That's is a good book.
all I remember; One of the Oswald's worked for the doctor; New Orleans.
Nazi came up from South America to be treated at the Ochsner's hospital there; Ochsner had connection to Chicago?
The lady "Mary" of the title was murdered.
They had an electron acceleration hidden in a Tower where they bombarded the pathogens in the hope of creating a mutation.
They took monkeys with cancer, extracted pus or whatever from their tumors, Irradiated the material with this particle beam; then injected them into more monkeys.
Rumor at the time was the "killer" of patsy Oswald (did he really die or was it staged on a Soap Opera set?) 'Jack" Ruby / Rubeinstein of Chicago - kiddy porn dude connected with LBJ;
They claimed he was given cancer with one of these shots; others have declared Ruby was still alive for decades in Mexico. (The guy who sighted him had an unfortunate accident? So it appeared) . The school play part of it was they had Ruby say he wouldn't talk unless they took him to D.C. They never did. He supposedly died in custody. (why would the punish an accomplice; ? More likely they set him free in Mexico? Also strong rumors of that; as with Hitler in S. America)
Oswald worked as a gopher for that hospital, monkey experiments.
Man who wrote the book, was from New Orleans, his Dad was a doctor there; and by serendipity, Rented certain apts. saw and heard certain things, he came into the information. And much later, wrote it up in this book.
Always to be remembered. The journalist who got a "scoop" from her private interview with "Ruby" (She was able to influence the Judge, being a celebrity at the time' regular on a TV show) was murdered.
She believed she would gain $$$ and fame for revealing the conspiracy.
Fame"faggotry" can be lethal.
However, she should never be forgot.
She failed to understand how it works; as so many others, even today fail to catch what it is.
Psychopaths (and psychopathic behavior) are notoriously difficult for ordinary people ot spot.. It's quite alien to people with normal sensibilities.