Oswald's Game

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by Davison, Jean


  238–239. President’s Miami speech: Newman, 509; Summers, 425, 423.

  239. Newspapers’ coverage of speech and motorcade route: XXVI, 69; Newman, 511.

  Marina on Oswald’s failure to call: III, 45–46.

  240. Hunting rifle in Truly’s office: McMillan, 519; VII, 381–382, 387–388.

  Conversation with Frazier: II, 222.

  Ruth on Oswald’s arrival: III, 46–48.

  Oswald’s activities at Ruth’s house: McMillan, 521, 523–525.

  240–241. President Kennedy in Fort Worth: Bishop, 25, 28, 61; Manchester, 114, 121, 137; VII, 455.

  242. Oswald on his way to shoot Walker?: Newman, 47–49.

  Note 3: There are other theories about where Oswald was headed. Commission lawyer David Belin believes that he was en route to a street at which he could have caught a bus to Mexico (Belin, 425–428). Congressman Harold Sawyer of the Assassinations Committee believes that Oswald was on his way to the home of an individual identified by the Dallas press as a Communist party defector who had helped the FBI destroy the Party in Texas. The news story had appeared on the same page as articles about John Abt defending Communists in New York and the president’s proposed visit to Dallas. The informant’s home was two blocks farther up the street in the direction Oswald was walking when Tippit stopped him (HACR, 673–674).

  Oswald seen by shoe store manager: VII, 3–4.

  CHAPTER 15. THE ARREST

  243. Seth Kantor’s reaction: XX, 410.

  AM/LASH meeting with case officer: Book V, 19–20.

  243–244. Castro’s statements: Daniel, “When Castro Heard the News.”

  244. Michael Paine’s reactions: McMillan, 540–541.

  Oswald’s arrest: VII, 40, 52, 73; VII, 54 (crowd); VII, 41, 59 (in police car); Belin, 27.

  244–245. Fritz on Oswald’s answers: IV, 239.

  Other questioners’ impressions: XXIV, 839, 844; VII, 135.

  245. Oswald discusses political beliefs: WR, 610; IV, 224.

  Oswald apprised of rights, declines lawyer: IV, 216.

  FBI agents join questioning: IV, 209, 210.

  Oswald meets Hosty: IV, 210, 466–467.

  Hosty realizes note was from Oswald: HACR, 245.

  Oswald’s statements on rifle, whereabouts, and pistol: WR, 619; XI, 613; WR, 181.

  Denial he was in Mexico City: IV, 210.

  Witnesses identify Oswald: WR, 166.

  246. Concealment of Neely Street address: WR, 617.

  Oswald at press conference: IV, 166; Newman, 547.

  Ruby’s personality and arrest record: XXIII, 21, 22, 172, 356, 7, 125; WR, 796, 800.

  Ruby’s large sums of money and pistol: WR, 797, 805.

  Ruby’s reaction to assassination: WR, 335, 337–338.

  247. Oswald’s assertions, Jarman’s location: WR, 182, 635, 250.

  Jarman, Norman, and Williams on shooting: III, 204–207, 191–192, 175–176.

  Secret Service report: WR, 635; Oswald asks for Abt: XX, 441; IV, 215; VII, 314.

  247–248. Kantor and Oswald’s remarks: XX, 416.

  248. Aline Mosby’s reaction: XXII, 710.

  Search of Paine home, pictures found: WR, 628; VII, 215, 231.

  Paine and Oswald on Neely Street residence: WR, 607.

  Marina’s first reactions, rifle missing: McMillan, 538–540; III, 79.

  Pictures in June’s baby book and Marguerite’s response: McMillan, 544; I, 146, 148.

  249. Marina’s talk with Oswald: McMillan, 546–548; I, 77.

  250. Marguerite, “This room is bugged”: Oswald, 22.

  Robert on brother’s demeanor and statements: Ibid., 143, 144, 146.

