News
release
Public Information Office
SLU 10880 Hammond,
LA 70402 phone:
985-549-2341 fax:
985-549-2061
publicinfo@selu.edu
www.selu.edu/news
Contact: Christina
Chapple
Date: 11/4/03
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on image for publication quality photo
NOTE TO EDITORS: If you
would like to follow up on this press release, Dr. Kurtz will be available
for interviews through November 18. (He leaves on November 19 to participate
in a national conference on the JFK assassination in Pittsburgh.) His class
on the assassination meets on Tuesdays and Thursday at 9:30 a.m. Please
contact Christina Chapple or Rene
Abadie, Southeastern Public Information, 985-549-2341, to arrange an
interview.
HISTORIAN STILL FASCINATED
BY
“UNSOLVED MYSTERY” OF KENNEDY ASSASSINATION
HAMMOND -- Like all Baby Boomers,
Michael Kurtz remembers exactly where he was when President John F. Kennedy
was shot.
The future Southeastern Louisiana
University history professor and Kennedy assassination scholar was a graduate
student at the University of Tennessee on November 22, 1963. “I happened
to be sick that day and was in the university health center,” he recalled.
“They had the radio on....”
Kurtz shared the worldwide shock
at the gunning down of America’s vibrant young president. It was not until
several years later, however, during New Orleans District Attorney Jim
Garrison’s highly-controversial prosecution of businessman Clay Shaw for
conspiracy to assassinate Kennedy, that Kurtz began his career-long examination
of what he terms “the Crime of the Century.”
Forty years after Kennedy was
shot in Dallas, Kurtz, dean of graduate studies at Southeastern,
is the author of the 1993 book, “Crime of the Century: The Kennedy Assassination
from a Historian’s Perspective,” as well as articles on the subject in
journals such as “The Historian” and “Louisiana History.” For the past
30 years, he has taught a senior-level elective course on the assassination,
in addition to his many lectures, media interviews, and panel appearances
on the assassination. On previous assassination anniversaries, his expertise
has been tapped for retrospectives filmed by CBS’s “48 Hours” and Nova.
Kurtz currently is researching
and writing a new study of the assassination, “Conflict and Consensus in
the JFK Assassination Debates,” due to be published next year by the University
Press of Kansas. And on the November 22, 2003, he will participate in a
national academic conference on the assassination sponsored by the Cyril
H. Wecht Institute of Forensic Science and Law and the Duquesne University
School of Law in Pittsburgh.
When Garrison’s investigation
was headlining the news in 1967, “I just started reading books about the
assassination,” Kurtz said. “Practically everybody brought up what I considered
to be very important points criticizing the Warren Commission's conclusion
that Oswald did it all by himself. I started doing more research, and thought
this would be a very interesting topic for a historian to study.
“I didn't have a preconceived
opinion to begin with,” he said. “ I just wanted to find out, just as any
historian does with any topic, just what was the truth.”
On the first day of the course
that he teaches to approximately 40 students each fall, Kurtz flatly states
that he cannot -- nor, he maintains, can anyone -- authoritatively answer
“Who killed JFK?”
“When I started doing my research
in the late sixties and early seventies, it was already evident that a
lot of material was being covered up and that some material had already
been destroyed,” Kurtz said. “In the absence of complete documentation
you can't come up with a final answer.”
His research, however, has led
him to conclude that the assassination was a conspiracy and that more than
one gunman fired at the Kennedy motorcade that day in Dallas’s Dealey Plaza.
He also feels that Cuba and organized crime are the most likely culprits
behind the assassination.
Kurtz’s research includes primary
evidence in the National Archives, the Warren Commission volumes and report,
related CIA and FBI documents, the documents of the House Select Committee
on Assassinations, and personal interviews with subjects such as Dr. Robert
Shaw, the thoracic surgeon who operated on Texas Gov. John Connally, who
was also shot that infamous day.
“Dr. Shaw had been the chief
of thoracic surgery for the U.S. Army in Europe during World War
II, so he knew what he was talking about,” Kurtz said. “He stated very
emphatically that it was impossible for that single bullet to have gone
through Kennedy and then through Connally and to have caused all those
wounds.”
That kind of expert testimony,
examination of the famous Zapruder film in which Kurtz says that Kennedy’s
movements indicate a shot coming from the right front, the curiously intact
condition of the bullet that supposedly struck both Kennedy and Connally,
as well as “the fact that it's been covered up so much all these years,”
all spell conspiracy, Kurtz believes.
“If Oswald did it all by himself
as just a lone nut, there's no reason for national security or
anything else to cover up anything in the case. But there has been
a massive cover-up,” Kurtz said.
“Cuba and organized crime certainly are two of the biggest suspects,”
Kurtz said. “It's also quite possible that certain individuals connected
with the CIA, Secret Service, and FBI could have participated in a conspiracy
to kill Kennedy as well. There were certain individuals who participated
in many things, such as the CIA-Mafia assassination plots against Castro.
These people wanted desperately to cover up their actions and in so doing
helped to cover up what was going on with the assassination.”
“I think the polls have shown
over the years that the American people instinctively know that there's
been a cover up and that there must have been a conspiracy,” Kurtz said.
“The key question is who put them up to it.”
“I think I'm still very fascinated
by it because it's unsolved. It remains a mystery,” Kurtz said. |
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