HOUSE JFK INVESTIGA TION The Michigan Doily-Sunday, September 10, 1976-Page 5 CONTINUES v - - ._. - - Evidence backs Warren report WASHINGTON (AP) - Relying heavily on science, House investigators are answering some of the nagging questions about President John Kennedy's assassination. The answers so far point to a lone assassin. With a major portion of the scientific evidence in hand, the House assassination committee seems headed toward an endorsement of the major finding of the Warren Commission: there was no conspiracy. REP. LOUIS STOKES (D-Ohio), the committee's chairman, insists that members will reach no final judgment until all the evidence is in. But the bulk of the testimony in last week's hearings supported the Warren Commission's major findings. Some witnesses pointed out, however, that the commission probe 14 years ago was less than thorough, and some committee members showed with their questions that they cannot yet accept certain aspects of the official findings. A Stetson hat, for instance, bothers Rep. Harold Sawyer (R-Mich.). Time and again, he has asked how John Connally, then governor of Texas, could have held onto that hat after his wrist was supposedly shattered by a bullet as he rode with Kennedy. Scientists say Connally could have, but they can't prove to a mathematical certainty that he actually did. LIKE HIS committee colleagues, Sawyer is trained in law and politics, not physics, chemistry and anatomy. All have displayed the wrinkled brows of confusion as they tried to absorb the complex scientific evidence presented during the opening week of hearings. At sea with such subjects as neutron activation analyses and drag force formulas,- committee members fall back on "common sense" to interpret the meaning beneath the murky language. And that, suggested Rep. Richardson Preyer, (D-N.C.), is a pitfall to be avoided. AS SCIENTISTS testified that a single bullet could have passed through Kennedy's neck and then struck Connally, Preyer remarked that ''common sense tells us that no bullet can do anything like that. Yet common sense tells us the world is flat, and we know the world is round. This evidence impresses upon us the limits of common sense." Throughout the years since Kennedy was assassinated in Dallas on Nov. 22, 1963, the "common sense" of laymen has failed to settle the very real questions surrounding the commission's conclusion that Lee Harvey Oswald was the lone assassin. With Oswald murdered and with several other key figures in the case now dead, the committee is relying heavily on new tests in four scientific areas. PATHOLOGY AND ballistics findings were presented last week. Acoustics and photoanalytic results will be offered tomorrow and Tuesday. The key aspects of the studies described last week focus on "the single-bullet theory" - that one bullet passed through Kennedy's neck, then wounded Connally in the back, chest, wrist and thigh. The Warren Commission adopted this theory, though saying it could not prove it conclusively. The commission identified the missile that caused those wounds as a nearly intact bullet found on Connally's stretcher at the hospital where he was treated. SARCASTICALLY dubbing this the "magic bullet," skeptics say a single missile could not be so nearly whole after causing all these wounds. The scientists' answer: The bullet was fully jacketed in copper, hard and designed to stay whole upon striking flesh. The bullet struck nothing but soft flesh in Kennedy's neck. The entrance wound in Connally's back shows the bullet that struck him was undamaged. Bullets are damaged when they strike bone and Connally's rib was broken but that doesn't mean the bullet went through the rib; it could have only grazed it. The bullet exited Connally's chest and went on to hit his wrist. There, it clearly shattered a bone and left fragments, causing the only damage to the bullet. Then it lodged in the flesh of his thigh. That, at least, is the scientists' explanation. They buttress it with -sophisticated new tests matching the bullet found on the stretcher with the fragment taken from Connally's wrist; with a review of the Kennedy and Connally X-rays, enhanced through computer techniques not available 15 years ago, and with ballistics studies by independent analysts with no previous exposure to the Kennedy case. The single-bullet theory is an important facet of the conflusion that there was only one gunman. HOUSE OF IMPORTS ORMENTAL SOf 1 I WITH THIS COUPON TAPESTW; CLOTIIEH 8VRY SWALL A4N#S and let i IMoroi V0% OFF WITH THIS COUPON 320 E. Liberty 709- 0 i ---------- ----- I t AP roto Ballistics expert Monty Lutz displays the Mannlicher-Carcao rifle found in the Texas Schoolbook Depository after the assassination of President Kennedy. Lutz testified Friday before the House assassinations Committee. Nixon may travel to Europe this fall WASHINGTON (AP) - If the absence of welcome mats in some countries doesn't dissuade him, Richard Nixon this week will announce an around-the-world trip to begin at the end of the month. Although it would be a private undertaking, such a trip would return Nixon dramatically to the diplomatic stage he left when he resigned as President four years ago. CHINA, THE land of his greatest foreign policy achievement, and Western Europe are not on the ' proposed itinerary. But South Asia, Eastern Europe and Africa are. Some of Nixon's closest advisers are counseling him to stay home because . Australia is not the only country that views a visit by the former President as less than a boon - although the Australian government is the only one so far to make noise about it. Nixon's decision will be made early this week and probably announced while he is in New York to sign a contract for a book on foreign policy and balance of power relationships that he has said will "look to the future, rather than the past." ALTHOUGH he would visit countries that are important and strategic, a friend said, they are "not ones in which he might be considered meddling in foreign policy which is being carried out by the President." Thus, while he would go to Oman on the Arabian peninsula, Nixon would bypass neighboring Saudi Arabia. Egypt and Israel also would not be on the tour. The countries under consideration as stopping-off points include Iran, Romania, the Philippines, Singapore, Thailand and some in Africa. NIXON, 65, became a world traveler and steeped himself in foreign affairs while he was vice president. In the 1960s, during the eight years he was out of office, Nixon made trips out of the country annually. Now, as then, he plans courtesy calls on chiefs of state. His aides in San } Clemente went through long-standing invitations, then contacted various governments to feel out current attitudes. Many national leaders sent word they'd be pleased to see him, but there were some cool receptions. The most publicized rejection was that of the Australian government, which said a Nixon call on Prime Minister Malcolm Frazer would be inopportune, because of other official visits the next two months. DOWNTOWN ANN ARBOR 114 East Washington The best lunches and dinners of a very modest price. 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