  251. Similar statements in Moscow: XXII, 706.

  Phone call to Ruth and her reactions: III, 85–86.

  Conversation with president of Dallas Bar Association: VII, 328–330.

  Oswald’s reaction to backyard photos: WR, 608–609.

  252. Assassinations Committee on photographs: HACR, 52.

  Sunday morning questioning: VII, 298–299, 267; IV, 228, 240; XX, 444; WR, 610, 629.

  252–253. Leavelle’s impression: VII, 269.

  253. Holmes’s statement: WR, 633.

  Priscilla Johnson’s comment: XX, 310.

  Transfer to county jail delayed: XV, 148–149; Belin, 463–465.

  Dressed in black: WR, 636; McMillan, 555.

  254. Ruby at Western Union office: WR, 354, 357; XIII, 226.

  “I’m Jack Ruby”: Kantor, 149.

  Crowd’s cheer: VII, 589; XX, 419.

  Clenched fist: Summers, 137, 547 n. 35.

  CHAPTER 16. REACTIONS

  255. Oswald seen as politically erratic: New York Times, November 23, 1963, 1, and December 7, 1963, 1.

  256. Castro’s reaction reported: Ibid., November 24, 1963, 10.

  Castro speech: The Worker, December 1, 1963, 8.

  Castro’s fear of war: WR, 309; HACH, III, 225.

  U.S. officials’ concern: Manchester, 333, 359.

  Lyndon Johnson persuades Warren: Manchester, 630; Warren, 358.

  256–258. Witnesses on Oswald’s motive: II, 392, 424; XI, 402 (Paine); VIII, 413–414 (Hall); VIII, 354 (Clark); VIII, 176–177, 179 (Marilyn); I, 123 (Marina); IV, 239–240 (Fritz).

  258. Marina on backyard photos, “something important”: XXIII, 408–409, 479.

  259. “Start another revolution?”: XXIII, 385.

  Denies knowledge of Mexico trip, later admission: XXIII, 388, 511.

  “Hitler needed killing,” note’s discovery: XXIII, 413, 391; IX, 393–394.

  Explanation for saving note: McMillan, 369, 370, 373; WR, 405.

  Marina approximating the truth: Epstein, Inquest, 99.

  259–260. Marina explains inconsistencies: HACH, XII, 433.

  260–261. Marina’s testimony about November 21: WR, 420–421.

  261. Ruth’s observations: XI, 391–393; McMillan, 523, 544–545.

  Marina denies quarrel: McMillan, 628 n. 13.

  Marina’s later testimony about November 21: HACH, II, 266–267.

  262. “You and your long tongue”: McMillan, 516.

  McMillan on events of November 21: McMillan, 521, 523, 566.

  263. Ruth Paine’s warning about Oswald: II, 509.

  De Mohrenschildt and Walker shooting: I, 18; IX, 249, 317.

  De Mohrenschildt on his testimony and Oswald’s motive: HACH, XII, 216, 241, 224.

  De Mohrenschildt and Janet Auchincloss: IX, 179; HACH, XII, 226–227.

  264. Money for rifle, guilt feelings: Epstein, Legend, 319 n. 10; McMillan, 570.

  De Mohrenschildt’s backyard photo: HACR, 52–53; HACH, XII, 52–53, 336, 241, and II, 315; McMillan, 362, 609 n. 9.

  Note 1: McMillan believes that “5/IV/63” signified May 4, 1963, but Marina testified that the date on the photograph meant “Five-fourth month-1963” (HACH, II, 265–266). Oswald was surely familiar with the Russian style of writing dates, since two birthday gifts he received in the Soviet Union were inscribed in that fashion (WR, 691, 708).

  264–265. De Mohrenschildt on investigation’s effects: HACH, XII, 312, 301.

  265. No evidence worked for CIA: HACR, 277; Epstein, Legend, 185–187; McMillan, 632 n. 5.

  De Mohrenschildt’s suicide: McMillan, 569–570.

