snapped. "I just provide information." Sometimes as many as 30 persons showed up on Nov. 22, claiming they had been present when Kennedy was shot. Jim Bowie, a former Dallas County assistant district attorney, once said he thought it amazing so many people were in Dealey Plaza on Nov. 22, 1963. "That day it looked like only three or four hundred," he said, dryly, "but each year we find there were another thousand standing there. I wonder how many will have been there by the year 2000." One such claimant was hauled away in 1970 by acquaintances who claimed the man wasn't even in Texas when the president was killed. He had just mesmerized a group of Oregon students with his eyewitness "recollections." "He was still in college in Wisconsin," said one as they pulled him into a nearby car, "and we're not letting him get away with this tacky exhibition." Others showed little or no restraint. Tabloid newspapers, slide shows, impromptu speeches and for-sale interviews often turned Nov. 22 into a carnival-like extravaganza. The most extravagant of all was Nov. 22, 1983, when publisher Larry Flynt, gliding by the scene at exactly 11:30 a.m. in a black convertible limousine, raised up his crippled and paralyzed body, groaned and splashed a large bottle of catsup over his head - symbolic, someone might conclude, of the brutality inflicted on Kennedy by two shots to the head precisely 20 years to the minute before. R0023926-112194 Doctor who tried to save JFK, dies at 77 WT (c) 1994 Washington Times. All rts. reserv. 07827055 Doctor who tried to save JFK, dies at 77 Washington Times (WT) - Wednesday, November 23, 1994 By: FROM WIRE DISPATCHES AND STAFF REPORTS Edition: Final Section: NATION AMERICAN SCENE Page: A12 Word Count: 52 TEXT: DALLAS - Dr. Marion Thomas "Pepper" Jenkins, who declared President Kennedy dead in the Parkland Memorial Hospital emergency room in 1963, has died at 77. Dr. Jenkins, who also treated Lee Harvey Oswald and Jack Ruby, died of stomach cancer Monday, one day short of the 31st anniversary of the assassination. a0715-112394 ZAPRUDER FILM ON LIST OF `IMPORTANT' MOVIES US (c) 1994 USA Today. All rts. reserv. 07819047 ZAPRUDER FILM ON LIST OF `IMPORTANT' MOVIES USA Today (US) - TUESDAY November 15, 1994 By: Marco R. della Cava Edition: FINAL Section: NEWS Page: 01A Word Count: 156 TEXT: Eight millimeters and 486 grainy frames does not a classic make - unless you're a movie called Zapruder. The endlessly analyzed footage of President Kennedy's 1963 assassination, taken by Abraham Zapruder, joins E.T. in the Library of Congress' vault of films deemed culturally, historically or aesthetically important. The Zapruder film is the first amateur movie on the list, which now numbers 150. "It was very important to represent the whole body of amateur film which is important to our heritage," says David Francis of the Library of Congress. This is "probably the most famous amateur film of all time." Among other new entries: Off-beat buddy dramas The African Queen (1951) and Midnight Cowboy (1969). A 1933 pre-Disney version of Snow White, starring Betty Boop. "I feel strongly about every film that's made," says Roddy McDowall, actor and member of the National Film Preservation Board, which helps choose the films. "Even ones that are considered kitsch." Copyright 1994 Gannett Co., Inc. DESCRIPTORS: LIBRARY OF CONGRESS; ABRAHAM ZAPRUDER; JOHN F KENNEDY; SUBJECT TERMS: MOVIE; LIBRARY; PRESERVATION; ASSASSINATION NEW IN PAPERBACK - NEW IN PAPERBACK. WP (c) 1994 Washington Post. All rts. reserv. 2222480 NEW IN PAPERBACK - NEW IN PAPERBACK. The Washington Post, November 20, 1994, FINAL Edition Section: BOOK WORLD, p. x12 Story Type: Review Line Count: 56 Word Count: 621 ALSO JUST OUT President Kennedy: Profile of Power, by Richard Reeves (Touchstone, $15) THE ZAPRUDER FILM, ALMOST 31 YEARS LATER 4.7 INCHES DFP (c) 1994 Detroit Free Press Inc. All rts. reserv. 07540379 THE ZAPRUDER FILM, ALMOST 31 YEARS LATER 4.7 INCHES Detroit Free Press (FP) - TUESDAY November 15, 1994 Edition: METRO FINAL Section: NWS Page: 4A Word Count: 154 TEXT: The film Abraham Zapruder shot of President John F. Kennedy's assassination on Nov. 22, 1963, joined classics of comedy and suspense Monday in the Library of Congress registry of American film. The 486 frames are the first amateur 8-millimeter film placed in the registry, which was established in 1988 to preserve film deemed culturally, historically or aesthetically important. The 24 other films that were added, bringing the total to 150: "The African Queen," 1951 "The Apartment," 1960 "The Cool World," 1963 "A Corner in Wheat," 1909 "E.T. -- The Extra-Terrestrial," 1982 "The Exploits of Elaine," 1914 "Force of Evil," 1948 "Freaks," 1932 "Hell's Hinges," 1916 "Hospital," 1970 "Invasion of the Body Snatchers," 1956 "The Lady Eve," 1941 "Louisiana Story," 1948 "The Manchurian Candidate," 1962 "Marty," 1955 "Meet Me in St. Louis," 1944 "Midnight Cowboy," 1969 "A Movie," 1958 "Pinocchio," 1940 "Safety Last," 1923 "Scarface," 1932 "Snow White," 1933 "Tabu," 1931 "Taxi Driver," 1976 DESCRIPTORS: movie; list LOVE FIELD DFP (c) 1994 Detroit Free Press Inc. All rts. reserv. 07521425 LOVE FIELD Detroit Free Press (FP) - FRIDAY June 17, 1994 By: FRANK BRUNI Edition: METRO FINAL Section: FTR Page: 2D Word Count: 202 MEMO: WORTH A LOOK; Adventures in video TEXT: Terry Shea of Grosse Pointe makes the good point that Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis' recent death -- and the attention paid to her popularity and legendary style -- make this movie particularly interesting to watch right now. Commencing on the day of John F. Kennedy's assassination, it focuses on a Dallas woman (Michelle Pfeiffer) who is utterly enraptured by the first lady and goes to the airport to see the Kennedys arrive. Later, she is so devastated by Kennedy's death -- and so concerned for the first lady -- that she sets off by bus for the funeral. Along the way, she meets and becomes involved with a black man. The plot is a bit thin and unfolds slowly but, as Shea notes, this 1991 movie is considerably better than its fleeting theatrical life suggested. In addition, adds Shea, 44, a bank manager, "Michelle Pfeiffer is great." She earned a Best Actress Oscar nomination for this performance, which gave her considerably more screen time than she currently gets in "Wolf" (see review, Page 1D). To recommend a video to Frank Bruni, call 1-313-441-1034 anytime; press option 9 when prompted and leave your message. CUTLINE: Michelle Pfeiffer CAPTION: Michelle Pfeiffer JACKIE'S KIDS OVERCOME TEMPTATION, FAME, FORTUNE DFP (c) 1994 Detroit Free Press Inc. All rts. reserv. 07519293 JACKIE'S KIDS OVERCOME TEMPTATION, FAME, FORTUNE Detroit Free Press (FP) - THURSDAY June 2, 1994 By: JOHN H. DAVIS New York Times News Service Edition: METRO FINAL Section: WWL Page: 2D Word Count: 1,513 TEXT: Much of the credit for the way John F. Kennedy Jr. and Caroline Kennedy turned out must go to their mother, Jacqueline. The former first lady overcame enormous odds in bringing up her children to be relatively normal, natural and, above all, unspoiled young professionals. From their earliest years, John and Caroline, as the children of an assassinated president, received overwhelming attention, wherever they went, whatever they did. If that was not enough to spoil them, there was all the money their father had left them and the money Jacqueline's second husband, Aristotle Onassis, had left them as well. When Jacqueline married Onassis in 1968, a trust fund assuring her an annual income of $175,000, which she had inherited from Kennedy, automatically reverted to her children. By the terms of the bequest, each of them received trusts worth approximately $7 million to $10 million, depending on market conditions. Then when Onassis died in 1975, he left John and Caroline each incomes of $25,000 a year until their 21st birthdays. That meant when Caroline was 18 and John was 15, each had an annual income of at least $200,000 a year, probably more. Yet miraculously the money did not spoil them. Both Caroline and John graduated from college and law school, buckled down to work in New York City and eschewed the jet-set world of red Ferraris and weekend jaunts on the Concorde to Paris. Yes, Jacqueline had brought up her children well. Even her most vituperative critics agreed she was an exceptionally good mother. Tough love Realizing how spoiled young John Jr. could become, Jacqueline took steps early in her son's life to toughen him up. She told one of the Secret Service agents assigned her to give John boxing lessons. When the boy turned 11, she sent him to the Drake Island Adventure Center in Plymouth, England, for a demanding course in canoeing, sailing and mountain climbing that was supposed to build character. She dispatched him at 13 to the Outward Bound program for the development of survival skills under extreme conditions of deprivation. John survived these rigors satisfactorily. Nevertheless, still fearing he would become too soft, Jacqueline packed him off to the National Outdoor Leadership School in Kenya, where he was compelled to learn how to cope with life in the African wilds with almost no creature comforts to fall back on. John Jr. did not distinguish himself academically at the Collegiate School in Manhattan, so Jacqueline enrolled him at the stricter Phillips Academy in Andover, the alma mater of George Bush. There he took an avid interest in the theater, acting in school plays. Ambitious error For reasons that have never been satisfactorily explained, upon graduating from Andover, John entered Brown University instead of Harvard where his Kennedy grandfather, father, uncles and some of his cousins had gone. Again John Jr. did not distinguish himself academically at Brown, but became an actor and immediately drew the stern opposition of his mother. No, he could not become an actor. He had to enter a more dignified, respectable profession. Nevertheless, in defiance of his mother's wishes he starred in Brian Friel's off-Broadway play "Winners." At his mother's express request there were to be no reviews of the play, lest a good one might encourage John to proceed further with his acting career. Soon, however, serious offers from television producers and Hollywood moguls began coming in. Some believed he stood a chance of becoming a major film star. He had dark good looks, was charismatic, athletic and had indisputable acting ability. But while Jacqueline was a very conscientious mother, she was also a very manipulative one. She had the ability to turn off affection and approval when she was crossed; then just as quickly she could turn it back on again when her demands were met. Disapproval from Jacqueline could be devastating. She could be so gracious and warm and affectionate when she wanted to be that it made her withdrawal of favor and affection that much more withering. She could exercise a form of emotional blackmail on people. Once you had been given the cold shoulder by Jacqueline you didn't want to experience it again. We do not know what actually transpired between Jacqueline and John when the showdown occurred over his desire to be an actor. But his mother's scorn must have been insufferably painful to him. For at some point he capitulated to her and gave up his ambition to become an actor, deciding to go to law school instead. Straightened out In July 1988, television viewers across the nation witnessed the political debut of handsome John Jr., then 28, as he addressed the Democratic National Convention in Atlanta. Poised and charismatic, like his father, but displaying more the physical traits of his mother's family, he disclaimed political ambition in his speech, but showed he could make a stunning impression speaking on his feet. The following year he graduated from New York University Law School and was appointed an assistant district attorney by Manhattan District Attorney Robert Morganthau, who had received his first job in the Justice Department from President John F. Kennedy in 1961. Then, in 1990, after two much-publicized failed attempts, John Jr. passed the New York State bar exam. By then young John Jr.'s face, a perfect blend of his Bouvier and Kennedy genetic inheritance, had become almost as familiar as his father's had been during the White House years, and his future seemed bright indeed. By the time of young Kennedy's speech to the Democrats in Atlanta, his sister, Caroline Bouvier Kennedy, had graduated from Columbia Law School, passed the bar exam, married Edwin Schlossberg, produced a daughter whom she named Rose Kennedy Schlossberg and begun working on a book for William Morrow, "The Bill of Rights in Action," which eventually would become a national best-seller. That the law was not so congenial to John Jr.'s temperament and interests was proven by his two failures of the New York state bar exam. But then, in many ways John Jr. is more a Bouvier than a Kennedy. Certainly his complexion, features and dark hair resemble those of his mother more than his father. And he bears a striking resemblance to his grandfather John V. (Black Jack) Bouvier -- Jacqueline's adored father -- when Black Jack was a young man. Correspondingly, his face bears no resemblance whatsoever to his paternal grandfather, Joseph P. Kennedy. In temperament and interests he is also more a Bouvier than a Kennedy. He is much more drawn to the arts than he is to politics. It is also worth noting that since John Jr. was appointed an assistant district attorney in Manhattan he has been spending his summers in East Hampton, where his mother grew up, rather than in Hyannis Port. More like Dad Caroline, on the other hand, is very much a Kennedy. Bearing a marked resemblance to her father, she took very little from her mother. Certainly she is completely bereft of her mother's sense of style. Devoted to her father's memory, she is the dedicated vice president of the John F. Kennedy Library Foundation in Boston. A very conscientious young woman, Caroline worked hard at Radcliffe and did well academically, graduating near the top of her class in 1980. Upon leaving college she took a job in the Film and Television Department of the Metropolitan Museum of Art, worked at it for four years, then surprised everybody by enrolling in Columbia Law School in 1985 at the age of 28. That same year she married Edwin Schlossberg, 41, an inventor of electronic games and a designer of museum exhibits and amusement parlors, from an Orthodox Jewish family. They lived in a 12-room, $2.5-million apartment on Park Avenue and 78th Street. On June 24, 1988 she gave birth to her first child, whom she named Rose Kennedy Schlossberg, after her grandmother. Another daughter, Tatiana, followed, and then in 1993 she gave birth to a son whom she named John Bouvier Kennedy Schlossberg. Meanwhile she had graduated from law school, passed her bar exam and completed her book, "The Bill of Rights in Action," co-authored with Ellen Alderman. Perhaps John Jr. might get a chance to demonstrate his acting skills in a courtroom as a government prosecutor. Histrionics are a not inconsiderable part of a trial lawyer's offensive arsenal. Then again, it is not inconceivable that in discouraging John from pursuing an acting career Jacqueline prevented her son from realizing himself, from fulfilling his own personal destiny. And he may resent that and hold it against his mother. Whatever the future holds for her children, it is clear that for most Americans, in the final years of her life, Jacqueline remained an inaccessible enigma: a radiant stylish first lady, who survived appalling tragedies with courage and dignity. Reprinted by arrangement with National Press Books, from "The Bouviers: From Waterloo to the Kennedys and Beyond" ($24.95, hardcover). Davis, a cousin of Jacqueline Bouvier Kennedy Onassis, is a recognized authority on the Bouvier family. CAPTION: PHOTO Photo 1989 File Photo DESCRIPTORS: biography; Caroline; Kennedy Schlossberg; John F. Kennedy Jr. ; Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis; book; excerpt KENNEDY GLAMOUR ALWAYS RUBBED OFF DFP (c) 1994 Detroit Free Press Inc. All rts. reserv. 07518943 KENNEDY GLAMOUR ALWAYS RUBBED OFF Detroit Free Press (FP) - SUNDAY May 29, 1994 By: SUSAN AGER Edition: METRO FINAL Section: WWL Page: 1J Word Count: 593 TEXT: My first memory of politics: I'm 6 years old, sitting in the back seat of my father's car. He's driving my mother and me home from a doctor's appointment in downtown Detroit. We're listening to a speech by John F. Kennedy who, my mother tells me, is running for president. Then she says, "He has such a wonderful voice," as if he were a movie star or a radio deejay. As if she has a crush on him. My mother voted for Jack Kennedy. On election night, she let me stay up late. I rooted for him because we lived on Kennedy Drive. To have the president's name in our address would be exciting. Everyone would know how to spell it. Looking like Jackie The Kennedy name has woven itself through my life. When I was 15 1/2, on the night of my first prom, my 17-year-old date took my hands in Cobo Hall's River Room, shining with satin and rhinestones, and said: "You are beautiful tonight. You look like Jackie Kennedy." My hair, mounded atop my head, was laced with tiny pearls. My lips were glossed with pink. I held myself straight. I smiled without showing my teeth. I said very little, and when I spoke I tried to whisper. A woman who says very little, looks you in the eye and smiles like Mona Lisa will inevitably win the compliments Jackie did: graceful, elegant, poised. She will not win votes in a political race, or cheers in a potato sack race at her children's school picnic. But Jackie didn't want those things. And, when I was 15, neither did I. I only wanted my feet to shrink -- until I learned that Jackie wore shoes even larger than my own size 9. During the years when the Camelot legend was under careful construction, almost every woman wanted to be like Jackie, the beautiful and gallant widow of a slain and handsome hero. Every man knew it, and every mother, too. Somewhere is an old photo of Susan at 13 on Easter Sunday, dressed in clothes my mother bought me: a straight beige shift and a matching pillbox hat. I'm squinting in the sun, but on my lips is an enigmatic smile, Jackie's smile. Remembering Caroline When I was 16, I took my first real job at my hometown's Caroline Kennedy Public Library. I wonder how many libraries throughout the nation were renamed for that bereft little girl and her littler brother, icons too. My own brothers also worked at the Caroline Kennedy Library, one after another. For a long time, each of us kept that magic name on our resumes. My mother, two years younger than Jackie, continued to scrutinize each published photo of her. Jackie remained the model of what a woman who works at it could be after 50 -- then, after 60. Impeccable. Self-contained. Captivating to wealthy men. My youngest brother is now captivated by a woman whose last name happens to be Kennedy. My parents still live on Kennedy Drive. Everyone knows how to spell it. And I keep tucked in a pillbox of unforgettable compliments the one my prom date paid me, fingering it now and again, sentimental at how much it meant to me. Once there was a moment when I looked like Jackie Kennedy -- under dim lights, to a kid in a white tuxedo, in an era long ago when Jackie was the best a woman could be. To leave a message for Susan Ager, call 1-313-441-1034 and press 8. 'SHE GRACED OUR LIVES' NATION BIDS HER FAREWELL DFP (c) 1994 Detroit Free Press Inc. All rts. reserv. 