ill ' as sed tk, cent vote, ls Mtutioiia] b y a 68.81 ’as 1 76.59 pei > the bonj Passed l y No. dool fund^ 71.15 pe r uilt set a coj. eed to pay 'at his twt ? the tin, ■oil of f 0I . f of Stai d of theft k ago anl oated sob. iy back 1. much of eived, o a secre. had nevei itliff. ITT S nily 1SS fednesday, November 8, 1972 College Station, Texas Page 3 !' THE BATTALION New Inconsistencies Found In Warren Report EDITOR’S NOTE: This is Part II of a two-part article con cerning new inconsistencies found by Cyril Wecht of Duquesne Uni versity in the Warren Commis sion Report. The easiest way out was to match up the wound six inches below the shoulders in his back and the wound in his throat. “But you couldn’t very well have a bullet entering six inches below the neck, then make a sudden U- turn and exit out the throat,” said Wecht. “So they simply al tered the sketches that had pin pointed the wounds. I’ve seen the first sketches made of the wounds they showed a wound six inches below the shoulders. I’ve also seen the holes in Kennedy’s shirt and jacket and everything matches up. But in their testi mony for the Warren Commission the doctors simply moved the hole up several inches” to make every thing plausible. “Nobody chal lenged them. They said they hadn’t drawn the first sketches to scale but now they could remem ber where the wound was. Every other hole, scar, incision and mark was drawn in exactly. Only this hole was several inches off.” Wecht said that in December, 1966, he was allowed to view the Zapruder film of the assassina tion, which he did over 100 times in addition to examining blow ups of each frame. He said that using this film, the FBI was able to gauge the length of time be tween the first and last times the President was struck, which turned out to be six seconds. They also test-fired Lee Harvey Os wald’s rifle (a single-shot, bolt- action Manlicher Carcano) and found that the quickest it could be loaded and fired—never mind aimed—was 2.3 seconds. This presented a bit of a problem in that four bullets apparently were fired, and the length of time be tween them purportedly was six seconds. Yet it would take nearly seven seconds just to get off that many shots. The results indicated it was “an impossibility that one person could have done all the shooting.” Wecht said it was this contradic tion that led to the Commission’s “single” or “magic” bullet theory —which affirmed that one bullet “entered John Kennedy’s back and exited through his neck, went into Governor Connally’s right back (breaking a rib), exited from his right chest into his right wrist where it shattered a large bone, then went into his right thigh, only to be found later on the stretcher at Parkland Hos pital.” “Whatever needed to be done to correct their inconsistencies was done,” Wecht charged, “be cause no one else knew what was going on and it w a s not until years later that private investi gators had a chance to see the evidence.” Warren Commission exhibit number 399 is the bullet that was found on the stretcher at Park land Hospital. Wecht says his ex amination of the Archive X-rays shows particles of metal in Ken nedy’s chest and also in Connal ly’s chest—traces of the bullet that passed through them. This same bullet, according to the Warren Commission, was also supposed to have broken one of Connally’s ribs and shattered a bone in his wrist. The bullet is a 6.5 mm. shell with an original weight of 161 grams. Two more inconsistencies presented them selves, said Wecht, because the bullet found at Parkland has a weight of 159 grams: (1) According to the Commis sion’s report, the bullet lost only two grams of weight in passing through both Kennedy and Con- nally and leaving traces behind in both; (2) and after doing all this damage to both men, the bullet has “no deformities in its upper two-thirds at all and the bottom one-third shows only very mini mal flattening with no loss of substance.” In addition, one small section of the base of the bullet was re moved by the FBI for examina tion, which brings up the ques tion of how the bullet could have lost any substance in passing through the two men and still weigh 159 grams after the FBI sample was removed. Still another impossible conse quence of the Commission’s find ings was that the bullet was mov ing from right to left as it passed through Kennedy, then had to turn abruptly in mid-air and go into Connally’s right back (Con- nally was seated directly in front of Kennedy at the time). “Bul lets only do that in comic books,” said Wecht. “There is not one forensic pa thologist I have talked to who believes the Warren Commission findings,” Wecht said. “And without the single-bullet theory, the Warren Commission conclu sion of a lone assassin is de stroyed. The evidence clearly in dicates that at least more than one person was involved in the shooting.” Wecht claimed no special infor mation about who the other as sassin^) might be, but implicat ed Dallas Patrolman J. D. Tippet as part of the conspiracy. Ac cording to Wecht, 45 minutes after the assassination Tippet, “who was in a place he had no business being” (since all police had been ordered to Dealey Pla za), spotted Oswald walking down a street, “decided that he was the assassin,” and went after him—only to be himself killed. “J. D. Tippet was there to do a job that because of his failure, Jack Ruby had to complete two days later,” Wecht said. “By legal definition we’re deal ing with a conspiracy,” he said. And who is behind it all? Wecht points to members of the CIA. He said it is a well-known fact in Washington that Oswald had been on the payroll of the CIA up to the time of the assassina tion. “The CIA has pulled bloody, cut-throat operations all around the world,” he said, “yet no one wants to believe that it could happen here.” Wecht’s conclusions, as limited as they are, parallel former New Orleans District Attorney Jim Garrison’s conclusions. Garrison (with whom Wecht has conferred on the assassination investiga tion) claims that a group of rightwing CIA members along with members of the Cuban exile community and others plotted and carried out the assassination, believing that President Kennedy was beginning