CIA Domestic Intelligence Rev
Weisberg, an Office of Strategic Services officer during World War II, U.S. Senate staff member and investigative reporter, devoted 40 years of his life to researching and writing about the Kennedy and King assassinations. His first book, Whitewash: The Report on the Warren Report (1965), was the first critical study of the government's official version of what happened in Dallas on Nov. 22, 1963. Seven of the eight books Weisberg published after Whitewash were about the Kennedy assassination. Over time, Weisberg became recognized, both nationally and internationally, as the dean of writers critical of the official version of the JFK assassination known as the Warren Commission Report. Harold Weisberg donated the world's largest accessible private collection of government documents and public records relating to the assassination of President John F. Kennedy to Hood College and the Beneficial-Hodson Library at Hood College, which donated a copy to the National Security Internet Archive.
physical copy
More Books
Gazetteer of the Bombay Presidency
Book digitized by Google and uploaded to the Internet Archive by user tpb. 27 volumes in 35 : 25 cm Vol. 26 lacks general title Includes bibliographical references and indexes v. 1., pt. 1. History of GujaraΜt -- v. 1...
Dust In The Lion S Paw Autobiography 1939 1946
Dust In The Lion S Paw Autobiography 1939 1946 β Freya Stark
European Union law
cxiii, 946 pages : 26 cm "Written with exceptional clarity, European Union Law constitutes a classic textbook for students and practitioners of European law. Using a clear structural framework, it guides readers throu...
The Orthodox Word Magazin #1 to #105
The Orthodox Word Magazine Issues #1 to #105
Conserving and preserving library materials
207 p. ; 24 cm "Papers presented at the Allerton Park Institute, sponsored by University of Illinois, Graduate School of Library and Information Science, held November 15-18, 1981, Illini Union, Urbana, Illinois." Inc...
The theory of good and evil : a treatise on moral philosophy
v. 1. The moral criterion.--v. 2. The individual and the society. Man and the universe 26 27 31 36