- published: 07 May 2010
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Lee Harvey Oswald (October 18, 1939 – November 24, 1963) was an American sniper who assassinated President John F. Kennedy on November 22, 1963. According to five U.S. government investigations, Oswald shot and killed Kennedy as he traveled by motorcade through Dealey Plaza in the city of Dallas, Texas.
Oswald was a former U.S. Marine who defected to the Soviet Union in October 1959. He lived in the city of Minsk in Belarus until June 1962, at which time he returned to the United States. Oswald was initially arrested for the murder of police officer J. D. Tippit, who was killed on a Dallas street approximately 45 minutes after President Kennedy was shot. Oswald was later charged with the murder of President Kennedy; he denied shooting anybody, saying that he was a patsy. Two days later, while being transferred from police headquarters to the county jail, Oswald was shot and mortally wounded by Dallas nightclub owner Jack Ruby in full view of television cameras broadcasting live.
Veteran newscaster Dennis Daily dips into his audio archives and presents THE UPI MARCH, recorded in 1952 in honor of United Press International -- at one time, the largest news-gathering organization in the world. Dennis presents the march with overlays of the history of the company.
Pamela Hess, United Press International, Pentagon Beat Reporter Interviewed on March 24th, 2004 Transcript at http://echochamberproject.com/hess
Journalist Aline Mosby worked for United Press International (UPI) her entire career, In 1959, she became the first American woman correspondent posted in Moscow. There she met and interviewed Lee Harvey Oswald in November 1959. It was on Friday, November 13th, that Oswald granted reporter Aline Mosby an interview.
Tom Gauger and Sharon Gotkin are remembered in another set of clips from the old UPI Radio Network. The network (1958-1999) provided around-the-clock audio services, including hourly newscasts, sportscasts, business reports, actualities and even religion reports to hundreds of radio stations around the country.
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Footage of Lee Harvey Oswald's interview after being arrested for the shooting of JFK. www.crustysocks.com
The arrest of Lee Harvey Oswald. The hallways were swarming with reporters and cameramen as Oswald was being led from room to room at Dallas Police Headquarters. Oswalds anholdelse og gang i Dallas Police Department
Three months before he assassinated President John F. Kennedy, 23-year-old Lee Harvey Oswald was interviewed a total of three times on radio and television in New Orleans, Louisiana. The attention Oswald received was undoubtedly due to the fact that the media considered him to be a very odd and unusual character. Oswald had lived in Russia for three years at the height of the Cold War. This video, culled from NBC-TV's 11/22/63 coverage, includes Oswald's brief television appearance on New Orleans station WDSU-TV in August of 1963. Portions of this TV interview can be seen in various documentaries and films, but rarely is the entire (but brief) interview ever shown. This video contains Oswald's complete television interview.* * = At least this version is the most "complete" version I ha...
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Soon-to-be Presidential assassin Lee Harvey Oswald got a little bit of pre-assassination attention in his hometown of New Orleans, Louisiana, in the summer of 1963 when he was twice prominently featured on local New Orleans radio programs (three months before he took a rifle to work on November 22nd of that year and killed President John F. Kennedy). This video includes both of Oswald's appearances on New Orleans radio station WDSU. The first program took place on August 17, 1963. The second show was four days later, on August 21, 1963. Oswald handles himself pretty well during this pair of radio interviews, speaking quite intelligently on some of the political issues being discussed, which deal mainly with the United States' strained relations with Cuba and Oswald's involvement as the s...
Lee Harvey Oswald answers reporters' questions before his own assassination. From "The Assassination of President Kennedy."
Bookmark These http://www.jfkassassinationforum.com http://www.jfkassassinationgallery.com Marina Oswald Interviewed In 1963 Discussing Her Husband Lee Harvey Oswald & The JFK Assassination FAIR USE NOTICE: This video may contain copyrighted material. Such material is made available for educational purposes only. This constitutes a 'fair use' of any such copyrighted material as provided for in Title 17 U.S.C. section 107 of the US Copyright Law.
Interview that took place August 17th, 1963 regarding the Fair Play for Cuba Committee's New Orleans chapter, which Oswald was the secretary for. According to Stuckey himself, Oswald was the first person he heard who was able to defend Fidel Castro's political and economic policies rather well.
WDSU-TV interviews Lee Harvey Oswald in 1963 when he was living in New Orleans.
Later in the day, after driving into town with his two pet dogs and sending an emergency money order to one of his employees, Ruby walked to the nearby police headquarters, where he made his way to the basement via the Main Steet ramp. At 11:21 am CST — while authorities were escorting Oswald through the police basement to an armored car that was to take him to the nearby county jail — Ruby stepped out from a crowd of reporters and fired his .38 revolver into Oswald's abdomen, fatally wounding him. The shooting was broadcast live nationally, and millions of television viewers witnessed it. Author Norman Mailer, and others, have questioned why Ruby would have left his two beloved dogs in his car if he had planned on killing Oswald at police headquarters. The House Select Committee on Assas...
This video is about Planet of the Apes - UPI 1971
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Big Fish (2003) Movie' United Press International journalist Will Bloom and his French freelance photojournalist wife Josephine Bloom, who is pregnant with their first child, leave their Paris base to return to Will's hometown of Ashton, Alabama on the news that his father, Edward Bloom, stricken with cancer, will soon die, he being taken off chemotherapy treatment. Although connected indirectly through Will's mother/Edward's wife, Sandra Bloom, Will has been estranged from his father for three years since his and Josephine's wedding. Will's issue with his father is the fanciful tales Edward has told of his life all his life, not only to Will but the whole world. As a child when Edward was largely absent as a traveling salesman, Will believed those stories, but now realizes that he does ...
Helen Amelia Thomas was an American author and news service reporter, member of the White House press corps and opinion columnist. She worked for the United Press and post-1958 successor United Press International for 57 years, first as a correspondent, and later as White House bureau manager. She was a columnist for Hearst Newspapers from 2000 to 2010, writing on national affairs and the White House. She covered the administrations of eleven U.S. presidents—from the final years of the Eisenhower administration to the second year of the Obama administration. Thomas was the first female officer of the National Press Club, the first female member and president of the White House Correspondents' Association and the first female member of the Gridiron Club. She wrote six books; her last, with ...
Video Credits to RTVM WATCH: Press conference of President Rody Duterte, Davao City Press conference of President Rody Duterte, Aug 21, 2016 I do not want to insult you. But maybe, we have to separate from you. Pres. Rody Duterte to the United Nations (UN) De Lima’s ‘love affair’ with driver exposed SENATOR Leila de Lima is the latest subject of President Rodrigo Duterte’s ongoing shame campaign against government officials involved in illegal drugs, but unlike others whose names were just revealed to the public, the lady lawmaker’s private life was also exposed. Duterte denounced de Lima for having an affair with her married driver, who, the President claimed, collected money from illegal drug traders. “Here is an immoral woman flaunting … insofar as the wife of the driver is concerned,...
Lucinda Franks graduated from Vassar and then went to London where she got a job as a coffee girl at United Press International. She wrote news stories on her own time, visiting Northern Ireland when civil war broke out. At 22, she found herself dodging bullets and sending back stories to UPI headquarters, which later won several awards. She then was summoned to New York to investigate a new phenomenon; highly educated young people who had formed a revolutionary terrorist group called Weatherman. Franks entered the radical underground and traced the life of Diana Oughton, who had blown herself up making dynamite bombs in the cellar of a New York town house. The five part newspaper series won Franks and reporter Thomas Powers the Pulitzer Prize for national reporting. Franks was the first ...