By Thomas A. Bass, at Mekong Review
By Kevin G. Hall, at McClatchy DC Bureau
By Jefferson Morley, at Newsweek
By John Greenewald, at The Black Vault
Martin Hay scrutinizes the responses to his critical review of The Awful Grace of God which the authors have incorporated into their second book, written to bolster their original thesis concerning Ray and the King assassination.
Mike Vinson contributed this interesting article about how Jerry Ray, James Earl Ray's brother, has been attempting to gain possession of the alleged murder weapon in order to do legitimate testing on the rifle. Ray is convinced a genuine test would clear his brother's name in terms of the shooting of Martin Luther King.
The history of the Vietnam War is invariably delineated by historians as a continuum of escalating involvement from the administrations of Eisenhower through Nixon. This essay by Prof. Norwood challenges that notion by demonstrating how the vision of John F. Kennedy was consistently and vehemently opposed to conventional warfare there.
Was the hero of Jim Douglass' book murdered in 1968?
Read the review of Hugh Turley & David Martin, The Martyrdom of Thomas Merton, by Edward Curtin
Interview of Rex Bradford, with Jeff Schechtman, for WhoWhatWhy
In this dense and expertly synthesized review, Jim DiEugenio shows how more recent evidence has caused our understanding of the Tippit murder and its relationship to the assassination to evolve.
By Alanna Durkin Richer, Associated Press, at: The Detroit News
Read the press release at: The National Archives
If the bullet wound in John Kennedy’s throat was an entrance, then of course the shot came from the front. But that small hole in the skin, when viewed in relation to the neck’s internal damage, can tell you even more about where that shot came from, writes Milicent Cranor.
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