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LARGE Moorman Drumscan ( Credit: Josiah Thompson ) Craig Lamson Version3086 viewsJosiah Thompson (The history behind the Drumscan)
'll try to explain. In the spring of 1967, I was done with my LIFE assignment and was putting together all the details that went into Six Seconds. Mary Moorman's photograph was extremely important since it showed the knoll at Z 315. I had done some research with AP and Wide World in New York concerning the negatives and prints of the photo that they had. But the original Polaroid was sitting in Dallas. I paid Mary Moorman for the use of her photo in Six Second. Part of the deal was that she would let a professional photographer come to her house and copy the Polaroid. I hired a professional photographer to do this. He went to her home and copied the Polaroid using a medium format camera where the negative itself is about the size of Moorman's Polaroid. It was that negative from forty-five years ago that I had scanned in San Francisco. The drum scan resulting may turn out to be the highest resolution copy of the Moorman photo extant since the Polaroid itself has deteriorated further with each passing decade.
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Hughes ( Heat damaged frame ) from film projector1577 views
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Bond Composite ( Street light pole alighnement from bond camera position ) ( Credit: R. Unger )2271 views
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CE 842: Small fragment of metal from wrist of Governor Connally. 1528 views
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CE 843: Two metal fragments removed from the President's head at the time of the autopsy1065 views
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Miller Funeral Home removing Lee Harvey Oswald's body from Parkland Hospital, 11/24/1963564 views
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Miller Funeral Home removing Lee Harvey Oswald's body from Parkland Hospital, 11/24/1963511 views
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Dealey Plaza Photo taken from helicopter 1963 ?1279 views
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Hughes GIF Lovelady raises his right arm to shield his eyes, as he leans forward from the shadow into the sunlight. 1508 viewsCredit: Gerda Dunckel
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Zapruder frames from JFK the movie1202 views
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Re-Enactment from JFK the movie1195 views
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http://www.baylor.edu/lib/poage/shaw/index.php?id=854952067 viewsFilm canisters of 35mm film taken of the surgery / Autopsy of Lee Harvey Oswald by Dr. Karl Dockery. The undeveloped film was in the possession of Jack Price until it was given to Gary Shaw in 2004. The film was subsequently developed.
Oswald Materials
Background
Around 9:00 a.m. on January 5, 2004, Gary Shaw received a call from Jack Price, Parkland Hospital administrator at the time President Kennedy was assassinated, asking if he could come visit.When he arrived, he gave nine rolls of undeveloped film to Shaw that had been taken during the Lee Harvey Oswald Surgery / autopsy at Parkland Hospital on November 24, 1963. The items listed here chronicle the development of the film after being in storage for forty years. Unfortunately, because of the time factor, most of the film was ruined. A few of the photos taken in surgery are shown here
Dr. Karl Dockery's film of Lee Harvey Oswald's surgery at Parkland Hospital on November 24, 1963 and the disposition of the film by Mr. C. J. Price, Parkland administrator.
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