  265–266. CIA and FBI response to Dallas: Book V, 25, 40, 41, 60–67, 58, 38.

  266. Hoover’s push for quick solution: Ibid., 32–35, 38–42.

  Concern for FBI’s reputation: Ibid., 46–47, 51, 53.

  267. CIA plots kept from Commission: Ibid., 67–75.

  Assassination Committee’s conclusion on Cuba: Blakey and Billings, 155.

  Blakey’s suspicion Castro’s denial untrue: Ibid., 146, 147–148.

  CHAPTER 17. CONSPIRACY THINKING

  269. TV documentary: “J. Edgar Hoover,” ABC News Closeup, June 3, 1982.

  270. Origin of Lifton’s theory: Lifton, 25–27, 80.

  271. Witnesses on casket a
nd sheet: Ibid., 775, 777, 786–787.

  Body bag, plain casket: Ibid., 746–747, 785, 794.

  Time of arrival: Ibid., 516, 604, 605, 728. “Had this been an ordinary case”: Ibid., 775.

  Elizabeth Loftus on memory: Rodgers, “The Malleable Memory of Eyewitnesses,” 32, 34.

  Lady Bird Johnson’s flight of stairs: Manchester, 236.

  271–272. O’Connor and body bag: Lifton, 747.

  272. Two other witnesses: Ibid., 794, 785.

  Lifton on sutured throat wound: Ibid., 755.

  Chief of surgery’s recollection: Ibid., 804, 810.

  272–273. On vertical thinking: de Bono, 7, 88.

  273. Other theories on backward movement: Kurtz, 102–103.

  273–274. Eddowes and assistants: Eddowes, x.

  274. Varying heights: Ibid., 211, 213, 214.

  Pic on Oswald’s appearance: Ibid., 36–37.

  “Switching” of fingerprints: Ibid., 139.

  275. Betrayal scenario: Morrow, 108, 124–127, 176–177, 200–233 passim.

  276. Morrow on motivations: Morrow, 127.

  276–277. Evidence Oswald at Cuban Embassy, November 9 letter: Summers, 372, 374–376, 398; WR, 304–305, 309–310.

  277. Man in movie theater: Anson, 38, 282, 353; Belin, 26, 35.

  277–278. Mrs. Troon’s story: Summers, 174–176.

  278–279. Army intelligence file: HACR, 282–286; Summers, 91–93, 305–306.

  280. National Research Council on shots: Science, October 8, 1982, 127–133.

  Assassinations Committee on possible conspirators: HACR, 108–109, 109 n. 4.

  281. Committee conclusions on Oswald’s guilt: Ibid., 40, 46–47, 53–54, 57–59.

  “Bewilderingly well framed”: Summers, 86.

  Commission on Zapruder film and rifle: WR, 96–117.

  Stretcher bullet tested: HACR, 37.

  282. Connally, Committee, and Mrs. Kennedy on first shot: IV, 132–133; Life, November 25, 1966, 48; HACR, 87; V, 180.

  Committee test of rifle: HACR, 89.

  Spectators see man or rifle in window: WR, 63–65, 143–147.

  Evidence bullets fired from Oswald’s rifle only: HACR, 37, 34–35, 42, 45.

  283. Grassy knoll witnesses: Lifton, 70–72.

  Ferrie’s background: HACH, X, 106–111, 127.

  Office at 544 Camp Street?: XX, 524–525 (letter); Epstein, Legend, 321 n. 8.

  284. Oswald in Clinton?: HACR, 142; HACH, IV, 485; Summers, 334–335.

  No training as electrician, HACH, XII, 400.

  285. Clinton incident seen as intelligence scheme: Summers, 336–337.

  286.

