07-12-2012, 10:37 AM
Checking the receipt, we did pay 37.50, which calculates to 12.50 per each of the three front-to-back readings, not to mention countless referrals.
For example, the illustration on 111 of Exhibit 10-12. Contents of Evidence Envelope. This photo of TWO shells is utilized by Barry Krusch in Part One of Impossible: The Case Against Lee Harvey Oswald. Two, not three, empty shells, making the lone gunman in the nest a blown hangout.
A fascinating conference with Twyman, Mantik and Ryan re Zapruder forgery.
A study of Ruby's activities culminating with the observation on 271:
We start with November 12 and 13 when Ruby met his old friend and racketeer, Al Gruber--mob killer--and another mob hit man, Paul R. Jones, in Dallas over a two-week period. The three hadn't been together since 1947, and Al Gruber hadn't had contact with Ruby for the preceding ten years.
During this same two-week period, Ruby phoned another mob hit man, Lennie Patrick, in Chicago. And on November 17, Ruby took a trip to Las Vegas where he met Lewis McWillie, yet another mob hit man and contact of Santo Trafficante, Jr., in Tampa, Florida. The relationship of Ruby and McWillie went back to the days when Trafficante ran gambling casinos in Cuba, before Castro took over.
So here we have Jack Ruby, in addition to his frenzy of telephone calls to Mafia figures all over the United States, having personal meetings with mob hit men shortly before the assassination of John Kennedy.
An excellent chart of Ruby's calls [size=12]on 251: associates of Trafficante, Hoffa, Giancana, Marcello, Cos[size=12]tello.
The book is a compendium undertaken with the clarity and thoroughness of an engineer, a joy to experience, a sorrow to complete.
Hen[size=12]ce the necessity to periodically do it all again.
[/SIZE][/SIZE][/SIZE]
For example, the illustration on 111 of Exhibit 10-12. Contents of Evidence Envelope. This photo of TWO shells is utilized by Barry Krusch in Part One of Impossible: The Case Against Lee Harvey Oswald. Two, not three, empty shells, making the lone gunman in the nest a blown hangout.
A fascinating conference with Twyman, Mantik and Ryan re Zapruder forgery.
A study of Ruby's activities culminating with the observation on 271:
We start with November 12 and 13 when Ruby met his old friend and racketeer, Al Gruber--mob killer--and another mob hit man, Paul R. Jones, in Dallas over a two-week period. The three hadn't been together since 1947, and Al Gruber hadn't had contact with Ruby for the preceding ten years.
During this same two-week period, Ruby phoned another mob hit man, Lennie Patrick, in Chicago. And on November 17, Ruby took a trip to Las Vegas where he met Lewis McWillie, yet another mob hit man and contact of Santo Trafficante, Jr., in Tampa, Florida. The relationship of Ruby and McWillie went back to the days when Trafficante ran gambling casinos in Cuba, before Castro took over.
So here we have Jack Ruby, in addition to his frenzy of telephone calls to Mafia figures all over the United States, having personal meetings with mob hit men shortly before the assassination of John Kennedy.
An excellent chart of Ruby's calls [size=12]on 251: associates of Trafficante, Hoffa, Giancana, Marcello, Cos[size=12]tello.
The book is a compendium undertaken with the clarity and thoroughness of an engineer, a joy to experience, a sorrow to complete.
Hen[size=12]ce the necessity to periodically do it all again.
[/SIZE][/SIZE][/SIZE]