a leftward drift that threatened national security, and was also considering an eas ing of relations with Fidel Cas tro. Lee Harvey Oswald lived for 36 hours after the assassination. All that time he was being inter rogated by federal, state and lo cal authorities. Yet, said Wecht, we are told that not one note, tape recoi'ding, or transcript was made in all that 36 hours of in terrogation. Yet the Dallas police force was reputed at the time to be one of the most experienced in handling homicide cases. “Yet who listens to all this? complained Cyril Wecht. His vis it to the National Archives and his important findings resulted in a brief flurry of headlines around the country and little else. No one has come forth to challenge anything he has said, even his most damning indictments of the Warren Commission findings. Government policy seems to he to ignore the critics and hope they eventually go away. XEROX COPIES 5< EACH OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK 7 a. m. - XI p. m. MSC Main Desk CASA CHAPULTEPEC OPEN 11 A. M. TO 2 P. M. — 5 P. M. TO 9:30 P. M. 1315 COLLEGE AVENUE — PHONE 822-9872 SPECIALS GOOD WED., THURS- & FRI. Taco Dinner 99c 2 Tacos Fried Rice Fried Beans Guacamole Tostaditas Hot Sauce Enchilada Dinner 99c 3 Enchiladas Fried Rice Fried Beans Guacamole Tostaditas Hot Sauce We Accept Personal ized Checks and Bank- America- card Tamale Dinner 99c 2 Tamaleh Spanish Rice Fried Beans Chile Conquezo Tostaditas Hot Sauce Combination 99c Dinner Enchilada Tamale Spanish Rice Fried Beans Taco Guacamole Tostaditas Hot Sauce your BankAmericard Ufflxme faie. Corps To Visit Dallas For A&M-SMU Game American Dream Pursued By Blacks And Chicanos The Corps of Cadets will make its first Corps Trip of the year this weekend when the 2,650 members travel to the SMU game in Dallas. Activities in Dallas will begin Saturday at 9:30 a.m. with the Corps of Cadets parade. Corps units led by Col. Ronald Krna- vek, his staff and the Aggie Band will assemble on Market md Austin Sts. and the parade will move north on Main to Pearl and Elm Sts. to the dismissal area. Air Force Maj. Gen. William B. Campbell, commander of the Army-Air Force Exchange Serv ice headquartered in Dallas, will take unit salutes at the review ing stand on Main St. as the Corps passes. The Dallas A&M Club has sponsored a party Saturday night following the SMU-A&M football clash in the Cotton Bowl. Tickets are $10 per couple and can be purchased at the Student Pro grams Office and from class of ficers. The ticket includes live entertainment and set-ups. The after game party will be held in the Northpark Inn Ex hibit Center in Dallas. Cadet Corps headquarters for the weekend will be at the Sands Motel on North Buchner Blvd. At one time a major operation involving rail-transported cadets numbering more than 5,000, the Aggie Corps trip traces its be ginnings to before the turn of the century. Letters written by a freshman cadet from Wills Point in 1888-89 requested pa rental permission to leave cam pus for a group trip to Dallas and the state fair. Former A&M Board President L. F. Peterson of Fort Worth acquired the let ters for the TAMU Archives. A Corps Trip is also scheduled for the Texas game in Austin Thanksgiving Day. Young rural blacks and chi canes still follow the “american dream” of success even though most of them have poor chances of realizing it, according to Dr. William P. Kuvlesky, a rural so ciologist with the Prairie View A&M Texas Agricultural Experi ment Station. Current research clearly shows that most rural youth have high hopes of success and are willing to use education to realize them, Kuvlesky, also on the staff of the Department of Agricultural Eco nomics and Rural Sociology at A&M, recently told a national meeting of the Rural Education Association and American Associ ation of School Administrators in Philadelphia. “The aspirational frames of reference of most rural youth, including blacks and chicanos, look like portraits of contempo rary middleclass, urban life,” he said. Most rural youth want to move into or near a city and even more expect to. Most want and expect post-high education. Boys who once wanted to be farmers are turning to professional and technical jobs and the girls want to have small families and work after marriage. In trying to fulfill their hopes, many young rural blacks and chicanos turn away from their local communities to take their chances in the cities. Whether they do or do not leave, few real ize their high aspirations, Kuv lesky said. To combat the disadvantages rural youth have, Kuvlesky advo cates the development of a mas sively funded, high priority na tional policy aimed at serving rural youth’s educational and em ployment needs. He also believes that educators need to review the concept of for mal education and be flexible and broad in their view of educational programs. Educators should not be reluctant to use advanced tech nology, “open schools” and non school opportunities tkat have educational potential. One of the saddest lacks of cur rent schools is the failure to pro vide counseling and continuous assistance to the student for fig uring out his life ends and plan ning for them, Kuvlesky said. Evolving a “student-oriented,” rather than educator or commun ity oriented, framework for edu cation and school operations is necessary, he added. . BOTTLE CAPS and wire go together to make the traditional spurs worn by fresh men each year before the A&M-SMU football game. Members of Squadron Four were caught by photographer Kim Stroebel while putting the noisemakers together. PRIZES! PRIZES! PRIZES! LADIES, there’s going to be a Party at the Figure Salon— Everyone Is Invited! FANTASTIC FASHION UNDER $20.oo Washable Acrylic r Matching Pant and L Vest in Assorted mt Colors Sizes 8-18 $14.00 jJrPenny Pincher Q&everlep Q&ralep TOWNSHIRE FREE • Exercising • Refreshments • Prizes • Programs for all • Babysitters Guest Speakers: “'The Look of 73” Thursday, November 9th. 7:30 p.m. You can win a year’s membership to the salon or any of the $600 worth of free prizes. Come One, Come All! on 3710 EAST 29th 846-3794 How Sweet It Is! 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