07518167 'SHE GRACED OUR LIVES' NATION BIDS HER FAREWELL Detroit Free Press (FP) - TUESDAY May 24, 1994 By: MARY OTTO Free Press Washington Staff The Associated Press contributed. Edition: METRO FINAL Section: NWS Page: 1A Word Count: 736 MEMO: SEE ALSO METRO EDITION, Page 1A JACQUELINE KENNEDY ONASSIS, 1929-1994 TEXT: ARLINGTON, Va. - To the eyes of one onlooker, it was the only place for Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis to be buried, in Arlington National Cemetery, beside John F. Kennedy and the eternal flame she lit for him nearly 31 years ago. "To my way of thinking, she was never separated from him," said Harriet McMahon, who came from Charles Town, W.Va., with her daughter and grandson to stand at the cemetery gates and watch the hearse whisk past. "It's a remarriage, her being buried with him." By friends and strangers nationwide, Onassis was remembered Monday as the stoic wife of a slain president, a heroine, a devoted mother, a lover of beauty and culture. Onassis died Thursday of lymphatic cancer at her home in New York. She was 64. She was remembered by her brother-in-law, Sen. Edward Kennedy of Massachusetts, during a funeral mass Monday morning at St. Ignatius of Loyola Roman Catholic Church on Manhattan's Upper East Side, where she was baptized. "She never wanted public notice -- in part, I think, because it brought back painful memories of an unbearable sorrow endured in the glare of a million lights," he said. "In all the years since then, her genuineness and depth of character continued to shine through the privacy, and reach people everywhere. . . . She graced our history and for those of us who knew and loved her, she graced our lives." Her son, John F. Kennedy Jr., 33, who touched the nation three decades ago as a tot by saluting his father's casket, spoke briefly during the funeral service. "Choosing the readings for these services, we struggled to find ones that captured my mother's essence," he said. "Three things came to mind over and over again, and ultimately dictated our selections. They were her love of words, the bonds of home and family and her spirit of adventure." Her daughter, Caroline Kennedy Schlossberg, 36, read "Memory of Cape Cod," a poem by Edna St. Vincent Millay, from a book she said her mother kept on a special shelf in her room. Among those in attendance at the mass were first lady Hillary Rodham Clinton, former first lady Lady Bird Johnson, dozens of members of the Kennedy family and scores of friends. President Bill Clinton did not attend the mass, fearing the crowds that he draws would disrupt the private service. At her burial, the Rev. Philip Hannan presided, as he had over the burial of President Kennedy. The site, on a hill that overlooks the monuments of Washington, was chosen by the former first lady for her husband's grave. After the benediction, both children kissed their mother's mahogany casket and paid their respects to their father at the eternal flame. "God gave her very great gifts and imposed upon her great burdens," President Clinton told about 100 family members and close friends who attended the burial service. "She bore them all with dignity and grace and uncommon common sense." "Whether she was soothing a nation grieving for a former president or raising the children with the care and the privacy they deserved or simply being a good friend, she seemed always to do the right thing in the right way," Clinton said. "May the flame she lit so long ago burn ever brighter here and always brighter in our hearts," the president said. "God bless you, friend, and farewell." Outside, several hundred onlookers gathered outside the gates of Arlington National Cemetery. Howard Riddick and his sister, Martha, came from southeastern Virginia to watch the funeral procession just as they had come to Washington on a cold November day in 1963 for John F. Kennedy's funeral. Also among the throng was William Kenney, a traveling minister and singer, who carried a large American flag. "She was a lady of America, dedicated to America," Kenney said. "That is why this flag is dedicated to her." Then, in a deep, resonant voice, he sang "Amazing Grace." CAPTION: PHOTO Caroline Kennedy Schlossberg kneels at the casket of her mother, Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis, during burial services Monday at Arlington National Cemetery. Onassis was buried beside John F. Kennedy. Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis' children, John Jr. and Caroline, follow her casket after the funeral Monday in New York City. At right are Caroline Kennedy Schlossberg's husband, Edwin, and Onassis' longtime companion, Maurice Tempelsman. Both her children spoke at the funeral. DESCRIPTORS: Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis; obituary; death NATION BIDS HER FAREWELL DFP (c) 1994 Detroit Free Press Inc. All rts. reserv. 07518164 NATION BIDS HER FAREWELL Detroit Free Press (FP) - TUESDAY May 24, 1994 By: MARY OTTO Free Press Washington Staff The Associated Press contributed. Edition: METRO EDITION Section: NWS Page: 1A Word Count: 657 MEMO: SEE ALSO METRO FINAL CHASER EDITION, Page 1A JACQUELINE KENNEDY ONASSIS, 1929-1994 TEXT: ARLINGTON, Va. - To the eyes of one onlooker, it was the only place for Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis to be buried, in Arlington National Cemetery, beside John F. Kennedy and the eternal flame she lit for him nearly 31 years ago. "To my way of thinking, she was never separated from him," said Harriet McMahon, who came from Charles Town, W.Va., with her daughter and grandson to stand at the cemetery gates and watch the hearse whisk past. "It's a remarriage, her being buried with him." By friends and strangers nationwide, Onassis was remembered Monday as the stoic wife of a slain president, a heroine, a devoted mother, a lover of beauty and culture. "God gave her very great gifts and imposed upon her great burdens," President Bill Clinton told about 100 family members and close friends who attended the burial service. "She bore them all with dignity and grace and uncommon common sense." "Whether she was soothing a nation grieving for a former president or raising the children with the care and the privacy they deserved or simply being a good friend, she seemed always to do the right thing in the right way," Clinton said. "May the flame she lit so long ago burn ever brighter here and always brighter in our hearts," the president said. "God bless you, friend, and farewell." Onassis died Thursday of lymphatic cancer at her home in New York. She was 64. A funeral mass was said Monday morning at St. Ignatius of Loyola Roman Catholic Church on Manhattan's Upper East Side, where she was baptized. Among those in attendance at the mass were first lady Hillary Rodham Clinton, former first lady Lady Bird Johnson, dozens of members of the Kennedy family and scores of friends. President Clinton did not attend the mass, fearing the crowds that he draws would disrupt the private service. At the mass, Onassis was remembered by her brother-in-law, Sen. Edward Kennedy of Massachusetts. Her son, John F. Kennedy Jr., 33, who touched the nation three decades ago as a tot by saluting his father's casket, spoke briefly during the funeral service. "Choosing the readings for these services, we struggled to find ones that captured my mother's essence, he said. "Three things came to mind over and over again, and ultimately dictated our selections. They were her love of words, the bonds of home and family and her spirit of adventure." Her daughter, Caroline Kennedy Schlossberg, 36, read "Memory of Cape Cod," a poem by Edna St. Vincent Millay, from a book she said her mother kept on a special shelf in her room. At her burial, the Rev. Philip Hannan presided, as he had over the burial of President Kennedy. The site, on a hill that overlooks the monuments of Washington, was chosen by the former first lady for her husband's grave. After the benediction, both children kissed their mother's mahogany casket and paid their respects to their father at the eternal flame. Outside, several hundred onlookers gathered outside the gates of Arlington National Cemetery. Howard Riddick and his sister, Martha, came from southeastern Virginia to watch the funeral procession just as they had come to Washington on a cold November day in 1963 for John F. Kennedy's funeral. Also among the throng was William Kenney, a traveling minister and singer, who carried a large American flag. "She was a lady of America, dedicated to America," Kenney said. "That is why this flag is dedicated to her." Then, in a deep, resonant voice, he sang " Amazing Grace." CAPTION: PHOTO Caroline Kennedy Schlossberg kneels at the casket of her mother, Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis, during burial services Monday at Arlington National Cemetery. Onassis was buried beside John F. Kennedy. Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis' children, John Jr. and Caroline, follow her casket after the funeral. At right are Caroline's husband, Edwin Schlossberg, and Onassis' companion, Maurice Templesman. DESCRIPTORS: Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis; death; reaction; obituary TONY AND JACQUELINE, RESPECTFULLY DFP (c) 1994 Detroit Free Press Inc. All rts. reserv. 07518148 TONY AND JACQUELINE, RESPECTFULLY Detroit Free Press (FP) - MONDAY May 23, 1994 By: RODDY RAY Edition: METRO FINAL Section: NWS Page: 1B Word Count: 401 MEMO: LOCAL NEWS: REAL LIFE TEXT: It was a bitter cold day in 1961 that Free Press photographer Tony Spina found himself among a chosen few standing before the White House reviewing stand. John F. Kennedy's face showed the weight of a nation. His father, Joseph, looked proud. Jacqueline beamed. He tried for a photo that the Kennedys would like. That was his standard. By now, he'd taken many pictures of Jacqueline, in Los Angeles and Detroit. They knew each other, in a way. In 1964, after Kennedy's death, Tony realized he could compile a book. But he knew Jacqueline was uncomfortable with some of the books coming out, and he wanted her permission. "I think I've seen your pictures," she told him when he called her, and she welcomed a chance to see more. He sent them. The return letter, to his Bloomfield Hills home, said she was deeply touched. At the Democratic Convention in Atlantic City, as the book was coming out, Tony was paged. He dialed a phone and was told she had requested his presence at a reception for Lady Bird Johnson. He hurried with his cameras. When she tried to leave the limelight, Tony respected her decision. He was angered by those who didn't. Why couldn't they leave her alone? In 1968, when she remarried, many second-guessed her but Tony figured she had her reasons. Less because of what he'd read than what he felt. It was the same sort of gut instinct that struck him Wednesday when he learned she was dying. My lands, he thought, she's too young; she hasn't even seen John Jr. married yet. Tony began looking through his old photos. His 1961 inauguration picture ran Friday across the top of the front page of the final edition of the Free Press. Wayne State University has a similar print, signed by Kennedy, "To Tony Spina with best wishes." The White House called Tony upon seeing the inauguration photo in the Miami Herald in 1961 and asked for a copy. He sent two; the one came back. As for Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis, well, Tony, 79 and retired from the Free Press, never shook her hand, but he respected her very much. His gut feeling is that it was mutual. GOT A RECENT REAL LIFE STORY? CALL 222-2659 ANYTIME. CAPTION: PHOTO Tony Spina shows the print that the new president autographed and returned to him. PREPARING TO SAY FAREWELL DFP (c) 1994 Detroit Free Press Inc. All rts. reserv. 07518037 PREPARING TO SAY FAREWELL Detroit Free Press (FP) - MONDAY May 23, 1994 Edition: METRO FINAL Section: NWS Page: 1A Word Count: 197 TEXT: * Funeral: Private, 10 a.m. today, at St. Ignatius of Loyola Roman Catholic Church, New York. * Burial: Private, this afternoon at Arlington National Cemetery, beside the grave of President John F. Kennedy. * Expressions of condolence: No flowers, please. Contributions may be sent to: The New York Hospital Cancer Research Fund, 525 East 68th St., New York, N.Y. 10121. Or: The Municipal Arts Society, 457 Madison Avenue, New York, N.Y. 10022. * TV coverage: ABC news special begins at 9:45 a.m.; CBS special report begins at 9:45 a.m.; NBC plans to interrupt regular programming throughout the day with updates; CNN plans extensive live coverage beginning at 7 a.m. * Those attending: First lady Hillary Rodham Clinton will attend the New York services, where U.S. Sen. Edward Kennedy will give the main eulogy. President Bill Clinton will speak at the burial services. Onassis' children, John F. Kennedy Jr. and Caroline Kennedy Schlossberg, plan to speak briefly at the funeral. CAPTION: PHOTO Arlington National Cemetery historian Tom Sherlock places flowers Sunday on the blanket that covers the site where Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis will be buried beside John F. Kennedy. President Bill Clinton and Onassis' children plan to speak at the private burial this afternoon. 'SHE DID IT IN HER OWN WAY' DFP (c) 1994 Detroit Free Press Inc. All rts. reserv. 07517907 'SHE DID IT IN HER OWN WAY' Detroit Free Press (FP) - SATURDAY May 21, 1994 Edition: METRO FINAL Section: NWS Page: 1A Word Count: 145 TEXT: John F. Kennedy Jr.'s statement Friday following his mother's death: "Last night at around 10:15 my mother passed on. She was surrounded by her friends and her family and her books and the people and the things that she loved. "And she did it in her own way and in her own terms, and we all feel lucky for that and now she's in God's hands. "There's been an enormous outpouring of good wishes from everyone both in New York and beyond. And I speak for all of our family when we say we're extremely grateful. Everyone's been very generous. And I hope now that, you know, we can just have these next couple of days in relative peace." CUTLINE: John F. Kennedy Jr. speaks to journalists Friday in New York City. CAPTION: PHOTO John F. Kennedy Jr. speaks to journalists Friday in New York City. DESCRIPTORS: Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis; John Kennedy Jr.; death; text; statement Detroit Free Press (FP) - SATURDAY May 21, 1994 DFP (c) 1994 Detroit Free Press Inc. All rts. reserv. 07517864 Detroit Free Press (FP) - SATURDAY May 21, 1994 Edition: METRO FINAL Section: NWS Page: 7A Word Count: 488 MEMO: JACQUELINE KENNEDY ONASSIS, 1929-1994 Reprinted with permission from H&C Communications, Inc TEXT: An essay titled "A Memoir" was written by Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis and published in Look magazine on Nov. 17, 1964, nearly a year after the assassination of President John F. Kennedy. It is reprinted with permission from H&C Communications Inc. (Handwritten at top of the page) I should have known that it was asking too much to dream that I might have grown old with him. It is nearly a year since he has been gone. On so many days -- his birthday, an anniversary, watching his children running to sea -- I have thought, "But this day last year was his last to see that." He was so full of love and life on all those days. He seems so vulnerable now, when you think that each one was a last time. Soon the final day will come around again -- as inexorably as it did last year. But expected this time. It will find some of us different people than we were a year ago. Learning to accept what was unthinkable when he was alive, changes you. I don't think there is any consolation. What was lost can not be replaced. Someone who loved President Kennedy, but who had never known him, wrote to me this winter: "The hero comes when he is needed. When our belief gets pale and weak, there comes a man out of that need who is shining -- and everyone living reflects a little of that light -- and stores some up against the time when he is gone." Now I think that I should have known that he was magic all along. I did know it -- but I should have guessed it could not last. I should have known that it was asking too much to dream that I might have grown old with him and see our children grow up together. So now he is a legend when he would have preferred to be a man. I must believe that he does not share our suffering now. I think for him -- at least he will never know whatever sadness might have lain ahead. He knew such a share of it in his life that it always made you so happy whenever you saw him enjoying himself. But now he will never know more -- not age, nor stagnation, nor despair, nor crippling illness, nor loss of any more people he loved. His high noon kept all the freshness of the morning -- and he died then, never knowing disillusionment. ". . . he has gone . . . Among the radiant, ever venturing on, Somewhere, with morning, as such spirits will." (from John Masefield's "On the Finish of the Sailing Ship Race") He is free and we must live. Those who love him most know that "the death you have dealt is more than the death which has swallowed you." Jacqueline Kennedy (handwritten signature) DESCRIPTORS: Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis; John Kennedy; text; death SHE'LL REST IN ARLINGTON BESIDE JFK DFP (c) 1994 Detroit Free Press Inc. All rts. reserv. 07517853 SHE'LL REST IN ARLINGTON BESIDE JFK Detroit Free Press (FP) - SATURDAY May 21, 1994 By: R.A. ZALDIVAR Free Press Washington Bureau The Associated Press contributed to this report. Edition: METRO FINAL Section: NWS Page: 1A Word Count: 581 MEMO: JACQUELINE KENNEDY ONASSIS, 1929-1994 TEXT: WASHINGTON - On the day after President John F. Kennedy was assassinated, his young widow, Jacqueline, visited Arlington National Cemetery to view a place on a sloping hill below an old southern mansion that her husband had loved. The spot, overlooking the monuments and great public buildings of the capital, had been recommended by Defense Secretary Robert McNamara as a grave site for the fallen president. The final decision would be Jackie's. An account of that November day in 1963 says she lingered there, standing silently in a soft rain, shielded by the umbrellas of those around her. Finally, she nodded her approval. Monday afternoon, Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis will be buried in that honored place, next to her husband Jack, the president who embodied the hopes of a generation; their son Patrick, who lived only three days and died in the same year his father was shot, and an unnamed daughter who was stillborn in 1956. After private viewing at her Fifth Avenue apartment and a funeral mass at 10 a.m. Monday at St. Ignatius Loyola Roman Catholic Church on Manhattan's Upper East Side, her body will be flown to Washington for burial at Arlington. The funeral and burial will be open only to family and close friends. Cemetery Superintendent J.C. Metzler said the Kennedys would be the second presidential couple to be buried at Arlington. William Howard Taft, the 27th president, and his wife, Helen Herron Taft, are buried in Section 30, about one-eighth of a mile from the Kennedy grave site. No other presidents or first ladies are buried there. Arlington is set aside for those who served in the armed forces. Metzler said surviving spouses and dependent children also are entitled to burial there. Had Jacqueline Onassis been survived by her second husband, Aristotle Onassis, federal rules would not have allowed her burial at Arlington. The cemetery was created from a 1,100-acre plantation that belonged to Mary Anna Custis Lee, daughter of George Washington's adopted son and wife of Confederate Gen. Robert E. Lee. Union troops seized the Virginia estate shortly after the Civil War broke out. The stately mansion -- Arlington House -- was the Lee family home. A vengeful Union general decided to convert the land around the mansion into a military cemetery, thereby denying its use to Lee and his descendants. Now Arlington is a resting place for the honored dead of the whole nation. Kennedy had visited Arlington House earlier in the year he was shot, and according to author Brent Ashabranner, he said: "It's so beautiful, I could stay here forever." The Kennedy grave site, which receives some four million visitors a year, is no ostentatious monument. A low wall surrounds the site, inscribed with passages from the president's inaugural address. Nearby, a simple white cross marks the grave of Robert F. Kennedy, the younger brother assassinated in 1968. Behind the president's memorial stone burns an eternal flame. On clear, dark nights, its flickering light can be seen across the Potomac River in Washington. On Nov. 25, 1963, Jackie Kennedy lit that flame. Where to send condolences People wishing to send cards or letters of sympathy to the family should address them to the Kennedy Residence, 1040 Fifth Ave., New York, N.Y. 10028. Onassis' friend and spokeswoman Nancy Tuckerman suggests a contribution to a favorite charity. Tuckerman said the family has been inundated with flowers, and she asks that no more be sent. CAPTION: GRAPH, MAP Map; Diagram Knight-Ridder Tribune DESCRIPTORS: Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis; death AUTHOR SEEKS JFK LINK; DONALD THE GOOD; FATHER ALEC? DFP (c) 1994 Detroit Free Press Inc. All rts. reserv. 