Your already cited evidence consists of a random photo pulled off the Internet of a library book with a "date due" slip, and several unsubstantiated claims and assumptions about what constitutes a "standard system".
Here is your original claim:
No evidence has been cited in this thread other than the Mosk memo and some conjecture and personal anecdotes.
First it was the entire thread:
No evidence has been cited in this thread other than the Mosk memo and some conjecture and personal anecdotes.Now you want to change it to
my evidence:
Your already cited evidence consists of a random photo pulled off the Internet of a library book with a "date due" slip, and several unsubstantiated claims and assumptions about what constitutes a "standard system".
The entire thread is full of relevant evidence. WC testimony, Texas history unit archives, unemployment records, stamped library book card, calendar, link to a discussion on another internet board regarding exactly how the old manual library systems worked (with many examples, none of which included the actual return date of books returned on or before the due dates). Here are some quotes from this thread that either include this evidence or a response that disagrees with your position and demonstrates how far out in left field you are.
That would be the same thing John---Jerry is correct...So it looks like this whole thread was a chase after wild fowl
Apparently...Oswald was a speed reader.
The memo says: "Card shows return date" rather than just "return date". A big difference. It means the "return date" is established from the "card." And that seems to further confirm Jerry O's theory that it means the due date and not the date actually returned. Another conspiracy myth busted.
It's interesting that Oswald read "The Huey Long Murder Case" by Hermann B. Deutsch. A case in which there are disputes over whether Long was killed by an assassin or accidentally shot by his own bodyguards.
LOL. Do you think Oswald returned every book that he checked out precisely two weeks later? A logical inference strongly suggests that this reflects the due date.
Evidence that has already been cited in this thread.
Additionally, here is a link for a thread on “The Straight Dope” regarding this type of library checkout system (before computerization). It includes descriptions from various locations. I have read the first 25 posts. All describe a system similar to what I have already indicated as typical. None of them have tracking of the actual return date.
https://boards.straightdope.com/sdmb/showthread.php?t=558711
Again, I challenge you to provide any evidence whatsoever of a public library system in operation in the U.S in 1963 that routinely recorded the actual return dates of books that were returned on or before the due dates. Unless you can, I am finished with this discussion. Period.