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Ron Bulman

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  1. I looked earlier, found nothing other than the Four Died Trying piece. Surprising given his work on the MLKA and RFKA. An acknowledged author. Amazon.com: The Plot to Kill King: The Truth Behind the Assassination of Martin Luther King Jr.: 9781510729629: Pepper Esq., William F.: Books
  2. No, he was not, and did not. Your link did not work for me. Good chance he ate his cheese sandwich in the domino room, after getting a coke. Then wandered out front, with Shelly. Where he finished off the coke. Someone shot from the snipers nest. Quite possibly as a distraction for those below to look up and back (SSA's-Altgens) or a few to hear. Maybe they hit Connally, no one knows for sure. I've wondered if those shots were with the Mauser, if the Carcano was a prop, already planted before the assassination. Who, how did they get away?
  3. He's going down: Trump's prison fears rise as trial insider previews damning case | Watch (msn.com)
  4. Dr. Donald Miller. Oliver Stone. You were friends . . . you'd have dinner together? Yeah, we'd operated together a year or so . . . he would still categorically say I don't want to talk about the assassination. Then one night after operating together several hours in the lounge afterward over coffee I asked again about the neck wound. And this time he said it was an entrance wound, unquestionably and entrance wound. I took that admission as given in confidence. . . . But a year later in front of the HSCA, he once again reverted publicly like he did with the Warren Commission and said it was an exit wound. So I didn't say anything about what Malcom had told me until after he died in 2009. . . . I never saw Dr. Perry after 1978 . . . So he told you this on what date, what year was it? 1977. From JFK Revisited, pages 429-430. The HSCA was established in 1978. Why was Dr. Miller interested in the JFKA? Dr. Burkley. More tomorrow or the next day.
  5. Didn't he also do some work on the RFKA or maybe he represented Sirhan for a while?
  6. That's a good article Robert, thanks for posting it.
  7. April 2024 total solar eclipse viewing events: Parties, festivals and more | Space Plus one more golden oldie from yesterday.
  8. I've not read this thread. My post comes from one or two of three or four books in a couple of boxes to be disposed of under my desk. I don't remember the names of the books or authors at the moment. But they theorize those from another world thousands of years ago chose Egypt as the biggest wide open landing space of their liking on the planet. If I recall right, they offered as evidence USAF (and maybe USN?) pilots as well as astronauts commenting on the resemblance to a landing strip or field. Now I remember. I was drawn into this by Jim Marrs who I greatly respect for Crossfire, a seminal book for me. Then his Rule by Secrecy and Rise of the Fourth Reich were enlightening. Alien Agenda was a surprise. Alien Agenda: Marrs, Jim: 9780061096860: Amazon.com: Books I read a couple of more related books. Never could wrap my head around it convincingly.
  9. Pat, I respect your efforts over the years and your website is valuable, but I disagree over the throat wound, and it's never disappeared. Dr. Perry essentially stuck by his story over the years. He bent for the Warren Omission but then told others, with conviction that it was an entrance wound. Based on his experience of having frequently seen entrance and exit wounds as an emergency room surgeon multiple if not hundreds of times in the Dallas County hospital, as well as a hunter. He knew what he was talking about. He said it 3X in the press conference immediately after the assassination, his initial and the most trusted expert interpretation of the wound.
  10. Thanks to Alex for finding this in the first place and sharing it. Thanks to you Vince for finding his posting of it and sharing it to a wider audience on your you tube channel and here. Imho, it is truly of historic significance.
  11. The pyramids were built by their progeny to direct them to the safest landing area.
  12. I laughed out loud at this. From Fort Worth, where JFK spent his last night on this earth. Thousands view total solar eclipse from Fort Worth's Botanic Garden (msn.com) One more from the sound track at Tarleton yesterday.
  13. I watched the eclipse from the university football stadium in Stephenville Texas, with just a wag, 1000-2000 others. They had a split screen on the 66' X 22' video screen. 1/2 was a stream from 10 miles away at the schools Hunnewell ranch where their telescope is of the eclipse as it progressed. The other of it from other cities via NASA, in Mexico, Dallas, Little Rock and Russellville Arkansas. So, you could take a break from leaning back to watch it through your "viewers", my back still ached a bit afterwards. They also played an incredible song list relating to the moon, sun, space without repeating anything. Many I've not heard in a while. Waiting for the Sun by the Doors, Here Comes the Sun by the Beatles, Let the Sun Shine by Aquarius, Dancing in the Moonlight. Hot Dogs, Popcorn, Pretzels. A fun and festive mood with even a few people dancing to the music.
