ARTICLE: PART 1. INTRODUCTION WHO ASSASSINATED PRESIDENT KENNEDY?

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00414469
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June 6, 2025
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June 12, 2025
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May 1, 1970
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104-10209-10237 --- Part 1. introduction Who A naced Precedent Kennedy? On honeeber 22. 0:3. in Dallas. Texas. President John F. Kennedy. while riding in an oven linousine � - through Denley Plaza a,d worth., to the suriounding - ttowls� was shot to death. Lee ilarvey Oswnld, an ev-marine. and forcer visitor to tht Soviet Union. was arretted that afternnon In a monie theatre in another section of pa:.41: that night he was chnrged with shooting Presluest kennedy from the sixth floor rrrrrr neost window o: the Trails School Donk Deposi- tory Building everlor�ving bealey Plaza. This act Oswald denied steedily through two days of question- ing info record of questions and answers was ever preserved/. 'Iwo days later while Oswald was being transferred from one jail to another, he was shot by Jack Pnby. a Dnilts night-club owner. In the basement of the Dallas police station, while mil- lions of Americans watchtd on television. The com- mission of investleation, appointed by President Lyndon D. Johnson, as: headed by Chief Justice Earl Warren of the U. S. Sanreme Court, published its report In Septenber :Ct.!, and Concluded that Oswald was the sole assassin and that there was no conspir- acy. In view of the authority of the Warren Commis- sion, that conclusion. was accepted by many Americans for a long time. But the conclusion cannot be con- sidered true by any person who carefully considers the crucial evidence -- such as the pnysics of the Shooting. the timing of a number of events, and Other leportnat and undeniable facts. In other words. Oswald was net tee sole assassin, and there was a conspiracy. This article will cenelop that thesis, prove it to be true on the basis ef substantial, conclusive evidence, and in particalar some analysis of the � photographic evidence.. : There was In fact a conspiracy. Oswald played a role in the conspiracy. although there is con- clusive evidence that en Novembe7 22. 1963, he did no shooting at Fresisent Kennedy. end that, just as he claimed when :e was in the Dallas jail, he was a "patsy." At :east three gunmen (and proba- bly four) -- none of whom were in the sixth floor eitSternelost window of the Texas Scnool Book Depos- itory building where the Warren Comrlssion placed Oswald -- fired a canal of six shots at President Kenneey. � - One of these shots missed entirely.: one bit Governor John B. Connally. Jr. of Texas. riding . with Kennedy: and fear hit President Kennedy. one in his throat, one is hir back, and two in his head. (Inc bulk of tut undenialiie enidence for there statements abomt the shots consists of: (a) the physics of tht motions of Kennedy Cud Con- nally shown in some tO frames of the famous film by Abraham Zapruder: (b) the locations of the in- juries in Kennedy Ind in Connally: and (c) more than 100 pictures. censisting of 'sore than 30 still photographs end more than 70 frames of mo- vies.) More than SO persons were involved in the con- at the tint of firing the shots. These persons included mescers of the Dallas police force (but not all of the Dallas police -- and that ac- 110:0 ""rom the PUn:tJher: In crler cd 1.nd/tide tna article bu Richard E. Sprague in :%is issue ofCem- putern cnd Aueetennvi.nn, it UO3 necessary to type the article in tha of ow' "Across the Editor's Doak" eeotion, rather than the usual typeface for our artioles. We rugrot any.reaustion in Legibility haw resu:ted. Document Number FINA Review on c('..:'L�LY` counts for some strange eirents), elrweats of the Central Intelligence agency, anwe Anti-Castro Cwt.*. exiles. some ad from New Orleans. and sore other groups. After the InItinn. very highly pInced.persons in the United !Ast*... governe,nt became accettories to ti.' erie,. In ether words, they pArtItipated In a.�iduou, con- ceal,,ent of important facts. in shielding the per- petratnrs of the crien. and in spreading d thee layer of rewritten history (in the manner .1 r:ti.rs'e Orwell's famous novel A'dit") river the uhnir br,rw. Of course. asstrtie; these stnice.nts ',ars then reither true err believnnle. without ve.Ty str9ng evidence, it would be evil to make sueh st.itements. As to believability, prior to Oistrict Att,Iney Jim Garnison's trial of Clay Shaw in New (gleans in Feb. and March, 190. nubile Opinion pi..11 in the United States shewed that over if. perf.dit of the people in the ChiseJ States believed i iat there was 8 conspiracy. ;se press. radio. And WIrtntt everywhere in the Os sled States reenr led t� iret inn. investigation and the New Orleans trial it. ti distorted way. r.fth��,..lie. Ga rr i Son did in 11 prove to tne satisfaction of the Nett Orleans Jur/ that Clay Shaw was involved in the conspiracy, even though he proved that Snaw knew had net 0.vald. The news media of the halted States (ester, for two newspapers in New Grleans) reported the trial in such a way as to stew that no conspiracy etstted. The media largely succee.led in Chanqing ll.S.punItC opinion, if we judge from the falling oft of inn poll percentages. n.t the Cnited States' ru.dia have been proved wrong many tints efore. and they will be prose.. wrong again in tnis case. For example. the pc,,, of the United States almost entirely refused tn lieve for five years (003 to 10401) that the 0r.,ns brothers had flown in a flying machine heavier iw.c air. Only after the Wright brothers had won ,er.,- tacular air races and demonstrated other successful flights in France. did the majority of the "hard- headed" American press believe that the Wright brotia- ers had flown! But the evidence cited or referred to in this article, and the existing photographic evidence :no its analysis. a little of which Is published here. establishes the fact of conspiracy. This evidence alone with other evicence should and can initialise � major change in the beliefs of the people of the United States. As for beliefs of tie people of Europe. it has long 'been and still is accepted there that President John F. Kennedy was astansinated by is conspiracy. What is the Evidence? The evidence for its:: statement -- "the Warren Commission conclusions are false" -- is now over- whelming. There now exists not only a mountain of new evi- dence, but also considerable new analysis 0: the old evidence, the evidence which thr Commission it- self published in the 2.6 volumes of Evidence and hearings accompanying tfte Warren Report. Much of the new evidence and the new analyses of the old evidence are available for any serious researcher's Inspection; if any such person is interested, he should write re. There itre four prime sources of new evidence tad analysis: 1. Researchers all over the United States, s.:ce affiliated with the National Committee to Investigate Assassinations iNCTIA). oiheri acting independently but cooperating witx the NCTIA, have optained.new evidence from witnesses, and even from conspirators -- including admissions and confessions. Comrums and AUTOMATION for May, i570 1553 -\4-C 'Es 1978, - /1"-.7:41ff'3544,1191114 s3t, -.CIA HISTORICAL RE:ME:WM FC-LEASE iN FULL .*1/44%ktiekati, 140,0 � ...,,,,,u43341 or otscribed La this article. �7:3:Researchers have produced scientific, sol- Idly-pased ana4yses of the old *I'd new . evidence and published these arelyses In books and articles. 4. The office of District Attorney Jim Gtrristis in New Orleans has, under his direction. carried on tend coetinues to terry on) tin eatensive investiention of President Kea- nedy's ossnssination. Ouch of this evi- dence has been wade 'reliable to the NCTIA. This article concentrates on some of the photo- graphic evidence and problems of computerized anal... However. for the benefit of readers who. . would like to examine some of the other evidence, a few very ',Tenant and Interesting refevencel will be mentioned next. Four Important Reference Omoks On valuable book is Sty serr,flas In 11,1141, by Professor Josiah Thompson, a professor of philosophy at Haverford College, Haverford. Ye.. published .a 1960 by Bernard Geis and associates, New York. 323 pages. Thompson m:.de a thorough end competent anal� ysis of the happenings during the six seconds when President Kennedy and Governor Connally of Texas . were shot. With the cooperation of Life magazine I during the first part of his Investigation. he looked at the clear origiral of the Zapruder film. (After that. Ufe magazine locked the film up and I denied any further access. until Garrison subpoenaed i the film for the New Orleans trial of Clay Shaw./ Tnompson shn.ed that at least three gunmen shot at t the President. and that one of the fatal shots cane i from the front and not trie.oack. , Another impeccably scholarly book is kcessories y aftm_r the Fact, by Sylvia Meagher. published in ! 1967 by itohos Merrill Co.. Indianapolis. Ind.. 477 I pages. She presents a most thorough analysis of the t gaps, conflicts, contradictions, and failures to I investigate, that are clearly revealed by careful ; study of the barren Commission Report and the 26 volumes of supporting documents. A third important book is Inquest: the Warren (M-315545�n 14.1 the Establishment of Trutn. by Ed- ward Jay Epstein. published by the Viking Press. / New York, N.Y., 1966. 224 pp. Epstein makes a preg- ; nant remark at the beginning of his Chapter 9. "The ) major problem in the writing of the Report was the . selection of the evidence. From the tens of thou- sands of pages of evidence, which facts were to be : Included and which facts excluded?" This book is an illuminating account of whit actually did happen Ain the work of the staff of the Warren Commission. :( and why and how they could have reached the wrong 1 conclusions. A fourth significant book Is Farewell America, by James Hepburn, published in Canada and in Bel- glum by Frontiers Publishing Co.. Vaduz. Liechten- stein. 1960. 416 pp. (One cannot be sued in Liech- tenstein.) This book is apparently based largely ton information collected by certain former members of the French intelligence service, who penetrated 4the plot to assassinate President Kennedy. Accord- ing to the cook Jacket. the author, James Hepburn. r attended the London School of Economies and later Ilgraduated from the Institute of Political Studies !in Paris. (however. "Hepburn" is a pseudonym.) The book gives a large amount of information about the plot to assassinate Kennedy, its background. rand parallels in history. Toe book alleges that - J. Edgar Hoover knew of the plot beforehand and did ;nothing to stop it. It also alleges that a Texas ;oil millionaire. some other oil men. soma Texas sad COMPUTERS and AMMATiON for OA/. 1970 .4 V governnent. 4144; atm2.2.r2 of the Dallas Police iie . .partmeet. and many realer' if the CIA. the 161. and the Secret Service, all were involved fa the. plot. I. do not agree with nor believe some of these she- gat ions. � Appendix 1 of this Look lists many "classified" documents in toe Natiooal Ar.:hives of the United States. SuCh 43 no. 47.A. � srnret CIA do,,,,,nt en- tithed "Oswale's access to Information *Gout the ,p, p5aeri. lists-e,.re refer- ences. eatitird "report:, e..r..Arande. end docuente" such 25 "irissier Ricbar4 M. Helms". "Genrrnl Dyne- mics tossirr F ILI" �.bat tow to get access to these references I: nowiere mentioned. P47e3 300 to 324 contain a Irmari:oli account of t.enty years! activity oy.tne CIA. Such of the information in the b004 is clearly tr.e; other information is probable or plausible: acme information is clearly In the category "possible but herd to bellete and by no Intens proved. For re450as that Pay he e6essed. this book is very nnrd to obtain in the United States but it can be baligst in ether countries. Although it his Li- brory.Of Congress caisloe no. 60-57391. at the Li- brary of Con;ress it is "rot available". Commerciel importation ef the boy: has been blocked by the U.S. Customs and the U.S. Poit Office. A movie with the same title has been MAS..5 by the publishers of the book: tee movie. "Farevell AnerIca", has to!en shown In savers' European cities, but no copies of the film are so far available in the United States. A ril,eter of inportsat reference books are includ- ed.in tie partial bibliograpny at the end of this article. Amon,, the nor" irportant authors are Harold anisberg. Paris ..ia,mance. Mark Lane, Rose- mary Jemes. Joachim Jo-:ten. and Raymond Marcus. A fuller bibliogr5ph7 is available from the NCT1A. The New �deans Mai of Clay Shaw One of the largest additional installments of new public evidence came out of three weeks of court testimony given in New Orleans. Feb. and March., 1069. when District Attorney Jim Garrison charged Clay Shaw with haring a part in the conspiracy to assessinate President Kennedy. The trial was accurately and very fully reported in The 7i-es Picayune. Feb. 7. 