07045881 AUTHOR SEEKS JFK LINK; DONALD THE GOOD; FATHER ALEC? Detroit Free Press (FP) - WEDNESDAY December 22, 1993 By: LIZ SMITH Edition: METRO FINAL Section: FTR Page: 5F Word Count: 540 TEXT: John H. Davis has written about the life -- and, more frequently, the death -- of John F. Kennedy, in such books as "Mafia Kingfish: Carlos Marcello and the Assassination of JFK" and "The Kennedy Contract." Now Davis has just won a four-year battle with the Justice Department to obtain release of the Carlos Marcello tapes -- conversations the former mob king had with FBI informants and fellow criminals. Davis hopes these tapes will help prove his theory that Marcello, boss of the Louisiana-Texas Mafia, was the man behind Kennedy's assassination. Davis just began the painstaking task of transcribing 155 reels of tape. In time, some of Marcello's more colorful remarks will become part of Lester Persky's TV production of Davis' "Mafia Kingfish" book. A triumphant Davis told me, "This has been a long, bitter and costly struggle. The American people should be made aware of how long it took to get to this point. And they should question why it took so long!" HERE, BELIEVE IT or not, is something sweet concerning the Donald-Marla nuptials. Donald, who claims to be a changed man -- more or less -- donated all the leftover food from the wedding extravaganza to God's Love We Deliver. And that included whatever remained of their wedding cake! The numerous bouquets were sent on to New York's Hospital for Special Surgery. ALEC BALDWIN as a priest? Fans of the sexy actor, whose chest hair is the stuff of movie legend, may see him in such a role if he decides to do the screen version of Richard Vetere's novel "The Third Miracle," which has been optioned by Francis Coppola's Zoetrope. It's the story of a priest investigating a series of miracles -- caused, say believers, by the spirit of a dead woman. Coppola himself is "very interested" in directing this spiritual tale. AS WE'VE SAID BEFORE, Oliver Stone has proved with his "Heaven and Earth" film that he can direct a woman sympathetically. Now he seems to be in the groove. He'll guide some female or another through the arduous paces of "Evita" next year, and he has held discussions with China's leading actress, Gong Li, about appearing in his planned biopic, "Madam Mao." (Gong recently won the New York Film Critics award as best supporting actress for "Farewell My Concubine.") I doubt that Stone will ever become a "woman's director" in the great tradition of George Cukor, but at least he's now in there pitching. P.S.: This week's Variety reports that Stone is also interested in doing a movie about Hustler magazine's Larry Flynt for Columbia Pictures. And the Washington Post says the director plans a remake of "Planet of the Apes." This should put Stone back in more familiar masculine -- not to mention furry -- territory. SHORT TAKES: Glenn Close, currently dazzling Los Angeles theatergoers as the demented movie queen Norma Desmond in "Sunset Boulevard," will entertain her fans onscreen in Ron Howard's "The Paper." Close plays a tough managing editor of a big daily tabloid and reportedly has a ball with the character's many colorful temper tantrums. . . . Mark Phillips, the former husband of Princess Anne, has found a new love -- close to home. He's now reported cozy with his devoted secretary, one Carolyn Saunders. FBI OFFERS NO EVIDENCE OF RUBY ROLE IN CONSPIRACY DFP (c) 1994 Detroit Free Press Inc. All rts. reserv. 07044965 FBI OFFERS NO EVIDENCE OF RUBY ROLE IN CONSPIRACY Detroit Free Press (FP) - WEDNESDAY December 15, 1993 By: Associated Press Edition: METRO EDITION Section: NWS Page: 2A Word Count: 358 TEXT: WASHINGTON - The FBI questioned nearly 1,000 people in the weeks following the assassination of President John F. Kennedy but found no evidence Jack Ruby was part of a conspiracy to silence Lee Harvey Oswald. FBI documents released Tuesday by the National Archives indicate that the possibility of a conspiracy, in which Ruby was sent to kill the man accused of being the assassin, was extensively explored. The archives released 28 boxes of FBI documents. The documents include a 1923 evaluation of "Jacob Rubenstein" -- as Ruby was known in his youth -- describing him as "disobedient and quick-tempered"; Ruby's polygraph chart, indicating he was probably telling the truth when he denied a conspiracy, and photographs of strip-tease acts at Ruby's Dallas nightclub. More than any other single event, the shooting of Oswald by Ruby in the basement of the Dallas jail at 11:20 a.m. on Nov. 24, 1963, two days after the Kennedy assassination, triggered public suspicion of a conspiracy -- suspicion that survives. Much of the material made available already has been open to the public through the FBI reading room. But portions of some documents previously blacked out or omitted from the public record were included in the archives release. Ruby, convicted of killing Oswald, died of cancer Jan. 3, 1967. The FBI record is filled with leads linking Ruby to Oswald checked by bureau agents. Indeed, the phones started ringing at FBI offices almost immediately after the Oswald shooting with people claiming knowledge of a plot. The absurdity of some of the leads did not deter the FBI from investigating. A Roseville, Ohio, woman, for example, reported to the FBI two weeks after the assassination that during the singing of "Cowboy's Lament" on the Jimmy Dean TV show, she heard a "message of instructions to Jack Ruby." The FBI's Cincinnati bureau tersely concluded that the woman "contributed nothing of value." The FBI attempted to learn if Ruby had any ties to organized crime. But most of the documents indicate that the bureau concluded that Ruby was a small-time operator who was "never able to cultivate" the friendship of important people in organized crime or law enforcement. JFK: 30 YEARS LATER CLINTON BACKS WARREN COMMISSION REPORT DFP (c) 1994 Detroit Free Press Inc. All rts. reserv. 07042152 JFK: 30 YEARS LATER CLINTON BACKS WARREN COMMISSION REPORT Detroit Free Press (FP) - TUESDAY November 23, 1993 By: Associated Press Edition: METRO FINAL Section: NWS Page: 4A Word Count: 313 MEMO: HEADLINES TEXT: WASHINGTON - President Bill Clinton said Monday he believes the Warren Commission's conclusion that Lee Harvey Oswald acted alone in the assassination of President John F. Kennedy. During his 1992 campaign, Clinton said he didn't agree with the commission's findings. Commenting on the 30th anniversary of Kennedy's assassination, Clinton said he was content with the Secret Service's efforts to protect him. He noted that "most of the crowds that I see now have been through some sort of screening process." At the same time, he said it is important for presidents to have regular contact with the public and "not to lose touch and get totally out of sync." "And one of the greatest things a president has to guard against all the time is just becoming isolated from the feelings, the concerns, the conditions of daily life that all other Americans have to confront," Clinton said. The Warren Commission, appointed after Kennedy's slaying in Dallas, said that Oswald, a former marine who had once defected to the Soviet Union, acted alone in killing Kennedy and wounding then-Gov. John Connally of Texas. But that finding has been questioned from the start. An Associated Press poll of 1,026 adults released Monday showed 12 percent believe Americans have been told the truth about the assassination; 78 percent believe there was a conspiracy to cover up the truth. CAPTION: PHOTO (DAVE CAULKIN/Associated Press) A mourner places flowers on the British memorial to John F. Kennedy on Monday, 30 years after the popular young president was gunned down in Dallas. The memorial, at Runnymede near Windsor, is about 20 miles west of London. Officials at Arlington National Cemetery in Virginia estimated 25,000 people visited the eternal flame at Kennedy's grave Monday. "He was a true American hero, and we don't have many of those anymore," said Vicky Carroll, 43, of Upper Marlboro, Md., who left a pale rose. DESCRIPTORS: BClinton; assassination; JFK; John Kennedy; report; Warren Commission AFTER 30 YEARS, KENNEDY'S IMAGE RETAINS ITS GLOW DFP (c) 1994 Detroit Free Press Inc. All rts. reserv. 07042040 AFTER 30 YEARS, KENNEDY'S IMAGE RETAINS ITS GLOW Detroit Free Press (FP) - MONDAY November 22, 1993 Edition: METRO FINAL Section: PHO Page: 12D Word Count: 79 MEMO: PHOTOSTORY; CUTLINES ONLY SEE STORY ON PAGE 1A TEXT: John F. Kennedy greets crowds in Detroit during a campaign stop for a Cobo Hall speech in October 1960. Left: Bending stiffly because of back problems, Kennedy embraces his son, John Jr., in August 1963. Above: Kennedy chats with poet Carl Sandburg in October 1961. On the 30th anniversary of his assassination, Kennedy's popularity and image are largely untarnished by discussions of his failings. CAPTION: PHOTO Photo TONY SPINA and Associated Press DESCRIPTORS: John; F. Kennedy; 30 years after JFK ASSASSINATION THEORISTS IN DALLAS AS 30TH APPROACHES DFP (c) 1994 Detroit Free Press Inc. All rts. reserv. 07041721 JFK ASSASSINATION THEORISTS IN DALLAS AS 30TH APPROACHES Detroit Free Press (FP) - FRIDAY November 19, 1993 By: LIZ SMITH Edition: METRO FINAL Section: FTR Page: 7D Word Count: 341 TEXT: PRODUCER LESTER PERSKY has renewed his option on the film rights to the John Davis book "Mafia Kingfish" about the Marcello crime family of New Orleans and its supposed involvement in the assassination of President John F. Kennedy. Persky is the man who brought "A Woman Named Jackie" and "'Poor Little Rich Girl" to the mini-screen. He also has his eye on giving the miniseries treatment to Edvard Radzinsky's "The Last Tsar." Disney is interested, and so is Jessica Lange; she'd like to play the doomed czarina Alexandra. Meanwhile, author Davis, along with other assassination theorists, is off to Dallas for the 30th anniversary of JFK's death and the symposium on same. Many will be there to attack Gerald Posner, whose Random House best-seller, "Case Closed," advances the theory that Lee Harvey Oswald was the lone assassin. Theorists are taking with them to Dallas the new book, "Cause of Death," by forensic pathologist Cyril Wecht. This Dutton book calls Kennedy's murder "the most controversial assassination of a world leader in all of history." IN HOLLYWOOD, the bottom line is usually money. But not always. And here's a terrific example. James Woods, who won an Emmy for his portrayal of an alcoholic in "My Name Is Bill W.," kept hearing from members of Alcoholics Anonymous, asking when the acclaimed TV movie would go to video. They considered it a great film for AA -- something that could save thousands of lives. Woods put in a call to Warner's Television and was stunned to learn the movie never would come out on tape -- because of his profit participation guarantee! The actor immediately asked what would happen if he gave up his profit position. What happened is that the video of "My Name Is Bill W." comes out next June, and James Woods has been promised 1,000 copies for distribution among AA chapters around the country. Woods' positive karma is apparently working. The day after he waived his profits on "Bill," he was cast opposite Sly Stallone and Sharon Stone in "The Specialist." DESCRIPTORS: celebrity; column KENNEDY: MYTHS FADE INTO HISTORY DFP (c) 1994 Detroit Free Press Inc. All rts. reserv. 07041603 KENNEDY: MYTHS FADE INTO HISTORY Detroit Free Press (FP) - WEDNESDAY November 17, 1993 By: DAVID S. BRODER Edition: METRO FINAL Section: EDP Page: 11A Word Count: 778 MEMO: OTHER VOICES TEXT: Thirty years after his death, John F. Kennedy has left the realm of mythology and become a figure in history. It's a good thing for him -- and for his country. President Bill Clinton has played tricks on the national consciousness by presenting himself as Kennedy's heir, exploiting the now-famous handshake picture of a high-school version of himself and the smiling architect of the New Frontier. But they are creatures of different times -- and very different men. The mythologized Kennedy was the architect of a political and generational revolution, dazzling in his intellect and personality, bold in breaking from the weary policies of the past. Had he not been untimely murdered, the myth goes, he would have spared the young people of America the agony of Vietnam, supplied them with a thriving economy and a sense of public service, and inspired them to break the bonds of racism that had marred the nation's past. Like all other enduring myths, this one is rooted in elements that were genuinely present in the man who inspired the fable. But taken together, the mythic elements do not come close to defining the Kennedy of history. A closer approximation can be gained from many of the books on Kennedy that have appeared in the past decade, most recently and notably "President Kennedy: Profile of Power," by veteran journalist Richard Reeves. The Kennedy who emerges from Reeves' detailed reconstruction of his White House years is a capable but seriously flawed politician and person, often uncertain and overly cautious, occasionally heedless of personal and national risk, but also a president capable of taking on challenges and not infrequently meeting them with gumption and grace. Reeves' own two-paragraph summation is phrased this way: "The man at the center was a gifted professional politician reacting to events he often neither foresaw nor understood, handling some well, others badly, but always with plausible explanations. He was intelligent, detached, curious, candid if not always honest, and he was carelessly and dangerously disorganized. He was also very impatient, addicted to excitement, living his life as if it were a race against boredom. He was a man of soaring charm who believed that one-on-one he would always prevail -- a notion that betrayed him when he first confronted the premier of the Soviet Union. "Kennedy was decisive, though he never made a decision until he had to, and then invariably he chose the most moderate of available options. His most consistent mistake in governing, as opposed to politics, was thinking that power could be hoarded for use at the right moment -- but moments and conditions defied reason. He had little ideology beyond anti-communism and faith in active, pragmatic government. And he had less emotion. What he had was an attitude, a way of taking on the world, substituting intelligence for ideas or idealism, questions for answers. What convictions he did have on nuclear proliferation or civil rights or the use of military power, he was often willing to suspend, particularly if that avoided confrontation with Congress or the risk of being called soft. If some would call that cynicism, he would see it as irony. 'Life is unfair,' he said, in the way the French said, 'C'est la vie.' Irony was as close as he came to a view of life; things are never what they seem." Those who prefer to keep an image of Kennedy as a mythological figure will be distressed by this portrayal, as they have been by other historians' efforts to demythologize the man who inspired such loyalty, affection and admiration in them. But Kennedy never sought adulation; as journalist Mary McGrory noted at the time, his instinctive response to the rapture of his audiences was to extend his arm forward with the hand upraised, as if to hold them at some distance. For a country that now loves to despise politicians as much as it once loved John Kennedy, it is a hard thing to be told that he was nothing if not a politician. But it is the truth. Political calculus was Kennedy's great skill -- and delight. Perhaps if Americans can accept that historical reality about their favorite modern president, we could learn to appreciate that same quality in our current generation of leaders. To portray Kennedy as a politician need not be a way of denigrating him; it can be a way of elevating the profession he was proud to call his own. In any event, we show his memory greater respect by confronting him as he was, not as we would wish him to have been. Copyright, 1993, Washington Post Writers Group CAPTION: PHOTO Photo TONY SPINA DESCRIPTORS: John; Kennedy MARINA'S STORY ADDS LITTLE TO ASSASSINATION LEGEND DFP (c) 1994 Detroit Free Press Inc. All rts. reserv. 07041276 MARINA'S STORY ADDS LITTLE TO ASSASSINATION LEGEND Detroit Free Press (FP) - MONDAY November 15, 1993 By: SUSAN STEWART Edition: METRO FINAL Section: FTR Page: 1E Word Count: 442 TEXT: Assassination buffs may find NBC's "Fatal Deception: Mrs. Lee Harvey Oswald" beguiling, but it's hard to imagine why anybody else would. Shrouded in flashbacks and heavily laden with leaden performances, "Oswald" (tonight at 9 p.m. on WDIV-TV, Channel 4) is about as much fun as reading the entire Warren Commission report in pig latin. How could it be otherwise? Marina Oswald Porter is -- face it -- the least compelling figure in all of assassinationdom. A mere 22 in November 1963, with no money, two babies and a poor grasp of English, she was, at best, her husband's unwitting enabler. "Oswald," which was made with her cooperation, is little more than a way for Marina to assuage her guilt over her testimony to the Warren Commission, which found her husband to be the "lone gunman" who killed JFK, and for her not being "brave enough or smart enough" to prevent the assassination. Marina couldn't have prevented a traffic jam in 1963. Fresh off the boat from Minsk, and weighed down with domestic responsibilities, she knows only that there's something fishy about her husband's hobbies -- guns, cameras, Communist propaganda sheets. She hasn't a clue as to how to proceed. Helena Bonham Carter plays Marina the way she plays everybody: like a deer caught in the headlights. She's believable, but not interesting. Frank Whaley ("The Doors") is a fine Oswald -- all swaggering insecurity -- with one good moment. He grabs Marina's cigarette, spits in his palm, and puts the cigarette out in his hand. Where did he learn this trick? CIA? Cuba? Kremlin? "Oswald" has suspicions, but never mounts anything close to a theory. The dialogue is clueless, too. Here is Oswald having dinner with Marina's aunt and uncle in Russia: "You said you liked chicken." "Oh, I do. It's very good chicken." Berlitz lessons all around! "Oswald" peaks with the assassination itself; the events of the day are seen from Marina's eyes. These scenes are gripping, probably more because of the story they tell than the way they tell it. Eventually, between the flashbacks, Marina meets a sympathetic journalist who grabs her hands, stares into her eyes and encourages her to heal herself. "You know," she tells him, "I didn't ask to be a historic figure, but if I must, I would like to be part of an honest history." Then she and her daughters make a cleansing appearance at the JFK memorial in Dallas. "I never had a chance to mourn your father, or the president." But "Oswald" never makes us care. One star. CAPTION: PHOTO Director Robert Dornhelm films Helena Bonham-Carter and Frank Whaley in Red Square last year. Frank Whaley as Oswald DESCRIPTORS: television; review; Lee Harvey Oswald; John F. Kennedy JFK BOOK AUTHOR THREATENED; ALLENDE NOVEL TO THE SCREEN DFP (c) 1994 Detroit Free Press Inc. All rts. reserv. 