Livingstone Harrison Edward
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.
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The New Testament in the original Greek
The New Testament in the original Greek — Westcott, Brooke Foss, 1825-1901, ed, Hort, Fenton John Anthony, 1828-1892, joint ed, Schaff, Philip, 1819-1893
Congressman McFadden on the Federal Reserve Corporation
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International Catalogue of Scientific Literature
Book digitized by Google from the library of Harvard University and uploaded to the Internet Archive by user tpb.
FSI - Saudi Arabic Basic Course - Urban Hijazi Dialect - Student Text
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The Modern Construction of Myth
Andrew Von Hendy offers an integrated critical account of the career of myth in modernity. He takes as its starting point some crucial moments in the 18th-century reinvention of the concept and then follows the major ...
Rupert Sheldrake
Attached are some papers related to Rupert Sheldrake, a current target of defamation, famous for his hypothesis of morphic resonance, which he describes as "a process whereby self-organising systems inherit a memory f...