19o9 to March 2. 1969. the leading daily paper in New Orleans. published since 164T. The record of the trial as published ii Ike Tires Picayune contains many indications that: 1. C:ay Snow know and meet with Lee Harvei � Oswald (dead), David Ferric (dead), and Jack Ruby (dead). sod exchange money with -� them. Twelve witnesses saw them together in twos and threes, at various times and _places. 2. There were at least three gunmen in Dealey Plaza firing at President Kennedy on Novem- ber 22, 1963, from at least two directions. and therefore there was a conspiracy. Whet Gerrisca failed to prove to the satisfaction cf the New Orleans jury was that Clay Shaw was involved In the conspiracy in Dallas. The Monti Police Tape Among the pieces of new public evidence is the "Nisei Police Tape." IL September 1963. President -John F. Keonedy gave a speech in Miami, Florida. Prior to this time a Miami police informer who had tafIltrated the National States Rights Party (nter- i.lewed oce of its chieftains. a Ur. Hilteer. In � hotel revs In Miami. Unknown to Hilteer the room had been bugged by the Miami police and the inter- view was taped. The Inferrer drew Milteer out on 31 j 1 'the subject of assassinations. %Meer skid that Jack Wennely was going to he mated either in Miami or in some ether city by individunts who were connected with right wing groups including the Min- tile gel\ And the Nntconal StSleS Iii. his Party. Ile said it would be done with a hien-power rifle from S high point In a city buildieg and that a patsy would be picked up Ey the pallce afterwards. De said a enn using the i.e.'... itrosO was the most likely one to do it. De adeed that brown End been tot law- leg Martin Luther King around the country for several months trying to assassinate him ton. The Miami police turned the information over to the FPI, who informed the Mien: police that they had turned it over to the Secrct Service. Kennedy was well protected in Miami and exposed himself as little as possible. apparently partie es � result of the Secret Service receiving the infor- mation. On the morning of November 22, 1963. Milteer tel- ephoned the informer to say that Jack Kennedy was coming thst day to Dallas, and would probably never be seen in Miami again. The informer interpreted this to mean that Kennedy would be shot in Millais and says that he reported this information to the Miami police. The Miami poilce in turn reported the information to the Miami office of the FBI. After the assassination. the Mien, police as- sumed that either the FBI or the Secret Service were follewing up on these lends. So the Miami po- lice remained silent. When District Attorney Jim 6nrrison contactel them !n late 1966, prior to pub- lic announcement of his investigation. the Miami po- lice learned of Garrison's evidence about a conspir- acy. They become very disturbed, and then decided in January 190 to make the tape public. (Garri- son's investigation did not become public until February 1967.) The Miami tape was played for a group of newsmen in the police headquarters in January 1967. Stories about the tape appeared in several newspapers, but not in The New York Times nor in other leading newspapers, in spite of the Importance of the story. The FBI and the Secret Service had all the above information from the Miami police prior to the forma- tion of the Warren Commissien. Yet none of the a- bove information appears in the Warren Commission Report. 'la the 26 accompanying volumes, or in the Warren Commission archive, which have beta made public. Oswald's Message to the FBI Among other evidence collected by Garrison (and confirmed by Mark Lane) is the fact that Oswald tele- phoned the Dallas. Texas, office of the FBI on No- vember 20, 1963. end told them that President Ken- nedy was going to be assassinated on November 22. An FBI teletype message was sent that day to J. Edger hoover with that information. A repeat teletype message with that information was also sent on that day to the New Orleans office of the FBI, apparently because of Oswald's former presence in New Orleans. A clerk in the New Orleans office of the FBI re- vealed the existence of the teletype message, and gave a deposition to that effect to Garrison. lie also revealed the existence of that teletype mes- sage to Attorney Mark Lane after Garrison's inves- tigation was made public. No statement about this message appears in the Warren Commission Report. in the twenty-six accompanying volumes, or in the Warren Commission Archives. The Radio Communicator One of the Ia thing events prior to the trial of Clay Shaw la 1969 mas the finding of a mai aimed 32 Jim :licks. De thy.01 op voluntarily in garrison's office. Garrison an4.ene of the ,,,,,, criers. Jones !beets. suddenle realford that they had seen his picture before. SS nni- of the pershna is waley Vlara,.near the tie, of the ffitni shooting (Si" Fig. 41): Hicks neeitted that hc was the radio cow- munickitor emeng.the rifle teams since they were. ovt of sight from each other, and of course each team ww4d- need to :noa what was going on. Si" Hicks hod set up a cemmanicatinns center at the Adolphus lintel prior to the assassination. Th!! photograph Harris bad seen is a picture of Jim flicks in.Deriley Plaza just after the shots, with his radio in his left rear trouser pocket ond antes- na hangthi down outside. (See the foreground of Figure II.) Since the time of his admissions. Jim Hicks hes been locked up in en Air Force Hospital for the insane located ill Oklahoma. Strange Events In the Warren Commission's activities, there are many strange events, extraordinary patterns of behavior, and important unanswered questions to which the Warrsn Commission paid almost no atten- tion. There are more than 50 instances of these strargs events � where tee :iarren Cor...ssion did not look, or loosed aside, as if they were trying sot to see. 'Amacg ttese ore the following: 1. Crucial records were burned or destroyed. For exa,;ie. Comm;nder J. J. Humes, chief autopsy sureeon, personally burned in Its fireplace on Nov. 24. 1963 his preliminary draft of the autopsy report. The Warren Commissicn accepted this action as natural. 2. Crucial physical evidence was destroyed, as in (a) washing of Governor Connally's bul- let-penetrated clothing, before it was ex- amined by the Commission's staff, and (b) the prompt rebuilding of the presidenttal limousine, so that it could no longer be examined for bullet larks: etc. The Warren Commission accepted these artions without questioning. � 3. The Warren (emission did not examine the autopsy X-rays and photographs of President Kennedy. In (act, tine photographs were not even developed unti: two years after President Kennedy's death. The Kennedy family and Burke Marshall, their lawyer, assisted in locking them up. 4. The Warren Commission accepted the sudden appearance of a pristine bullet (C.mmis- sion Exhibit 391). fitting Oswald's GOO. On the wrong stretcher in Parkland lio.pitals and the Commission essumed that it "fell" out of Governor Connally. 5. The Warren Commission (in an admitt:d error) published Zapruder frames 314 and :t15 in reversed order, so that the notion of JFK's head after the fatal shot. MSS reversed. The Warren Commission Ignored the visible and violent backward motion of President Kennedy's head shown in the Zaprucirr film at the instant of the fatal shot -- � mo- tion that conclusively shows that the Presi- dent was fatally shot from the front. 7. The Warren Commission failed to investigate many possible motives for shooting President Kennedy, and who would profit thereby. Etc. Perhaps the strangest of all the events are some events that took place after the Warren Commission made their report: 1. President Lyndon B. Johnson issued an execu- . Ova order locking up in the Archives of !". COMPUTERS end AUTOMATiOnl foe May, lens -�:�� ������� 4. 1\ t � � .. .. � � . - ..... . , . ........:;�.-- . �1-------Th f.- �.,."-----'-,-- : --- - -,-..:, . I ....OM. ......."."". $ i � ) I . 4 . . . . 4 . " . . . 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AV.. ,, �� ' � ..�: :.N.":" ";- :- - 1 � � � � ' � � � � I. �� . � ". - . :** .. 'I, t; �����-_ :?... ;- .., ''�-�� ..t...-r�':.: .,-- .���� ' � � - -..., - -- .: � .- --. - . - � � , � " .. � ... � .-,1. � �.., .- � ... . -,.. ,f. 4 "...: ... . ....4�.. A. :4,..! ....: .... . � . ... . .. "r'- � � � � ." ���.. � � NO., � � s'e, t 4....����11 figure 11 View of Deals), Plaza shortly atter the !nation. showing Jim Ricks. tbe radio commusicator emoeg the fir- ing teams. In the foreground, with radio in pocket, and "V-shaped antenna !seeing down. (Table 3. No. 61) COmPUTtftS and AUTOMATION for Mit, 1970 33 I the United States for 75 years as "cattail- domtial. secret, and top secret." over 100 1-p5rtant relevant reports and remorandc; The list of the titles of these extraordi- nary documonts was obtained ang Published In the Saturday Evening Post, on April 6. 2. Chief Justice Earl Warren hes steadily re- fused to coesider any new evidence. As re- c.ntly as l'569 he told newsmen. "I know of no new evidence, and heve seen no new evi- dence." It is a fact that such new eiri dence exists in large cuantities. This strange attitude may be coupled with war- ren's steady silence in response to letters. No scientist, nO honest man, ever refuses to look at new evidence. The kind of action which locks a- way old evideace. and refuses to look at new evi- dence, is not the kind of action of honest scien- tists and honest men. Basically. the Warren Commission picked up the Dallas police hypothesis, that Lee Harvey Oswald was the sole assassin and there was no conspiracy. Once they chose this hypothesis (and they chose it very early), they assiduously tried to confirm it. partly by selecting evidence, partly by suppressing information which they knew, and partly :4 altering evidence to .e opposite -- in other words. falsi- fying evidence. Their candidate for assassination vehemently denied ((or two days before being killed by Jack R,by) participatiog in or knowing about the ossassination of President Wennedy. lie also posi- tively stateJ that he had been made a patsy, a fall gey. He also said that the photograph of him hold- ihg a rifle was a fake. saying. "That's oy head but not my body." (That pholcgraph is demonstrably a fake..) Over 50.003 items of evidence exist which support and mutually confirm a contrasting hypothesis. This hypothesis is that there was a conspiracy, and that at least four persons shot at President Kennedy, and that more than 50 persons were involved in the con- spiracy. In fact. about 6 persons who participated in the c.nspiracy have admiated their participation and described what happened in their own involve- ment. All of these items of evidence collected con- firm the information in all of the photographs. and are very largely consistent. I do not allege that the CIA, the Secret Service, Lyndon 8. Johnson, and. certain other prominent individuals participated in the conspiracy before the assassination occurred. I do assert that these individuals and agencies. after the assassination occurred. participated in covering up and concealing the conspiracy and there- by became accessories after the fact. The evidence raferred to it sreilable under appropriate circum- stances to an untainted ConPressional investigation. Part 2. The Photographic Evidence Over 510 Photographs The assassination of President John F. Kennedy was the most 'photographed murder in history. Ap- proximately 75 photographers took a total of approxi- mately 510 photographs, either before or during or within an hour after the events in Dealcy Plaza, and either there or nearby or related to those events. The word "photograph" in' this context includes both still photos and movie sequences. The rumber Of frames in a movie sequence rime: from about 10 to about 500: and in the count or 510 photographs (Owl above. the 10 to 500 frames of a single movie se- quence are counted Just as one photograph. The to- tal number of frames Is over 25.000. 