Mr. JENNER.
Dr. Oliver, the nature of the inquiry enjoined upon the Commission in the
discharge of which it has been assiduously engaged is to determine the facts and
circumstances relating to the deaths of President John F. Kennedy and Lee
Harvey Oswald. There has come to the attention of the Commission and its staff
an article entitled, "Marxmanship in Dallas," of which we understand. you were
the author, published in two parts in American Opinion, a magazine published by
the John Birch Society, part I, in the February 1964 issue, pages 13 through 28,
and part II in the March 1964 issue, pages 65 through 78.
That article it is charged among other things that President Kennedy's
assassination was a part of a Communist plot engineered with the help of the
Central Intelligence Agency, that Lee Harvey Oswald was a Communist agent
trained in sabotage, terrorism, and guerrilla warfare, including accurate
shooting from ambush, in a school for international criminals near Minsk,
Russia, under order from Secretary of Defense Robert S. McNamara, the U.S. Army
began to rehearse for President Kennedy's funeral more than a week before the
funeral actually took place---
Mr. OLIVER.
Now, are we not confusing quite a number of things, here, Mr. Jenner?
Mr. JENNER.
Well, you may comment when I finish the statement, if you please.
Mr. OLIVER.
Very good.
Mr. JENNER.
That Lee Harvey Oswald was sent to Dallas where he tried to murder Gen.
Edwin A. Walker; that in November, Oswald was sent back from New Orleans, La, to
Dallas, Tex., where a job at a suitably located building had been arranged for
him and that something went wrong with the Communist conspiracy's plans, as a
result of which Oswald was apprehended and identified.
There has also come to the attention of the Commission various news items and
newspapers published in Washington, D.C., Illinois, Mississippi, Arizona, Texas,
Colorado, California, and other States, which contain reports of lectures and
speeches made by you from time to time, in which you have repeated, elaborated
upon, or added to the charges and claims made in your article in the American
Opinion which I have summarized.
The Commission is interested, among other things, in obtaining from you the
sources of, and the basis for, the foregoing charges and claims appearing in
your article and those reported in the news media as having been made by you in
lectures and speeches.
John, if you want that, there it is.
Mr. UNGER.
Thank you.
Mr. JENNER.
I wanted to give you the framework of the examination.
Mr. OLIVER.
May I point out that the article to which you originally referred contained
no reference to a rehearsal for the funeral, and certainly contained no
statement that the CIA had engineered the assassination.
Mr. JENNER.
What we will do. I will go into ,the article. I understand you brought
copies of it, and we can put the article in the record and it will speak for
itself.
Mr. OLIVER.
The entire article will be reproduced in the record?
Mr. JENNER.
I beg your pardon?
Mr. OLIVER.
Will the entire article be reproduced in the record?
Mr. JENNER.
Yes, sir.
Mr. OLIVER.
All right.
Mr. JENNER.
Have I stated your name accurately, that is, Revilo Pendleton Oliver.
Mr. OLIVER.
Yes.
Mr. JENNER.
You do reside at 710 West Ohio Street?
Mr. OLIVER.
701, simply Ohio Street there being no West.
Mr. JENNER.
You are a professional man. What is your profession, sir?
Mr. OLIVER.
I am a professor of classical philology in the University of Illinois.
Mr. JENNER.
You have held that position since when?
Mr. JENNER.
I held rank as a full professor, I believe, since 1953, it could be
1954.
Mr. JENNER.
You are the holder of a doctor of philosophy degree, are you not?
Mr. OLIVER.
That is right.
Mr. JENNER.
From what university, sir?
Mr. OLIVER.
The University of Illinois.
Mr. JENNER.
When did you receive your doctorate?
Mr. OLIVER.
To the best of my recollection, 1940.
Mr. JENNER.
Approximately?
Mr. OLIVER.
1940.
Mr. JENNER.
Have you resided in Urbana or in Champaign, at least in the university area,
from the time you became a member of the faculty of the University of Illinois
and a professor?
Mr. OLIVER.