  Note 1: During his trial Ruby passed a note to his attorney, Joseph Tonahill, concerning his first lawyer, Tom Howard:

  Joe, you should know this. Tom Howard told me to say that I shot

  Oswald so that Caroline and Mrs. Kennedy wouldn’t have to come to

  Dallas to testify. OK? [HACR, 193]

  This would seem to prove that Ruby’s professed motive was a fabrication. But that isn’t so—Ruby gave this reason for his action in a statement to a Secret Service agent, Forrest Sorrels, shortly after his arrest, before he talked to Howard (XIX, 440; Blakey and Billings, 321, 324). What Ruby may have meant was that Howard had advised him to stick to that particular part of his statement and omit the other reasons he had mentioned.

  Ruby’s reactions: WR, 338, 344, 349.

  Opinion poll: Henderson and Summerlin, 202–205, 207, 216–217.

  287. Ruby’s background: WR, 779–806 passim.

  287–289. Ruby’s activities November 22–24: WR, 334–352; Kantor, 84–86, 105, 110; Henderson and Summerlin, 44.

  288. Weissman a conservative: WR, 295.

  289. Ruby’s expectations after arrest: Kantor, 157, 224.

  289–291. Ruby’s testimony: V, 181–212 passim.

  292. Ruby’s statements on conspiracy, tape recording, Dann’s remark: Meagher, 453, 452.

  CHAPTER 18. OSWALD’S GAME

  294. Oswald’s “love of fantasy,” radio program: Oswald, 46–47.

  Note 1: Oswald’s history resembles that of another American assassin, McKinley’s assailant, Leon Czolgosz. A self-taught radical with few personal relationships, Czolgosz tried unsuccessfully to join anarchist groups in Cleveland and Chicago. The anarchists were put off by his eagerness and suspected him of being a police agent. After being rejected by these groups, he shot McKinley. Before his execution Czolgosz said, “I killed the President because he was the enemy of the good working people.”

  Sources for other material in Chapter 18 have been cited in earlier chapters.

  Index

  Abel, Rudolf, 103

  Abt, John, 115, 247, 249, 251

  Accessories after the Fact (Meagher), 192

  Agitator, 148

  Air Force One, 241, 270

  Air Review, 86

  Alabama, University of, 146

  Albert Schweitzer College, 81

  Alphabetization Campaign, Cuban, 174

  Alpha 66, 136

  Alvarez, Luis, 273

  American Civil Liberties Union, 226–29, 251, 275

  AM/LASH, 181–83, 230, 243, 267

  Andrews, Dean, 177–78, 190

  Animal Farm (Orwell), 77

  Anson, Robert Sam, 277

  Argentina, 82

  Asia, Oswald’s concern about poverty in, 75

  assassins:

  political causes and, 65

  self-image of, 65–66

  Atsugi air base, 72

  Attwood, William, 182, 229

  Auchincloss, Janet, 263–64

  Azcue, Eusebio, 207, 210, 215, 219, 236, 276

  Ballen, Sam, 128

  Baltimore Sun, 88

  Banister, Guy, 283–85

  Batista, Fulgencio, 76

  Bay of Pigs invasion, 15, 87–88, 89, 90, 96, 119, 122, 136, 164

  Becker, Ernest, 79

  Becket, Thomas à, 91–92, 183

  Belin, David, 211

  Benbrook, Tex., 43

  Bergquist, Laura, 212–13, 218

  Berkshire Industrial Farm, 59

  Best Evidence (Lifton), 23–24, 270–72

  Bethesda Naval Hospital, 271

  Bethlehem Children’s Home, 42

  Oswald in, 43

  Betrayal (Morrow), 275–76

  Big Brothers, 59

  blacks:

  capitalism linked to hatred of, 37

  blacks (continued)

  Oswald’s identification with, 112

  Blakey, G. Robert, 267

  Block, Morris, 87

  Block, Robert E., 76

  Board of National Estimates (CIA), 91

  Bond, James, (character), 123, 148

  Bookhout, James, 245

  Booth, John Wilkes, 65

  Bouhe, George, 107–8, 109, 117, 121

  Bradlee, Ben, 229

  Brave New World (Huxley), 148

  Brewer, Johnny, 277

  Bringuier, Carlos, 164–67, 169, 170, 174–75, 192, 195–96, 199, 200, 201, 255, 284, 318 n. 2