34 The Warren Commission examined 26 phopnrspha. about 5 percent of the 5;0. The Fill esswimed about 51 photographs. or about 10 percent. ire most fa- mous of all the photogrLphs is the Zapruder which had ever 400 framv.s. gawy of the pootograpts were taken by profes- sional uhotogrnphers. 1.!.oat 3q of the photographers, were professionals who worked for nowspopers, tele- vision networks, and photo;raphic agencies. The harren Commission did not interview a single one of the professional photographers. noi did the Warren Commission see any of their photogr,.phS. Fifteen of these pro:essionals were actually in the Kennedy motorcade, no further than 6 Car lengths behind the Kennedy car. Five of these photograph- ers were television network Ca...s.rsaw,n. TN! .. .... Commission lookeo at none of ineir photographs. No of the photoeraphers were from the waite House. One of these men (Thomas Atkins) was the regular photograpner for the white House. lie made s special film for ;..yndon B. Johnson. Atkins used his own film plus some footage obtained from the television photographers. Johnson looked at the film and then put It nosy. This fllm is n'Av storeo with the Fenneyy Kemorial Library materials in a warehouse in Washington. D.C.: it is stated to be "unavailuble" to researchers. The COmmi$5104 did not see this film, nor did they interview Atkins. UcCeaSe the professionals used movie cameras of professional cuolity. their filmS are exceedingly revealing agd va;usble as primary evidence. The Warren Con-sissien looked at none of these films. During the past several years. I have collected copies of over 200 of these photographs. sod I have looked ti: and token notes on another 2.74 of these photographs, without obtaining copies of t!ora. Some of the remaining 100 have eitker not been found or have been locked up or destroyed by the owners, who are fearful of the Information they show. Or they have been locked up by the F8I, who have either placed then in files inaccessible to the p6olic or . possibly have destroyed them. (See Table 2.) Chart 2 of this article stows the tines of about 50 of the ;.holographs taken in Dealey Plaza during Kennedy's passage through it. Table 3 of this article lists over 510 photo- graphs so far identified snd know' to exist or to have existed -- with possibly a few borderline cases. Uost of the "official" photographs of the Warren CoRmission, or of the FBI, or of the Dallas Police, which are In the Warren Commission Report or in the 26 volumes of the Warren Commission's Evidence and Hearings. are not Includeo in the list of Table 3, because such photographs were taken more than one hour after the shots were fired. The 6111 Moe Easternmost Window According to the Warren report. Oswald was sup- posed to have fired a rifle from the 6th floor easternmost window of the Texas School book Deposi- tory Building. (Ste Chart 1) Among the photographs there are several that show this window. Accompany- ing this article are copies of two photographs, one showing this window exactly 5.7 seconds before tee first shot and one showing this window exactly 3.5 seconds after the last shot. (See Figs. 6 and 7) The first photograph (Table 3. No. 8) was taken by photographer Hughes, and shows the window with only � box appearing in it. The second (Table 3. No. 121) was tAigen by photographer Dillard and shows the window with only the box in it. There is ti photo- graph taken by Norman Similas taken during the shooting which Is now in the possession of the FBI fano Tables 2 and 3. No. (94). A possible reason for the FBI not to reveal or display this photograph is, that it was taken between its* first nod thgt lost ff" COMPUTERS and AUTOMATION for May, 1970 snots, and.shows Inc wIndw empty except for the box. Oswald and his rifle are rot in this wingow -- which . would be complete proof ttat be wee not there. Nor- man Similes. end also an editor of iljerti regezine in Canada, saw this ph;:.to, however, and both state - that the window was enpty. Caen without the aveilabllity of the Similes pho- to. (he other two pictures destroy the hsrren Cod, nission's findings and the testimony Of their key witnesses. The witne� -s. notably Howard Brennan. Said that the assassin was leaning out of the win- dow and poking the rifle well out of the aindow both before and after the shots were fired. The ' ComnisSion offers other evidence. The evidence consists of: three bullet casings "found" on the floor near that window; the three boxes arranged in the' window to look like a Quo rest; ond the bullet (Commission Exhibit Yr) which Supposedly passed throu:di both Kennedy and Connally.. All this evidence con be demonstrated to be faked. Photographs cov.oled with testimony prove that the Dallas authorities altered the "sixth floor TSBD" evidence. The alterations were as follows: The original setting up of the bullet casings ) was too obviously faked. Sheriff Boger Craig ar- rived on the scene first and saw the three casings, 7 side by side, neatly pointing in the same direc- (ion, just inches Apart. By the tine the "official. lolice ;hotographer. gr. Studebaker (who in reality was an nmateur photographer with odl)' twO months experience). took pictures of them, the casings had been scattered around the floor by some member of the police force. Similarly. the original position of the boxes making up the so-called -gun rest", was so obvious- ly inadequate, that Inc police moved them to look a lot more like a gun rest. Jack Beers. Dallas Mori- ina NP.S photographer, took photos of the boxes at 4 pm while they were still in their original posi- tion. This fact is confirmed by several photos taken at the time of the shots from outside the building showing the-corner of the topmost box stacked three high. V Dy the time Studebaker took photos of the boxes, used as Exhibits by the Warren Commission. it was after dark, and the ooxes had been rearranged so that they were only two deep, with the third one moved onto the window sill. Checking the position of the corner of this box as it would appear from the outside of the building, shows that it is in � quite different east-west lateral location than the corner actually showed itself to be in the pho- ton taken at 12:30 pm to 1 pa. (Dillard, Hughes, Deers, Weaver, Willis, Murray). The net result of all this evidence collectively is the following proved conclusion: No one fired en shots on November 22. 1963 betwten noon and one pm from the sixth floor easternmoet window of the 15110. . The Zapruder Movie Of all the photographs taken in Dailey Plaza on that fateful day, the color movie sequence of some 400 frames taken by Abraham Zapruder is the most important. It shows from the right hand side of the motorcade the entire sequence of events, from President Kennedy rounding the curve from Houston St. into Elm St., through all the shooting. until :the big presidential limousine left wi,,h the dead president going under the triple overpass off to Parkland Hospital. This film almost by Itself, with careful, scientific analysis, establishes the .times of five of the 'hots. The Warren Commission received the original of the Zapruder film to look at, oisloam from .Life magazine, which bought it from Zapruder: COMPUTERS and AUTOMATION for May, 1970 From that time en, the film was never p.;bile.lw shown, but remained in the locked files But a direct copy of the original was sGh'po-enaed and shown .NINE times by Aseistant DistrictAttorncy Alvin Oser In New Orleans 1u February 'tt the trial of Clay Shaw. The jUdge. the jury. (km news- paper reporters. and the speetat.es in the Court. room all bcceme convinced thiit: Oscr and 7.arrison had demonstrated a conspirer); to. kill President Kennedy. hhen one SPet and studies. in detail the Zapruder film in its clear version and the other ' photographs showing the effects. o( tat shots, one becomes convinced of two statcnents: I. There were six shots, of which flee nit per- sons In the Kennedy car; of these five the first went through the throat of President Kennedy; the second struck rsennedy in the back; the third struck Governor Connally . In the right shoulder; the fourth and fifth struck President Kennedy nearly si- multaneously in the head and blew out his brains. The remaining shut missed and struck a curbstone on Main St. 2. The last of the five shots (coming from the gra.;sy knoll area). and one of the two . fatal shots, struck Kennedy from the front end to the right, hurling his head to the left and backwards with great force. in ac- cordance with the laws of psysiCs. (For a scientific analysis. see Sin Srconds in Dallas.) Either one of these statements renders impossible the Warren Commission Report's conclusion, that only three shot: were fired, the second one missing en- tirely and striking the curb of Rain St. Obviously. If there was a conspiracy. it becomes vitally necessary to prevent the American people Iron seeing the Zapruder film. clear and complete. and especially in motion. For over six years. ex- cept in New Orleans. this has been liChieved. How- ever, currently, bootleg copies of the Zapruder film are on sale here and there in the United States at prices ranging from $10 to $50, available for private and illegal showings, since Life magazine owns the or:ginal and has never given permission for copies of the film to be sold. Many of these bootleg copies, because of lack of clarity, do not � demonstrate the first statement: but they do demon- strate convincingly the second statement. the back- ward thrust Of President Kennedy's head at the time of the fatal shot. . - Life magazine would be-able to tare Millions of dollars from showing the ZIpruder film. In three days of showing the Zapruder film. uncut, clear. and not tampered with, on national television, eve- ry person in the United States who watched televi- sion could see for himself that more than three shots were fired (which makes the Warrea Commission conclusions nonsense) and could see that the fatal shot thrust Kennedy's head backwards with great force (proving that he was hit from the front. and not thz back, which also makes the Warren Commis- sion conclusions nonsense). Although the Warren Commission report was silent on this lest point. some defenders have tried to explain away the back- ward motion by conjecturing a speedup in the car's motion causing a "snap backward". The Zapruder film by itself shows this is not true. Oae can clearly see that the car does not speed up at the time, and that Mrs. Kennedy's head dots not snap at all. Other explanations have been offered, such as a whiplash motion, caused by Kennedy's neck brace, or a reverie explosion as the bullet from the rear exited Kennedy's head in (rant. Josiah Thompson's analysis la Six Seconds in Dallas, proves beyond $ 3$ : ; i 1 � swowow ct A .1.1441. S441. Velocity ballet Striking -Weeeedee heed from the 11',,t1.'ald Pr^ilnre the %end afetleretioe beekward shown in Znprwder frams 313 thr,malt 31$. and meesursoie tterefrem. Mere than a dozen 'thee photos confirm that there were more than thrce�sholS. Othei Attiv;!;cs at tho Time of the Shots Ihr photegravhs tnken lit the tier, of the shots (to' Chart 2) th" mony other significant and im- portant activities. Coveted with the testimony of ,.. photnernphers end other witnesses. the photos prove the t:srred Commission wrong nn several other pnintS.' To describe all of th..sc prints in dttell requires more space than is here nvellnble. Out the follow- ing list summnrizes these ectivities end conclo- sions (see also Chart 1 for timing and direction - of shots). 