04-02-2010, 07:47 AM
Charles, thank you for your instructive reply. I shall pursue a copy of George Michael Evica, And We Are All Mortal, 1978, perhaps, as suggested on the Mary Ferrell site, from Last Hurrah Bookshop, Andy Winiarczyk.
The powerful line from JFK's American University address June 10, 1963, a concept unthinkable to Dulles & Co.
I have read some of your writings on the author and his work, and reviews, biographies and obituaries, all inviting further reading.
From Jim DiEugenio in his review of A Certain Arrogance http://www.ctka.net/reviews/certain_arrogance.html in which he writes, "The second reason this demonstration is valuable is it shows once again that if you press on almost any aspect of the Oswald saga, questions, inconsistencies, paradoxes in abundance come to the forefront."
Which parallels the concept Holmes communicates to Watson in The Three Garridebs in The Case Book of Sherlock Holmes (page 122) "Touch him where you would he was false."
I will be looking for the new edition of A Certain Arrogance, at your advice.
Regarding Professor Evica's reference to Dalmatian in re "Dragoo," I am indebted to Pierre and Elizabeth Dragaud who arrived 1699 Staten Island having left the province of Saintonge that same year. They provided a grandson (my great-to-the-sixth) for the Revolutionary War.
The powerful line from JFK's American University address June 10, 1963, a concept unthinkable to Dulles & Co.
I have read some of your writings on the author and his work, and reviews, biographies and obituaries, all inviting further reading.
From Jim DiEugenio in his review of A Certain Arrogance http://www.ctka.net/reviews/certain_arrogance.html in which he writes, "The second reason this demonstration is valuable is it shows once again that if you press on almost any aspect of the Oswald saga, questions, inconsistencies, paradoxes in abundance come to the forefront."
Which parallels the concept Holmes communicates to Watson in The Three Garridebs in The Case Book of Sherlock Holmes (page 122) "Touch him where you would he was false."
I will be looking for the new edition of A Certain Arrogance, at your advice.
Regarding Professor Evica's reference to Dalmatian in re "Dragoo," I am indebted to Pierre and Elizabeth Dragaud who arrived 1699 Staten Island having left the province of Saintonge that same year. They provided a grandson (my great-to-the-sixth) for the Revolutionary War.