  Bundy, McGeorge, 135, 182, 239

  Burgess, Guy, 86–87, 295

  Butler, Ed, 16, 17, 20, 174

  capitalism:

  Oswald’s mother seen as victim of, 37, 56

  Oswald’s renunciation of, 35, 56

  Castro, Fidel, 23, 29, 76, 119

  assassination plots against, 24–25, 87, 88, 90–92, 136, 198, 216

  Oswald’s support for, 16, 20, 25, 76–77, 96, 109, 140–41, 168–70, 171

  warning about assassination plots by, 22–24, 182–183, 184, 197, 202, 215, 216, 217, 226, 267, 293, 297

  Castro’s Cuba, Cuba’s Fidel (Lockwood), 218

  Catledge, Turner, 212

  Central Intelligence Agency (CIA), 86, 92, 138, 208–209, 212, 265–267

  Castro assassination plots and, 24–25, 88–89, 91, 92, 136, 216, 230

  Cuban sabotage and, 181–84

  Oswald’s def
ection and, 32

  returning defectors and, 106

  Snyder and, 31

  U.S.-Cuban relations and, 175

  Children’s Village, 59

  Church, Frank, 21, 88, 90, 137, 183, 194, 235

  Civil Air Patrol, 62–63

  Clark, Comer, 213–17, 218, 267

  Clark, Max, 118–19, 257

  Clearing the Air (Schorr), 211

  Clements, Manning C., 245–46

  Cline, Ray, 181

  Combest, Billy, 254

  Communist Manifesto (Marx and Engels), 63, 64

  Communist party, U.S.:

  Oswald and, 65, 169, 176–77

  Rosenbergs and, 54–55

  Connally, John, 101–2, 241–42, 281, 282

  Connally, Mrs. John, 271

  Conspiracy (Summers), 254

  Contreras, Oscar, 210, 322 n. 1

  Crafard, Larry, 288

  Crescent City Garage, 146–47

  Criminal Personality, The (Yochelson and Samenow), 66–68

  criminals, habitual:

  control sought by, 66–67

  fantasies of, 66

  manipulative personalities of, 67

  St. Elizabeths Hospital study of, 66–68, 295

  secrecy of, 66, 67

  self-centeredness of, 66–67

  Cuba, 82, 83

  Alpha 66 raid in, 136

  anti-Castro raids in, 163–66, 180–84

  Bay of Pigs invasion of, 15, 87–88, 89, 90, 96, 119, 122, 136, 164

  CIA role in, 88–89, 181–84

  Literacy Campaign in, 174

  missile crisis in, 119

  revolution in, 29, 76–77

  Soviets and, 119, 135

  “subversion airlift” to, 142, 143

  Cuban Revolutionary Junta (JURE), 186, 187, 191, 199

  Cuban Student Directorate (DRE), 163, 164–66, 196

  Dallas Morning News, 123, 124, 132, 233, 237, 287

  Dallas Times-Herald, 129, 137, 239, 283

  Daniel, Jean, 229–30, 238, 243

  Dann, Sol, 292

  Davis, Ben, 115, 145, 249

  de Bono, Edward, 272

  Delany, Judge, 50

  Delgado, Nelson, 74–75, 76–78, 81, 82, 142, 296

  de Mohrenschildt, George, 110–13, 118, 121, 124, 125, 128, 174, 202, 222, 263–65, 328 n. 1

  suicide of, 265

  before Warren Commission, 263

  Descartes, René, 67

  Diem, Ngo Dinh, 146, 221, 233

  Dominican Republic, 83 attempted coup in, 76

  Donovan, John E., 74, 75–76, 85

  DRE (Cuban Student Directorate), 163, 164–66, 196

  Dulles, Allen, 267

  Duran, Silvia, 206–8, 210, 236, 265–66, 276–77

 

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