4. Inc first shnt. fired by man xl frosa be- -- hind the fence on the grassy knoll. hit Kenoedy in the throat at Z109 (2 numbers in the text rind on the Map refer to frond as or the Zepruder Film. The frames were 1/141 second Ap4rS. The Z numbers on the map show the location of Kennedy in each Zsp(uder frame). b. The second shot, fired by min x6 from the * second floor window of the Dal Tex build- ing. struck Kennedy in the back at 2226. C. The third shot, fired by man sd from the � T'CAS School Hook Depository (75110) hit Connally in the back at Z230. d. T%e fourth shot fired by sqn x6 fro. the Val Tex Dui:Ging struck the curb on the south side of Main St. at shout Z265. e.7he fifth shot fired by man =0 from the TSBj hit Kennedy in the head et 7.312+. C. The sixth shot fired by men x5 from the grassy knoll hit Kennedy in the head at 7.313. g. Nan 42 "created" a puff of smoke as an ap- parent diversion (as it turned out, the diversion was not needed) and then ran back beyond the position of man sl and '� .!�����-�� Jumped over the fence. 16 The timing of the first shot established 7 �� � by three photos -- Zapruder. Willis (Table 3. No. 05). and iletzner (Table 3. No, 101) to be 2109. was such that the view of � Kennedy from the sixth floor easternmost � window of the 15110. was completely ob- scured by a large oak tree. (811 on Chart - . � 1) � I.. A man who looked very like Oswald ran down ' 4 the grassy knoll ten minutes after - the shots were ared and drove away down Elm St. with a Latin-appeerlog mon in e light-colorea station wagon with a lug- gage rack. To Someone not familiar with all of the millions of details of the Kennedy assassination, this seems unrelat- ed. However, other evidence indicates the mon may have been an anti-Castro ad- � venturer impersonating Oswald, and that the Latin may have been another of the anti...- Castro Cubans. ������ Man Who Ran. Away Many photographs were taken within an hour if- ter the shots, which show that certain men on the ' .grassy knoll ran away after the firing, and these � photographs show how they ran away. For example, several photographs (Table 3. Nos, 3. 19. and $2) show a Certain was, wholias bees � � � . � iy the sac who fired the (4141 shot, shot 6. His position hot I0,eft ShAAR AA the map le 4re0 06. The photos show that he escaped by means of a white car, which hnd been previously twirled just � few feet (rim his position. This subject bat beenAnurstignird at tenth by the researchers. hut theinvestiggitsen has not been finished. It nay be that the investigation cannot be eeemiltely concluded until eniNeiterised analysis of the information in the photogrephs (see Part 3) hes progressed much"lur�ber. The photos also show where and how won '2.3 C. 4 ..ran sway after the 1140SS. The 'Irsenpr" and the 'Phoney Polistenan" Approximately a half hour after the shots were fired. Sergeant O. V. Harkness a( the lisllas Polka Was instructed by Inspector Sawyer of the Italian Police (in command of lealey P147.4 pollee activi- ties after (ho assasfinntinn) to go back to the railroad tracks (see Map nnl Fig. 1) and stop � freight train which was being moved out And search it. (The npprniimate time IS established by the tingles of the shndows in the photographs. by the � testimony of Sergeant Harkness to the Warren Con- mission. Vol. 6. p. 312. and by the tieing of Wm. � Allen's sequence of photos.) The area where the freight cars -ere located is to the north rold weal. Or the TSUJI. and north cf the grassy knoll hien. Sergeant Harkness says he arrested some 'tramps or "hoboes" whom he found in one of the box C4rS in the railroad area, Cc says he took them to the station end does not say what station he meant. However. Sheriff Elkins said that a policeman brought three "tramps" Into the Sheriff's office. (See map and Fig. 1.) The route that linrkness would naturally take if he went to the Sheriff's office with the three "tramps" is exactly the route portrayed In the series of four photographs (Pigs. 2.3.4. and 5), � shown in this article. In Figs. 2. 4 and 5, two policemen can be seen escorting Gret "tramps" eastward. from the direction of the railroad yards along the Elm Street extension in front of the TRW. They turn south in front of the TSoll (Fig. 4) and proceed down Houston St. to the Sheriff's office. The vehicle entrance to the office is located at the center of the block on the lest side. of lloustun St. between Elm St. and Main St. The entrance is directly in front of the floe wen as they proceed toward it in Fig. 5. Why is this significant? First. there Is no re- cord at all of the arrest of these men -- there is no record of their official booking nor of their release, even though Sheriff Elkins testif.ed that he turned them over to Captain Will Frits of the Dallas Police in the police station. Furthermore. there is no record in the Pallas police force of the "phoney" policeman at the right in Fig. 2. De ii wearing non-regulation shoes or possibly rhbbers: and in his right ear is either a radio communica- tions device or a hearing aid. - Sergeant Hnrkness and Sheriff Elkin, both indi- cate there wns no other policeman with Darhiess when he arrested the "tramps" and when he turned them over to Elkins. Other information indicates that one or Pere of these "tramps" were members of right wing groups and were actually included among the gunmen who shot or shot at President Kennedy. If any reader of this article notices any person resembling any one of the "tramps" or the "phoney" policeman, it would be useful for him to send information to me, acre continued cos page SO) A . .compurtes and AUTOMATION for' May. 1970 � e� Path triken by Harkness with "Tramps" 4.0.� I ��� � � � 4 ." .,. t41 : /./. p � 1.1:(Q.. L. '' ..: -../r..7 ' .... �'" ... i e. b . . - � - � ' . nt/ :.!�..,-.... ,. ����� I. . . 7.:.. - ..� -�-� � -.0..-.1' ... � � _.� .-. . . .�. . tr.� � � /7 k' . ;s:' fr. � '" � " � .7:'��� 7 �.� 14 :r�� ." 4.� � *14 ." � � ����� a. . ,�� \ � : � ���� , . \�,�..��� �-��:''';;,..1d,":' " 1.; �.4 , � � � � �. I � rt; � ���-; '".1 � � A - �: " I � .3. 671 .1; � -7' *".-.71 1-7; �/��.? -.4 � J.-0' � I.' � � V ! � ���.:::.;':� .- � . �,,.. -- ..r?cc,...,,._.....-',. 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' -2, - ri = 0 r_ .7-. 1 r3 = I - 0 E:7 7A . .� .f -...i :Li. _ . � � ,..-�-�-�� , D il.rio Li ri n J � N. , . i -1 -1 i , - � ��� r-- -:- � I � . t '''''...� \ \N1%., . � - ! 9 Li 1,.. L___.] i._,.. � � L.,' � ,:-..--: ,.� \_.. ..... , � i 2)-- '.'"�-lv.- L.*\ - - '1 -:�'' .V. �; * ;...� I ;1��=1.1��������4 . � � i! i t � *' . .. . �-� � ����� � / � / � 7-- � 1.� ) k./ A �A � � � - ����������� � I J ' � � `***. Figures 2. 3. 4 sad $ These four pictures of the "Tramps" and various policemen were taken by George Smith and William Allen (see Table 3. Nos. 195. 197. 251 and 252). Sergeant Harkness appears in Figures 2. 4 and 5 (at the left in Figures 2 and 4. and in the front in Figure 5). The "Phoney" Policeman also appears in these sane three figures (at the right in Figure 2, and at the rear in Figures 4 and 5). There is no record of this man being a member of the Dallas Police Force. He is the only Dallas policeman of those appearing in the hundreds of photographs taken Nov. 22 nho is wearing ma earpiece or radio communication device in his right car (see Figure 2). Why? He is the only 00! who is wearing rubbers. bny? His pistol handle appears to be different from Harkness' pisA01. Why? It would be interesting to discover this mass Identity. and ask him some questions. COMPUTEaS and AUTOMATION foe May, MO 39 It Cad '4�Yr so; wOuvw0inV Sy31new03 � f � )1" " `-� � ����� � ��� . �����:, � :-��������. � � � � �� ���1"...� � � ��' : � ' e - � � . ��.� . � ��,../ � e � ����{ ��.� � � � � op ; tr I � � N �. i�: . .,.. ., . " t v. :�.k....It t,: 1... ..�-.e. . ,..- ..., .:,., v. r-,-�.:�.1.: .2 !:.����� . ty � .: . . . . s'i,,. % � . . � . x. � sok _I . 1 4.........:............,....71 i 1..:,"''''. ��'�',�.....!.....4...... ...:1.�;-- -1.0���%, 'ft V s se WT.' . . . � III,. . �"; I% � ' 1;1.37:""t�s'. ' Ot6{ 101 kotitewoinv PP�'�srlinewo, i T ., . 7-7'1 ,K- ..;�,. pr:�Nr .11.27 ����������� 4 r � i��:' ....�,.:.,:* . 1 � � - � . r � i 11 .-- it : � V., i , .t .t - � t ti.....: �.., 0. ...-: . ,�,- ---/ Ss ...� ....1,. , . � � : � .� '1. ' , 1 . :...............- 4 * 'V. �I " -.. ������:. ' 11-�� ... .(,P;;,� 1,4 . .-............ :.; \� .. 1 , I i t � '. � . � ...... . � 4/1'3 � � '. 1 It i :� � . k , ' ' . . ' .- ^. r ���,/ � . / ...Yrs ; ; : :..) . N ?� ). ::---; � '.� '.� :- :�:�:-.� �.� � � -� 1 r--;� '7�-�-....._ 4 /1 I � ..._ � ' � ; ai �!,..r; -. ..............: . ' ���' : . Vi � I f �''.'---:-.."'......."...17.4.- ;I. : ����,� v. � / .:4.... S.. . ; -. �; � � ". � . .!.. .:��� . -,.. � , ....' ����% .' � .o.....a...-') . ;� 1 t : 1 I '. .. .. , - O.,7A . ..........................i.,�,... 7...,....s.. , -....-...77. ' < ...p.d....,.....%.%.'.7 � :�:' � �� . 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';' I 'el rr...:,-...-7-- �- .., � �� � . ./ . ta:::::���������� :: , . - � A 6 I . � �� �� �� �� �� �� �� ��'�� � 7�67,.::41�.�26::.::::::: : a/ , � .... t 1.. cll - ... � � ...,......-:-4,. � . � f--4.��:�:.... � � � . . . 1....e.....,....;�---:�� ., ---.. ., , 6 '..rii : � �� . .� '� t.0 ......�����..76, I ........e. 1A I:f..i.-% �..-;-�:, -- 1 ' 1 . .� . .) :1 I � � . 4 ft � � I 1 1.4.:/. 4 4, ��� � � � t�� A !�-� � 11 � i , II 1.I ;1., . .. -� i :a .. ; ... t .: !� . ) i� � -- . . : r . � � s� i � � I - 4 t- � ... !. t� ' 14.1' ....::: fi s. .�' - . ...s � :it .� , . .: � -- , 1:- 1 -.4'. ic.� rit�ti . i� ::: i � 0 ti . �1 - ' % ....Jr..: . .--1, I --4�....�����-......,P.: ..7140�:-.. . ..- . � . . . r . . � . : . I it .1 . ..., ..; ;-.., ..,. , A � '.. 1 1 , .� - I :: . : 1 . i - i i - \ 1 �. i � t 4 . � �� . � 1 . . i , _ �� .� 7: ... (71 I ...._ , ...... � L2 :- I .; L.."�_�;...1 I- - �� ' ..".-4- .. � ._:.....1......,,,ter,����:�.*-.�����-� ,......z cr.. . : .....d....11.-..�.... ...... . _ `�� i .. . � ��� ...... .�......� - � 4/1:1 \1� ZI"r�r � .�. ���� I. vs- � � ���� ��-� � � t " � � � ������ ��� . � f..i � i! .41�14�1�� ...4�46.0%..����,�����4. El OF. " -;./: � 4 f� � i t 4.� . � � - 01. � � � � : ��-1 � Ii 111 ./ �:7-1 1/ : � . ,setTs.. . � � <./' .� 2.= . � - � .7 � �����-�������� ..-... : ...../ -.ay., ( ' : 1 , .� .� : � �'� � � } �:.f ' ; 4 . .. , ., ,. .. , . j% �"^. :. .: � 1 .ii I._ ( ' �, ����.:�.�f 1 ,. - ' " 1.....7. I " � at V ''...i . � . � I. .1. ;� . � � � t r *V I � I I ' . � . � � ^ � � Z"..;.h: � .....���;:,...."?..34; � .� I no, t ������", e. � .1 i� , . t , � ; � .� 4 � � t � � .4 . -.` - � -Ns-A � ; t p.$; 467 - .71,7.� it .� ..�...1��������1 %WM. �Air � :�����:�.�!:`,;!;�...;? 7;71 1 ' , � 14 � ., � I - . ...; ,..;..4.s.- ' � .� � � �� .... � ...,i.j � . -:'-1:....:���� � I ....; ..,---; � '4 .... , .� 7: � .� . � � . � � � . � � � Figure 6 The 6th floor easternmost v.indoh of the Texas School Cook Depository Build- :ken S.7 seconds before Ow shooting. shming the ulnas% less than one quarter open. (Table 3. No. 8) ' .���� r. C. DIllsr4 ... v2.7. - � 7/ 7E-:" !����� 7.77.4 ����������100......�141. " � � ���� � � .4, ..� � ,���-������ � � � �r�-� :I � " 1 � �-� Exklblt C ego ,������������� - - ' =��n - � ��1 ������ - - -; 0/011...� � -- Figure 7 The 6th floor easternmost isinJo4 of the Texas School Dusk Depositor) DullJ. lng, trken 3 seconds after thc shooting, shos.ing no one there. (Table S. No. l'd1) �'� A �-� ���11.101M ���,11�;:,���.����^111.�����=..141,3=1.0 ��� � - � � � � �..." . ., � .� ,������ � � .� �����:�� t�', ���� `:.:-����:-�.'..... ����� .�. . SI:: : � � ..,' � � � ,: ''-�1 l ',.;�,: � i � ..t*: f .. : ... � . . ,� � � .1 r:t I �',..,k7. :��:.\ ,.� � ..'. . : ,....� �,� � . �� .-..-1.;'ir-1. '1, '''' . 4.1: ...� . - � .. "e;,,,, 7, ''.,t fit.�;:: ��. 1. ���� I ,. t � t � l'... ,,�, .,.... r � ..;�. �,:;���.:,,,, 4,7��� :4 .tk. :, ��� :: ����� ���',..1 � ' . : �; \ � .. . , � .%)4,' � :1 I# ;'.i..�' � . .t..fe � � �.. . � .. ; 2 ...I' . 13 .��., i ,.�,...* ,,� .,' ' i : :..,- . � '. . ' , . 41." ...1 . , ' : � .� .; ''''; t.. ' ' , . e � � i � .� ;......v� � ..;.� ... � ,1��......- � ..,,.. � � i �-,� %: ,. ,...t..-., --!....�;_s,-�,:.:rd........-1--- ;.., �.:,-,::���� �!�:', , ..,,........., �.� - � . , �. , � � ---- � " �,,;: � s�-,t .... � I., s'" �:, 1 � . ,�-� -r . � ... ,fl.' ; -1 .1,�:�... ..f'n'����:::.sw�'" � � I ......� : .. c ,.., ' ...4,';�`.-:ztt;�:.�*t 't .':::', � � ' i .i'il,(st 7'1 ':.!..'