Difference between revisions of "November 29"

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<noinclude>== Featured Article ==</noinclude>
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{{day
{{AOTD
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|yesterday= November 28
|title= Magic bullet
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|tomorrow= November 30
|image= CE399side.jpg
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|month= November
|imagewidth=
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}}
|more= (Click here to find out just ''how'' astounding)
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|summary= Today, in 1963, American President Lyndon B. Johnson established the  President's Commission on the Assassination of President Kennedy, known unofficially as the Warren Commission, to try and get to the bottom of just what had happened one week earlier in Dallas.  The most famous product of the commission would be what became known as the "magic bullet theory."  As actor Kevin Costner, portraying New Orleans D.A. Jim Garrison in the film "''JFK''," summed it up succinctly:
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[[File:blank.gif]]''"Never in the history of gunfire has there been a [[bullet]] this ridiculous."''
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Ever since the assassination of John F. Kennedy the question has lingered: how could just one bullet possibly traverse 15 layers of clothing, 7 layers of skin, approximately 15 inches of tissue and a necktie knot, remove 4 inches of rib, and shatter a radius bone?  Simply preposterous, right?
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A Discovery Channel special "''Unsolved History: JFK — Beyond the Magic Bullet''", attempted to replicate the conditions of that day. The participants set up blocks of [[ballistics gel]] with a substance similar to human bone inside. Next, two mannequin figures made of [[ballistic]] anatomical substances (animal skin, gelatin, and interior bone-analog cast) were set up in the exact relative position of JFK and Connally. A [[marksman]], from a distance equal to that of the sixth floor of the Book Depository building, fired the same [[rifle]] model found in the Book Depository, using a round from the same batch of "Western Case Cartridge Company" [[6.5x52 mm]] [[ammunition]] purchased with the surplus [[Carcano]] weapon in early 1963.
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The results were astounding.}}
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{| class="wikitable" width="100%"
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! style="background:#9BCD9B; border:1px solid green"| <div style="float:right"><small><nowiki>[</nowiki>[[November 29|more]]<nowiki>]</nowiki></small></div>What else happened today
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|style="background:#F0FFF0"|
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* [[1995]] &mdash; Canadian Senator [[Anne Cools]] (then a member of the Liberal Party) delivers her speech in the Upper House protesting the wholesale misinformation surrounding the Liberal government's faux justifications for [[Bill C-68]].
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|}<noinclude>
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==Today in pictures==
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<gallery>
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</gallery>
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===Picture of the day===
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{{POTD:November 29}}
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[[category:Dates]] [[category:AOTDs needed]]</noinclude>
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Latest revision as of 09:52, 26 November 2013

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Featured Article

CE399side.jpg
Today, in 1963, American President Lyndon B. Johnson established the President's Commission on the Assassination of President Kennedy, known unofficially as the Warren Commission, to try and get to the bottom of just what had happened one week earlier in Dallas. The most famous product of the commission would be what later became known as the "magic bullet theory." As actor Kevin Costner, portraying New Orleans D.A. Jim Garrison in the 1991 film "JFK," summed it up succinctly:

   "Never in the history of gunfire has there been a bullet this ridiculous."

Ever since the assassination of John F. Kennedy the question has lingered: how could just one bullet possibly traverse 15 layers of clothing, 7 layers of skin, approximately 15 inches of tissue and a necktie knot, remove 4 inches of rib, and shatter a radius bone? Simply preposterous, right?

A 2004 Discovery Channel special, "Unsolved History: JFK — Beyond the Magic Bullet", attempted to replicate the conditions of that day. The participants set up blocks of ballistics gel with a substance similar to human bone inside. Next, two mannequin figures made of ballistic anatomical substances (animal skin, gelatin, and interior bone-analog cast) were set up in the exact relative position of JFK and Connally. A marksman, from a distance equal to that of the sixth floor of the Book Depository building, fired the same rifle model found in the Book Depository, using a round from the same batch of "Western Case Cartridge Company" 6.5x52 mm ammunition purchased with the surplus Carcano weapon in early 1963.

The results were astounding.
(Click here to find out just how astounding)

On this day

[more]
What else happened today
  • 1995 — Canadian Senator Anne Cools (then a member of the Liberal Party) delivers her speech in the Upper House protesting the wholesale misinformation surrounding the Liberal government's faux justifications for Bill C-68.


Today in pictures

November 29/gallery

Featured Image Featured Video
November 29/image November 29/video
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