Don,
Do you think that it's possible to close Jane's case? Or do you think that the evidence there is not sufficient to be able to do so conclusively? What I mean is, are we all just grasping at straws here or do you think that there might just be a possibility of solving this? Would it help if we try to contact Cambridge/Harvard police for more information/access to their files? I strongly suspect that the FBI has files on her case (given other circumstances that took place at Harvard at the same time as her murder) which might be available now given the time that has elapsed. Do you think that this is worth pursuing?
You've shared so much with us here that we would have never known had you not come on board and participated in our discussions! Are you resigned to the fact that this might never be solved or do you hold out hope that perhaps it might find a way to conclusion?
Oh
On another note - A few more questions
.
ETA - How long did you know Jane? How did you meet her? Was she well-liked? Who did she "hang around" with? How did you guys come to be neighbors?
I don't think it's possible unless the murderer is someone completely outside of the suspect universe. That's possible but I don't think it's likely. I would so much like to know what Lt. Joyce was thinking at the end of his career, and whether he was able to go to the person of interest and interview him, and what he thought if he had. I don't see any way to move forward, absent some way to have a look at LE files that are probably never released to the public.
I don't think that the FBI would have much. I can't remember any FBI talk at the time, and Jane wasn't involved with the SDS or any other group, no matter how much she might have been on board with the rent strike thing.
I think my wife and I became friends with Jane when she was a senior. The undergraduate concentrators and grad students mingled freely (not to say they were all friends) in the Peabody Museum's "smoking room," and even non-smokers hung out there. Even faculty were regularly there. It was an important gathering place. So that's where we would have met.
The thing to understand is that people -- men and women -- loved Jane. There's been a lot of talk about her academic talents, but she was also a fine musician. She was an excellent pianist and played the organ at my wedding. I remember going down to a little church on the Cape, where the wedding would be held, and she went into the organ loft and busted out Bach's Toccata BWV 540, on an organ she'd never played before. I can't hear that piece without thinking of her.
She had women friends that she was close to. I can't remember their names, but at least one of them is quoted in the various news accounts.
We came to be neighbors because we knew that the tenant in the studio apartment next to ours would be moving out, we told her, and she was able to get it. Apartments in the complex rarely went on the market, because typically they were handed on from person to person. The Bankoffs, for example, lived in the other apartment on the 4th floor, and they got the place in the same way (via me). Then when we went to the field an archaeology grad student took our place and when we got back, we took over the Bankoff's place, passed it on to my wife's sister . . . .
I am resigned to the fact that this isn't going to be solved. I'm not resigned to the fact that nothing more will ever emerge, though, but I really do feel strongly that the murderer is dead. I'd love to be wrong.