07038539 JFK BOOK AUTHOR THREATENED; ALLENDE NOVEL TO THE SCREEN Detroit Free Press (FP) - MONDAY October 25, 1993 By: LIZ SMITH Edition: METRO FINAL Section: FTR Page: 10D Word Count: 546 TEXT: When the dapper young author Gerald Posner sat down with me recently on Barry Diller's QVC for an interview about his book, "Case Closed," the audience response to him was so great that he sold 1,500 copies in about 10 minutes. I knew that, since Posner's JFK work was published, he has undergone quite an ordeal. The many assassination buffs who make a living or a hobby out of promoting various conspiracy theories have no use for this writer. Posner is now telling us that Lee Harvey Oswald was definitely JFK's only killer and that there was no conspiracy. ("Case Closed" has been on the New York Times best-seller list for the past five weeks.) Posner said he's had threats and ominous telephone calls. The "conspiracy people" tried to get him canceled or not booked on numerous TV shows. Filmmaker Oliver Stone even protested to Posner's editor, Harry Evans of Random House, asking how the company could publish such a book. (I guess the answer to Stone's question is that a book gets published the same way a movie like "JFK" gets made. Because it's still a free country.) On Nov. 20 there'll be a reunion of the many journalists who were in Dallas on the day of JFK's murder and also the many who rushed there to cover the tragedy. Then, on Nov. 23, the Assassination Archives & Research Center in Dallas will hold a symposium. Posner will speak amid great opposition. The archives, which uses the Compuserve on-line computer network to keep conspiracy advocates up to date, already has issued a book and advisory against Posner. Random House is a little worried about seeing its author go into the lion's den. But Posner is a brave guy, convinced and convincing in his thesis that Oswald was a socio-psychopath, a disgruntled misfit, a loner, who couldn't get along with anyone and had threatened to kill Dwight Eisenhower, tried to kill conservative Gen. Edwin Walker and then did kill John F. Kennedy. He had no ideology, really, just a desire to get even and be noticed. Posner says the Assassination Archives people always argued that the federal government was not forthcoming with information and investigations into Kennedy's death. They argued for more access, more freedom and the right to be heard. Now Posner wants the same courtesy from the conspiracy theorists. ONE OF THE most eagerly awaited movies of next year will be the one based on Isabel Allende's novel "The House of the Spirits." The cast is simply incredible. I'm talking Vanessa Redgrave, Jeremy Irons, Glenn Close, Meryl Streep and Winona Ryder. The director is Sweden's Bille August. We won't see this Miramax film until February. But the war-plagued citizens of Sarajevo -- of all places -- have already seen it. Over the weekend, Vanessa Redgrave and Jeremy Irons personally accompanied a print of this movie to the Film Festival of Sarajevo, hoping that their appearance would raise the spirits of that shattered city. For 17 months, the citizens of Sarajevo have endured the horrors of war. Still bleeding under siege, they want to keep their city alive -- there is a strong artistic movement of resistance there. Redgrave and Irons displayed their considerable integrity as artists and human beings by traveling to Sarejevo. DESCRIPTORS: Gerald Posner JFK'S WILD RIDE DFP (c) 1994 Detroit Free Press Inc. All rts. reserv. 07036508 JFK'S WILD RIDE Detroit Free Press (FP) - SUNDAY October 10, 1993 By: MEL SMALL Edition: METRO FINAL Section: FTR Page: 7J Word Count: 541 MEMO: BOOKS; Mel Small teaches history at Wayne State University. TEXT: PRESIDENT KENNEDY: Profile of Power By Richard Reeves Simon & Schuster, 798 pages, $30 Thirty years and hundreds of books after the assassination, John F. Kennedy continues to fascinate. In one of the better and certainly one of the fairest accounts of his presidency, syndicated columnist and New Yorker writer Richard Reeves sheds new light on many of the major events of Kennedy's thousand days. Reeves presents a day-by-day, sometimes minute-by-minute, narrative of the frenetic nature of life in the Oval Office. Relying on valuable interviews with contemporaries and some new archival materials, the author and his team of researchers approach the story as surprisingly objective journalist-historians describing almost matter-of-factly how well Kennedy operated. Indeed, if anything, readers may be disappointed with Reeves' reluctance to evaluate Kennedy's actions or to place them in some larger context. He does, however, offer a fast-paced, fascinating, and often thrilling narrative of crisis after crisis from the Bay of Pigs, to Berlin, to the missiles of October, and confrontations with Southern segregationists. An impatient, easily bored man with a short attention span, Kennedy thrived on those crises, even though several nearly resulted in the Third World War. This pragmatic "managerial politician" craved action and apparently sought danger. Adding to his -- and the world's -- problems was the fact he was a hopelessly sloppy administrator who tore up President Dwight Eisenhower's neat organizational charts when he took over in 1961. The author of books on Gerald Ford and Ronald Reagan, among others, Reeves reminds us not only of how close we came to Armageddon during the Cuban missile crisis but also that through much of 1961 there was a very good chance for war over Berlin. Unlike other biographers, Reeves does not linger over Kennedy's affairs and liaisons -- he merely reports a 20-minute nooner or quickie as part of White House routine. If anything, he finds Kennedy "more promiscuous with physicians and drugs than he was with women." As others have pointed out, Kennedy depended heavily on pills, injections, and therapies that may have had serious side effects. Reeves, who also teaches political science at UCLA, offers many lessons in his microscopic analysis of the way this energetic and intelligent chief executive performed. For one thing, despite Kennedy's power and generally capable staff, he was rarely in control of events. Because the White House press corps was less intrusive in those days, we never learned that those allegedly cool crisis managers often did not have a clue. It may well be that Bill Clinton will most profit when this study of his role model makes the best-seller charts. No doubt, readers will become more sympathetic to the immense problems presidents face. Perhaps no one is ever really prepared. After Kennedy's first night as president, he told a friend that he had jumped in Abraham Lincoln's bed "and just hung on." According to Reeves, "he was still hanging on three years later" as he careened from one crisis to the next on the ride of his life. CAPTION: PHOTO President John Kennedy's term is described as mostly management by crisis by Syndicated columnist and New Yorker writer Richard Reeves, below. DESCRIPTORS: book; review LBJ USED WILES IN DAYS AFTER JFK DIED DFP (c) 1994 Detroit Free Press Inc. All rts. reserv. 07034106 LBJ USED WILES IN DAYS AFTER JFK DIED Detroit Free Press (FP) - THURSDAY September 23, 1993 By: AARON EPSTEIN and CHRISTOPHER SCANLAN Free Press Washington Staff Edition: METRO FINAL Section: NWS Page: 5A Word Count: 473 MEMO: NATION & WORLD TEXT: WASHINGTON - When Chief Justice Earl Warren refused to head a commission to investigate the assassination of John F. Kennedy, President Lyndon Johnson applied his famed arm-twisting tactics. Johnson appealed to Warren's patriotism, expressing fears that post-assassination panic could trigger a nuclear confrontation with the Soviet Union in which tens of millions of Americans would die. As Johnson told it, the chief justice "started crying" and caved in. Nearly 30 years after he had the conversations, Johnson's browbeating, folksiness and gruff charm spring to life in newly released transcripts of his taped telephone calls during the first 35 days of his presidency. In the documents made public Wednesday, Johnson grapples with Republican opposition to a civil rights bill, rides herd on legislation for higher education, counts votes in Congress and seeks advice on Vietnam, Cuba and other foreign hotspots. But more than anything else, his phone calls reveal a man never too busy to contact an old friend recovering from illness, cagily handing scraps of news to sympathetic publishers and columnists, congratulating football coaches or touting his own powers of persuasion. Here's Johnson telling his onetime Senate mentor Richard Russell, D-Ga., on Nov. 29, 1963, how he cajoled Warren into heading the assassination commission by mentioning the possibility of a U.S.-Soviet confrontation: "Warren told me he wouldn't do it under any circumstances . . . didn't think the Supreme Court justice ought to go on. . . . I called him and ordered him down here and he didn't want to come. I insisted he come . . . (he) came down here and told me NO twice." Johnson then spoke of the conspiracy theorists who blamed then-Soviet leader Nikita Khrushchev and Cuban leader Fidel Castro for the assassination. "All I want you to do is look at the facts . . . and determine who killed the president. And I think you can put on your uniform of World War I, fat as you are . . . and do anything you could to save one American life . . . and I'm surprised that you, the chief justice of the U.S., would turn me down. . . . And he started crying and said, 'Well, I won't turn you down . . . I'll just do whatever you say.' " The Warren Commission ultimately concluded Kennedy had been killed by a single assailant, Lee Harvey Oswald. On Nov. 22, 1963, the day Kennedy was killed in Dallas, Johnson made sympathy calls and humbly informed friends that he was "totally inadequate" for the presidency. The transcripts, made public by the National Archives in Washington and the Lyndon Baines Johnson Library in Austin, Texas, were supposed to be kept confidential for 50 years. But a 1992 federal law requires the release of numerous documents. CAPTION: PHOTO Lyndon Johnson LBJ HAD WAR FEARS OVER JFK SLAYING DFP (c) 1994 Detroit Free Press Inc. All rts. reserv. 07034104 LBJ HAD WAR FEARS OVER JFK SLAYING Detroit Free Press (FP) - THURSDAY September 23, 1993 By: Free Press Wire Services Edition: METRO EDITION Section: NWS Page: 5A Word Count: 445 MEMO: NATION & WORLD TEXT: WASHINGTON - President Lyndon Johnson voiced fears of being pushed into a nuclear war with the Soviet Union over unconfirmed reports that John F. Kennedy's assassination could have been part of a Soviet or a Cuban plot, newly released documents showed Wednesday. Johnson expressed his fears 30 years ago as he twisted arms to create the fact-finding panel, headed by then-Supreme Court Chief Justice Earl Warren, to investigate the assassination. The seven-member Warren Commission, in its September 1964 report, concluded that Lee Harvey Oswald acted alone when he shot Kennedy in a Dallas motorcade on Nov. 22, 1963. The transcripts -- about 800 pages of dozens of conversations -- were released simultaneously Wednesday by the National Archives in Washington and the Lyndon Baines Johnson Library in Austin, Texas. They were made public under the JFK Assassination Records Collection Act of 1992, which provides for the speediest possible release of all government and presidential records on the assassination. Verbatim records of Johnson's telephone conversations in the days after the slaying suggest he feared that uncorroborated reports of possible Soviet or Cuban involvement could lead to war. In a Nov. 29 effort to persuade Democratic Sen. Richard Russell of Georgia to serve on the Warren Commission, for instance, Johnson said testimony implicating then-Soviet leader Nikita Khrushchev or Cuban leader Fidel Castro could "check us into a war that can kill 40 million Americans in an hour." The first call recorded in the transcripts is one Johnson made aboard Air Force One less than an hour after he was sworn in as president and left Dallas with Kennedy's body. The recipient was Nellie Connally, the wife of Texas Gov. John Connally, who was wounded in the attack. "We are praying with you, darling, and I know that everything is going to be all right, isn't it," Johnson said. "God bless you, darling. Give him a hug and a kiss for me." The transcripts showed that establishing a panel to investigate the assassination preoccupied Johnson during his first week in office. Sensitive to procedural concerns and expressing some home-state parochialism, Johnson at first favored having a Texas panel do the work. He quickly altered his views, listening to senior aides and legal experts who urged him to create a federal panel. Soon, he was arguing their view just as strenuously. "We just can't have the House and Senate and FBI and other people going around testifying Khrushchev killed Kennedy or Castro killed him. We've got to have the facts," Johnson told Republican Rep. Charles Halleck of Indiana in a Nov. 29 conversation just hours before he announced creation of the Warren panel. CAPTION: PHOTO Lyndon Johnson JFK ASSASSINATION RESEARCHER COMES FULL CIRCLE, PLAUSIBLY DFP (c) 1994 Detroit Free Press Inc. All rts. reserv. 07032753 JFK ASSASSINATION RESEARCHER COMES FULL CIRCLE, PLAUSIBLY Detroit Free Press (FP) - SUNDAY September 12, 1993 By: MEL SMALL Edition: METRO FINAL Section: FTR Page: 7J Word Count: 534 MEMO: BOOKS; Mel Small is a professor of history at Wayne State University. We promise this is the very last Kennedy assassination book we're reviewing. Ever. TEXT: CASE CLOSED: Lee Harvey Oswald and the Assassination of JFK By Gerald Posner Random House, 607 pages, $25 Although true-believer conspiracy buffs will not be convinced, the much-ballyhooed "Case Closed" offers a plausible defense of the original Warren Commission findings that Lee Harvey Oswald was the lone gunman who killed John F. Kennedy. In his well-researched, fair-minded study, Gerald Posner casts considerable doubt on those who believe in any combination of the Mafia-CIA-FBI-Secret Service-LBJ-KGB-Hoffa-Castro-Anti-Castro-Marilyn Monro e-avenger assassination plots. At the least, he has placed the ball back in their evidentiary courts where it properly belongs. A lawyer and an investigative journalist, Posner revisited the 26-volume Warren Commission Report (and constructed its first comprehensive index along the way), the House Select Committee Report on Assassinations and conducted 200 interviews with many key players. He uses this material, which includes over two million pages of documentation, in the narrative and rich footnotes to weaken substantially conspiracy theorists' arguments from Mark Lane to Oliver Stone. "Case Closed" deals in excruciating detail with the complicated life and meanderings of Oswald, a mean, disturbed and violent fellow "disconnected from reality" who also, unfortunately, was an above-average marksman. His running tabulation of the miscreant's finances reveals that if he was being employed by sinister agencies, they certainly kept him on the ragged edge of poverty. Posner also examines in somewhat lesser detail the life of Jack Ruby, another disturbed and violent fellow who was so unbalanced and undependable -- a "snitch" -- that the Mafia would never have trusted him with any serious task. The author claims a breakthrough in a new analysis of the Zapruder film that seems to prove that Oswald had at least eight and not 4.8 seconds to snap off three rounds. In addition, he presents the best defense of the three-bullet theory to date and explains why the late John Connally, among others, came to his erroneous conclusion about the magic single bullet. Finally, he goes a long way toward explaining why the House Select Committee was wrong when it suggested in 1979 that Oswald was not a single shooter. Of course, Posner tends to accept at face value FBI, Secret Service and police reports and interviews. Those who believe in the gigantic conspiracy a la Oliver Stone's movie "JFK" will dismiss such evidence as just another part of the most elaborate cover-up in history. Further, he frequently relies on ad hominem attacks to refute the often wacky charges of the scores of witnesses dredged up by his rivals in the "thriving industry" of Kennedy assassination plots. One after another, he cites alcoholism, greed, self-promotion, perjury, paranoia and lunacy to challenge their credibility. After more than 200 books on the assassination, Posner may at last have it right. No doubt questions remain. But those with the patience to wade through this heavily documented account will be rewarded by never having to read another JFK assassination book. Case almost closed. CAPTION: PHOTO Photo BOHUSLAV RAPOSH DESCRIPTORS: book; review THE KENNEDY PAPERS EASE THE NATIONAL CONSCIENCE BY RELEASING DFP (c) 1994 Detroit Free Press Inc. All rts. reserv. 07030804 THE KENNEDY PAPERS EASE THE NATIONAL CONSCIENCE BY RELEASING THE REST Detroit Free Press (FP) - SUNDAY August 29, 1993 Edition: METRO FINAL Section: EDP Page: 2F Word Count: 309 MEMO: IN OUR OPINION TEXT: Far from resolving anything, newly released government documents on the assassination of President John F. Kennedy can be used to bolster the cases of those who insist Lee Harvey Oswald acted alone and those who believe he was part of a vast conspiracy. Still, given the hold the assassination continues to exert on the national psyche nearly 30 years after the fact, more information surely is better than less. Much of the 900,000 pages of raw material opened by the National Archives consists of unsubstantiated charges, gossip and rumor, much of it about the assassin's personal life. It neither proves nor disproves the lone-assassin conclusion reached by the Warren Commission nor the theories of those who attribute the president's murder to organized crime, a cabal of U.S. military officers, spies and right-wing kooks, or Cuban or Soviet communists. But it documents anew the unsavory complicity of the Central Intelligence Agency and the Mob in failed attempts in the early 1960s to kill Cuban leader Fidel Castro; some speculate that the president's assassination was a matter of retaliation. Thousands of government records on the Kennedy assassination remain sealed, including materials on an alleged CIA plan contemplating the assassination of foreign leaders. Public skepticism about Washington -- and the integrity of its investigation of the president's death in Dallas -- could be assuaged by releasing all remaining files on the assassination and related intrigues. President Bill Clinton has shown a preference -- with a few disturbing exceptions -- for government openness over secrecy. But he has yet to appoint an independent panel mandated by law to review the national-security implications of assassination documents that still are classified. Working toward full disclosure of government files on the Kennedy assassination would represent an appropriate expression of post-Cold War candor as an antidote to cynicism and suspicion. CAPTION: PHOTO John F. Kennedy DESCRIPTORS: editorial UNLOCKED JFK FILES STILL LEAVE QUESTIONS GOT A THEORY? IT DFP (c) 1994 Detroit Free Press Inc. All rts. reserv. 