�'.1 ..4.� ii ...1.. f:;1�(''..;' ,.t.�.. ...... ....:, : 1 ;:, .' . 1 i ' ..;-:-:::-...,L....�.:::::::;.....�........1� .....�. , ,,,... � � �,) - - . .1 - 4 � t: -.4.::).V....:` t ju,:i � c`it''''.,2:*-2;:r. 1 ., .� �_,��.:,:�":1 ,4 ......:..... � - ? I , . .,..i. � : .. � ' ����� � 1�.....rel� 71�1�10, ������������ '��������11..., :.....ss==="aexiarKer=.2%=3.1c7.-�����mramrsrm h: � . . ����z' A 14'il-���� ' ^ , � � � 1 � C n, .�� kr- � ' � 'r41 \: .r..4.e.f I � � ..-����'" �� ::��������� ����� n_z_�������_.� Figure 8 John F. Kennedy on Ell St. about the time of the first shot, Z 106 (Table 3, No. 100. The umbrella belonging to the "Cmbrella Man" can be seen at the loner left of the Ste:natons Freeway sign. Man ;13 can be seen behind the null to the left of that sign. 17," .. 1-, �;N ��� 4 ����������� .0 '� 1/4." .�4. . . - .,(7. , v.-- ....N.F. N. . v.-...ft-�,z ;i: �.r..,.....:: : , �,7 777-- . .. . ,:' Nk.i.N ' .1;. 1 � .. ' -.% � ,l'\". C. �)` . trr s'I' ' .1 , � I.. V��,���� - ... "���� � 47.....���� ��� *�,.. , - ����� ..e. ., � � .. . � � ; Vc�r�� . 1 I.' \ * ..� . . � � , .... � , 4"�� 0 [ ��� �3 ". ...V....TO � 1 �'S k NN k ... .�,,, ......... � ...1 i i t , 0���. . .. '..,4L 1 � ' 1..-.. 1� .'� ..:.% 11. t � -, .. ���1 : 1 � 1 � � . , � . ...op .1 . \ �� ...k ;.��!��.�-,..... %. i .� 1t) L 11..... ...,.....,� � .1 * rola \ 1 \ ,' � i ccq, " Nr. n,"? e: t'� k. L ; /I' is.....�:,..:\��..�:"............:;............i. C.>". . 51 i.t II 1 .-...� , % I-, - S. . . A I -..,..... 'I-4� A I 'W.... . � I ..r � ' ....,,, (I : ! '�-�'( c'.... '-'7. , , . , I/ V ��� � � s� -,.. ,,..... ��� . k� ...I � � zon.'/ ""<4.,...,�����.��_ ,: :',� . 4...�,,,,.<�,"":�.. � ' . �-""������........., I....ft, WC:Curroo. � ""*"..e....'-'":"�'?7�7?"�'*�������� ts� . t'������,..:::4:44....."..:.....,A.:... ' ''''..... � � . ....... ��� ....Y � Y. ................:.. waaaka � .... . . V 1..r....� � � S : ���N-7����� �7 " . ly..........Y.O; . " � Figure 9 John F. Kennedy after the first three shots and before the fstal shot. Z 202 (Table 3, No. 85). The "Umbrella Man" can be seen at the lower left of the Stemmoi.s Freeway sign, and Man z2 can again � be seen at the left of that sign. . _ . � ������������� ����� ���� .....������������7�10. � Al- � . � i � �-�,,,,�-���-.1:��.; � - � ".� � -. � t � � 0' 1.;� t ' � 1"' .7; ? � " � ,, � � 1 A ��.......�! :'!' ,�� 1 . ...i ::* :r :7 ::�� ::�"::- :r :r :r ..-, i�-���-. � . ..: ,. t........`A Ifil -�,.�� 0 1 � ( ::��..,::' .,:t -... ,---� �������.�;-: ��-�-�,,N � ".:�*-������-�- N - .,::.\ Ci�Ck ,!--Y"' �- --...r% it - e---",...--_----;��-� I . ...-4 l..\:....Nt-1./.7 \ 47% . ,�-�-��� � � � . . � � ..."-' .. '" � � 'A' - �1' 7" ., ,.: s,-;;;�/.7, -_,,,-.,-,--,:-����������"-7-7"-'..�� I: � ..1.").'�) ,,�-����. .; "' -' '''s '''.-,0 ',, . - � '�'... -../ ' 4-- �-.............�.7fi 4.4. -- i '. . .7.::;"-- � - -- --�,----Pr�. 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"--7., ,...t. � .:.� -....:���,:e - � � � � � � . ��1���� - , ���--z.��������-�,:���-� - � � �_.`���_�._z�%-'1 .1 � ._ � ;1�",......�.--?-4-�.,`�-.�;-1._�.-1. - ,. � , 1 � .��� � � . � -I � 4.. 4�.. .1: 1- � ���������-�'''.. �-�� � ���.� . � � ; � :7' "...���(;" --- . � .���� ����.������ ������� . .� . � 1 i . � 1 1 ^ 1...-..: 7 : ' � � -.'" ' i k-- ' --4�:-.c.:- � � N.-, :�-..) .- . ���� ,... ... : ...... ����� ���� � i .. ����� � S)::'Z... i. 7.'7:: . � � � 1. . ��:� ' � . . � .. �tt�S' /.%.�> tf.' .� i���� V, , � � !..... . � i i ..1 Ai:',..� -. -,..,n,,���;,�,:. 1 ,--..-.). �,..� :,�- . i'; ;is \ '. ic� = � . � 1.;�������7,- . _0 � s 1 1/4�����fi�-�71:������� ,7-. -�:.,kZ'.���� 1 - - ��,--:;,. I - - - .-� :r ::- :r :7 :r :7' : ' �"*. � t' ' 1 - iill �1.1 .4�,.. � ....---... fr v, ..-.1....-,,,�, � 7" 1.. . A.,. ,,,Ir/.. , � . .__..._ .... i ,. ..7-e----- f, . eu - � : .: /',5"''''s.:-.--- � N. -. 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C',..4 ....ad..- ' � � - �� . .....- .� 1 r.' .%;--:' 1 . \ of A t 1-, ....,f: .,...,,,, ... sz It i .. ..... , . � -; ' .'c' ,f% .....-- � . ..� � � .. .� .. .....�....1_.a .% ..........t. , 4_ , . : : ...., -� � N 411............(14 .. 1, � so. ���� ...� ge. �1 ... � . , . . .. \ C \ *S:7; , . \ t'=.% k '..L.i ... / � s. i � C. . ......" ..1 . . kiI:�; 'H� -., !.i -...., '7 '. � �,-.. vi - .^-� ..� � . )- / . .....4. ...c.,.." 1 clri 1.7.7....,.... .),,,,,.;..4......,...... � ...�.�. , ..... _, 7.4.:: ......._:.: . .0 7 - ,,,.... .44....� ,� r-4 ......-,),... -.......... _....... ...,.......v..., � , .....�. ., _ f,....._, --:,......,.., ay. �........ r ". � � ./. *-: ........A,..' ., � 7 , : J. . 0, - 4 1 r [ Ar.... 1 i��,- 4._ .. - � ..:..: ..... L.. c �.......;4111 �.1.1 t .. k.- � 1 . � � ..? - .,...z.� 3 r" . ........i; itt i . t- � irr"..9. r-J", , , � .: ,. : , - � . . t ...rms.& � , . � � 1 :: . ..'. 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' � � . . � .." .. � 4,, .. .: ������.n.Z........ . ;) 'I... . �,. - � FigiO� � See notes on page 47 . . -,........ . ! .:.., � �. � . . . � . . �.:.- ,-�.. 1 � � '1\1/4 1 � � . � 1 ������� 1 V 1 ��� � � 4 4 � "4. 1 -soft - Table 1 I 1 � :1. t H. i 1.1 1.4,CT 4%0 C1101 70 14(4110,1 ftotONS A%3 SICA.IfiC467 OBJICTS IO THL SfATIAL CASSIT Of DEAUT 1.1.42A (Se. Cttft S. pages 46 eed I. Areit el. the Che.et. lb/ tretial cher% le divieed tat. eleere 79 feet by 711 fret. etch Itbeted by a letter 4 to if (roc to; it belt.a ft I. emitted) ��4 � stnbee I to IS free left to risot. Locatives go toe ccccc ere epecIfied by ttttt 1 ttttt sod bets. ledieeted 4.0 the breeders of th. .4p. :. fere.. The 0.4 of � p le the fellmolog loOK refer. to toe lecoliee of tech pc Illter le wee piece If he stayed far 104. obole time, or IS more thee owe piece If he so..1 fr. Oat 70t011GO to 0000ff. I. diarist 'pervert came refers to too or tors p tttttt sAth the same list 04.4. 1. huct,ert. A somber fellemlog the hese of a remit refer. to tie (Ilo tor tell) somber of e atilt photograph. or tee (pee "ober of a astir selyerte ttttt Sq sect persee. bower* preceded by 7 refer -to fro. ...ere of lb. este. smelt file lose. ty At ttttt Zepredee steedlop Is area 0 7. 4. S'otereede. The leadle; parties *t the motorcade letledlop Prost- sleet J. f. helloed, IS 10004 Sittgrommetically I to 6 tccOadi before terse, er r.t.eCt Aril(erb 7. 3 Alt;ees 6 tat 2 2551 Alive. 7 (Ol Z 346) .044VOOO Lade (oho toot it colors ovate if the eatorcede from toe op- posite old. firma Zorprodee) tell I 2 hell 3 Oetreer 1 Be 2 Detect; 3 Coed. I to 3 Coed. 4 to 9 Ofehe(t) Bto.020 ballet mark(.) es tomb C000erce St. compose directions Co�oally. Gem. .1. a.. back shot (at Z 238/ Dells. Clieaty Crlolsal ldp. Doll.. Couitty ttttttt SIP,. Oellas Comely Skerlfi.4 Officti Cal-Tee Bldg. 0111.04 1 Dermas. Nes. ictc_e119-7 J 13 ^ 6 O8 Pt-too. or C%Itt ate.e.dy text.] "the cot tree. from 2 161 .to Z 701 4eieeoy it: I 6 Z 133 2 ( tttttt shell 2 276 (beck shot) Hit Z7'11 H 11 2 71.5 13 2707. C 13 2 312 (head slot) r. 6 C 12 Z 313 (204 heed shoot) C13 2346 Gil 24(0 C ^ 6 Fl 2433 5 013 2465 R 3 2 3.H 6 Z485 X knoll. grassy C 2 to C the first shot. The ...coerced. Is arce.g.d le aloe., 14,oetos St. 1.04 Wit, SI. 411 th.s. refs. of . core Ono I .2 0.4 (050. (e, e5e04-.e4 dirt:ft.( pAsstiont It toter tt.et. the 4.1) toceet- t1�� Iota I 1 40. Shoot 1.1f 141, p f i.e onto ttttt sr. to. lotoIlleo. of ?...414col 8eono0,.0 bred it ter 1..4 400. 710...4. heed . loc� t 1 Dee Oft warted b� � 6,1 (4.1. 1�mg rim St. 11.., 14. COlIDOI erre csrefelly eetereloeJ by the fill: Ihrf ore Ideat1fIrd by the foe, ...bees of toe calor eerie file toles by AP(4.4. 2.gre- der: thee. locetioes rye oted by the here.. Came le title is. beatigotitoo. Succeelitee f ttttt Ofrfe �0401.$ 14.4ft 5. Note. The lof it, the 4111200. of the motorcade (C-J 14. J IS) Is cot repeated 14 this iedes. The isforastisa shame It the legeod (4.2 1-4) Is sot ...pelted to M. lodes. Mack at the seer:1001s isfornatio. (tech is Ismail..s of trees. Alta trellis limo.. pill.. mocks as corbe. etc.) Is 221 rese.trd Is thle ladon. I 1-6 J -6 15 C-C 15 Ills A 15 C 13 A 11 El. St. 2 1 to 8 15 Elm St. estossloa . � A-B.6-12 .foroer Dells. Crusty, siii imit. see 815 C Bldg. S4f0;< bldg. east t� . A 8-10 7500 . . 1 ttttt k.ell . G 4 to C 10 Nester(*) C 7 bill. Jr.. . .F 9 Nellaad 11 2 N St. A-1( 13-14 Wedges sad la. frigid. 7 6 Decibel 1. 2 i 814 Neches 3 I 12 18.66411 6 � 10 46 Wile Si. No. � ... : tees. etre meg whose smogs asi bees !eternised Mon .1. f let shot at Z 181 Mite .2 M46 03 Stas-84 Nati 85. soerte if 6th shot at Z 313 Iwo so, off sap le Del-Tex Bldg, solute at 2.4 shot st Z 226 sad 4th shot st Z 265 Mao .7 Nsa 06. source of 3rd shot at Z 238 :lad 5th shim at Z 312 MA& wIth Umbrella Rattle 0 Batts. 1 Kittle 2 material picked sp hi Walther. 824 stbers Mores. Neel...ors 1 lbsel000rs L2L.1.1.18 0 10-11 C It O &I 0.10 9 31.15 6 sew A 1: O0 All � 9 0 13 F Ii P.rtnn be OS re( b,..mant0 I.:8x I. 2s Isle 711 Oteelee Alleged otodom 'whim; see* �Pol railroad teed per( of amok. (shoos la 9 photos) to11.0.4 yard sod parklag are. Role Is felt Shots. Co lot 204 3,4 4th 6th 51.1osa sooke, puff of (shako Is 9 photel) Stemmoes f y sign lig.e (she slit hit Is the fate by s frsgeest'ef shot) least Schaal Beek Deposi- tory Bldg. at 411 Els: St. (7500) 75110. 6th floor tttttt vomit eindoe. from stitch horfe. COmmtillOn alleged 1.44 0...14 fired 3 Toescr. J. 1 Teener. 7. 1 leaser. 7. 2 'Umbrella' Mao 5. 6 Zapreder (lecttiosi ef Abrskiim Zaproder dvrlog the voting color MORI* Witch be took) � T 4-4. 4-5 6-9 � 5 4 15 A 11 A 15 A 11 O6 D T � 7 0 8 � 3 410-13 A IS C 13 C 13 0 12 DO 0 11 O7 COMPUTERS sod AUTOMATION foe May, 1970 t I tt, NOTES FO 4 FIGURE 10, PAGES 44 AND 45 An excellent example of the many things that cep be learted even from a single photograph. is provid- ed by figure 10. This photograph was teken by a professionel Associated Press photographer. James Aitcees (Table 3. No. ST). This photograph was used by tie. /sere. Comeissioft as Yarborough Exhibit A. 1.ol. AC. pages 701-702. However. the Nei-rented- mist:e. staff did not point out very much of the pertirent information contained in tht photograph. President Kennedy (n1) appears in the Ilocusina partielly hidden by the rear view mirror. Three shots nave already stuck him and Governor Connally by tte time this photograph was taken. The erect tic:s; of tee photograph is established by the po- silica of the left front tire of the limousine with respect to the hhite road stripe on Elm St. (v2) Cy conparing this position with the corresponding posisioes of the limousine as the li_mousioa app-are Ir. tee Zspruder film, it has been determined that this ;heto was snapped at exactly the some instant pi frnec 255. 5.rte shot; here fired at ZIC9. 7.226, 7.230 and Z23I3. the Altgent photo was exposed 66 Zaproder frte.is a:ter the first shot (3.6 'seconds) and 50 franes refine the I3st shot (3.2 secs). :e vie. at the fact that only 3.6 seconds had elapse.: foliowing the first shot, it is not surpris- ing that very few people in the picture show signs of realizing that anything has happened. Note the soil:L.; face's and applauding hands along the curbs. Scrm of the Secret Service men reacted slowly. The tw.; eec on the right-hand running board of JFK's folic-5p Car (a3) obviously hcve heard something and are looting back. The two on the lef',.