Do this:
Set Open Office or Microsoft Office to their default margin settings, and set the font on Times Roman 12 point (this is default on Open Office).
Now, open one of the memos in a window and type it word for word in your word processor.
Both word processors put the line breaks in exactly the same places that they do on the "original" memos that were supposedly typed over 30 years ago on a typewriter.
I saw a blog on another thread that showed one person's attempt to do this with Microsoft Office. Out of curiosity, I did the same thing with Open Office (www.openoffice.org)
The results were the same. I could type this in Open Office, print it out, run it through a copier or fax 10 times and give you a document that looks exactly like the one that CBS claims has been verified authentic by an expert.
If you don't believe it yet, the mainstream media is not your friend.
>>Both word processors put the line breaks in exactly the same places that they do on the "original" memos that were supposedly typed over 30 years ago on a typewriter.<<
In my opinion, this could seal the deal.
...that cinches it no friggen typewriter could make the same document,,,,another dead giveaway is the centered letterhead in the same font which is impossible to do on a typewriter.. They would have used preprinted letterhead back then also..