Those are my impressions. And I cannot imagine how anyone could possibly believe the nonsense fairytale you are trying to pass off.
Yawn!
Which bit of Mr. Norman's statement that "the floor construction guys" "
Didn’t work for the Book Depository" can you possibly be struggling with, Mr. Collins? These words all on their own rule out ALL Depository employees--------whether 401 Elm or warehouse. These men, who were
helped out on the floor-laying project by some Depository employees when business was slack, came in from outside.
He is explicitly asked in his 6FM interview to name some Depository employees who helped out
specifically on 11/22/63, and on the spot can only think of Mr. Givens. (Mr. Norman did not himself help out on 11/22/63.) He is however
then, immediately after this, explicitly asked to name one of the carpentry crew, and cannot name a single person, being able only to give a physical/personality description of one of these men. This again proves that he knows there were
two groups of men working on the floor-laying project: "carpenters" (outside team) + Depository men (helping out).
Now while Mr. Norman cannot speak with certainty to the question of who exactly was on six 11/22/63, his information that he, Mr. Williams & Mr. Jarman avoided the sixth floor for their lunch break because they had reason to expect it would be noisy, tells us a crucial fact: there were men on the sixth floor who were not expected to take their lunch hour at the same time as the Depository men. Such men cannot have been Depository employees---------they must have been members of the outside carpentry crew.