The People v. The Warren Report
Suggestions for Historians
by
Book Details
About the Book
This writing is by a latecomer to literature of the JFK assassination. It began as fascination with problems perceived in the methodology of the Warren Report, which he photocopied in 1995. Most troublesome was reconciliation of the single bullet theory with the phenomenon of common sense. Since 1997 that problem has generated an attempt to understand why defenders and critics of the Warren Report cannot persuade the American people to embrace differing conclusions and methodology. Convinced the twain shall not soon meet, this writing offers suggestions for future historians who will surely undertake to write history of the JFK assassination.
About the Author
Rodger A. Remington was born on November 30, 1929, in Marinette, Wisconsin, where he received his elementary and secondary education at Our Lady of Lourdes Parish School, then staffed by the School Sisters of Notre Dame. He attended Aquinas College in Grand Rapids, Michigan, where he received a bachelor degree in history in 1951. His education was interrupted by service in the United States Army between 1951-1953. Subsequently he received graduate degrees in history from Saint Louis University in 1961 and 1965. Presently he is ranked an emeritus professor of history at Aquinas since his retirement in 1997, following thirty-four years of faculty service.