-hand running board (c4) seem to be oblivious to everyaing. The one in front. Clint Hill. was later to run up to the limossire and push Hrs. Kennedy back into the rear seat when she climbed up on the back hood of the car. Tin motorcycle policeman next to JFK on the right. D. L. Jackson (25) seems to realize JFK has been hit; at say rate, he is looking right at JFK. The fatal � snot. 3 seconds later, zoomed from the grassy %noll richt over Jackson's helmet and struck JFK on the , right side of his forehead. Jackson was never in- terviewed by anyone and seems to have completely disappeared from the Dallas police force shortly after tee assassination. Lyndon Johnson's secret service men, on the other hand, reacted very fast.. Kilos Youngblood testified that he pushed Johnson down on the floor of the car as soon as he heard the shots. The po- sitions where Youngblood and Johnson would have bees � g in the photo (n6) mre 'anent. proving that Youngb:ood did indeed do just what he said. ix 3.6 seconds. Agent Eivett in Johnson's follow-up car can also be seen reacting quickly (sT) as he opens the left rear door, preparing to Jump out. Governor Connelly had been hit at Z frame 238, about one second before the photo was taken. Be Can be seen with his face contorted, turned to his right (s6). and slumping toward the sill of the limousine. (cs. Kennedy had, by this time, turned to see her husband in pain, and grasped his milk* vat% her COMPUTE4 and Al/TOMATIOt4 foe May, 1970 *cite gloved hand (CO). Secret Service Agent Eel- levwxa didn't react until hell after this photo. Tnis is not too surprising since Mrs. LynOon R. Zoteson (Lady Bird) (A10) is smiling at the crowds as if nothing had happened, even though her husband it lying on the floor next to her with Agent bang- blond on top of him. Police,ao (nil) Just to tele left and rear. of tee Presidential limousine doesn't seem to snow tsltelog is wrong, although he could be looking at Zik. Later he was hi, in the face with blood and grey matter from the :ate) shot hhich ea,e from the l'i;-st front and drove the fleshy debri: of Kes- uellf's head back and to the left toward Hargis. :The only reason the Altgens photo appears as � Conoission Exhibit is that some sharp-eyed critic noticed a man who looked Just like Lee darvey Ocwold !seeding in the doorway of the Texas School Book Dem politery Building Ir the tackeround of the photo (n:2). The CoavnisriOn was therefore forced to con- sider this point and thty contended that the man was hilly Lovelady. who was an associate of Oswtld's at the building. Four years later. I was able to prove that the ktrren Com,ission was right. ty using several ether pictographs in combination. Lr.tii then, the contro- vetsy still raged among Coomisiion defenders and re- sezrcaers. Cte of the most significant parts of the Altgens ptoto is the part showing the Cal Tex building in tie tackground and an open. dar.ened window on the secoad floor (�13). Harold Weisberg. one of the re- searchers, first called attention to this window and tie possibility that one or core shots might have bees fired from it. A man Ma) appears In this photo, fallen back on tee fire esc:pe directly above the open window. :ast five seconds earlier in the Hughes film se- ei.ence. he was sitting in a normal positien. This mat sax noi been found to be hewed. The group. of three people (n1S) in the window to the south of kin have not realized anything remarkable has hap- pened and are waving and clapping and looking at the President. The probable explanation of tke meat action was his much closer proximity to the raise directly below him created by e shot from the Dal-Tex window. The second sh,t most probably came from this window as wen as the curb shot. A Latin-appearing rasa who closely resembles one of the Cubans known to be involved in the New Orleans part of the conspiracy appears in the same ticiaity (n16). Some researchers claim that he is using a microphone and a two-way radio. H I believe these objects to be part of the opened vent window on the Johnson secret service follow-up car. The large oak tree (n17) is the one referred to above in this article, as the tree which blocked She view of Kennedy from the 6th floor easternmost window In the Texas School Book Depository, at the time of the first shot 189). The Warren Commis.. sits Report admits the oak tree blocked the view from Z 161 to Z 207 (see Chart 1 and Chart 2). 4 47 �������=� P sv.Dp_Tuc.71.14 UALF .r DLV PLI.ZA DALLAS - 4kho3iru5 ohotoir o phts , posi.ticom. John 1 V oloicx...t. surrovn..1ini t0 151.) LEcift4.12 � Z.-153������ %Aar iti ors Lan., it �������..Lur 4 si�t tr.e.ekt �� � 3 C..(26 MI kk.� t.."- bre.-t kLt intten Ith. 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LL � ,.....70-11 --""'"'"*.**W0111��!�������- '; ���� L:2 � TEA rt � � , t6rt "Pects/Co...T.0-0- cat � S ior.ji) 4." Prgsst.:41. LT:0%171m 5S fo' 7-6 4...e.cosis 604.��.n. Career' 4 Kal(ar...4.... id shot G 'R ir� c............ . , 444T1 1 .� . : . � ' 1. %KR. II .. 1 A. Muchmait.!"�'. :�.::T�N!! II; :I �-� L.I. � I bowl. t* . TT-..� .. 1:: .. - � ..I -41_ i '1 . bon.<1.L2-3 Limn' I,. � � earrara 1�����������67 eau stria- 9�113. � � : "-� Meetri e auk t . � - 14;47.4 � � � � � ��� : * I: � � r. V` Out � � � � � � � Sogri� 1 Than "- ��:�.��� 17 f....rer Str,Ara. ; car 4-1 I Mary 1 11.16 tanou au_ V.D..,2.st � /It Ain't ;'� I. rAU.A1 Craml T V ezcz.ros 44.0,4444 CA � 2.. "'"� I roef da Ira 46. I 644,or 4 lir0 � ri pr.wt I Camara. U- (r 46- 1 �6�5,1�1� Laa:.nd, portico.% Inctor..64c 40.641����."�66.1146111 � Au-r.st4) � PreTS, Camera - Car 4 2.. Alclurly car It 5 Gown :744....���=�.46 Caw: Ty Ceaakal�a_. f...nataT II A 5444",i r of .4 42401 tA4 it ��� W-tavar " Zatiat.CTE. roct...Est_. � � Yhai "Umbeella Man" Tool* 2 Some interesting things happen when oat begins to analyze the many pictures taken by different photographers (ram different dleectiens standing . in different places, hut all taken in the same smell inter,n1 of 10 or 15 seconds, and all in the same small area of Healey Plaza and its environs. One of the things that happens is that the pic- tures confirm each other, and show what people were doing. One outchme of the analysis is that we see other persons who also were taking pictures: then they tool Can be identified and located, and their pictures - also can be found, and copies of their picture: con .be obtained from them also. An example of a result of even further analysts of the pictures in three dimensions of space and one dimension of time is that we discover the story of "the man with the umbrella". . When we first see the "man wits the umorelia", : he is holding it closed. This is when the KenGedy car sounds the corner from Houston St. into Elm St. )-.ext he is holding it c;-.ert and low over his head; the tine is shortly before the first shot (see Fig. ?). Note that the weather is sunny. "slight breezes Tend gusts": it is a sunny November day in Dallas; ILe time is noon; the temperature is (.3� Fahren- ficit. and there is no ordinary reasoG at all for holding an open block umbrella over one's head. The rein that had occurred earlier in the morning stopped about ten twenty, and the temperature is not high enough to be shzding oneself. No one else in all of Henley Plaza appears to have been holding on ores umbrella. Nett, he raises the uhbrellu, still open, high about two feet higher: this is shortly before the last shot and the umbrella shows up in the Zspruder film. A few seconds after the lest shot, we see him holding the wibrella folded (TaLle 3. No. 259). Then a few minutes la- t ter. we have three pictures of hiA, still standing . in tht same place, still holding the umbrella fold- ' ed up. (Table 3. NOS. 40. 49. and 50) Wherea* everybody else in that area has dispersed rapidly, he is still standing in the same place, looking in ail directions. He has stood in It position to have been seen from all the places from which shots were fired. Yet he is in front of the Stemmons Freeway sign -- so that people on the western side of !the sign can't readily see him. and people in font of the sign are facing away from him. Wlia can draw two tentative conclusions: � .:e 1. Visual coordination as well as.radio coor- dination of the firing teams was necessary. .� because of the separation of the team mem- bers by several hundred yards. the noise and confusion of the motorcade, and the ' crowd of spectators. The "man with the umbrella" nIghtobe the visual coordinator. 2. Also. it was likely that an on-the-scene commander was required In order to make the last-minute go-no-go decision. This man may have been the on-the-scene com- mander. The Warren Commission did not see the "umbrella ' man" in the photographs, did not find him, did not interview him, and did not enter him in any of its � records anywhere. Neither did the FBI nor the Dal- las sehorities. Again, one asks why? It was a reasonably simple matter for an amateur to find !ilm in the photographs. Josiah Thompson found him and mentioned him.ln his bock. Six Seconds in Dal- ha. (see.pages ,227-228). Thompson even appealed for him, if innocent, to dome forward and identify pasself.. That, so far...has not happened. � �k IPPOSITANT fIVI:CfrAAritS AS:71111ED ST TVA .f al ka Roll and M4is Lids 6.66 of Soo*oatot �Ima r..1.11rihrr di is Mary *mamma 1 M3 'Int floor 10 to 12 too. wiedow, to(oto **** O00000r te.1.144 to. ****** VS till Millis 12 � Pea tttttttt oot- oleo of Ike 041- 5o. 8allatog 37/1 ra ral.r I Isto $1.51 (I..' Plage.. .10e to, lase to tat .1.- 5... "likes of term earold 274 NA 8o6askkis Lot, 278 in rem611. Aral 1210111.e yeas,. 11411,111 494 IB 51a5110 493 PB 111411115 IlsoJe of OK pr.- ce.01.4. (fr.. {I. etas, sidar of tko streot :roe lopredor) 1 TS61. soortoy cIa slatk floor al.. dow om9ty *ocelot tot bolt 2 KA#epAdy lortoor St.. ea El. St. 4? � still Wato:ropki I. woofs; 8" block sod whit* tka�, attar tie *boot 10 .a. how. 72. IVO) stout 10 to 17 sot. ho- far. ...Ail 1 to 10 too. ofterwer4t ablal lie t1.* of sa.. S � (loot and loot stet' about 22 mt. oftet tho okoto Tim 'Babushka Lady's" Movie _ As mentioned above, the pictures show other per- sons also taking pictures. One of these other per- sons has been called the "Babushka lady" because she is wearing a babushka (a triangular head scarf). She took a movie as did Zapruder. but she took hers from the left hand side of the motorcade: and she was able to take all the scenes beginning with the rounding of President Kennedy's car from Hooston St. on to Elm St.. and ending with the dead presi- dent's limousine passing under the overpass to go to the hospital. Her movie would be particularly valuable for it would probably show all tnat wit going on on the grassy knoll. She may have been Mrs. Beck, at the time a stu- dent at the University of Michigan at Ann Arbor. who was visiting in Dallas. After her movie was developed. Mrs. Beck talked about it to the Detroit Free Press. Then the Detroit FBI attempted to find her. The information at present stops there. However. from observing similar actions of the FBI. one would suspect that they found her, obtained her movie, and either destro;ed it or filed it away un- available to researchers. (See lable 2.) . Until it can be confirmed that the "Babushka Lady" is Mrs. Beck, their films are listed separate- ly in Table 3 (Nos. 376 G 500). Some Other Conclusions IA great many other conclusions can be drawn from or are significantly supported by the photographic Stridence. A few examples are: COMPUTERS aimd AAJTCMAA1494 km May. 1970 v I. About ten men are shown being arrested. 2. At least two other rifles sre shown being found before Oswald's rifle wa: found. 13. *Oswald" is shown in two fake photographs iwith him holoing a rifle. n,cit Oswald was shown the photos he said. "That's my head but somebody elses body." Osuald uas right In this case has been clearly demonstrated by Fred Neneomo. a Los Ange- les researcher. � 4. Oswald did not shoot Officer J. U. Tippit of the Dallas police force; tun other ere did. Oswald was not near the shooting site at the tine. 5. Oswald's supposed discovery and arrest in the Texas Theatre. the eAlele theater where he went, was staged and prearranged. Continuing analysts and Continued searching for more photos will no doubt produce new conclusions and findings for soma time to come. � (next oontinuad on pad. LC1 Zepruder free. nueiee. Snouts t, Spatial Chart' Metercsde &tore Ito St. hi Stints: Chart 2 SCHEMATIC TIMING CHART Of P1iOTCGRAFK5. MOVIES. AhD EVEKIS 1Mbe.ALLT(LAZAAKOtzt) 12130 rm Norixtrit 22. 1963 ;r1( ea Heustea St. E 1 I I. JIM ii no St. JFK Post Overalls* Caner. Cars avid 84144 in Elm St. Other Curs Past Orersniss Seconds Sect, 'do Seconds ��� � � ..[C .14 behind "the- nit, tree as seen free "tn.. Csusle window Window en?ly Ouches 614 Dillard 11: I/WC 1,C. Photographers and Their FhotousPhst Zaproder Mix Muchmore Meshes Hartle Bell ' Altgeas Dermas Dillard � Shalimar* 1 KA 1 $1U152 81.2A 296 Illutline re 2 280 332 0cilhois 0 Mug es 1 Hughes 2 50.1 4654 lisrtin 0 MI $564 � *11g. ii 14 Martha 1 M 65 M-138 Belli Mormos� 1 � Willis 3 � 61 23 Millis 4 � � Altgeas 1-6 425 Moores. 