Legally, I believe; yes.
Mr. JENNER.
Would you want to explain to me what you mean by "legally"?
Mr. OLIVER.
Well, I have lived elsewhere during that time; I have been abroad, and I
have lived in Washington, D.C., and in Virginia, but I maintained a legal
residence in Urbana.
Mr. JENNER.
These, I take it, were either special assignments, or vacations, or
sabbatical leaves to which you refer?
Mr. OLIVER.
Right, and let us say Urbana and/or Champaign, because during some of those
years I lived in the adjacent town of Champaign.
Mr. JENNER.
Yes. Urbana/Champaign, they are twin cities, and the university is located
in both cities, is that not correct?
Mr. OLIVER.
Between the two.
Mr. JENNER.
Between the two. Although their boundaries touch?
Mr. OLIVER.
Yes; in fact, their boundaries so touch they have a problem because cars
parked in one city would find the parking meters on the curb of the other
city.
Mr. JENNER.
Would you give me, but not in great elaboration, your career from your
college days. You received a master's degree, where did you receive that?
Mr. OLIVER.
Out at the University of Illinois, also.
Mr. JENNER.
Just tell us in summary.
Mr. OLIVER.
I took my doctoral degree at the University of Illinois, under Prof. William
Abbott Oldfather.
Mr. JENNER.
A very great man.
Mr. OLIVER.
A very distinguished man. I have been successively instructor, assistant
professor, associate professor, and professor of the classics, and I have also
been assistant professor, associate professor, and full professor of Spanish and
Italian--largely a matter of my giving courses in the Renaissance.
Mr. JENNER.
Do you teach Latin and Greek, too, or have you?
Mr. OLIVER.
Oh, that is classics.
Mr. JENNER.
I see. During the war did you have some special assignment militarily
oriented or Government oriented?
Mr. OLIVER.
Yes; during the war I was on leave from the university for service with the
War Department.
Mr. JENNER.
And without revealing any secrets, would you tell us the general nature of
that?
Mr. OLIVER.
The general nature of that was work that is supposedly secret in nature. I
can only say I was with the War Department and that the offices in which I
principally worked were located on Lee Boulevard in Arlington, and not in the
Pentagon.
Mr. JENNER.
Was this civilian oriented rather than army oriented?
Mr. OLIVER.
I was a civilian expert. It was, however, an Army Establishment under the
command of a general.
Mr. JENNER.
What was that, research work?
Mr. OLIVER.
Yes; under the command of a brigadier general, I should say.
Mr. JENNER.
This research work, did that involve any work of investigating or inquiring
into the commission of crimes or conspiracies, work of that nature?
Mr. OLIVER.
Not actual investigation on my part.
Mr. JENNER.
But
Mr. OLIVER.
It involved the use of the results of the investigations of others.
Mr. JENNER.
So that you had experience in examining investigators' reports and reaching
judgments from those reports?
Mr. OLIVER.
Yes.
Mr. JENNER.
And reporting your judgment to your superiors,
Mr. OLIVER.
That is right.
Mr. JENNER.
Are you a member of the John Birch Society?
Mr. OLIVER.
I am a member of the council of John Birch Society.
Mr. JENNER.
Would you explain to me what that is? I am frank to say to you
Mr. OLIVER.
The John Birch Society was founded by Mr. Robert Welch in Indianapolis,
Ind., in December 1958. Very shortly after its foundation a council was
organized. The council consists of persons whom the society regards as
prominent, and has approximately 30 members. The number fluctuates, of course as
a result of deaths, and so on. The council meets with Mr. Welch
periodically.
Mr. JENNER.
Is it in the nature of a board of managers or a board of governors of a bar
association? I am not trying to be technical, but just trying to get a notion of
what the council is.
Mr. OLIVER.
I am not sufficiently familiar with the board of governors of a bar
association but I think as a general analogy that would stand, yes.
Mr. JENNER.
That is all I wanted.
And you became a member in 1958, did you say?
Mr. OLIVER.
At the foundation.