07030767 UNLOCKED JFK FILES STILL LEAVE QUESTIONS GOT A THEORY? IT'S ALREADY BEEN PROBED Detroit Free Press (FP) - SUNDAY August 29, 1993 By: AARON EPSTEIN Free Press Washington Staff Edition: METRO FINAL Section: COM Page: 1F Word Count: 1,331 TEXT: WASHINGTON - It's a glimpse into the cobwebs of some other time, these 800,000 pages of paranoia and pursuit, intrigue and enigma, rumor and speculation that piled up in the aftermath of the assassination of President John F. Kennedy. To peer, file by file, into the National Archives' newly released Kennedy collection is, in poet-novelist Robert Penn Warren's phrase, to watch history "drip in darkness like a leaking pipe in the cellar." Locked away for 30 years, the raw documents form fragments of an unprecedented search for an elusive truth when world power was divided in two, when the United States and Soviet Union had limitless suspicion and fear of the other, and when no snippet of information, no conspiracy theory, was too wild for U.S. government investigators to ignore. Obviously, the Soviets conspired with Lee Harvey Oswald to fire the shots that triggered a national nightmare and terminated a mythical Camelot on Nov. 22, 1963. No, it was the CIA, not the KGB. Fidel Castro was the mastermind. Or the mob. Maybe both. What about Lyndon Johnson? Or could it have been reactionaries among the Dallas elite who hated Kennedy, as the FBI was informed by a couple who knew Oswald well? No, it was a conspiracy between Neiman-Marcus and another powerful Texas retailer, Oswald's mother insisted. Her evidence, an FBI memo said, included a pre-assassination Neiman-Marcus ad for a pearl necklace, titled: "The Connecting Link." It was an intensely criticized conspiracy theory -- the notion of Oliver Stone's movie "JFK" that military and intelligence officials plotted the assassination -- that led to the law that opened a major chunk of the investigative records last week. The records -- compiled by the CIA, the Warren Commission, the House Select Committee on Assassinations and the Lyndon B. Johnson Library in Austin, Texas, among others -- indicate that virtually every hypothesis was probed, massaged and stamped secret. Even anonymous letters spawned investigations, like the one saying that Oswald "got a little help" from a couple named Beck in Farmington, Mich. "He is Russian and so are the Becks," wrote the tipster. There is an FBI dossier on the Becks, proving nothing. A Dallas justice of the peace said his wife got a call from a man who overheard a woman talking to her son-in-law in a conversation indicating that the son-in-law conspired with Oswald. Among investigators, the Soviet theory understandably predominated. After all, Oswald had defected to the Soviet Union in 1959, married a Russian woman named Marina, returned to the United States nearly three years later, considered himself a Marxist and traveled to Mexico City to seek visas to Cuba and the Soviet Union two months before shooting Kennedy. Here is a file headlined: "Investigation Reflecting Manner in Which Lee Harvey Oswald Obtained Names of Individuals With Russian Background in Dallas-Fort Worth Area." There is a report of a man who overheard a drunken Communist Party leader in Tulsa, Okla., say he had learned that Nikita Khrushchev once said of Kennedy: "I want him killed." There is a CIA memo reporting a Soviet informant's belief that "the KGB recognized that Oswald might have been an American agent" and did not consider signing up Marina for spy duty because "it was considered dangerous to recruit a wife to report on her husband." And there is a lengthy CIA study comparing Oswald to other American defectors to the Soviet Union. Conclusion: "It is impossible to draw conclusions on how typical or exceptional the Oswald case as a whole may be." Still, the study observes: "A streak of irresponsibility and frustration runs through many of the personalities involved here. . . . Oswald fits the picture exactly. . . . His mental imbalance, frustration, fuzzy self-taught ideology, inability to adjust and to get along with people, and inability to earn success and recognition, are the qualities characterizing the defector group as a whole." Did Gilberto Alverado really see Oswald being paid off in the Cuban Embassy in Mexico City to carry out the assassination? A government memo dated Nov. 30, 1963, said Alverado fabricated the story because "he says he hates Castro and that his story about Oswald, if believed, would help cause the U.S.A. to take action against Castro." Running down Russian links Every seemingly ominous Oswald-Russian connection was run down. How did Oswald come to meet a Russian-speaking geologist, Peter Paul Gregory? The trail led FBI agents to the Texas Employment Commission, where a counselor said she gave Gregory's name to Oswald when he stopped by to seek a job and the names of people who could converse with Marina in Russian. And speaking of Marina, what about the letter to her that mentions a June snowfall in Minsk? Did it really snow in June or was it a code? Then there was that puzzling October 1962 letter from "Erick" in Minsk, who informed Oswald in English that he met English students, saw a performance of "Eugene Onegin" and ran into a "tall, bony, fair-haired girl who said you were a very charming boy. She liked you. (Don't say this to your wife)." Erick then wrote a message in Russian to Marina. Very suspicious, a CIA analyst indicated in a memo. Why would Erick tell Oswald not to mention the fair-haired girl to his wife, then write to the wife on the same page? Why did Erick ask Marina to write to him? "There is no question in my mind," the CIA analyst wrote in a confidential memo, "but that Erick either works for the KGB or has close connections with the KGB. (1) He was friend of Oswalds. (2) He met British students. (3) He freely writes letters to the Oswalds." Most of the records already have been reviewed by the Warren Commission, which concluded in 1964 that Oswald fired two shots that struck the president and acted alone, and a U.S. House committee, which found evidence that another shot may have come from a different direction. After perusing the files, University of Notre Dame law Professor Robert Blakey, who was chief counsel to the House committee, said they contained supporting evidence both for those who believe the assassination resulted from a conspiracy and for those who don't. A feast for researchers Oswald has faded into that macabre corner of our collective memories where John Wilkes Booth resides. And the American fascination for the Kennedy assassination may be withering. Yet for many of those old enough to have lived through it, the emotional impact of two rifle shots fired from the sixth-floor window of the Texas Book Depository in downtown Dallas endures to this day. Assassination buffs may well ponder the mystery of documents still being kept secret inside the CIA and other government agencies. For now, the newly available papers offer plenty of grist for researchers, from Oswald's diary and love letters to Marina's obstetrical records and notes on chicken soup, from ballistics tests to the statement of a supermarket cashier to the effect that it was definitely Oswald who cashed a $6 check at A&P Store No. 8 but it was uncertain whether he bought anything. As Oswald himself wrote in a draft for a book, his was "an often incredible and sometimes terrifying world, but a world whose outward appearance is very like our own." And this just in: A retired KGB colonel promises "staggering disclosures" about Oswald's murky Mexico City trip in a new book timed to coincide with the 30th anniversary of the killing of Kennedy. CAPTION: PHOTO An unidentified officer carries the .765-caliber rifle believed to have been used to shoot President John F. Kennedy on Nov. 22, 1963., in Dallas. Lee Harvey Oswald's mother had her own conspiracy theory. John F. Kennedy This photo of President John F. Kennedy was taken just before he was shot. Decades later, many believe assassin Lee Harvey Oswald didn't act alone. Recently released files don't contain a definitive answer. DESCRIPTORS: John F. Kennedy; assassination EX-KGB OFFICER SAYS BOOK WILL ALTER THEORIES ON JFK KILLING DFP (c) 1994 Detroit Free Press Inc. All rts. reserv. 07030669 EX-KGB OFFICER SAYS BOOK WILL ALTER THEORIES ON JFK KILLING Detroit Free Press (FP) - FRIDAY August 27, 1993 By: JIM WOLF Reuters Edition: METRO EDITION Section: NWS Page: 5A Word Count: 291 MEMO: NATION & WORLD TEXT: WASHINGTON - A KGB officer who dealt with Lee Harvey Oswald in Mexico City said Thursday he would disclose startling details about President John F. Kennedy's assassination in a book to be published in November. Retired KGB Col. Oleg Nechiporenko, author of the book, "Passport to Assassination," ridiculed a newly released account of possible Soviet involvement in the 1963 assassination written by a KGB defector working for the CIA. The defector, Peter Deryabin, speculated in a memo to his CIA superiors that Kennedy's murder was plotted by the KGB to relieve internal pressures on then Soviet leader, Nikita Khrushchev. The Deryabin memo, dated Nov. 27, 1963, five days after the assassination, was among the estimated one million pages of assassination-related documents made public this week. Nechiporenko's book is timed to coincide with the 30th anniversary of the assassination. It is being published by Birch Lane Press of New York. "These staggering disclosures will significantly impact prevailing assassination theory," Nechiporenko said in a statement. The book includes interviews with two other KGB officers who also dealt with Oswald in Mexico City as well as on interviews with Vladimir Semichastny, then chairman of the KGB. It is described as based on documentary evidence from KGB archives in Moscow and Minsk, where Oswald worked after defecting in 1959 before returning to the United States. Nechiporenko, 61, retired from the KGB in May 1991. He was under diplomatic cover in Mexico City in 1963 when he met Oswald, who sought visas to Cuba and the Soviet Union two months before Kennedy was shot. In his book, "KGB: The Secret Work of Soviet Secret Agents," historian John Barron termed Nechiporenko "the most skilled and dangerous" KGB officer in Latin America. CAPTION: PHOTO Lee Harvey Oswald EX-KGB OFFICER SAYS BOOK WILL ALTER THEORIES ON JFK KILLING DFP (c) 1994 Detroit Free Press Inc. All rts. reserv. 07030529 EX-KGB OFFICER SAYS BOOK WILL ALTER THEORIES ON JFK KILLING Detroit Free Press (FP) - FRIDAY August 27, 1993 By: JIM WOLF Reuters Edition: METRO EDITION Section: NWS Page: 5A Word Count: 292 MEMO: NATION & WORLD TEXT: WASHINGTON - A KGB officer who dealt with Lee Harvey Oswald in Mexico City said Thursday he would disclose startling details about President John F. Kennedy's assassination in a book to be published in November. Retired KGB Col. Oleg Nechiporenko, author of the book, "Passport to Assassination," ridiculed a newly released account of possible Soviet involvement in the 1963 assassination written by a KGB defector working for the CIA. The defector, Peter Deryabin, speculated in a memo to his CIA superiors that Kennedy's murder was plotted by the KGB to relieve internal pressures on then Soviet leader, Nikita Khrushchev. The Deryabin memo, dated Nov. 27, 1963, five days after the assassination, was among the estimated one million pages of assassination-related documents made public this week. Nechiporenko's book is timed to coincide with the 30th anniversary of the assassination. It is being published by Birch Lane Press of New York. "These staggering disclosures will significantly impact prevailing assassination theory," Nechiporenko said in a statement. The book includes interviews with two other KGB officers who also dealt with Oswald in Mexico City as well as on interviews with Vladimir Semichastny, then chairman of the KGB. It is described as based on documentary evidence from KGB archives in Moscow and Minsk, where Oswald worked after defecting in 1959 before returning to the United States. Nechiporenko, 61, retired from the KGB in May 1991. He was under diplomatic cover in Mexico City in 1963 when he met Oswald, who sought visas to Cuba and the Soviet Union two months before Kennedy was shot. In his book, "KGB: The Secret Work of Soviet Secret Agents," historian John Barron termed Nechiporenko "the most skilled and dangerous" KGB officer in Latin America. CAPTION: PHOTO ufcut,10p3 Lee Harvey Oswald AUTHENTICITY OF LETTER PRAISING OSWALD IS QUESTIONED DFP (c) 1994 Detroit Free Press Inc. All rts. reserv. 07030232 AUTHENTICITY OF LETTER PRAISING OSWALD IS QUESTIONED Detroit Free Press (FP) - WEDNESDAY August 25, 1993 By: JOHN DIAMOND Associated Press Edition: METRO EDITION Section: NWS Page: 5A Word Count: 369 TEXT: WASHINGTON - A letter purportedly written to Lee Harvey Oswald from a Cuban 12 days before John F. Kennedy's assassination praises Oswald's marksmanship and refers to an "affair" in which both are involved, newly released CIA documents show. The letter, dated Nov. 10, 1963, was described in a secret Central Intelligence Agency memo made public this week, but assassination experts say it may have been part of an elaborate CIA plot to implicate Fidel Castro in the killing. Addressed to "Friend Lee," the letter was written in Spanish and signed by someone calling himself "Pedro Charles." "You ought to close the business as soon as possible, like I told you before in Miami," the letter states according to the CIA's translation. "Do not be foolish with the money I gave you. So I hope you will not defraud me and that our dreams will be realized. After the affair I am going to recommend much to the Chief." The letter does not identify "the chief." But the writer says he told the chief, "You could put out a candle at 50 meters," an apparent reference to Oswald's shooting ability. The CIA memo raises questions about the letter's veracity, noting that it was postmarked Nov. 28, 1963, six days after the assassination. The memo notes that the type face and signature match that of another letter also postmarked from Havana, on Nov. 28 and addressed to then-Attorney General Robert F. Kennedy, the slain president's brother. That letter was signed "Mario del Rosario Molina." The text of the letter to RFK was not included in the memo. Assassination experts said the letter has long been known to investigators with access to secret assassination files and they said it may have been a fake, perhaps designed to falsely implicate the Castro regime in the assassination. "I suspect it's a fabrication or something that could have been used to set up Oswald," said James Lesar, director of the Assassination Archives and Research Center, a private, Washington-based trove of assassination records. Gaeton Fonzi, a staff member of two congressional investigations into the Kennedy assassination, said the letter was probably connected to an elaborate misinformation campaign directed by the CIA and designed to discredit Castro. DESCRIPTORS: Lee Harvey Oswald; assassination; John F. Kennedy RELEASED JFK FILES SHOW OSWALD SAID HE'D KILL DFP (c) 1994 Detroit Free Press Inc. All rts. reserv. 07030081 RELEASED JFK FILES SHOW OSWALD SAID HE'D KILL Detroit Free Press (FP) - TUESDAY August 24, 1993 By: Free Press Wire Services Edition: METRO EDITION Section: NWS Page: 1A Word Count: 609 MEMO: SEE ALSO METRO FINAL EDITION, Page 1A TEXT: WASHINGTON - The government Monday unlocked 30 years of secrets in John F. Kennedy's assassination -- from CIA theories of Soviet involvement to a second-hand report that Lee Harvey Oswald boasted to a Russian friend, "I will kill the president." Hundreds of thousands of government documents made public for the first time chronicle the effort by the CIA in the months after Kennedy was killed to determine whether there was foreign involvement. Researchers said Monday the documents are likely to raise more questions than they answer about the Nov. 22, 1963, assassination. "Nothing is going to settle this controversy," said Robert Blakey, a Notre Dame University law professor who was chief counsel to the House Select Committee on Assassinations. The documents released Monday also detail efforts by the Warren Commission, which investigated the killing, the follow-up Rockefeller Commission in 1975, the FBI and others to answer persistent questions in the decades that followed. For instance, 15 years after the assassination, an FBI agent interviewed a Russian emigre who recalled nearly verbatim a conversation with a friend, Pavel Golovachev, who had spoken with Oswald in 1962 in Russia. A former marine, Oswald defected to the Soviet Union and then returned to the United States before Kennedy was killed. Oswald was accused of killing the president, but himself was slain shortly after the assassination. The Warren Commission later claimed Oswald acted alone. The Sept. 19, 1977, classified memo to FBI Director Clarence Kelley said the emigre's friend had worked with Oswald at a radio factory in Minsk and had heard Oswald boast that "he would have lots of money in America." " 'For example, I will kill the president,' " the memo quotes the emigre as saying, recounting Golovachev's recollection of Oswald's words. Golovachev asked whether Oswald was joking, the memo said. "Oswald responded, 'You don't know America. If I manage this, my wife will become rich.' He said this quietly, but with an angry expression, and sounded serious." Many of the documents detailed similar second-hand information or speculation by U.S. intelligence employees trying to make sense of the assassination. For example, a Soviet defector working for the CIA speculated in a Nov. 27, 1963, memo that the murder was instigated by the KGB to relieve internal pressures on Nikita Khrushchev, then leader of the Soviet Union. Khrushchev was deposed in October 1964. "Our president's death . . . directly affects Khrushchev's longevity," wrote Peter Deryabin, in an eight-page memo. He was a Soviet KGB agent who defected to the West in 1954. Deryabin's memo offered no factual basis for his speculation. The National Archives made the documents public as required under a 1992 law. Still, 10,000 CIA documents remain secret. Also, portions of many of the released documents are blacked out because the information is still classified. Among the documents that have not been released: * A March 6, 1967, three-page memo from then-FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover to Attorney General Nicholas Katzenbach described only as "Re CIA Mafia connections." * A May 22, 1961, report in CIA files on "CIA, Cuba, and Mafia." * Excerpts from the files of then-CIA Director John McCone covering a period from November 1961 through December 1964, that include "references to Cuba assassinations, Warren Commission matters." CAPTION: PHOTO Associated Press file photo This photograph includes President John F. Kennedy, in the back seat, and Texas Gov. John Connally, in front of him, about a minute before they were shot in November 1963 in Dallas. Major questions about the attack are not likely to be answered in the 800,000-plus pages of documents made public Monday, experts said. DESCRIPTORS: John F. Kennedy; shooting; history; document JFK FILES REVEAL MORE INTRIGUE, NOT ANSWERS DFP (c) 1994 Detroit Free Press Inc. All rts. reserv. 