第八章
Chapter VIII, fragment 7, which opens with residual Appendix XIV footnotes (A14‑67 through A14‑98) documenting Oswald’s finances and living arrangements in New Orleans, the Murret and Paine households, his unemployment compensation, unpaid rent, and resources for the Mexican trip, and then transitions into the full body of Appendix XV.
APPENDIX XV
Appendix XV, a lengthy series of citation footnotes (A15‑1 through A15‑296) reconstructing Oswald’s contacts with the U.S. Embassy in Moscow and the Soviet regime from late 1959 through 1962, covering his visa application, the October 1959 renunciation of U.S. citizenship, the State Department’s “lookout card” and passport review procedures, the legal authorities governing loss and restoration of nationality (12 U.S.C. § 1481, 22 CFR, Foreign Affairs Manual provisions, and case law such as Kent v. Dulles, Aptheker v. Secretary of State, Wong Kim Ark, and Fletes-Mora v. Rogers), Marina Oswald’s separate immigration file and visa processing, the INS operations and regulations on misrepresentation and excludability, repatriation loan procedures, and the constitutional and statutory framework governing passport denials, travel restrictions, and proclamations 2914, 2974, and 3004.
第八章
This appendix consists of an extensive sequence of numbered footnote citations and cross-references, running from entry A16-1 through A16-332, that accompany the text of Chapter VIII. The references draw heavily on Commission Exhibits (CE), deposition transcripts (DE), and hearing volumes (H), drawing testimony from a wide cast of witnesses including Hyman Rubenstein, Eva Grant, Sam Ruby, Earl Ruby, Eileen Kaminsky, Jack Ruby, Alice Nichols, C. Ray Hall, Ralph Paul, Andrew Armstrong Jr., Curtis Laverne Crafard, Thomas S. Palmer, Marjorie Richey, Joseph W. Johnson Jr., Nancy Powell, Kay Olsen, Joseph L. Peterson, Breck Wall, T.M. Hansen, William D. Crowe Jr., August M. Eberhardt, Stanley M. Kaufman, and Karen Carlin. Throughout the appendix, comparative citations (often introduced with “see,” “see also,” “cf.,” “but cf.,” or “e.g.”) link specific exhibits and testimony pages to assertions made in the surrounding chapter text, with internal cross-references directing the reader to earlier and later pages of the main work.
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