From: JFK Lancer News <jfknews@jfklancer.com>Reply-To: 0016_ajafak-feedback-140@lb.bcentral.comTo: List Member <debra@jfklancer.com>Date: Saturday, February 23, 2002 10:23 AMSubject: Harold Weisberg Obituaries Mr. Harold Weisberg      As originally published on Saturday, February 23, 2002.      Mr. Harold Weisberg, 88, of Frederick, died Thursday, Feb. 21, at his home.      He was the husband of Lillian Stone Weisberg.      Born April 8, 1913, in Philadelphia, he was a son of the late Frederick and Sarah Spiegle Weisberg.      Mr. Weisberg was educated in public schools in Philadelphia and Wilmington, Del. He attended the University of Delaware and was conferred with a degree of doctor of humane letters from Hood College in 1993.      He was a renowned authority on the assassinations of John F. Kennedy and Martin Luther King Jr., and his seven books revealed many government inaccuracies in the assassinations. Hundreds of thousands of pages, papers and information obtained directly thorough various government agencies, and which formed the basis for his writings and conclusions, were given to Hood College in Frederick.      Mr. Weisberg worked in journalism with the Wilmington Morning News, and later the Philadelphia Ledger. He also worked as a Senate committee investigator, and served in the U.S. Army during World War II.      He and his wife lived in Hyattstown prior to moving to Frederick County where they raised poultry on the Coq d' Or Farm.      Mr. Weisberg was a gourmet cook, and he and Mrs. Weisberg won many honors throughout the Delmarva region and nationally. He was named National Barbecue King in 1959.      Surviving in addition to his wife are two sisters, Gloria Packer and husband Marvin of Philadelphia, and Alma Handelman of Delaware; and a number of nieces and nephews.      Mr. Weisberg was preceded in death by his stepfather, Harry Kety.      The family will receive friends from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m. Sunday, Feb. 24, at Keeney and Basford Funeral Home, 106 E. Church St., Frederick..      Funeral services will be held at 11 a.m. Monday, Feb. 25, at the funeral home. The Rev. Dr. W. Phillip Fogarty will officiate.      Interment will be in Resthaven Memorial Gardens, Frederick.      In lieu of flowers, the family requests memorial donations to Hood College, Harold Weisberg Archives, c/o Jan Samet, 401 Rosemont Ave., Frederick Md. 21701.      Copyright © 2002 Randall Family, LLC.Harold Weisberg; Denounced Warren Commission Findings By Adam BernsteinWashington Post Staff WriterSaturday, February 23, 2002; Page B06 Harold Weisberg, 88, a prolific author and persistent critic of the official report that found a lone gunman responsible for the death of President John F. Kennedy and who was often dubbed the dean of assassination researchers, died Feb. 21 at his home in Frederick. He had a kidney ailment and sepsis.Mr. Weisberg's career as the writer of about 10 published and roughly 35 unpublished books on the murders of Kennedy and the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. came last in a series of endeavors. He had been a journalist, a labor investigator for then-Progressive Party Sen. Robert M. La Follette Jr.. (Wis.), an investigator for a World War II spy agency, a State Department intelligence analyst and a prize-winning Montgomery County poultry farmer.In an obsession that kept him in financial hardship during the last 35 years, Mr. Weisberg collected in his home more than 250,000 government papers on the 1963 Kennedy assassination and scoured millions more at the National Archives. He produced one of the earliest books about the president's death, in 1965.Mr. Weisberg also became a leading authority on the 1968 King killing and was an investigator on behalf of James Earl Ray, who pleaded guilty to the crime but later recanted his story.Mr. Weisberg came to believe that neither Lee Harvey Oswald, the accused Kennedy gunman, nor Ray was responsible for the deaths of the prominent leaders. He focused on what he considered the inadequacies of the government investigations, specifically an improper probe of the available evidence. But for all his work, he never found definitive answers.He detested many other students of conspiracy, foremost filmmaker Oliver Stone, whose 1991 "JFK" spun out all kinds of theories about the president's death."To do a mishmash like this is out of love for the victim and respect for history?" Mr. Weisberg said to The Washington Post. "I think people who sell sex have more principle."In contrast, Mr. Weisberg presented information he gleaned from government investigative papers in an often dry manner -- even if that belied his cover tag lines promising "the end of the cover-up -- official lies exposed. Never such an investigation -- never such evidence!"His first literary success was a self-published work called "Whitewash: The Report on the Warren Report" (1965). After being turned down by several publishers, he publicized the book himself and sold more than 30,000 copies. Dell then published it and a follow up, "Whitewash II: The FBI-Secret Service Cover Up" (both 1966).Other books followed, including: "Oswald in New Orleans: Case of Conspiracy with the C.I.A." (Canyon Books, 1967); "Martin Luther King: The Assassination" (Carroll & Graf, 1993); and "Case Open: The Unanswered JFK Assassination Questions" (Carroll & Graf, 1994).Mr. Weisberg, a Philadelphia native, grew up in Wilmington, Del., the son of Russian Jewish immigrants. He attended the University of Delaware and then wrote articles for the Wilmington Morning News and the Sunday supplement of the Philadelphia Ledger.In the late 1930s, he worked for La Follette, who chaired a special Senate investigating committee commonly called the La Follette Civil Liberties Committee. Mr. Weisberg was sent to look at suspected labor-rights violations in Harlan County, Ky.During World War II, he served in the Army and the Office of Strategic Services. He joined State after the war but left in the late 1940s. He turned to farm life near Hyattsville with his wife, and they won prizes for their poultry. They also were early participants in a Peace Corps program called "Geese for Peace," in which the birds were shipped overseas to be raised in poverty-stricken countries. He turned to writing full-time after relinquishing farm life in the mid-1960s.By that time, Mr. Weisberg's fascination with the Kennedy death was solidified. In September 1964, the President's Commission on the Assassination of President John F. Kennedy -- called the Warren Commission -- concluded that Oswald was solely responsible for Kennedy's death.Immediately Mr. Weisberg set to work on "Whitewash." His examination of the report and its appendices showed what he considered "superficial and immature" research into the possibility of a conspiracy or a different assassin.Mr. Weisberg, friends said, had a photographic memory and a single-minded focus on his work that kept him occupied seven days a week. He once told The Post that he worried he would be judged long after his death as "a goddamn fool or Don Quixote."Survivors include his wife, Lillian Stone Weisberg, whom he married in 1939, of Frederick; and two sisters.© 2002 The Washington Post Company _______________________________________________________________________Powered by List BuilderTo unsubscribe follow the link:http://lb.bcentral.com/ex/manage/subscriberprefs?customerid=11480&subid=A8566CBECEFD9C05&msgnum=140