07030074 JFK FILES REVEAL MORE INTRIGUE, NOT ANSWERS Detroit Free Press (FP) - TUESDAY August 24, 1993 By: TIM WEINER New York Times The Boston Globe contributed to this report. Edition: METRO FINAL Section: NWS Page: 1A Word Count: 867 MEMO: SEE ALSO METRO EDITION, Page 1A TEXT: WASHINGTON - From the raw record of a national nightmare, committed to paper, stamped top secret and filed away for 30 years: a 1959 urinalysis of Lee Harvey Oswald; frantic requests for dossiers on the man arrested as John F. Kennedy's assassin; ballistics tests on the mail-order rifle; a scale model of the grassy knoll. The National Archives' huge cache of government documents on the assassination was opened Monday, offering a treasure trove for conspiracy theorists, a wealth of details for historians and a bottomless pit of memory and mystery for those who recall the president's murder. Included were 90,000 pages of documents from the Central Intelligence Agency, thousands of presidential papers, investigative files, photographs and memorandums. The files show how the CIA scrambled hours after the killing Nov. 22, 1963, to locate dossiers on Oswald (they found 30). They record a CIA official's fear that the FBI was tailing him as he met with the mobster the CIA had hired to kill Fidel Castro. They include a thousand shards of evidence, and thousands more of hearsay, rumor, gossip, innuendo and nonsense. Since thousands of CIA records and other materials remain classified, pieces are still missing from the puzzle. A large number of the documents consisted of newspaper clippings stamped secret by the CIA. But for those who believe the assassination was the sole work of Oswald, an ex-marine who had failed in nearly every endeavor, including an attempt to defect to Moscow, the newly released documents offer the final proof. For those who believe that Oswald did not act alone, the documents also offer substantiation. "This will feed another generation of assassination buffs, the children of assassination buffs," said Edward Jay Epstein, who wrote three books and an anthology on the assassination. The slaying spawned many theories -- the Soviets did it, the Cubans did it, the Mafia did it -- but the files appear to hold no smoking gun. It was reaction to an ornate assassination theory -- the 1991 movie "JFK" directed by Oliver Stone, which proposes that military officers and intelligence officials plotted the killing -- that prompted Congress to order the files opened by Monday. Most of the documents pored over all day by researchers and reporters were long-secret materials reviewed by two government commissions that had studied the assassination. Although documents relating to high policy are missing, Oswald's personal life is covered in massive detail. Personal effects taken from the Oswalds include letters in childlike Russian from Oswald to his wife, Marina, tracts from his diary and family correspondence. They even include one of Marina Oswald's recipes for meat stew, and extracts from a Russian booklet on proper nutrition. The Warren Commission ruled in 1964 that Oswald, acting alone, killed the president with two shots from a cheap mail-order rifle fired from the sixth-floor window of the Texas School Book Depository in downtown Dallas. A House select committee concluded in 1979 that Oswald killed Kennedy with two shots, but that there was evidence to support a theory that a third shot may have come from a grassy knoll across the plaza. Among the Warren Commission's most controversial findings was what conspiracy theorists have ridiculed as the "magic bullet" conclusion: that one of the shots Oswald fired passed through Kennedy, struck Texas Gov. John Connally in the back, exited his chest, passed through his right wrist, entered his left thigh and later showed up, largely intact, on a hospital stretcher. Conspiracy theorists say one bullet could not have traveled so tortuous a route and sustained so little damage. "A reasonable person could conclude either that Oswald acted alone or that there was a second shooter," said G. Robert Blakey, chief counsel to the House committee. "The single best explanation was that if there were a second shooter, there was involvement of organized crime." That latter explanation has fueled fascinated speculation. The organized crime element to which Blakey referred was a New Orleans faction presided over by Santos Trafficante. The material made public Monday includes CIA documents describing how the agency's leaders in 1960 asked an organized crime figure, Johnny Roselli, to arrange for "the liquidation of Fidel Castro," which the papers described as "a sensitive mission requiring gangster-type action." Roselli, in turn, asked for the help of Trafficante, who undertook several plots to kill Castro. After the Kennedy assassination, Roselli's contact in the CIA became nervous about meeting him in public, certain that the FBI was spying, the documents show. Roselli's body was found in a 55-gallon oil drum floating off the Florida coast in 1976. Blakey was at the archive Monday, reviewing papers. "The Warren Commission had access to most of this stuff, and what they didn't have access to, we had access to in 1979," he said. "This is not a current event. This is a historical footnote." CAPTION: PHOTO Associated Press file photo This photograph includes President John F. Kennedy, in the back seat with his wife, Jacqueline, about a minute before he was shot in November 1963 in Dallas. Major questions about the attack are not likely to be answered in the hundreds of thousands of documents made public Monday, experts said. DESCRIPTORS: John; F. Kennedy; shooting; history; document JFK AND PT-109, FIFTY YEARS LATER PROFILE IN COURAGE DFP (c) 1994 Detroit Free Press Inc. All rts. reserv. 07027477 JFK AND PT-109, FIFTY YEARS LATER PROFILE IN COURAGE Detroit Free Press (FP) - TUESDAY August 3, 1993 By: KATHARINE WEBSTER Associated Press Edition: METRO FINAL Section: NWS Page: 5A Word Count: 618 TEXT: FALL RIVER, Mass. - Fifty years after a Japanese destroyer sank Patrol Torpedo boat No. 109 on a moonless night in the Pacific, several hundred people gathered Monday to celebrate the heroism of the boat's captain -- Lt. John F. Kennedy. Although Kennedy's reputation has suffered some in recent years, the story of his role in saving 10 men on PT-109 still shines, especially for Gerard Zinser, the only crewman still living. Zinser, 75, remembered his skipper as "a down-to-earth person. He had courage. He was brave." The Naples, Fla., man was among several hundred veterans who attended a ceremony with Kennedy's relatives Monday, the 50th anniversary of the sinking. "On the wall of my Senate office in Washington is a photo of my brother on PT-109," said Sen. Edward Kennedy, who attended the ceremony with his son, Rhode Island state Rep. Patrick Kennedy. "That picture has always reminded me of Jack's courage." PT-109 -- one of the small, fast boats that patrolled the Pacific and torpedoed tons of enemy shipping -- collided with the Japanese destroyer Amagiri shortly after 1 a.m. on Aug. 2, 1943, in the Solomon Islands, about 800 miles northeast of Australia. "It was the dark of the moon," said Zinser, who was a 1st Class Motor Machinist Mate. "There was very little anyone could see, even their hand in front of their eyes. "I was right around midships and I heard some shouting going on: 'Ship at 2 o'clock!' The first thing I knew, the destroyer hit us." The stern of the boat exploded and sank. Two men died instantly. Flung into the water, Zinser floated unconscious for about 20 minutes. When he came to, he heard men shouting to each other and saw Kennedy flashing a lantern. They clung to the boat's wooden bow, some 40 miles inside enemy-controlled territory, until dawn. They knew they had to hide if they were going to survive, so Kennedy suggested they swim for a nearby island. Kennedy towed Patrick (Pappy) McMahon, who had been badly burned, by gripping the laces of McMahon's life jacket in his teeth. "McMahon wanted to be left behind, but Kennedy wouldn't even hear of it," Zinser said. The swim took four hours. The next day, they swam another four hours to a larger island. At night, Kennedy and George Ross took turns swimming out with the lantern, to attempt to flag passing boats. On the seventh day, they ran into some native scouts working for the Australians. Kennedy carved a message into a coconut, which they took to their contact. The next night, William Liebenow, captain of another PT boat, picked up the survivors. Liebenow attended the ceremony Monday. Later, Kennedy received the Navy and Marine Corps Medal for heroism. His war hero status did not become widely known until after he became president, said James Thomson, a history professor at Boston University. A book about his exploits, "PT-109" by Robert Donovan, came out in 1962, although Kennedy originally tried to discourage it. It was made into a movie starring Cliff Robertson. CAPTION: PHOTO SCOTT MAGUIRE Associated Press Models of PT-109 are displayed at the John F. Kennedy Library in Boston. Kennedy was credited with helping save the lives of 10 crew members; he pulled one burned man by his life jacket to a nearby island. They were rescued more than a week later. Several hundred people gathered in Massachusetts to pay tribute to John F. Kennedy and the crew of the PT-109, sunk 50 years ago Monday in the Pacific Ocean. Right: Kennedy poses aboard the boat in an undated photo. Below: Kennedy, right, and the crew, shortly before the boat collided with a Japanese ship and sank. SUMMER OF '63 REUNION BOYS WHO MET JFK RETURNING TO WHITE HO DFP (c) 1994 Detroit Free Press Inc. All rts. reserv. 07026422 SUMMER OF '63 REUNION BOYS WHO MET JFK RETURNING TO WHITE HOUSE Detroit Free Press (FP) - SATURDAY July 24, 1993 By: JEFF KUNERTH Orlando Sentinel Edition: METRO FINAL Section: NWS Page: 5A Word Count: 550 TEXT: ORLANDO, Fla. - Both Bill Clinton and Philip Cohen shook hands with President John F. Kennedy in the Rose Garden of the White House on July 24, 1963. A little bit of Kennedy rubbed off on Clinton, who says he left the meeting determined to devote his life to public service and pursuit of the presidency. Phil Cohen left the Rose Garden still convinced he wanted to pitch for the Boston Red Sox. He grew up, instead, to become a Winter Park, Fla., obstetrician, gynecologist and infertility doctor who voted last year for Ross Perot. This explains why the picture of Bill Clinton shaking hands with JFK is famous, and the picture of Phil Cohen shaking JFK's hand isn't -- although for many years it occupied a place of honor above the counter of Harry's Shoe Barn, his parents' business in New Hampshire. Clinton and Cohen were among 100 teenage boys representing their home states in an American Legion program called Boys Nation. They spent a week in Washington visiting with Secretary of State Dean Rusk, holding mock elections, debating issues of the day and passing legislation. On Friday, Cohen and his family left for a 30-year reunion with Clinton and 70 or so other alumni from the summer of '63. "We're very excited," said Cohen, 46. "The chance to visit the White House and be the guest of the president is a very unusual and exciting opportunity." Cohen says he likes to think a letter he wrote to Clinton suggesting the reunion might have prompted the whole event. But other Boys Nation alumni said a consensus was probably formed when the tall kid from Arkansas was elected president. "I think a lot of people had the same idea at the same time," said Rich Stratton, 47, an attorney in San Francisco who represented Illinois and was elected president by the Boys Nation. "I strongly suspect President Clinton has had this in the back of his mind for some time, too. We've never had a reunion until now." Cohen remembers exactly what JFK said to him as he shook his hand. "He said, 'They grow the timber tall in New Hampshire, don't they?' And I said, 'Yes, sir, they do,' " said Cohen, who at the time was a gangly 16-year-old from Stevens High School in Claremont. Stratton, a co-organizer of this weekend's reunion, recalls Kennedy commending their mock political party platforms. "The president praised us for having strong feelings about civil rights. That was something we all were quite proud of," said Stratton, who voted for Clinton. Neither man remembers much about Clinton at Boys Nation. In the group picture of the 100 teenage boys, Clinton is third from the right in the front row. Cohen is the tall kid in the third row, sticking up like a weed. Stratton is the sheepish-looking fellow with a crewcut on the far left. "I'm the one who forgot to wear his Boys Nation T-shirt that day," Stratton said. "If you look, there is one stupid kid who is just wearing a white T-shirt." CAPTION: PHOTO A young Bill Clinton shakes hands with President John F. Kennedy at the White House on July 24, 1963. Clinton was among 100 teenage boys representing their home states in an American Legion program.E WRITER TRIES AGAIN ON MAFIA-JFK PLOT; LIZ SIZZLES ON SET DFP (c) 1994 Detroit Free Press Inc. All rts. reserv. 07025147 WRITER TRIES AGAIN ON MAFIA-JFK PLOT; LIZ SIZZLES ON SET Detroit Free Press (FP) - TUESDAY July 13, 1993 By: LIZ SMITH Edition: METRO FINAL Section: FTR Page: 8C Word Count: 640 TEXT: John Davis is the author of such best-sellers as "The Bouviers," "The Kennedys," "Mafia Kingfish" and "Mafia Dynasty." I recently wrote that Davis had made "a cottage industry" out of the Kennedy family and its various dramas and tragedies. Davis was amused by this. He told me: "Since the story of the Kennedys is the most significant American family saga of this century, it deserves to be an 'industry.' " Then he sent me his latest book, "The Kennedy Contract: The Mafia Plot to Assassinate the President." This original Harper paperback embodies Davis' latest research and thinking about the Kennedy assassination. Davis claims to have uncovered new evidence reaffirming his assertions that Jimmy Hoffa, Santos Trafficante and Carlos Marcello were the Mob figures behind John F. Kennedy's death. Among the fresh facts and theories, there is a revelation Davis considers (and quite correctly!) to be "highly significant -- the recent testimony of Karen Carlin, after 30 years of silence, that she participated with Jack Ruby in the plot to kill Lee Harvey Oswald and that Marcello and Trafficante were behind it." Davis also takes on "JFK" director Oliver Stone, first praising Stone for bringing "some of the mysteries and enigmas and horrors" of the Kennedy assassination to the attention of the American public. But then he trashes the filmmaker for what he calls "the many historical distortions and inaccuracies" of that wildly controversial film. For Kennedy buffs and conspiracy mavens, this fairly short volume (266 pages) -- written by a man who has spent years trying to uncover the truth about the death of the 35th President -- is worth a look. ELIZABETH TAYLOR was just a wee bit testy during the five-day shoot aboard the Queen Mary (docked in Long Beach, Calif.) for her new John Frankenheimer-directed fragrance commercial. The star reportedly looked gorgeous but seemed definitely on edge and not brimming with the milk of human kindness. ("It was the heat, combined with her back problems. It's hard to be pleasant when you're in pain," explained one sympathetic on-the-set observer.) However, the tense mood was temporarily lightened by the constant presence of Taylor's tiny white Maltese, Sugar. One day Elizabeth noticed that Sugar's long coat seemed to be wilting. And so she did what any fabulously wealthy pet-owner would do: She called over her hairdresser, Jose Eber, to give the dog a quick comb-out and tease. Eber, who has been tending to Elizabeth's thick mane for years, and who is used to her little ways, complied with great good humor. REMEMBER SINEAD O'CONNOR'S attempt to perform at a Bob Dylan concert last year at Madison Square Garden? She was booed and fled the stage in tears. (This was in the wake of Sinead's controversial appearance on "Saturday Night Live," where she shredded a photograph of the Pope, declaring "Stop the real enemy!") At the time, this column decried the booers. We felt that Sinead showed extremely poor taste in doing what she did but that the Dylan fans were being hypocritical in censuring the singer. How many of them were living by the standards of the Holy Roman Church or even knew Sinead's political position in regard to the Pope? I received quite a bit of mail saying that by giving thumbs down to the booing, I was offending the gods of free speech. Now I see that the Washington Monthly's "Tilting the Windmills" column has a solution for how the ubiquitous boo can keep its free-speech status and yet remain a fair comment: "The Peters Rule on Booing. Booing is permissible -- though seldom, if ever, desirable -- after a speaker has been introduced and after he finishes, but it should never occur when it drowns out or otherwise interferes with his right to speak!" Liz Smith appears Monday-Thursday in the Free Press. DESCRIPTORS: celebrity; column; book; Kennedys Detroit Free Press (FP) - MONDAY June 21, 1993 DFP (c) 1994 Detroit Free Press Inc. All rts. reserv. 07022414 Detroit Free Press (FP) - MONDAY June 21, 1993 Edition: METRO FINAL Section: OBT Page: 2B Word Count: 298 MEMO: DEATHS ELSEWHERE TEXT: * James Benton Parsons, 81, who became the first black federal judge when President John F. Kennedy appointed him in 1961, died Saturday in Chicago after a lengthy illness. Judge Parsons retired from trial work last year but remained active, performing such duties as swearing in new citizens until illness made that impossible. He was a teacher in the 1930s and '40s, until earning his law degree in 1949. He taught constitutional law at John Marshall Law School and was an assistant Chicago corporation counsel until 1951. From 1951-60, he was an assistant U.S. attorney, then served for a year on the old Superior Court of Cook County. * Craig L. Rodwell, 52, a vocal advocate of gay rights for more than 30 years and the founder and former owner of the Oscar Wilde Memorial Bookshop in New York City's Greenwich Village, died of stomach cancer Friday at St. Vincent's Hospital in Manhattan. Mr. Rodwell played a leading role in the 1969 Stonewall Rebellion, named for the bar where patrons resisted a police raid in what is considered the beginning of the national gay rights movement. * Lee Schaenen, 67, retired director of Chicago's Lyric Opera Center for American Artists, died Thursday in Sanibel, Fla. He retired from the Lyric Opera Center in 1991, after conducting 45 operas. * Jean Cau, 67, a French author and journalist, died of cancer Friday in Paris. He was an assistant to philosopher and writer Jean-Paul Sartre from 1947-56 and won praise for the novel "La Pitie de Dieu," about four murderers who share a prison cell. It was published in the United States in 1963 under the title "The Mercy of God." His last book was "L'Ivresse des Intellectuels" ("Intoxication of the Intellectuals"), published in 1992. CAPTION: PHOTO James Benton Parsons DESCRIPTORS: obituary CONNALLY'S FAMILY LASHES OUT SPOKESMEN SAY THEY FIND A DFP (c) 1994 Detroit Free Press Inc. All rts. reserv. 