2 Willis 5 202 Altgeo 1.7 . . Willis 6 � Weigame Os &oaks) Eugaes Willis 7 Hughes 4 Martin 3 Roll 2 Doman COMPUTERS and AUTOMATION foe Mar, 1970 Dillard 1 . � llekaiby 1 t 2 Coach 1 2 3 4 $ 6 7 Road � � � � � � 4 6 7 6 9 - I 51 I� 1% 1 Loot. r..t.gr.r6or Do. Type I ha. C ho. 3 laprader.1 2 MC Mia.2 3*: 4 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 10 19 20 2Z 23 24 2S :6 27 28 29 30 31 32 ur. mc IC 102 itc IC mc mc IC 33 *2 34 bC 3$ mC 36 ic 37 uC 39 MC 40502 41 MC 42 PC 43 PC 44 rc 45 PC 46 PC 47 o. 40 Pc 49 PC 50 PC 51 PB 52 141 53 re 54 PB SS �8 I se, re 57 re P8 PB $e 69 40 P6 4: PO 42 PIS 63 ra 64 711 45 PO 4,4 rs 41 PI $3 Uhl* 3 MAlk LiST Of OVER 500 PHOW.C4A7115 AND 019.0 75 194010CSAPIDAS Photo S.. 1 Jrc 00irl.41ooste. 51.10 (twerp., .trn on town,. St. bet.. Oda � 2A On O. t:. St. Jest before. daring C. aft0 neni shot 11, Grassy 60011 ad Car. on Elm Jest after 1.14 11%01 1 ./cc 00 11001100 S. 2 Xs: .4 lin Jost betas.. derby C. aflor head snot O 211 on Itoottoa from 0.1� St. 2/3 of to CA..1 I JCS en Roost. C. Clef. 7500 616 floor .16.. do-' enty 2 Camera cars 01 0 St. 044 40 441 Ten escape � sitting 3 Grassy knoll after atoll 4 Grassy knoll after ttttt S County Courts 9149.. pal Ten G 402sf. tOolton 6 PatkIrl 2.01 7 pin,. looking sooth from arcade O forking Lot � Tvn 21249. - top 13 7!.ra 1,00rnoy C 041 Ten 0.2JiA on tionsto. St. (fro. OCA F11.) I Am In (rent of 7321011147. 71 Coolly 10011 1. El. St. lifter ttttt ZA Cressy knoll G Elm St. after ttttt Parking Lot 4 cop on motorcycle with negro 5 B. Lovelady la front of ISOCI 6 C. Bock. latervIened 00 Elm St. 7 91e. North on Houston from Cl. � Wiry North ea Hoottan G 1500 doerool 9 1 f 7910 - Cops with shotgaas � 10 Dal Tel Bldg - Cop *ilk shotgaa - Polies Car' .6 0 L. Florer :leder rrrrrr et 120.51.0 G Elm 1 Top of 7580 - 7 ceps ee Itk floor fire 46. cape 2 14 St. betmeen ?SOD sad 041 41(le being evemined JFK en Hoestoe St. 2 JFK 1. front of TSOD � 3 JFK appteareleg triple �nervosa ^e tie $t. � . 4 Grassy knoll area jest otter ttttt � 5 Grassy knoll area after ttttt 6 Center of Plass after ttttt 7 Grassy knell ores 8 Pieta fro. Ridg. en seelk later la day � Plaza fro. Bldg. on ttttt later I. 1.7 Bond.# 1 ycles rowelled H G Rain 2 JFK toennin Ii C Melo 3 JFK OA tt 4 Cressy 10011 C Eli St. after ttttt � 5 Gross, kfloll Llm St. otter ttttt 4 Grassy knoll C Ere St. after � 7 Gr.', knoll after shots 8 Grassy knoll after shots 9 Cressy knoll after shots II. Nooro.a.I 1 Motorcycle cop rounding corner, Elm G Hoed. ton .4 2 Grassy knoll G JFK at time of bead skot Altgoaa.103 1-2 Lead motorcycles in Motorcade o. solo St. 1-3 JFK appreacittaq Houston St. ea isala � 1.4 JFK turning termer at Horaton C halm � I-5 JFK halfway .1.1kra Hoesten torero Cl. o 1-6 OK after first ttttt shots C. baler* total � shot. 0;mis mind.. fire esc.pg. get Tog � 1.7 ifIC approeching triple overpass. C. 8111 OA CSC 1-8 Arcade C. kaoll (roe Soelb Ele after shgtO 2-4 TSAD 5:06 PM November 22 ^ 24 TSB� 5:06 PM Clank shore 2.6 Ism 5:04 PU Clock 48eme 243 15110 (OMR o.c.r positios es Altgoe4 9-4 7-14 ism froe sae* position o 2-IS ?SOO (roe some posItlee 5:16 Pk Clock 480ne � 2-19 TSOO Sr.. se./ p.1111.. 5:19 rm Clock oasts � 14811102 frau atm pooltloo 5119 ra t facto . photogropaer Seq. fto. Tyro tiA.4 G Mi. he. 641 69 70 71 72 73 74 15 CM Alto's. rn rn PO rn rn Co f0 76 ID 77 1.8 70 PB 79 ra 00 PH Cl 811114.11 fa 01 213 04 07 00 09 RA 90 rc 91 12 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 100 101 102 103 104 105 106 107 los.re 109 4.8 110 PS 114 115 -116 re ra PB PB Plot. Soema 2-20 73011 from se., posItton S:it ro 3-7 T5rat (Co. crater of piora 5,07 en Clock sno.s 3.0 mous from et-etre or 3-9 1,4111 (r.� renter of plat. 3-10 1%141 fro. renter of p;aro 3-11 TS11,t fro. c f p..r. 3-12 731e1 from reeler of "arra 4-10 Triple overpass from .em positioa se . altoerit 4-11 7rIple overpass fr. saoe roam. 4-12 Triple orerparr fur. sotto p0sitiO4 4-16 1SO4 5:16 no from sone p.m. als Alltiens 1.6 (loci skend 4.17 11441 f.16 re (tom sr, 7441.104 as 0119,01 1.6 fleck ato-s 4-10 1310 rm fie. saom positioa 40 Allttent I-I. Clock rota.. 1 Jif( 04 0414 St. 2 DX 00 110,1100 St. 3 yrn on II St. 4 Jill In front of Isr.a S NI after first suet 6 f.'m St. C grassy 1141.1i after ttttt 7 1.10 St. C gfasay knoll after ttttt O 71.110 Dooruoy 9 no.stoo St. looking X. (too Llm. 750.7 G n.1 rev 10 Isitn front - Doorde C. 5 . .1060.4 - tttttt ad possible rifle 11 Houstos St. leering .srli from Elm St. 12 75110 (.11 of It, (rem monssee C. lola 13 eke arrested Ook1a00 0.1 Ion 8144. 14 bite statloa oacoa ea (le *boot 12:45 15 Scenes *round 36. Scenes arouad 731111 17 Srenes arra.61 1303 10 Scenes waled 7st3 JFK on 11 2 JFK In (root of 7700 3 JFK on El. &benn tsar of first snot 1 JFK sear Lo.e field 2 JFK on iota approa08:0.1 roosts. 3 Lead motorcycles �;.proacatop 00.slO4 4 JFK r000dlop corner mai. Z. ...to. 5 Accede after ttttt 1 Group outside Parklaad Hospital Copy of moorage 2 -Clearer ghost pabliakd 0. 141:1411.10 2 in re � 3 � Grtt.or.12 0 ttttt .13 AP Pkotog - ropher.14 AP Photog- rapher.15 AP Photo; - rapher.16 AP Photog- rop6ot,12 � 1 1 Officers G arnseen loolde Tsao tit 616 floor ulad. Group of officials and Pickup truck on Sterns. FfTewey .73413 an OatkgrOund n Takeo from aortroj car - 1:04 rm. sor.22 2 Triple overpass from soon tor oa west 3 Closer's of overpass - 1:04 PM from car approaChid 4 7700. Dal Ten. Coast, Secords 014g. from mowing car os maga St seer overpass 1:04 rm � 5 7500. Oil Ten from cot as Kale St. I:04 rm Clock shy., 6 Grassy boll C. Triple ore t ttt free car on Rain St. . T500. Oil 7ex (rye car 4o. Koss - 1:04 PM - Vico of ectIvity *roved coreor of Elm A If JFK early �inOttreCntie JFK early Is motorcade JFK on Stemmas free-my - Possible eaa with rifle lo bacittrotad Cork's sig. shwa JFK.4 -C. ttill's foga sticking out of can Itickortrp.19 1 (Life) Arcade 6 Meat Cepole often 13 people) � � 2 Ateuto G Pketogrephers tektite pi (0.1 2) 0111or4.20 1 /SRO 6t8 floor Wade. (roe Coo 3 fOellaa Hernieg /0 2 7580 6t6 floor ulodo. Cr.. Coo 3 � COMPUTERS and ittiff3h4.471(761 law Atop. 1970 I Plot. .lichetogrerhee Sem. he. Type Noe. C. No. I. I:: rn 0i11e04.20 3 123 re � 4 124 ra J. Lble41.21 1 tss ra 124 CA 127 CO 128 en 1:7 en 1)0 131 1)2 113 134 135 1)4 137 en to en rn CA ra CO Ca 1)4 PR 239 re 140 PB 141 CO :42 re 143 ro 144 CO 145 en 144 CO 1*7 en CO 149 CO ISO rti IS) en 152 re 353 154 155 156 1ST 158 159 160 161 162 to ea Pa ril ro PO Pb PE1 PO re 163 PB 164 P8 165 PS 166 PS 167 168 169 170 1.8 fa P8 Pa 17l. PA 112r5 173 PB 174 PB ITS PO 176 PO 177 PO 178 PB 179 re .180 181 102 aro 104 105 186 Pe PB r8 P11 re ra f8 � � � � 1 � � �1 � , � rk.t. Saone Otter...11 C .14414 .011 04 (14 1:45 ex - P404 pelal141 0 9911. mark 041141 IWO.; ht.41 SCRS* it Perklead Detrital 11 ceetect Fritts of 1.411 late ea hure.6er 22 11 ce41.1 .1.4 of 4401.41 94..1141 6 (0010(1 prietr It finite "tett'. 16 44414.1 errata .t .4444 .4444 Cool- ,... 1,41.141 fali1144 elet.49 4e941 It. ....tgeftery COIN, 07141 1.14 p4r4t b49 2 It. Wo0120.,ty .44 bog 3 It. J 0". Copper bettl. 4 Oases 1.144e 7W 00 (14. 41.er 5 0.1. lut.ett C. .1.51. 7 14 (tope) 6 Letts, floret es m St 7 Area 'tett Ot.e7411 rill. foe.: a area .tert Otwald'is rifle fe.wl 9 Iwo nee la police tor oat neer.. 004 Cabo* 10 or. 1.10.5 led Item 7c-10 by cups 11 Ihttt traevi bet.; Ito 4.07 from 1$0.3 12 Three tt...pa bet.; led ...I fro. TSB.) 13 Rifle bele2 tootled sway from 111.0 by Lt. Pop 14 Wit befog retried fee. 7503 by Lt. Day 15 Rifle triny c ccccc d awoy (roe Tsno by Lt. P.r 16 T.* ladles 1. boy leeefog 15.013 17 V1.. fin. nth (100, 1.14,14. - boa. 22 IS 10 Ds-old rrrrrr 1 at Coilte Stotler. 19 C41. 910 44.994 14.41.9 op at 75.10 20 C441,;, 040.44 T!-..N) 21 014 wkllt 44.0 enX In aoey fro. TSDO 22 Scree ascent G inside 735(/ . view of *art side of b 25 1501 (too polat el ibiwtto. 24 3 brats stacked op it 13541 6t1. floor mit. de. 25 5Cl4c srowni G 1..dt 75.0 26 Scene trooni C. 1.114. 17413 27 Scene orour4 C. lottde 7503 20 SCtat 40444 C 144144 7733 29 Scene are.nd C. inside 17413 30 SC44e mead G leside Tsna 31 Scree toilet Tsr.: 32 Scoot orm..4 C. 1.sIde TSDD 33 Scefte �revad C. 14114! 7.:113 14 (Oalles Tints Dereidl 12-39 Carta rrrrr and second official pickleg op something from grovial 1-4 t2:40 Cl (beets clock saws) hello.,. sod grove *ter spot .acre tonethIng picked op - Sooth of El. one lalet 1-7 12:41 Cl G rrrrr anall 1.44 Ce41.4f of pies. 1-66r:rap wear feet of steps ea Elia .TSw6 Del lot la backgroond - C. Brehm beI.g !interviewed 12:42 Cl 1.7 Crown scar (vet of steps oil CI. Cressy koell fa 6006910.64 - C. firth. being 1 irwtd 12:42 Cl 1-8 Creep stet foot of steps 0. Cl. - C plate le backgrotrad 12:42 Cl 1.15 Cep .110 shotgun . Dal Tex lit !Adige...ad . (In& Hesston 12:43 Cl 1-16 Cop ettit shotza. - View east ea Cl. free Novato. 12:44351 1.17 (mooed 12:45 CM) IWO free eolith of Elm os Devito.. 1-10 Tsno ft,. 50.00 of Cl.. ori Hoestort (closer vitm) 1-19 Cro.d aeld back - Corner Elm/. eel- side (sooty Records Bldg. 1-20 Dal Tex, tops with sholgoas from cermet Els 6 /1 24 Cope C. cro.ds I. (loot of Del Tex fire escope - Xentesata I. photo 2-4 Cop 1.110 'hotel". I. froet of Oel Tex 2-5 616 floor mindew - ma. rrrrr 2.4a 610 floor Itiodett - mita wraserl .1 41140411 2-7 6th floor 04.1ow - Ka. wearerIng 2-8 Cops (acckIng cots heed op to r perk. 1.0 lot 12:51 (X 2-14 12:55 Pa Sheriff .wriag out et 616 (leer window oext to -the wieder 2 -IS ' - vied.. 2-16 12:53 CM Cops ttlth shotgun" Del Tex 14 backgrowed (looks Ilk. Murray 2-IS) 2-17 Lorry (loner twiwp (rioted 2-10 1_4fly Fiore, else. op 2-19 'A ' .1a4ew 3.5 1:00 PB Larry Storer I. Sh.riff's @flies .CCMANTERS and AUTCMAATKX4 far htey. 19/0 root. garaelogrepase S. No. Typo Naar 6 MO. Nu. 117 Cf1 IA re rn re qn rn ki CO 02 en 03 en 94 CO Is PO I% 10 iv7 CO oa Ph rig CO 290 III 201 CO 292 ra 293 ro 204 PO 2.05 Cl) � ro 2...r.7 CO :on NI :al CO 210 CB 211 re 212 re 211 re 214 rO 215 Cl) 216 rn :17 ra 210 rn 2;9 Cl) 220 LII 221 PO 222 CB 223 P8 224 P8 225 PB 226 PO 227 P8 228 PO 229 230 PS 231 P8 232 re 233 r8 334 Pfl 235 CO 236 r8 237 Cl) 238 PO 239 P8 240 re 241 re 242 Pll 243 113 244 ell 245 P3 246 PS 247 PB 248 Pil 249 PO 250 PS 251 P8 252 re 253 P8 254 rn 255 rn 256 PO 257 PO 258 re Sores 3-6 Larry Closer is Sttriff's off.ce 3.7 Lorry 41.4I so Se...rift's 111(.., 3-4 Larry fiord., is N.o,i(t., .1f,c. 3.9 Lorry rioter I. S44.((.4 off.c. 1-10 Larry floret ift Setriyea .yyrcg 101a � ������<� 32i�...1 fro. clote"p 3.231-. ceps la Tfra. doorway � 3-14 Tarte "tra.pr. from 0.0. rites la frost of 75.10 ^ 3.15 Torce 'iratps' es D St. ^ 3.16 14fte "10a44s- being led toward' sae- riff's office 4-2 Balitt wati. 05 (web � 4-3 Rtiltt 440 o. (.4 � 4-4 It. ments.nnty wIth be; C. It. Joao.. .tto Settle � 4.5 Lt. iriatmennry with hop G It. Cetera. ..ito bottle 4-6 It. J 114 bottle G 1.nco seta � 4-7 It. Jo sssss oilk rattle C 5.00O sock ^ 4-14 Doses 16114e 614 floor ogle.. � 4-13 0.41 Insist 6th floor rinin. ^ 4-16 rates letlde 6th float ...sin. � 4-17 7:e. do.s fim from 610 fleet .intiew 4.14 Sur. dowa Lim frem 611. floor wintn. 4-19 Slew de.. Eb. (04 6th /14. 04191444 � 5-1 ((at bumper of car 5-2 Cep la front of Tsna c 'pear 5-5 Croup It frost of 75(03 5..c reps Is 7700 deer..r � S.! rem. ci,. �nd crc,d 144.104 2.1:3 ta..ta) � 5-6 relict cars and crowd brtini 704a (tette) � 5-4 relate crrs �rel ern...I bet. int my.. (.516) 341 W�ye C. Loci. n�der tttttt 0. El � Sc. � 5-9 %rm.5. Lett. is, 411.6157 ig police cor � 5-10 Moro C. Usti.coo 14 polite C41 5-11 Lt. bey corolla.; rifle Owl of 7543 ^ 5-12 It. bay carrying rifle to.iird heart. 