The vee in Oswald's t-shirt was homemade. It was not designed that way. He had the habit of tugging on it, stretching it down. Judyth Vary Baker said so, and so did his Marine buddy James Anthony Botelho.
So, the vee was a weakness, a deformity in the shirt.
When the shirt was pulled down in front, the damaged, weakened material surrendered to the downward pull and descended into a vee. But when the shirt was pulled down in back, it got pulled up in front. Think of it like a see-saw in which if one kids goes up the other kid must go down.
So, if the shirt was pulled down in back, it got pulled up in front, and that lessened the showing of the vee.
There was a wide range of fluctation, but the average look was about what we see on Doorman. There are some shots with deeper vees than Doorman's and there are some with less, but his was about average.
bpete thinks he can win on a technicality because it wasn't, technically, a v-neck t-shirt. But, that doesn't matter. It was Oswald's unique, homemade, hand-crafted, v-neck t-shirt.
Look below. Can you see the vee now, bpete?
It's OK that it didn't show like that ALL the time. It didn't have to show like that all the time. That's because we are only talking about a split-second of time- when he was standing in the doorway. The fact is that Oswald was the only one whose t-shirt displayed like that ANY of the time. Therefore, the match to Doorman could only be a match to him and not to anyone else. Lovelady's t-shirt never showed like that at all, not on November 22, and not to any other time, so the t-shirt on Doorman could not have been his.
There is a compelling conclusion here,: that Doorman's t-shirt was Oswald's.
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