07022212 CONNALLY'S FAMILY LASHES OUT SPOKESMEN SAY THEY FIND AUTOPSY REQUESTS APPALLING, OFFENSIVE Detroit Free Press (FP) - SATURDAY June 19, 1993 By: SAM HOWE VERHOVEK New York Times Edition: METRO FINAL Section: NWS Page: 13A Word Count: 445 TEXT: HOUSTON - The family of former Texas Gov. John Connally on Friday angrily rejected requests by FBI officials and private researchers to exhume his body in a new search for evidence about the 1963 assassination of President John F. Kennedy. Connally was wounded while riding in a Dallas motorcade with Kennedy when the president was shot to death. Some researchers have suggested that bullet fragments that they say remain in Connally's body could show once and for all whether a second gun, and possibly a second assailant, were involved in the assassination. But Connally's family said through a spokesman Friday that most, and probably all, bullet fragments were removed soon after he was shot and that they clearly showed they were from one of the two bullets that hit the president, as various official inquiries have concluded. "Mr. Connally had been available for 30 years for any legitimate research request," said a statement issued by family friend Julian Read. "In all that time, no such request has been made by any responsible authority." The statement said the family would "resist vigorously any efforts to disturb the body of John Connally." Under state and federal law, the body may not be exhumed without family permission or a court order. Connally, 76, died Tuesday of pulmonary fibrosis and was buried Thursday in Austin. By Friday afternoon, ill feeling over the question of whether his body should be exhumed clearly had escalated. Some assassination conspiracy advocates suggested that a new cover-up of evidence was under way, and FBI officials hoped for an exhumation to prove that this was not the case. Meanwhile, Connally's family was appalled that the observance of his death had been publicly overshadowed by suggestions that his body should be unearthed just hours after burial. The family also said it was offended that an official request for access to his body had come even as his funeral was under way. "Obviously, the way this thing cropped up yesterday, right in the middle of the funeral, was bizarre, to say the least," said family spokesman George Christian. "The FBI tried to reach the family through various sources right in the middle of the services. I can't believe it. They have no conception what this does to the family." A spokeswoman for the Justice Department said Friday that the department had received letters from two research groups before the funeral, urging examination of the body and that officials had concluded there was merit to the request. "We then approached the family in what we hope was a sensitive way to ask what their wishes were," said the spokeswoman, Caroline Aronovitz. "And our understanding is they were not interested." CONNALLY COULD AID JFK PROBE BUT BITS OF BULLET LIKELY BURIE DFP (c) 1994 Detroit Free Press Inc. All rts. reserv. 07022063 CONNALLY COULD AID JFK PROBE BUT BITS OF BULLET LIKELY BURIED WITH HIM Detroit Free Press (FP) - FRIDAY June 18, 1993 By: Free Press Wire Services Edition: METRO FINAL Section: NWS Page: 5A Word Count: 640 MEMO: CORRECTION RAN June 19, 1993 getting it straight * A Friday article about the burial of former Texas Gov. John Connally gave an incorrect date for the assassination of President John F. Kennedy, which occurred on Nov. 22, 1963. TEXT: AUSTIN, Texas - Bullet fragments, lodged in the wrist and thigh of the late Texas Gov. John Connally for 30 years, may have proven whether more than one gunman was involved in the assassination of President John F. Kennedy. But the fragments apparently were buried with Connally on Thursday in Austin, despite the requests of the FBI and assassination researchers to have them removed before the funeral. Federal and state officials and Connally's family refused to say whether the metal pieces that hit Connally on Nov. 23, 1963, had been buried with him. "We are in the middle of a funeral. We decline to comment," said family spokesman Julian Read. But ABC News reported Connally's family apparently had not allowed doctors to remove the fragments. "I don't see any sense in it," Connally's brother, Merrill Connally, said at the funeral. Connally, 76, died Tuesday of pulmonary fibrosis. He was governor of Texas from 1963 to 1969, secretary of the Navy under Kennedy, and Treasury secretary for President Richard Nixon. But his place in history is also guaranteed by the injuries he suffered during the Kennedy assassination. Conspiracy proponents have never accepted the findings of the commission chaired by former Supreme Court Chief Justice Earl Warren. It concluded in a 1964 report that a single gunman, Lee Harvey Oswald, fired two bullets. One hit Kennedy, passed through him and hit Connally; the second bullet killed Kennedy. Many theorists believe more than one gunman fired on the motorcade. Most experts agree that Oswald could not have gotten off two shots in the split second in which films show Kennedy and Connally being hit. If the fragments inside Connally were not part of the first bullet that hit Kennedy, critics say, say, that would prove there was another gunman. Late Wednesday, the Washington, D.C.-based Assassination Archives and Research Center, a group of private conspiracy researchers, sent a letter to Attorney General Janet Reno, asking that the fragments be removed before Connally's funeral. Support for retrieving the fragments came from Oliver Revell, the agent in charge of the FBI's Dallas office, which is responsible for the Kennedy assassination case. Marjorie Poche, special agent in the Dallas office, said Thursday morning that Revell would recommend that government officials approach Connally's relatives and request an autopsy. "There's probably nothing surprising that will come from looking at the fragments from what the prior investigations have shown," she quoted Revell as saying. "It would quell the voices speculating there was more than one bullet." FBI and Justice Department officials said the Connally family was to be contacted for its views. But later Thursday, they were unable to say whether the contacts had been made, or the outcome. In Austin, Read, the family spokesman, said at the grave site: "I know of absolutely no contact whatsoever." Larry Howard, director of the JFK Assassination Information Center in Dallas, one of the groups that requested the procedure on Connally, said he was disappointed with the outcome, but he wasn't giving up. "They buried him and we tried, but we're not going to quit," Howard said, explaining that he will seek access to Connally's medical records and X-rays in an effort to shed light on his theories. "We were hoping the family would agree to do this, but they did not," he added. "Looking at the medical records would be better than nothing." CAPTION: PHOTO Former Texas Gov. John Connally's body is carried to the Texas State Capitol where it lay in state before Thursday's funeral and burial. Connally wore a sling during a visit to the White House shortly after he was shot in Dallas. DESCRIPTORS: funeral; John Connally; investigation TEXAS' CONNALLY GAVE LIFE TO POLITICS 3-TIME GOVERNOR, A DFP (c) 1994 Detroit Free Press Inc. All rts. reserv. 07021739 TEXAS' CONNALLY GAVE LIFE TO POLITICS 3-TIME GOVERNOR, ALLY OF JOHNSON, DIES AT 76 Detroit Free Press (FP) - WEDNESDAY June 16, 1993 By: MICHAEL GRACZYK Associated Press Edition: METRO FINAL Section: NWS Page: 5A Word Count: 437 TEXT: HOUSTON - John Connally, a three-term Texas governor and former cabinet member who was wounded in the gunfire that killed President John F. Kennedy, died Tuesday of pulmonary fibrosis. Connally, 76, and his close friend and political partner, President Lyndon B. Johnson, were dominant forces in Texas politics for decades . Connally was governor from 1963 to 1968. In 1961 he served for a few months as Kennedy's secretary of the Navy, but left to run for governor. Connally was riding in the car with Kennedy when the president was assassinated in Dallas on Nov. 22, 1963. He was struck by a bullet that passed through his body, leaving him with scars on his back, chest, wrist and thigh. Later, he would recall drifting in and out of consciousness for four days. He watched on television -- "really the first sustained consciousness I had" -- as Kennedy's body was carried to Arlington National Cemetery. Twenty years after the assassination, Connally said, "It made you realize in a fleeting second you could be gone, so you really don't have any time to waste, to fritter away on petty things or frivolities." In Washington, President Bill Clinton said Connally dedicated his life to his country and "to the principles in which he so passionately believed." "He will be remembered fondly by his state and his country for the work that he did and the person that he was," Clinton said in a statement. "I lost a real good friend," Gov. Ann Richards said. "I'll miss his phone calls. I'll miss his extraordinary good humor. I'll miss his optimism and his encouragement." After Johnson's death in 1973, Connally switched from the Democratic to the Republican Party, and his popularity waned. Connally's 1974 indictment by a Watergate grand jury further eroded his political power, though he was acquitted of charges that he accepted a $10,000 bribe from milk producers to persuade President Richard Nixon to raise price supports. Connally ran for president in 1980, but dropped out in March after Ronald Reagan trounced him in the South Carolina Republican primary. After spending $12.5 million, he garnered only one delegate. The 6-foot-2 Texan hailed Reagan as "the champ," and turned his attention toward campaigning for him. Connally then went to work in the offices of the law firm of Vinson & Elkins. He reportedly rejected Reagan's offer to become secretary of Energy and was offended at not being offered secretary of State or Defense. Connally filed for bankruptcy in 1987, listing debts of $93.3 million, mostly from oil and real estate deals that collapsed with the Texas economy in the 1980s. CAPTION: PHOTO Photo DESCRIPTORS: obituary; OBT; John Connally; biography; age AFTER 25 YEARS, WE'RE STILL SEARCHING FOR A SPIRIT DFP (c) 1994 Detroit Free Press Inc. All rts. reserv. 07012115 AFTER 25 YEARS, WE'RE STILL SEARCHING FOR A SPIRIT Detroit Free Press (FP) - SUNDAY April 4, 1993 By: RICHARD REEVES Edition: METRO FINAL Section: EDP Page: 3F Word Count: 758 MEMO: OTHER VOICES TEXT: NEW YORK - Twenty-five years ago today, Martin Luther King Jr. was shot to death as he stood on a motel balcony in Memphis. He was 39 years old. What if he had lived? The first answer that comes to mind is that he probably would have been murdered a few months later, as Robert F. Kennedy was on June 5 of that same year. He was 42 years old. And as John F. Kennedy was on Nov. 22, 1963. He was 46 years old. The three assassinations in five years crippled a generation or more of Americans. I remember Mary McGrory, then of the Washington Star, saying after John Kennedy's murder, "We'll never laugh again." "No, Mary," said a young man about the White House in those days, Daniel Patrick Moynihan. "We'll laugh again, but we'll never be young again." And most never were. A great deal of the excitement attending the rise of Bill Clinton is just that he is young. Many people have a sense that we are back where we were before the killing started. Perhaps the Reagan years and the Bush annex were just a detour on the road to a society where justice and equality are as important goals as production and profit. I doubt that. Anyone who believes that democratic history is told in cycles -- that every action produces an equal and opposite reaction -- knew there had to be a conservative swing of the pendulum. In his first (and last) campaign strategy meeting for the 1964 election, in mid-November 1963, John Kennedy said something about using photographs with poor blacks as part of putting together a new antipoverty program during the last year of his administration. "I sort of had something different in mind," said one of the men at the meeting, Richard Scammon, the director of the census. "You with some men in blue. Cops. Maybe in the suburbs." Then Scammon laid out 1960 census figures, showing the president that two great changes were happening in the United States -- and they were related. First, more and more Negroes (the word used then) were moving from the rural South to Northern cities, looking for factory jobs. Second, more and more "lunch-pail" whites in those cities were moving into new suburbs along the country's new superhighways. Scammon's point was that there were big changes in process that were not being pushed by politics. In fact, those movements of people were going to push politics, beginning with the possibility that lunch-pail Democrats might become suburban Republicans. Many did, of course, which helped produce the phenomenon that Kevin Phillips called "the emerging Republican majority." And that helped produce President Richard Nixon and President Ronald Reagan. The political changes, which involved both upward mobility and racism, were as inevitable as shopping centers. If John Kennedy had lived, Robert Kennedy would not have become the man he was after his brother's assassination. He would have been what he once was: an energetic, hard-edged political bully. And we would not have gone as deeply as we did into the quagmire of Vietnam. I don't mean to say that JFK would not have gone in -- he was in; he's the guy who got us there. But he knew the war was unwinnable -- which made him a pretty cynical fellow -- and sooner or later he would have backed out. My guess is that he would have done that late in his second term rather than after his re-election. If Robert Kennedy had lived, he would have become president, I think, although perhaps not in 1968, and he might have been able to find the American grail, a personal and populist politics that united working-class and middle-class voters of different races and religions. If Martin Luther King Jr. had lived, he would have had to become more political, trying to forge a coalition, something like the Rainbow Coalition that one of his disciples, Jesse Jackson, tried to create. That pressure from the Left also would have tended to shorten our involvement in Vietnam. But they were all struck down. We stayed in Vietnam long enough to erode our political credibility everywhere in the world, and to allow Soviet communism to survive long after its military credibility was checked and its economic credibility was zero. The three heroes were gone, the Cold War went on and on for no particular reason, and the United States has been at war with itself over these 25 years since Martin Luther King was killed. Universal Press Syndicate FOR CONSPIRACY THEORISTS, THE KENNEDY PLOT THICKENS DFP (c) 1994 Detroit Free Press Inc. All rts. reserv. 07010866 FOR CONSPIRACY THEORISTS, THE KENNEDY PLOT THICKENS Detroit Free Press (FP) - THURSDAY March 25, 1993 Edition: METRO FINAL Section: NWS Page: 2A Word Count: 201 MEMO: BY FAX BY PHONE: FREE PRESS PLUS TEXT: If you wonder whether the assassination of John F. Kennedy was the result of a conspiracy, Doculine, the Free Press' exclusive large document delivery service, may have an interesting document for you. Dr. Cyril Wecht, a forensic pathologist and one of nine medical members of the 1979 House Select Committee on Assassinations, wrote a long, scathing letter to the Journal of the American Medical Association to complain about articles it published supporting the lone gunman theory. His first version was deemed too long, so he shortened it. The shorter version was published in the most recent issue of JAMA. Now Doculine has both controversial versions of the letter available for you in a single 9 page document for $9.95. To order these letters, call Doculine at 1-800-627-1425. Use a touch tone phone and have your Visa or MasterCard handy. When asked for the ID number, enter 9379. Other Doculine offerings include: * ID# 9375 Highland Superstores 13-page Liquidation Motion, $15 * ID# 9378 Complete Text of President Clinton's Press Conference, $9.95 * ID# 9380 Highland's 37-page Unsecured Creditors List, $37 * ID# 9377 Gov. Engler's 60-page 1994 & 1995 Budget Summary, $60 DESCRIPTORS: hotline; DFreePress; Free Press Plus; JFK; investigation J. EDGAR HOOVER'S NASTIEST TRAITS ARE REVEALED IN BOOK DFP (c) 1994 Detroit Free Press Inc. All rts. reserv. 07004810 J. EDGAR HOOVER'S NASTIEST TRAITS ARE REVEALED IN BOOK Detroit Free Press (FP) - MONDAY February 8, 1993 By: LIZ SMITH Edition: METRO FINAL Section: FTR Page: 10C Word Count: 580 TEXT: "Behind his mask of public rectitude, it is now evident that this American hero was corrupt. He lived like an Oriental potentate, milking FBI funds and facilities for his private profit and pleasure. Wealthy friends favored him with lavish hospitality and investment tips, and he apparently protected them from criminal investigation," writes Anthony Summers in his startling new book, "Official and Confidential: The Secret Life of J. Edgar Hoover" from Putnam. As devotees of this column know, Summers is a particular pet of mine. He wrote the best book ever done on the late Marilyn Monroe, "Goddess," and is a distinguished reporter. He also wrote "Conspiracy," an acclaimed study of the assassination of John F. Kennedy. Over the weekend, the media were awash in Summers' revelations about the late FBI director's secret homosexuality and the fact that he sometimes dressed as a woman for parties held in the Plaza Hotel. (That must have been a sight.) But the crucial part of the Hoover-in-the-closet story is not that his homosexuality is news but that the Mafia used this information to keep Hoover under control. Almost every page of this work holds shocker after shocker about Hoover's deep corruption while he remained a self-appointed guardian of American morals and created himself as a legend under eight U.S. presidents. Just a few of the revelations include the fact that Hoover never, ever admitted he was wrong about anything. "He could not even admit the possibility. . . . He was vastly prejudiced against Jews, Hispanics and blacks (the latter were fine as "help" but to be excluded from the professions). . . . He behaved viciously toward fellow homosexuals. . . . He volunteered dirt on Undersecretary of State Sumner Welles and some say connived in the entrapment of Welles as a homosexual. . . . He attempted to smear Adlai Stevenson, Martin Luther King Jr. and three aides to President Nixon, saying they were gay. (There is no evidence that these assertions were true.) He loved and repeated smutty macho jokes against women. . . . He railed publicly against pornography and kept plenty of it in his own desk. . . . He wooed the press and showered favored contacts with gifts. . . . He snooped on presidents and their wives. . . . He fed material to Sen. Joe McCarthy and helped make the lurid senator's reign of terror possible. . . . He accepted gifts, lodging, drinks, stock tips and bribes from anyone who offered and appropriated FBI facilities for his personal use. . . . He ignored the early warnings about the attack on Pearl Harbor. . . . He used information on Kennedy's womanizing to make Lyndon Johnson vice president. . . . He relied on dirty tricks." Did J. Edgar Hoover ever do anything worthwhile? Summers says he cleaned the FBI in its early days and kept the bureau free of corruption. "A rare achievement in any police force. Their (the FBI's) integrity has earned the admiration and confidence of the public." THE ADVANCE BUZZ on Janet Jackson's performance in John Singleton's "Poetic Justice" is good. They say the singer-turned-actress "comes off brilliantly" playing a poet. Translation? She's better than expected. The movie is set for an early summer release. And Janet had divine inspiration for her "Poetic Justice" scenes -- the poetry in the film was written by Maya Angelou. Liz Smith appears Monday-Thursday in the Free Press. Detroit Free Press (FP) - FRIDAY January 29, 1993 DFP (c) 1994 Detroit Free Press Inc. All rts. reserv. 07003654 Detroit Free Press (FP) - FRIDAY January 29, 1993 Edition: METRO FINAL Section: OBT Page: 2B Word Count: 214 MEMO: DEATHS ELSEWHERE TEXT: * Edward Morgan, 82, a retired radio and television reporter, anchor and commentator, died Wednesday of complications of lung cancer at his home in McLean, Va. Morgan and Howard K. Smith were anchors for ABC's television coverage of the assassination of President John F. Kennedy. Morgan also served on the press panel at the second debate between Kennedy and Vice President Richard Nixon in 1960. For many years, Morgan broadcast a nightly ABC radio report and commentary with a liberal viewpoint, sponsored by the AFL-CIO. A critic of commercial broadcasting as timid and bland, he left ABC in 1967 to become the chief correspondent for the Public Broadcast Laboratory of National Educational Television and did commentaries for public radio. * David C. Rockola, 96, whose name became synonymous with the jukeboxes he made, died Tuesday in Skokie, Ill. He founded Rockola Scale Co. in 1926 and changed the name to Rock-Ola Manufacturing Co. in 1930. * Henry G. Plitt, 74, who founded a 600-screen theater chain that was bought by Cineplex Odeon Corp. in 1985, died of pancreatic cancer Tuesday in Beverly Hills, Calif. * Pete Manchikes, 70, host during the 1950s and '60s of the national radio program "Music 'til Dawn" and known professionally as Pete Matthews, died Tuesday in Erlanger, Ky. DESCRIPTORS: obituary Detroit Free Press (FP) - THURSDAY January 28, 1993 DFP (c) 1994 Detroit Free Press Inc. All rts. reserv. 