ASSASSINATION: ANY NUMBER CAN PLAY

Document Type: 
Collection: 
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP75-00149R000400490013-4
Release Decision: 
RIPPUB
Original Classification: 
K
Document Page Count: 
1
Document Creation Date: 
November 11, 2016
Document Release Date: 
December 22, 1998
Sequence Number: 
13
Case Number: 
Publication Date: 
November 7, 1966
Content Type: 
MAGAZINE
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PDF icon CIA-RDP75-00149R000400490013-4.pdf109.55 KB
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T Lr7S~.+ L ASSASSiNATiON: 3 Any Num,"'%ai Can Play STUDY THE PAST, says tile 111SCriptioll chiseled in stone outside the National Archives on Washington's Pennsylvania Avenue, and rarely have so many ama- teur scholars followed the command into the dusty reliquary of U.S. history. The well-beaten path leads upstairs to the East Search. Room, where, almost any day, a visitor can find one or two instant historians poring over some of the 300 cubic feet of evidence generated by the assassination. The name of the game is: who killed John F. Kennedy? And the answer, for the people disposed to play it, is 1.116y tile Ifl lpie Verdict the W,trmrf -commission; rendered: Lee Harvey Os- wald, acting alone. Three years after the fact, the will to doubt that verdict is stronger and more intractable ? than ever. Dissent has be- RMase : CIA-RDP75-00149R000400490013-4 Epstein's . "Inquest," a made-over mas- ter's thesis attacking the Warren com- mission's methods, topped 20,000 and t . I,s ulre magazine gave Epstein eight pages in its Decem- ber issue to analyze no fewer than 35 extant theories contradicting the com-' mission's. A New York television sta- tion scheduled a three-hour November postmortem starring Lane and other critics of the commission. The foreign press splashed the c:c,ubters' accounts, often with we-told-you-so glee. And even London's sober Sunday Times ven- tured that the Warren report "appears a vulnerable document." erwise obscure owner-editor of the tin (circula(ion: 765) Midlothian, Texas Mirror, found a flossier forum i California's Ramp: , is magazine for th most Byzantine tale to date. By Jones' lievers--a subculture of assassination or another by the assassination had me buffs who obsessively probe the massive "mysterious' deaths"-a catchall term tha record, swap their findings and publish includes a karate cliop, a slit throat, tw new and ever' more elaborate conspiracy heart attacks, two auto accidents an theories. And they have created a grow-' the demise by "acute barbiturate an ing market: a recent Louis Harris poll alcohol intoxication" of Hearst columnis showed that three-fifths of the American Dorothy Kilgallen. Introducing Jones public doubts the assassination was the Ramparts playfully paralleled his theory work of one man-nearly double the with that of the death "curse" o level of two years ago (Nuws,.vF those who opened King Tut's tomb Oct. 10). But the magazine gave him twenty It is a game any number can play, and pages and a widely reported Wash it was still proliferating last week: ' ington press conference, at which Jones ^ Hard-cover sales of "Rush to Joni"- confidently boosted the count to seven " Those people ment," lawyer Mark Lane's defense br;ef teen and announced: for Oswald, passed 90,000 and kept the have been pretty systematically elimi- book second of The New, York Time.,. nated.?" (Snorted "Inquest's" Epstein: "This is the way a child thinks-every the official verdict against the critiques. He sent them first to the 26 volumes of published testimony and exhibits, planned . to dispatch them next to the Archives as soon as the commission's hundreds of filing boxes of working pa- pers are declassified in the next 60 days.* Re hopes, too, that the much- debated autopsy photos and X-rays of the dead President will be made avail- able; he shares the prevalent belief that "somebody in the Kennedy family" has them. Liebclcr remains convinced that the Warren commission was right, a There were the first signs of a back- lash against the doubters. At ,U,, j 4, . }rte pr.AfcsSO~ We e}a.ej Lie elcr -a commission staff alumnus who o ten played devil's advocate during the in- quiry-put 23 students to work weighing "The PIII, the Secret Service and tho'CIA have already released what material they felt they could to the Archives under standard restrictions covering 'such considerations as national security, the iden- tities of agents and iniormants and the protection of innocent persons. The Archives staff is using the same guidelines in siftin th i g but ' he feels the widespread doubts demand a down-the-middle review. And- still the search goes on. The 30- foot rows of gray cardboard boxes in nate the doubters. "There is nothing new or startling there," an ex-commission 'staffer insists. But still the trickle con- tinues; one or two requests a day for data on a single subject is the Archives' equivalent to a run on a bank.. And that, in a society that has never quite closed its books on the assassination of Abraham Lincoln, was hardly surprising. "This," a' Warren commission lawyer forecasts. dolefully, "will go on for a century or. .more." CQYRGHT o cmnmtss on s memos Sanitized - Ap pers. thr `~of aee='34P75-00149R000400490013-4