Hi Dan ....Your absence has been noticed. There will be a note sent home about your failure to attend regularly if it happens again.
Summer is my busy time.
The WC narrative has Oswald wiping the prints off the rifle (amazingly there are no prints on the shells, not even Fritz's after he picked them up), he walks the entire length of the 6th floor with the rifle before placing it in a pre-constructed hiding place but leaves the shells just lying there!!
What is the thought process behind this? Some parts seem thought through, some don't.
He gets a Coke from the second floor lunchroom and then decides to leave the TSBD!!
Is he in a rush or not?
Any credible evidence regarding who was on the 6th floor just before, during and after the assassination rules Oswald out.
A lot of these niggling little things disappear when it is accepted Oswald is not the shooter.
And why is Oswald in such a rush? Why make himself so conspicuous?
Why rush across the 6th floor, rush down the stairs, then rush into the second floor lunchroom
and buy a Coke?? and then come out strolling, pass Mrs Reid [no longer in a rush], then saunter outside!!
Obviously, LNers have to have him rushing because of the encounter in the second floor lunchroom.
The problem is, it would appear the real assassin wasn't in any rush at any point. According to Howard Brennan [Eyewitness to History]:
"My first instinct was to look back up to that man on the sixth floor... By now the motorcade was beginning to speed up and in only a couple of seconds the President's car had disappeared under the triple underpass. To my amazement the man still stood there in the window! He didn't appear to be rushed. There was no particular emotion visible on his face except for a slight smirk. It was a look of satisfaction, as if he had accomplished what he had set out to do."In a way, this lack of rushing is corroborated by the testimony of Harold Norman, situated directly below the assassin, he hears the bolt being operated, hears the shells hitting the floor, but does not hear anyone rushing away from the area directly above him. Anyone moving quickly on the wooden floor a couple of feet above Norman's head would easily have been heard.
Once it is realised Oswald was not the assassin, all of this goes away. along with many other troublesome pieces of evidence that rule out LNer narrative of Oswald as the shooter.