07003447 Detroit Free Press (FP) - THURSDAY January 28, 1993 Edition: METRO FINAL Section: NWS Page: 1A Word Count: 172 MEMO: CUTINE ONLY TEXT: "The battle done, the victory won . . . the songs of triumph have begun, hallelujah." The Rev. Kawsai Thornell, canon of the Washington Cathedral, as the body of retired Supreme Court Justice Thurgood Marshall was returned to the Supreme Court building Wednesday to lie in state. Waiting for former Justice Thurgood Marshall's body to arrive at the court are, from left, Chief Justice William Rehnquist, Justices Byron White, Harry Blackmun, John Paul Stevens, Sandra Day O'Connor, Antonin Scalia, Anthony Kennedy, David Souter and Clarence Thomas and former Chief Justice Warren Burger. Thousands of mourners filed past the casket during the day. At left: Thurgood Marshall Jr., left, and John William Marshall look at the coffin of their father, who died Sunday and will be buried Friday. There will be a public memorial at 7 tonight at Fellowship Chapel Church, 19555 W. McNichols, Detroit. The observance will include choirs, a memorial litany and brief speeches by community leaders. CAPTION: PHOTO Photo Color BARRY THUMMAAssociated Press; Photo Color RON EDMONDS Associated Press DESCRIPTORS: Thurgood Marshall; Supreme Court; death HISTORICAL PROFITS OSWALD'S OLD ACQUAINTANCES CASH IN DFP (c) 1994 Detroit Free Press Inc. All rts. reserv. 07003404 HISTORICAL PROFITS OSWALD'S OLD ACQUAINTANCES CASH IN ON FREEDOM TO REMEMBER Detroit Free Press (FP) - THURSDAY January 28, 1993 By: JAMES P. GALLAGHER Chicago Tribune Edition: METRO FINAL Section: NWS Page: 3A Word Count: 499 TEXT: MINSK, Belarus - A handful of people in Minsk have suddenly become minor celebrities, all because they befriended a lonely American named Lee Harvey Oswald more than 30 years ago. Oswald, an ex-marine and admirer of the Soviet Union, moved to the Soviet Union in 1959. He worked in a sprawling radio factory in Minsk and married a local woman before returning to the United States in 1962, 18 months before the assassination of President John F. Kennedy. Soviet authorities kept Minsk off-limits to foreign researchers into Oswald's life. But now that the communist system has collapsed, Oswald's former friends are being besieged for details of his time in this drab capital city east of Moscow. Author Norman Mailer is the most prominent of those digging into Oswald's past. For the last few months, Mailer has been living on and off in Minsk. He confirmed in a telephone conversation that he is working on a book about Oswald, but declined to be more specific. Mailer even tried to move into the one-room apartment where Oswald, then in his early 20s, lived under constant secret police surveillance. "He offered to send my wife and me on vacation in the south for a couple of months," recalled the apartment's current occupant, Mikhail Kovalevski, a 66-year-old retiree. Maybe in the summer, Kovalevski said. But with the economy on the skids -- and with filmmakers, historians and journalists still hungry for tidbits about Oswald's past -- some of those who knew him are eager to cash in on their brief brush with history. Pavel Golovachev, 51, who worked with Oswald at the Gorizont TV and radio complex, said Mailer paid him $50 for an interview. "As the old saying goes, 'Thank you is fine, but it doesn't put vodka in the glass or butter on the bread,' " Golovachev said. Those who say they knew Oswald best generally speak highly of him. Ella German, who said she was briefly engaged to him, described him as "a pleasant-looking guy with a good sense of humor. He was not as rough and rude as the men here were back then. "We went to the movies, the theater, symphonies. He was easy to be with. But more casual acquaintances in Minsk, Detroit's sister city, remember Oswald less fondly. Leonid Botvinik, 64, who still works at the Gorizont plant, said most of his fellow employees had a bad opinion of Oswald. "Honestly, he was not a good worker," Botvinik said. "He would bring all kinds of magazines to read at work, and he was always dissatisfied with everything." Almost all who knew him do not believe he killed Kennedy. "Oswald shoot Kennedy? Come on!" Tsagoikov exclaimed. "Oswald could not shoot at all. I went hunting with him once, and when he saw a rabbit, he got so flustered he shot up in the air. There's no way he was capable of the precise marksmanship it would have taken to hit a moving CAPTION: PHOTO, MAP Photo; Map DESCRIPTORS: Lee Harvey Oswald JOHN F. KENNEDY IS ONE PRESIDENT RICH LITTLE ELECTS NOT TO I DFP (c) 1994 Detroit Free Press Inc. All rts. reserv. 06544392 JOHN F. KENNEDY IS ONE PRESIDENT RICH LITTLE ELECTS NOT TO IMITATE Detroit Free Press (FP) - THURSDAY December 3, 1992 By: JACK LLOYD Edition: METRO FINAL Section: FTR Page: 5D Word Count: 110 TEXT: Impressionist Rich Little likes doing presidents, and he does lots of them. But one he almost never does anymore is John F. Kennedy. "Only as a tribute," he said. "Otherwise, well, there's not much humor there." One of Little's earliest record albums, "Rich Little's Christmas Carol," featured the voice of Kennedy as the Spirit of Christmas Past. "There was a line that went something like, 'My time on Earth is short,' and Kennedy died two days after we finished the album," Little said. "Well, we had to go back in the studio to take that out. Instead of the Kennedy voice, we used Lloyd Bridges, if you can imagine that." DESCRIPTORS: Rich Little; John Kennedy BEFORE CAMELOT JFK'S EARLY YEARS PROVE FASCINATING IN BALANC DFP (c) 1994 Detroit Free Press Inc. All rts. reserv. 06542190 BEFORE CAMELOT JFK'S EARLY YEARS PROVE FASCINATING IN BALANCED ACCOUNT Detroit Free Press (FP) - SUNDAY November 15, 1992 By: MEL SMALL Edition: METRO FINAL Section: FTR Page: 11N Word Count: 674 MEMO: BOOKS; Mel Small teaches history at Wayne State University. TEXT: JFK: RECKLESS YOUTH By Nigel Hamilton Random House, 976 pages, $30 Just when it seemed that legions of biographers had revealed everything we needed to know -- and much that we did not want to know -- about John F. Kennedy, Nigel Hamilton has demonstrated, as David Powers once wrote, "Johnny, We Hardly Knew Ye." In the first volume of his monumental and perhaps even definitive "complete life in the English tradition," Hamilton presents the most balanced, nuanced, and richly researched biography of Kennedy to date. Carrying the story to his election to Congress in 1946, the author presents a sympathetic account of a highly intelligent, courageous and charming young man with astounding, but understandable, character flaws. Three interrelated themes dominate the hefty tome -- Jack's relationship with his father, his many severe illnesses, and his obsessive "sexual addiction." To shed light on these and other matters, Hamilton relies heavily, in the English manner, on letters written by Kennedy, family members and friends, especially LeMoyne Billings, Kennedy's faithful "Boswell." Joseph P. Kennedy emerges as a despicable, philandering coward of a father who failed at everything he attempted except for making millions in mostly shady Wall Street deals. Dabbling in psycho-biography, Hamilton describes how Joe, and a surprisingly cold and vapid Rose, were terrible parents whose emotional distance had a profound impact on their son. However, the author may stretch things a bit when he suggests that Jack's fierce anti-Stalinism in 1946 was a projection of subliminal hostility to his "Boston bully" of a father. Beds figure prominently in John Kennedy's life, but not just for the insatiable young man's innumerable liaisons with coeds, debutantes, nurses, movie stars and ladies of the night. Throughout the book, Jack is in and out of hospitals for countless operations and lengthy treatments for very serious but often undiagnosed back, digestive and glandular problems. His bouts with venereal disease were less life-threatening. The award-winning biographer of Field Marshal Montgomery, Hamilton dwells in detail on Jack's hyperactive sex life, where he "buried his fractured psyche in a lifetime of fruitless womanizing . . . that would relieve his libido yet never bring him contentment." Kennedy was only interested in women for recreation, although the author claims he may really have been in love with Inga Arvad, his controversial wartime flame. We know a lot about this affair because the FBI suspected "Inga Binga," a Danish journalist working in Washington, of being an Axis spy. Consequently, the FBI shadowed her for years and tapped her phones, trying to discover what the young naval intelligence officer was telling her about troop movements. Not much it turns out, although the logs of the Kennedy-Arvad phone conversations certainly titillated J. Edgar Hoover as they will titillate readers. In contrast to Thomas Reeve's recent anti-Kennedy polemic, "A Question of Character," Hamilton assesses the PT-109 story evenhandedly. Although father Joe shamelessly used the incident to promote his son and himself, Kennedy was indeed an admirable war hero and not the blunderer depicted by Reeves. Similarly, Hamilton pays tribute to young Kennedy's inquiring intellect. His Harvard senior thesis, published as the best-selling, "Why England Slept," was not ghost-written or heavily edited by Arthur Krock, the New York Times columnist who was on Joe Kennedy's secret payroll for years. Extremely witty with a self-deprecating sense of humor, well-liked by almost everyone who met him from prep school days through the navy years, quite knowledgeable about history and foreign affairs, Kennedy emerges as more than just a sex-crazed playboy with a congressional seat bought by Papa Joe when Hamilton brings his magisterial volume to a close in 1946. Guaranteed to distress both Kennedy lovers and haters, the first volume of this marvelous biography will leave most readers eagerly awaiting the next installment. CAPTION: PHOTO John F. Kennedy's senior thesis was published as "Why England Slept," and became a best-seller. It was not ghost-written nor heavily edited, says biographer Nigel Hamilton. DESCRIPTORS: book; review SOMETIMES, THE MAGIC IS JUST NOT THERE DFP (c) 1994 Detroit Free Press Inc. All rts. reserv. 06539254 SOMETIMES, THE MAGIC IS JUST NOT THERE Detroit Free Press (FP) - SUNDAY October 25, 1992 By: JEFF GREENFIELD Edition: METRO FINAL Section: EDP Page: 3G Word Count: 648 MEMO: OTHER VOICES TEXT: NEW YORK - It was just after the 1960 election, as Theodore White tells it, an election that John Kennedy won by little more than 100,000 votes, with a razor-thin electoral majority built on suspicious wins in Illinois and Texas. The president-elect was reading a news account of his much-praised staff, one of whom was described as "coruscatingly brilliant." "All I know," Kennedy muttered, "is that 8,000 votes the other way in Illinois and Texas and we'd all be coruscatingly stupid." This is a useful tale to remember as we enter the season of late-in-the-fourth-quarter-and-two-touchdowns-behind quarterbacking. Although President George Bush is campaigning with a new sense of verve, although voters still have time to change their minds, the press is filled with "how Bush lost" stories that chart his path to doom, and that shower praise on Bill Clinton's clairvoyantly brilliant staff. It's almost enough to make a wavering voter cast a vote for the president in the hope that if enough Americans do the same, we will all get to watch the press explain how it could have been so wrong. Do not mistake my point: No less an authority than House Republican Whip Newt Gingrich, R-Ga., has proclaimed Clinton's campaign the best of any Democrat's since 1960. Its understanding of the cultural texture of a campaign, its determination to emphasize Clinton's centrist credentials (antiwelfare, pro-death penalty, pro-growth), its recognition of the need for rapid responses to charges are all impressive. This is, however, not the most important element of the campaign; the most important element is rooted much less in the give-and-take of the battle than in the underlying terrain of political reality. What was the Bush campaign supposed to do about the end of the Cold War, which took the energy out of one of the Republican Party's most reliable issues for the last two decades? What was the campaign supposed to do about an economic slowdown that cut the legs out from under the winning themes of the last two Republican presidential campaigns? So-called Reagan Democrats may have been attracted by talk of values, but they kept voting Republican because of the promise of growth. When growth disappeared, it meant there would be no replay of 1984's "morning in America," no replay of 1988's "Let us continue" appeals. (Of course, Bush can be held responsible for the record of his administration, but it is not as if a team of campaign advisers can persuade the public that the news of the economy is good.) And what was the campaign supposed to do about a Democrat who simply refused to let himself be cast in the role of a soft-on-crime, tax-and-spend clone of Michael Dukakis? A year ago, fire-breathing Republicans were testing out themes that asked Americans whether they wanted "Jesse Jackson, Ted Kennedy and Barney Frank picking our Supreme Court justices." But that was not the candidate they were running against. Republicans point hopefully to the British elections, where the Conservatives trailed in the polls but wound up victorious. But while that is a useful warning against fortune-telling, it ignores one fundamental fact: Before the Conservatives went into the election, they dumped Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher and replaced her with John Major. As it is, a Clinton victory on Nov. 3 will be followed by even more talk of how the Bush campaign blew it. Were I one of those operatives, I would take heart from the scene in the movie "Little Big Man" where Chief Dan George stretches out on the ground and chants his spells, so that he may be taken up into the heavens. When nothing happens, he picks himself up, dusts himself off and says, "Well, sometimes the magic works, and sometimes it doesn't." Exactly. Universal Press Syndicate Detroit Free Press (FP) - TUESDAY October 20, 1992 DFP (c) 1994 Detroit Free Press Inc. All rts. reserv. 06538567 Detroit Free Press (FP) - TUESDAY October 20, 1992 By: BOB TALBERT Edition: METRO FINAL Section: FTR Page: 8C Word Count: 473 MEMO: MAGAZINE RACK TEXT: xhANN ARBOR OBSERVER (October): I discover about a million things -- OK, a slight exaggeration -- that I want to see, do, watch, hear or browse through when I wend my way through this monthly take on Ann Arbor, easily Michigan's most interesting city. As always, "Events at a Glance" by John Hinchey and Jennifer Hix is the most complete and entertaining monthly magazine calendar in the country. Discoveries elsewhere: Aunt Agatha's Mystery Book Shop at 213 S. Fourth St. sells nothing but mysteries and true-crime books, new and old; English is the most popular U-M undergraduate major, topping psychology and political science. Least popular? Italian, Greek and biophysics.EBONY (October): An excellent cover story, "The Year of the Black Woman," profiles astronaut Dr. Mae Jemison, Olympic gold medalist Jackie Joyner-Kersee, actress Halle Berry and politicians Carol Moseley Braun and Maxine Waters. Probably the most discussed article in this issue is the confession of big-boned, 5-foot-10 1/2-inch former beauty queen Jayne Kennedy Overton: "I was over 200 pounds, devastated and embarrassed." When she turned 40, she says, "I lost 40 of those pounds, went from a size 16 to size 12, and lost 5 1/2 inches from my hips." She did it with a low-cal diet, lots of water and exercise. TRUE NEWS (Premiere Issue, November): Black and white photos. Cheap paper stock. Snippets aimed at lip-movers. All rehash. Promo promises, "Fills the gap between People and the tabloids." If ever a gap needed filling, that was it, right? Deliver me from such nonsense. MAD (December): Yep, there he is, the patron saint of political put-ons, putting his Alfred E. Neuman for President bumper sticker on Barbara Bush's behind as an angry George Bush squints on Mad's cover. Inside Mad salutes (shouldn't that be, "slaps silly?") Christopher Columbus, sports betting, and television's female Gladiators while paying tribute to its late founder William Gaines with a full page of readers' regrets on his passing. SOLDIER OF FORTUNE, (November): Ross Perot is the Soldier of Fortune's cover boy. Well, his jug-eared, crew-cropped head is, anyway. It's on the shirtless body of a hunk holding a grenade launcher. Tagline promises: "Ross Perot's plan to get our POW/MIAs back." Perot says pay ransom for any prisoners left and give congressional immunity to those involved. Make 'em talk or guess where the grenade goes? CRIME BEAT, (November): Even Crime Beat is getting into the look-alike act with suggestions on how Hollywood should cast today's crime stories. Radio sleazoid Howard Stern as curly-haired California serial killer Richard Ramirez; Chevy Chase as Wall Street pickpocket Michael Milken, and Bridget Fonda as Carolyn Warmus, the former Detroiter accused of killing her lover's wife who has already been portrayed on TV by Virginia Madsen and Jenny Robertson. CAPTION: PHOTO Photo DESCRIPTORS: ragazine; review JIM GARRISON TRIED TO PROVE JFK DEATH PLOT DFP (c) 1994 Detroit Free Press Inc. All rts. reserv. 06538859 JIM GARRISON TRIED TO PROVE JFK DEATH PLOT Detroit Free Press (FP) - THURSDAY October 22, 1992 By: Free Press Wire Services Edition: METRO FINAL Section: OBT Page: 2B Word Count: 321 MEMO: OBITUARIES TEXT: NEW ORLEANS - Jim Garrison, the pistol-packing prosecutor whose conspiracy theories about President John F. Kennedy's assassination were scoffed at by many but inspired the director of the movie "JFK," died Wednesday. He was 70 and had a history of heart trouble. Mr. Garrison's accusation that New Orleans businessman Clay Shaw was a coconspirator with Lee Harvey Oswald and others in the 1963 assassination was never proven in court, but raised questions that remain in dispute. Mr. Garrison never stopped believing that CIA hard-liners had Kennedy killed to keep the United States involved in the Vietnam War. Mr. Garrison was most recently in the news in July, when it was disclosed that he and his first wife, the former Liz Ziegler, quietly remarried each other in a civil ceremony. Their marital breakup followed Mr. Garrison's controversial prosecution of Shaw. The prosecution formed the basis of the movie directed by Oliver Stone; Kevin Costner portrayed Mr. Garrison. Shaw was acquitted in 1969 on charges that he conspired to kill Kennedy. In the film, released in December, Mr. Garrison played Chief Justice Earl Warren, who headed the commission that investigated the assassination. Mr. Garrison was the author of several books on the assassination, including "Heritage of Stone," in which he further developed his theories that Kennedy was slain as a result of a conspiracy. Mr. Garrison, who went on to become a judge of the state 4th Circuit Court of Appeal, retired from the bench in November 1991. Shaw, who later died of lung cancer, testified during his trial that he did not know Oswald, who the Warren Commission said acted alone in the death of Kennedy, or any others involved in the case. Mr. Garrison had prosecuted Shaw for perjury, setting off a lengthy court battle that was not settled until the early 1970s, when a federal court ruled the prosecution was baseless and ordered Mr. Garrison to stop. CAPTION: PHOTO Jim Garrison DESCRIPTORS: obituary