i need to remind folks, we need you to turn your cell phones off, not just put em on silent, but turn them off. there s a lot of radio interference in the area, and we want to make sure the recorderrings come out well. there are two cameras here, those are from c-span. the program is being recorded for c-span, and they ll broad this sometime probably within the next week or two. and our associate curator is recording, also, for our oral history program which now totals over 800 people. while we re chatting, the biographies of our guests will appear on the screens behind us, also some photographs. ones of the kennedys come from the national archives and white house photographers, and the photographs of the kennedys that you ll see in dallas come from the sixth floor museum s collections. let s see here. we ll also have a q&a session. many of you have filled out the forms already. you don t have a pencil or pen to write with, hold up your hand, and people will come around an
the reunion in dallas this last year that we had a chance to sit down and communicate about it from the emotional aspect. we all had our responsibilities or writing reports and so forth but emotionally, we never got it out. clint hill, when did you first talk about this? well, i had an interview with 60 minutes in 1975, but it didn t really go into depth at that time. and then i got another interview with 60 minutes in 1991 or so and then an interview with national geographic but i ve never ever gone into depths until i agreed to help jerry write this book. where did you start? i started when i retired which is a little over five and a half years ago. i went in to the private sector in 1964 and kept very busy during that period of time. i went to see the movie jfk and it was so absurd that i decided i was not going to read any more conspiracy tales. but i worked in the private sector, retired, and all of a sudden, i thought, you know, there is one issue that sti
that is what she did. alaskans are much more like that. they re much more a hands off when it comes to social issues than conservatives in the lower 48. there have got to be a couple more questions. will you send her a copy of the book tinactin you think she will be the? we don t really know where she lives. we could definitely drive to her house, but did have a street address. the answer from the people was e-mail. we didn t want to e-mail. i know it is in bookstores. it is available. the price of 27.95. 26.95. cheaper on amazon. i hope she reads it. i don t know if she will. .. i think maybe she s starting to a little bit. we ve seen in the health care debate she has immersed herself in that. it s unclear. right. that s true. but no you can tell that she is sort of maybe starting to recognize she needs to be perceived differently when it comes to policy. you notice if you sort of study her facebook pages of course every politician has someone their rights
family in my book, the father of tom chan fled china in terror after the revolution in the mid 1940 s. today, tom chan expens spends to months in china importing fireworks to america. steve roberts, author of from every end of the earth, thanks so much. history professor steven g gillon, chronicles the hours after the kennedy assassination and the transfer of the presidency topline done johnson. mr. gillon uses recently classified sources to chronicle the first 24 hours after the assassination. barnes & noble in new york city hosts the event. when you write a question like this, the first question that you have to answer is do we really need another book about the kennedy assassination, is there anything new to be said about the assassination of president kennedy, are there new materials that are that have suddenly become available, that have not been available for the past 46 years, that allow us to see these events in a different light and obviously, my answer to