  14. I was trying to remember where I first read about Harold Dry-Hole Byrd. Crossfire? Nope. Maybe High Treason? No again. Some of it comes from The Radical Right and the Murder of John F. Kennedy by Harrison Livingstone, he's mentioned on 18 pages per the index. I first remember reading of him owning the TSBD and going on his first African safari the weeks before and after the JFKA. Then that he owned Ling Temco Vought aeronautics. Where my dad worked from the early through late 1950's. Somewhere in there I learned about him being a member of the Dallas Petroleum Club along with George Herbert Walker Bush, H L Hunt, Clint Murchison, George DE Mohrenschildt and others. Founder of the Civil Air Patrol, famous for a Ferrie - Oswald picture. For which he was honored (founding the CAP) by none other than his friend General Curtis LeMay. Last at the moment was him reportedly removing "the" sixth floor window to his home for a conversation piece.
  15. North Texas hotels, rental cars and Airbnbs are almost sold out ahead of eclipse, despite cloudy forecast (msn.com) Thousands camp around Texas for solar eclipse | wfaa.com
  16. Interesting numbers for this thread given it's content and time frame compared to others. Maybe I didn't follow it close enough.
  17. That's funny Cliff. Maybe enough to leave it up another day or two to see what turns up. The Gozo - Bozo thread, in honor of HST?
  18. It really is a big deal here. They are expecting traffic jams in a small town like ours (20K, 35 with the college). Hotel rates have tripled and quadrupled. Five different venues hosting events, plus one tonight at the University's Huneywell ranch outside town where the telescope is. They are hosting tomorrow also, opening up the football stadium as a place to view. In case of overcast skies they are streaming it in a live feed from NASA, plus beforehand showing an Eclipse Over Texas video on the giant screen. I feel sure there will be hot dogs, popcorn and maybe even beer available. I wonder if they will bring out the band and the cheerleaders, maybe a speech from the President and/or Dean of Science, who I used to work for as a Department Head. Free t-shirts while they last from the chamber of commerce and visitors center, as well as "viewers". Or, you can still order an official TSU Eclipse shirt from the book store for $27.99. I think I'll go, pending traffic, I do know a back way in. It sounds potentially like a carnival atmosphere. I wonder if the suites will be open, though not a good viewing spot if you're looking up. Might they be doing this? How to Sync Pink Floyd’s ‘The Dark Side of the Moon’ With the Solar Eclipse (msn.com)
  19. I'm in the dark Monday. My wife bought glasses so we can see the light, around the moon, without damaging our eyes. It's a big deal here. We're on the edge of total darkness. Lotsa people coming to observe from closer to the center, nationwide, world wide. I had to laugh in Wal-Mart today, at the T-shirts. NWS says we have a 50% chance of rain by 4:00 PM. A good chance it could be cloudy by I think it's currently 1:39. I hope to see a historical event but if not it's just another Stormy Monday I guess.
  20. I find these statistics fascinating. On each of the four days from Nov. 22 through Nov. 25, between 72% and 75% of respondents said they tuned in for a minimum of five hours of coverage. This was in the day of three channels of TV, no internet. I'm part of this. The only part I remember, the empty saddle and empty boots. John-John saluting. 81% of U.S. television homes had their sets on as the caisson carrying Kennedy’s body arrived at Arlington National Cemetery—the biggest audience of that four-day period, according to Nielsen—at 3 p.m. on Nov. 25. 50 years ago, America turned on the television | Pew Research Center
  21. After looking around a little, maybe the better last question is who was president of ABC News in 1963? In January it was still James Hagerty, since 1961. After that, Elmer Lower, who hired Peter Jennings among others. Hagerty was still a VP at ABC into the 1970's. He became the press secretary to Governor of New York Thomas E. Dewey in 1943, and handled Dewey's presidential campaigns in 1944 and in 1948.[2] He was in charge of candidate Eisenhower's press office in the 1952 campaign, leading to his appointment as Press Secretary in January 1953. He introduced television cameras to press conferences in 1955. He occasionally handled political assignments from Eisenhower, such as liaison with the Senate. Wikipedia. He was Ike's press secretary and apparently somewhat of a confidant/advisor in some respects? In such capacity might he have been aware of CIA interaction with the press, E.G. Operation Mockingbird? Maybe he knew Dulles? If Dulles and associates operating from his home on the Farm, monitoring all news that afternoon evening saw this how would they react? If say Dulles, Angleton, or Helms called Hagerty immediately and said kill this now and bury it . . . Speculation.
  22. I think Perry came in fairly early on Saturday, per a nurse's testimony or statement. She asked how he slept the night before because he looked a little haggard. He mentioned calls from Bethesda. ?
  23. Adrian Peterson omits this Hall of Famer among his top five NFL running backs of all time (msn.com)
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