5. (la � 5.13 It. Hoy carrying rifle toward b0w51e(1 C. � 5-14 U. Day carry1.8 rifle opyrcathing car- . wet � 5-15 It. Day corryin8 rifle croasarl 1144.01 � 5-16 It. Dar emring rifle c:ossing h a 5-17 Lt. 017 corryin rifle I. frost of Dal Tex, 5-18 Lt. Day corr7in2 rifle la frost .1 0.1 Tex 64 7U. 1.0500i and eta. leaving � hooey 01-1 T.. women and man gettlny in pollee Coe � Atioiltre photogropaer sores � 6.51.. roma awl man getting la pollee cat . Another photographer roves ^ 6-6 Two we... rind man Is police car - Am- ttttt photographer 560.4 � 0-77.. wowa and nom srrlrd.7 St polle. stall.. � 6-8 Two wanes altd sae �rrivitq at police ttttt 04 � 4-9 1.41. wone. awl waa is police roitIwg r.en J.HcAml.y.76 1 (Et. Worth Star 'Megrim) afe arrested I. Ft. Worth 44ar polite car � 2 laa. near car la Ft. Worth - Nov. 22 ill 3 Mao being led sirs,' from car N.Cribitielt.23 I (Ft. Worth Star Telegroml Spot .005e bullet hit grass 2 Spot .4.cre bullet hit v.. 3 Spot where tullet hit gross 4 Sr'( .here bullet hit grass 5 1' iinspitel ibtay people fa :root 6 Parklaod Dospitel - Catty people in (root 7 Parkland Despite' - Hi.f Peer;( Is J.Clablock.26 1 (Ft. Werth Star Telco's') bee1ey from Helicopter late - 2. Helicopter view of Oteley flare from cast of Oat It. 3 Helicopter clew of Dealer rpm, Cr.. most Of overpass 4 Porklond Hospital. .116 car $ Parkland Hospital. ttttt cars 6 View of R ttttt od tricks (re. 7563 I (Ft. Worth Stir Telegres) Three sea fres RA. tracks lie (feet of 7503 seder arrest � 2 Three nem (re. 1.11. tttttt le frost 7580 seder ttttt � 3 Lt. nootpowerr with beg ^ 4 Lt. iloatgoonry with hog ^ 3 Lt. Johastra with sad bottle � 6 Lt. Johaso. .Ith sack efts Wall. � 7 NI armee 6th floor 'ma inside 11.8411111.28 I (It. ttttt Star Telegram.) rk.t.cr.r...1 La camera sac CAM 2 early motorcade � C. 5a0111.27 53 - ----------- ----i -I -- 1 ' i t ' , : : = It 1 1 I . � � I t f r44,e. �Photogropeor Seq. no. lyre 1 Nam No. be. 259 PO Volgeoe.29 1 :145 25* 262 144 rn en 80510a7.30 PO 2 .4 1 1-2 1-3 Photo Shot, Sw.ne on Elm. grassy knoll. 7$000 doorway from ho..los on groom: - Cep 1 G 2 04 [le St. Ill o.k Elm oultoo C. Oil Ton fro. In free( of 15103 12:33 2.4 rn 0 1-4 - 265 re 0 i-5 r..ti.1 Lot - North section 12:34 2... ra 0 1-4 Porliog Lot - Souto settle* 12:34 267 PS � 1-7 Elm St. Lot. - From west rod loohliso east 12:34 2411 CO . 1-0 Critter of Plate fro. troll 12:35 269 FO . 1-9 Closewp of Urge group ea aaaaa corb of 2:0 PO . lim 12:35 1-10 Closeop of couple cm worth side Elm St. - ISAD it background 12:36 271 PO . I-11 Long shot facing ovorpoor froe steps eta Lim 12:37 272 PB . 1-12 Arcole f. knoll from center of Plato 12:38 2:3 Pli . 1.13 Police examloe spot on gramrd - hefts clock sho.s the time 12:39 214 08 � 1-14 Some as 13 - South 'Cie our :roe, emtiot . weathers lighting cigarette 12:39 275 re . 1-15 Volthers picking op somethisi from ground 12-31 276 PO 1-16 aolthr � holding smoethlog in his h�rd 12.39 277 PO � I -17 Another officiol torching spot on grated 12:40 270 P3 . 1-10 Police scowling �rosiml spot oe ground 12:40 279 re . 1-19 Priltre pich:ro up eeeee objects from two spots - Clock shoos the time 12:40 ' 260 PO ' 1-20 75540 Plot. 4 inoil from Commerce S. - Front OO,Ontoy tptorde. by 1.0 COTS 12:41 261 PO ' 1-21 IScO Plato G knoll fro. C4,,,,,nrce 51.02:41 262 PO o 1-22 front door of 7510 fro, south of far 12:42 283 ra " 1-23 Front door of 751.11 from f Elm 12:42 :64 ra . 1-24 Front door of 7540) - Closeop 12:42 265 PO . I-25 Front door of 7560 -Closeop 12:43 256 Pfl . 1-26 Negre boy in polio, ter - frost of 15110 . 12:43 207 PO 1.27 front door 7541D - Clams. . Val eeeee In doorway 12:43 286 Pil . 1-28 Vieo east on Elm St. from Hoostoe G CI. 141 Tee G Coonty Records Oldg. 12:43 209 1111 � 1-29 Coonly Recerda Pldg. - Ni Corner 12:43 290 PO � 1-30 View no.th on Novara* from south old. of Cie Si. 12:44 291 PO . 2-3* 'man fro. Novato' G Vole 12:44 292 re . 1-32 Tula (root C. doorway fren N G El. . 12:45 293 PO 1-33 Ism frost C. doorway fro. itanistonG Elm 12:45 -294 PH . 1,14 7530 doorway - Crowd let frost 12:45 295 �0 � 1-35 Cop with shotgun - Del Ten Bldg. le bock. premed 12:45 296 re . .. 1-36 View nowt% oe Noesten free El. St. 12:45 797 P13 � .... .. 2,3 View of overposs from El. 12:40 298 re . A. 12-4 Crowd en Cl. Cupola from soot.' s i on Ela 12:40 299 PO . , 2-5 15110 front door . Reportor tops recording Interview with Bremer' 12:42 300 PO ' 2-6 rsno front door 12:42 301 P8 " I 3-7 151(0 front door 12:42 302 ra . 2-6 Veltiters being 1 lewed le front if 7500 12:45 � 303 P8 " i 2.4 Volthers being 1 'Ned 1n frost of 7510 12:45 304 PO . i 2-10 folleeven on 6th floor yelling out wie- der& polio:Ain to 6tb floor window 12155 305 PO � 2-11 Policeman on 6th floor yelling out wta. dote C. pointing to 6th floor window 12tS5 30G PO " 2-12 Three ladies on top floor fire escape landing of Dal Tog 12:56 307 Pfl � 2-13 Cops with 'hi:Cosine is frost of 001 Tee 12:56 300 PO .' 2-14 Ceps with shotguns 1n trout of Oal Too " ra . 12:56 309 2-15 Caps with shotguns 1. (feet Of Dal Tee 12:56 s 310 PO . . 2.16 Ceps with Shotgun* 1st front of Oat Teo 12:56 211 PO 2-17 Larry Pierer being latorwiewed ln Seeriffl - office 1:06 , 312 PS ; 2-18 Larry Pierer being latowwlewed is Sheriff* , office 1:06 313 �3 i. � 2-19 Four sea ie Shoriff'll office 106 314 re 1 . 2-20 Larry Pierer 1:06 315 TO .; - 2-21 Larry flavor 1:06 316 re ..i . - 2-22 Larry Pierer 1:06 317 ra .er � 2.23 Caps beside Ost Tee ladg. � beitstell St. /. side 1100 54 Poeta ..(o0to9rapk4O he. Type ' ha.< C. to. No. 218 FO 3;4 rn 3n �10 321 III 322 rb 323 tft 324 to 326 rn 326 VO 221 rn 328 to 3.77 rn 390 FO 3.71 C11 232 rn 333 re 311 335 235 337 33.3 231 313 :441 212 213 211 315 217 348 319 350 351 352 :53 354 355 356 357 358 359 360 361 362 363 364 365 366 367 368 269 P8 rn ra ra PO PO CO PO PO 7 PO PO Pil ra re PI1 WI. 33 re GPI: 34 re re WI. 3$ 370 P8 Stotgitton.36 371 P8 Borrows.37 372 P8 373 NC Oennen.38 root* Soo.. RerIII.30 2-74 fop. t.t14. HSI Teo 0141. - Novato. St. 5.4e 61 � 2.26 4roop to fr... of Pal 7.r - CI 1:00 Onarray wont oo.nto.r, I. to, (ii.., 2-3" 1,c,, ye...t..to 1.21 2-27 (1201.1 01,00 4...1..0 1:24 � 2.3) do.ot..* 0 24 � 2-29 Cott, t:oeof Sit sher�ff's *Mae 1:1.3 2-20 Lorry f in Sterrfre office 1:149 3-2 Crttp eott,le Nat Ter 12:5+ � 3-3 (root of 310.0 C. ci� St. Cat. laoltiag .111 32 50. 3-4 Vico ftets eo n from elm 12:57 � 3-5 Olt'. th.t& no H (roe Elm 12:57 � 3-6 Is eeee ff's office 1,r4 3.7 0iftte t,c/, 3-0 le .0.444fri offscr, O 3-c le sv.riff's office 1:64 � 3.10 Nosy Coot.5 gottog pos. 14 $44,1(('S offrct 0:06 3-1i Vie. octet, not. (two Ho.otol 1:07 ^ 3-12 Bar an 1...000. St. . Sootb, of title 1:12 3-i3 Oar on 1,005105 3t. 50.0 Of Mein 1:12 3-14 fat arrver doon104.1 ..ere retro, b.regsm ft:. 1:23 � 3.15 le forriff's office 1:30 � 4-4 torr:sts ff., Clot C � 4.5 P.c.:hits (tem Ito G 01005104 � 4-4 0...yals tern Line: 11..44ee � 4.7 74," out ems - lop floor 4-8 1!4:, 0011 eml - All fn.. 4-9 coi,ite. C. CI+ ectivsty 4.10 I, 4 CI. OC 4-II 11PolleA C 1.14, ottlytty 4-12 ve.Itto G CI. Activity 4-13 ito.itch C. CI. OCtlwily - Posalblo Of. I,At ^ 4.14 WV. east enst -Top (lot,/ 4-15 Th1, toot tot . Top floora 4-16. 1514 rhst cod - Top floors 4.17 75054. lost ewe - Top (goers -Click news � 1-10 1V1. :last red - Top floors � 4.19 150.9 feat ere - Top tiners � 4-20 7S'ii talc earl - Top floors 4.21 75.11 last end - Top flooIa �tkies.31 1 hoomaes 414 one groord 2 he:toes 00 the grovel Coecollan1432 1 Ne.moot 02.gt0VOO beigoma. Cr.,',.. Iltotas . 2 No..ass ea graved - cl.le.p 3 Poritog lot 4 Mars C. El. St. (roe 1noll � II Crows ttttt side of Clio free 114+11 C40.S1411 Lady appears . 4 Cr-1 co Ovcrpass watcniod Jrx going riot Stem:lies Freeway 1 Lt. 6.tgoscry 00000 lag paper bog not of 1500 2 Officers is front of 1700 � Co:y of ii.. Allee 1-3 with ception reeding: '11.11e1 police search st....d for toilet bellowed to have Dodged la the 4 No;re girl crying outside *capitol S Negro girl trylog outside Partlerof vespitel Nvt one:: be took etythits Cam 2 1 fOoKtO cars oh Nooatee'St. foes Coe 2 4AP) 2 Coocra cars oit Wetstoil St. fro, Com 2 1 Jrc oe Napostee - Glimpse, on tie befor, 974 NC 2 375 PC Voideatified.39 1 Pbotog.(FoleY) 376 NC 114n. 8ec6.40 377 378 379 300 ^e PO PEI PC 301 PC 382 PC 263 PC 364 PC 385 PC 386 PC 367 PC wort glispses to *rosters ofter ttttt 'WO to AM of New. 22 - 6t4 floor wits, do. Not sore flle masts - Token coring Shots � 41 1 750 6th floor mildew before first shot Powell. 42 (soot fled hie Tolkland.43 1 Xi 01 Stews:mos Freeway - Bath of 7300 Grackle.; lot IlatOsemes644 1 Gro, of polite i epilog a. old acorn *Inside Tsaa � 2 Cramp of polite I. epilog ea old wire outside 1500 3 Scow le Oenley Pleas 4 Scone Is Dealey flare � 5 Scene at Tippitt sheeting Sou* et Tippill 'bootleg o 7 Osoald le Tense Ibestre jest before meat � 8 Ownwild felines Theatre jest alum OffOOt. COMPUTERS Ond AUTOMATION for May� 1970 7 494������-�-� \ Mot. .11notogropeor Seq. Os. 7/Po 'no C. I. sr. ttotto $00.11 31:10 tO .444,144.45 1 (I...". 1Wro141 toot. et 00111 00 Usdstot St. 309 7 �.J.L'0ns1it.44 1 Station 1.11.4-TV 14E1 restigispon - Cop csrryled sectgeo 14.014 1Sms 390 T 2 GoCter It . Cop with 'tot,. ototOlde isAn Onmos 391 T 3 70(43 doorot., oror sone tl+e as 411114 10 392 4 614 floor ...0.100 tic. ow4e00o.ts 343 7 5 totty r1A,.-, 1,4 10.1104 lie.Ine C. EIS 344 7 I. Ert,ter, Gen.; l 4 I. (toot At 1580395 7 /Cur ceps -tte isesgvas - Del les 14 ba,t7revoel 396 T � 6 /arty ft.", t.,1.7 It'd 4..0 H tttttt St. . 3 ttttt pootw700714oto coos op 397 T � lorry flor,r 7oit.g tato 04tete ttttt ocr0 of Socr1tt't 6.17. 340 10 Two cops leodiai segre tttttt lot. Tsna 399 I � 11 Posi"41, loc loco placed Is ponce car ta fo-ot Cl 'PO 400 7 ^ 12 Ste., too ...a oriole,: dew. Els St. 401 13 00.1con C wevo led to polite tor ea Els St. 14 S.., 1.0 befog ploced le csr �0010.1 peeielio;ser 403 7 7. A13o0.47 I lorAt-IV 4:41 lie. If Plan C. tes11 (100 l(0cltol 1. rola - 40o.4 000141 t..sr4 Intl * 404 7 2 Strne outside 7�.-43 405 T 3 Scent 0u1011e �%rr 404 T 4 Scene outside 7.".4 407 7 S Scene outsio. 400 7 6 Police senesin senugh tte (111.0 409 7 7 Police 1000i02 dot 6t0 floor so Beene. St. 410 8 Cr; nicks ITO: cot to-cord El. St. 411 9 Are* nowIwg Inch $ock G Or. rev,..r bsttle 412 � 10 Rifle on tte floor of TsPa - I. eldieg piece - Senn(' C. pone. �sintrie spot 413 � 1/ Close.; of rifle posed for rbet0 $ight visible 414 12 ritlice,es In141 rifle up Second dip poling et bolt 415 � 13 Grovp near bons intro rifle loved . bros.,. loiter, 0.104 416 ^ 14 Lt. Day destleg live seen for Clever - print. 801141 visible 417 15 Sheriffs tilling in 6t0 floor 418 I (VIAA-TV ADC) Crewe Bldg. is Oak C1111 . Whet. ttttttt 0 thooght to be - Ses Swaney epos lt - C.ald bo library Or te.ple 419 ^ 2. Two police cars speedicg sloop resides. till i. Oat Cllft - Police SO lel, old frame boildieg � 3 Cop holdney op 11101 grey jerkin . No., paring lot 4 Mee Is skirt sl ttttt telkilop seer ased � tor lot $ Severn police carsC. cops weer TIppItt . stiootitig site - Cop roes tsward polies car n�Idle; gin nu O 6 4rovp withered noon nispitt's tor. Piece of poper or p lyieg os desh bond - 140 detail . 7 Cops *cosine TIppitt's billfold (accord- tog to (�11s01 .00 Is ttttt .a) - Not. pod lesIde C0711 point to it - Cop holding TIppitt's pistol best** an ter 4 Group snood TippItt ttttt lag site (ever. exposed) � 9 Cooed �fetorr4 pollee tor is bonnie sec. Ii.. - It drives nay with gonna la back seat � 10 Police tors delving op to Texes Theatre ^ 11 Texas Theatre looting op in tower � 12 Texas Theatre -Cops golati Is -Car polls e.ep ^ 13 beside Term laestre - Very dark - light. Isliaking - Cops hostile Oswald tents tosIde doorway � 14 Cro.4 pothered groan police car istsids To-.., Thestre - Os.sid lando ta back gen - It drives nay A (irAA Aoc) 1. (AI( 3 - Intercede ea Mal� St. apprenang Unites St. 2 /coat of 7503 - (rood is ttttt std. of Cl... CAM 3 ro.ads corner Roestes Cis 11 CAM I. CAN 2. oteor paotogrephere Sc %sell . so greyed - 05.with nbreln folded . Officer Innen op- pritochlag earth cent . Narglo resting to eycle Son\ of Cln St. es CAX 3 snot 44.14 Cl. 402 T ^ � � 7 � T � 7 7 7 4.11ellead.46 420 T 421 4227 423 'I 424 T 425 , 426 - 427 T o .4267 429 7 oct y .431 .7 432 2 8. Coseb.49 433. 434 ;1 COMPUTERS sad AUTOMATION for /My. 1970 Plot. .ireetograpeor Seq. In. Typo hen C. In. Bo. 435 T 436 T 437 7 438 7 439 T 440 441 T 442 443 T. 444 T 445 T 404 7 447 7 448 7 4/9 7 7 451 7 452 4:a 454 7 455 T 456 T 457 T 458 T 459 T a. Cov44.41 4 Cop natk ccoolw, toolO dl. 5 Corn+ nab Less So.o-o.. 11.11. 41.+00030. 'fs;�e Idat� - S.0.1e010q 040.� 111 �irrep1.111 6 ree101 t ttt 1 �,1 04011 �� �ato00l 0* 10.00.1 � 7 111,1001 1071.7 10 31.0 cycl� 0001 to00 ...lb Or II. - ���1".. r. Cannier* O0011Ing 10 tell� CA4 1 8 Cr..-1 ea &aria nor of El. . likes too. arced.. � Crowd 04 aorta oleo of Cl. - 14000 (toe iisustoo 4 /1. 10 CroM om sort& tn. of ri. TA... fr05 tor drlwird coold. (411 4f saes. Are takes pt." to 64 35 IM - hew. 221 � 11 75-:0 GI% floor �Irleof IstsIdo - Cop, Oct*00.103 12 WO (rn. c ttttt of Plate - i.e.. 914 floor tsioss. c..t de.. i. - TOOl 1*