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  1. 22 November 1963. The shot heard around the world. A beloved president dead. A nation crippled with grief. But for one Beverly Hills housewife and mother of five, it was a day that would become the catalyst for a mind-boggling journey into the shadowy world of lies, deception, cover-ups, conspiracy and murder.

  2. May 22, 2019 · The intricate structure that Josh Hartwell lays out for “Queen of Conspiracy” deserves applause. When Miners Alley artistic director Len Matheo tossed Hartwell the idea of writing about 1960s ...

  3. Jan 30, 2019 · One of the evening’s high points—and one of its most poignant—occurred when Brussell used “Bridge over Troubled Water” (Simon) to reflect on the impact of the death of her sister in a car accident. It was sung softly and tenderly, and when she got to the lyric, “When darkness comes/and pain is all around,” her drawing-out of the ...

  4. Jan 22, 2015 · 4851. For more than 25 years, Mae Brussell (1922-1988) was America’s preeminent researcher into the suppressed history of political assassinations, covert operations, mind control, secret societies, organized banking crime and international fascism. When I first learned of her work in 1992, Brussell had already been dead for four years.

  5. Jun 21, 2018 · He opened up the whole field of sex as being as normal as the air you breathe. — “The Ballad of Mae Brussell,” by Paul Krassner, High Times, September 1991. ♠ I guess my most far-out idea is that Hitler is alive. — “The World According to Mae,” by Jill Wolfson, San Jose Mercury, March 28, 1982. ♣ (High School teachers) will take ...

  6. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Mae_BrussellMae Brussell - Wikipedia

    Mae Magnin Brussell (May 29, 1922 – October 3, 1988) was an American radio personality and conspiracy theorist. She was the host of Dialogue: Conspiracy (later renamed World Watchers International ).

  7. Oct 15, 2014 · Mae Brussell was born May 29, 1922, in Beverly Hills, her father Rabbi Edgar Magnin of the Wilshire Boulevard Temple, the man who blessed President Richard Nixon at the White House.

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