Mr. JENNER.
And you have remained one ever since?
Mr. OLIVER.
Oh, yes.
Mr. JENNER.
Do you have any other official connection with the John Birch Society apart
from being a member of the society and of the council?
Mr. OLIVER.
No; I write for American Opinion. And I am associate editor of it, I
believe. American Opinion, by the way, is published by Robert Welch, Inc.
Mr. JENNER.
Explain that to me, if you please?
Mr. OLIVER.
Which is a corporation, some of the stock of which is held by the John Birch
Society.
Mr. JENNER.
Could I ask you one thing, Doctor?
Mr. OLIVER.
Yes, sir.
Mr. JENNER.
You tend, and many witnesses do, you tend to drop your voice about three
quarters of the way through a sentence. It. would be helpful to me if you could
keep it up a little.
Mr. OLIVER.
Very good. I didn't want to seem to be lecturing.
Mr. JENNER.
Don't worry about it.
I see you have before you what looks like a magazine with a colored cover. Does
that happen to be a copy of American Opinion?
Mr. OLIVER.
It is.
Mr. JENNER.
Would you mind if I looked at it?
Mr. OLIVER.
Not at all. That is the March issue of this year.
Mr. JENNER.
I take it that the document I have in my hand and the other that you have
before you contain part I and part II of the article to which I made reference
in my opening statement?
Mr. OLIVER.
That is right. Will these copies be returned to me?
Mr. JENNER.
Are these the only ones you have, sir?
Mr. OLIVER.
Those are my file copies.
Mr. JENNER.
May I say this to you, any witness who wants the return of his documents is
entitled to them- That is our practice. If we have to return them, we duplicate
them on a Xerox machine. Some of the material, like the pictures will not be as
clear as you will wish. Whereas if you permit us to retain the original copy,
then it win be photographed and .the photograph of the document in evidence will
be quite clear. It occurred to me if acceptable to you, that for purposes of
reproduction, the original is to be preferred. May I suggest that you probably
will so desire, can you not obtain official copies?
Mr. OLIVER.
I will take the chance of obtaining additional copies. The issues were sold
out.
Mr. JENNER.
I see.
Mr. OLIVER.
But perhaps I can find extras. So you may have those.
Mr. JENNER.
Thank you.
Mr. Reporter, I will mark the copy entitled "American Opinion, An Impartial
Review, March 1964," upon which appears the rubber stamp "R. P. Oliver, File
copy," as Oliver Exhibit No. 1.
(The document referred to was marked Oliver Exhibit No. 1 for identification.)
Excuse me. Whose picture is that on the cover page?
Mr. OLIVER.
Senator Thurmond's.
Mr. JENNER.
I mark the second document which is on its face, the February 1964 issue of
America Opinion, likewise stamped "File copy, R. P. Oliver" on which appears a
picture of General MacArthur.
(The document referred to was marked Oliver Exhibit No. 2 for identification )
Mr. JENNER.
I take it from the discussion we have had, Dr. Oliver, that in Oliver
Exhibit No. 1 appears part I.
Mr. OLIVER.
Part II.
Mr. JENNER.
Have I got them reversed?
Mr. OLIVER.
I thought of interrupting at the time you marked those exhibits, and then
thought perhaps I should not.
Mr. JENNER.
Well, I have got them marked so I will have to leave them that way.
In Oliver Exhibit No. 1, appears part II at pages 65 through 76 of your article
entitled "Marxmanship in Dallas," and that in volume 2 appears part I of the
same article at pages 13 through 28.
These two pamphlets, Doctor, are true and correct copies of the issues of
American Opinion of the dates that we have described?
Mr. OLIVER.
They are the printed copies, yes.
Mr. JENNER.
Now, I will refer to Exhibits i and 2 in which are contained the parts II
and I, respectively of your article. I want to ask you some questions as to the
sources of some of the statements made therein.
But before I do that, I will ask whether you are the author of the article?
Mr. OLIVER.
Yes, that is right.
Mr. JENNER.
Part I and part II.
