11-02-2011, 10:30 PM
(This post was last modified: 11-02-2011, 11:15 PM by Jack White.)
In preparing his five talks for the upcoming Hawaii JFK Conference, John Armstrong
has been calling me frequently and discussing various points to be covered.
He has reminded me of a few of the discoveries he had made:
1. Something I did not REALLY understand till a discussion yesterday (even
though I had read Harvey & Lee) was that FOR THE OFFICIAL RECORD, since
there was only ONE Lee Harvey Oswald, the Marines had only ONE record of
the two men using that name. The Marines had a "Lee Harvey Oswald" file,
and into it went all the records of BOTH men. It is here that the most egregious
discrepancies exist of two different men at the same time. And each LHO was
not necessarily ON ACTIVE DUTY ALL THE TIME.
An example: Both Lee and Harvey attended Marine Aviation School at
Keesler AFB, but at differing times. AFTER that training, one went to Japan,
but the other went to New Orleans and "became a CIVILIAN", getting a job
at Pfisterer Dental Lab. That LHO then LATER went to Japan as a Marine.
It is no wonder then that after the assassination, the FBI went to Pfisterer
and confiscated all the records regarding the LHO employment there. Other
records show LHO in high school and simultaneously in Japan. Still other
records show LHO in the Philippines and Japan at the same time.
2. Ask yourself, why was the MONEY ORDER used to "purchase the Mannlicher-
Carcano from Klein's" NEVER CASHED? It has been there in the WR volumes
all these years for all to see. But John was the first researcher to notice that
the backside bore NO ENDORSEMENT OR BANK STAMPS. If Klein's had
sold the rifle, it would have had stampings on the back for each transaction.
3. The "Papers of Edward Epstein" were placed at Georgetown University,
but the INTERVIEWS Epstein was allowed to conduct with Marines who had
served "with LHO" at various times and places are CLASSIFIED. John learned
this from his research associate Malcolm Blount of England. Malcolm arranged
to fly from England to Washington to study the Epstein Collection. When he
got to Georgetown, he was allowed to access the Epstein papers EXCEPT
for the INTERVIEWS with Marine acquaintances of LHO at various times
and places. Here is part of what Malcolm told John:
"John, I got on a plane and flew there just to read those interviews....I was not pleased when Scott Taylor the head of special collections at Georgetown University said that he made a mistake, and that box of the Oursler Collection relating to Epstein's book was closed to research. As I said, he called Oursler and pleaded my case but to no avail."
"The time has come," the Walrus said,

"To talk of many things:

Of shoes--and ships--and sealing-wax--

Of cabbages--and kings--

And why the sea is boiling hot--

And whether pigs have wings.":flypig:
Jack
has been calling me frequently and discussing various points to be covered.
He has reminded me of a few of the discoveries he had made:
1. Something I did not REALLY understand till a discussion yesterday (even
though I had read Harvey & Lee) was that FOR THE OFFICIAL RECORD, since
there was only ONE Lee Harvey Oswald, the Marines had only ONE record of
the two men using that name. The Marines had a "Lee Harvey Oswald" file,
and into it went all the records of BOTH men. It is here that the most egregious
discrepancies exist of two different men at the same time. And each LHO was
not necessarily ON ACTIVE DUTY ALL THE TIME.
An example: Both Lee and Harvey attended Marine Aviation School at
Keesler AFB, but at differing times. AFTER that training, one went to Japan,
but the other went to New Orleans and "became a CIVILIAN", getting a job
at Pfisterer Dental Lab. That LHO then LATER went to Japan as a Marine.
It is no wonder then that after the assassination, the FBI went to Pfisterer
and confiscated all the records regarding the LHO employment there. Other
records show LHO in high school and simultaneously in Japan. Still other
records show LHO in the Philippines and Japan at the same time.
2. Ask yourself, why was the MONEY ORDER used to "purchase the Mannlicher-
Carcano from Klein's" NEVER CASHED? It has been there in the WR volumes
all these years for all to see. But John was the first researcher to notice that
the backside bore NO ENDORSEMENT OR BANK STAMPS. If Klein's had
sold the rifle, it would have had stampings on the back for each transaction.
3. The "Papers of Edward Epstein" were placed at Georgetown University,
but the INTERVIEWS Epstein was allowed to conduct with Marines who had
served "with LHO" at various times and places are CLASSIFIED. John learned
this from his research associate Malcolm Blount of England. Malcolm arranged
to fly from England to Washington to study the Epstein Collection. When he
got to Georgetown, he was allowed to access the Epstein papers EXCEPT
for the INTERVIEWS with Marine acquaintances of LHO at various times
and places. Here is part of what Malcolm told John:
"John, I got on a plane and flew there just to read those interviews....I was not pleased when Scott Taylor the head of special collections at Georgetown University said that he made a mistake, and that box of the Oursler Collection relating to Epstein's book was closed to research. As I said, he called Oursler and pleaded my case but to no avail."
"The time has come," the Walrus said,

"To talk of many things:

Of shoes--and ships--and sealing-wax--

Of cabbages--and kings--

And why the sea is boiling hot--

And whether pigs have wings.":flypig:
Jack