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missed former Major General Edwin A. Walker last spring. … The story said Oswald scribbled a notebook entry with Walker's name and phone number. Investigators found the notebook in Oswald's room after his arrest in the Kennedy shooting. Officers recalled Walker had reported getting threatening calls before the bullet was fired at him.
Edwin A. Walker, 1909-1993, was a Major General in the United States Army. He graduated from the United States Military Academy at West Point in 1931, where he was a polo aficionado. During World War II, Walker commanded a special forces unit in the Italian Campaign, and later led an artillery unit in the Korean War.
15 sie 2002 · On June 12, 1961, Walker, a highly decorated combat veteran of World War II and Korea, was officially “admonished” by the commander in chief of the army in Europe, General Bruce C. Clarke, for teaching his strong anticommunist views to his troops. 1 In designing his “Pro-Blue” program for his troops, Walker borrowed elements of Birchite and othe...
Peter Adams’s The Insurrectionist is the first comprehensive biography of Major General Edwin A. Walker, a figure who, in the 1950s and 1960s, became a leader of a far-right political movement known for its elaborate conspiracy theories, authoritarianism, and uncompromising white supremacy.
I I - GL.G) Security, called to say that in the hearings before the special Subcommittee of the Preparedness Investigating Subcommittee, General Edwin Walker referred to CIA as being under the control of Walter Rostow since 1954. II said that Colonel Grogan has officially denied Walker's allegation.
The testimony of Maj. Gen. Edwin A. Walker was taken at 4:15 p.m., on July 23, 1964, in the office of the U.S. attorney, 301 Post Office Building, Bryan and Ervay Streets, Dallas, Tex., by Mr. Wesley J. Liebeler, assistant counsel of the President's Commission.
The testimony of Maj. Gen. Edwin A. Walker was taken at 4:15 p.m., on July 23, 1964, in the offlce of the U.S. attorney, 301 Post Office Building, Bryan and Ervay Streets, Dallas, Tex., by Mr. Wesley J. Liebeler, assistant counsel of the President’s Commission. Mr. LIEBELER.