Mr. OLIVER.
Right.
Mr. JENNER.
The picture representation in each of those issues is your picture?
Mr. OLIVER.
The picture of myself, yes. I may say I did not choose the other
photographs. That was the work of the editor.
Mr. JENNER.
I should say that the picture representation on page 13 of Exhibit 2, and
the picture representation on 65 is in each instance your picture?
Mr. OLIVER.
That is right.
Mr. JENNER.
I will asd you a general question first. If you want to particularize you
may. I will tell you that I will get into particulars as we go along. What was
the source, or what were the sources, if there was more than one source, of the
statements and claims made in your article. When I say 'your article' I mean
both parts, unless I distinguish.
Mr. OLIVER.
Statements which I make as statements of fact or of reports are taken very
largely, perhaps entirely, from printed sources, such as newspapers,
periodicals.
The portions in which I reason from those facts are, of course, the deductions
which I draw.
Mr. JENNER.
Do the articles indicate when you are reasoning and when you are referring
to sources?
Mr. OLIVER.
I believe so with at least reasonable clarity. It was my intention to make
that clear.
Mr. JENNER.
I take it then that none of the portions of the article is derived from any
personal source of information upon your part, that is personal knowledge as
distinguished from reference sources that you have described to me.
Mr. OLIVER.
Certainly nothing concerning the assassination is derived from any personal
knowledge of mine. I was not present, and as a matter of fact, have seen none of
the persons involved. By "seen," of course, I mean seen personally, not in
pictures or films.
Mr. JENNER.
All right.
I direct your attention to part I, on page 13. You make the statement, "Lee
Harvey Oswald was a young punk who defected to the Soviet taking with him the
operational codes of the Marine Corps and sufficient other secrets as a
fledgling traitor had been able to steal while in military service."
What is the source of your statement that Lee Harvey Oswald took with him or
even had the operational codes of the Marine Corps?
Mr. OLIVER.
The principal source certainly is a statement made by a former officer of
the Marine Corps and reported widely in the press at the time, that after
Oswald's defection the Marine Corps found it necessary to change all of their
operational codes, and further had to make certain other changes evidently
involving radar frequencies, and quite possible the location of radar
stations.
The officer, naturally, was not too explicit on that point. He stated, however,
that this work involved, I believe, many thousands of man-hours of work.
Well, I think that a reasonably inference is that no organization would expend
without reason the many thousands of man-hours of hard work and the other effort
and expensse that would be necessary to make those changes without good and
sufficient reasons to believe that their codes had been compromised.
Mr. JENNER.
I take it then that the source of your information, to pinpoint it, was a
newspaper report?
Mr. OLIVER.
That is right.
Mr. JENNER.
Of a statement made by an officer of the Marine Corps?
Mr. OLIVER.
That is right.
Mr. JENNER.
That was your sole source of information?
Mr. OLIVER.
To the best of my recolliction it was.
Mr. JENNER.
Do you happen to have a copy of that newspaper account? Did you bring one
with you by any chance?
Mr. OLIVER.
I believe that I have. You people have the American Eagle reprint of the
assassination story, do you not?
Mr. JENNER.
Would you describe that more definitely for the record?
Mr. OLIVER.
The American Eagle reprint is a reprint by photo offset of clippings from
the two Dallas newspapers and, I believe, possible two other sources.
Mr. JENNER.
May I interrupt you? Now I know what you are talking about.
Mr. OLIVER.
Yes.
Mr. JENNER.
It is published by the American Eagle Publishing Co.
Mr. OLIVER.
That is right.
Mr. JENNER.
Of which Robert A. Surrey is president?
Mr. OLIVER.
That is right.
Mr. JENNER.
Of Dallas, Tex.
Mr. OLIVER.
I believe he is president.
Mr. JENNER.
He has so testified. When you first mentioned this document it didn't click
with me, but now I recall. It is tail, newspaper-sized yellow covered--
Mr. OLIVER.
Document.
Mr. JENNER.
Document.
(Discussion off the record. )