(Testimony of Mrs. Lee Harvey Oswald Resumed)
Mrs. Oswald.
it. I know that the photograph of Walker's home which I saw showed a two-story house. But I don't recognize it from this view. I never saw the house itself at any time in my life.
Mr. Rankin.
Does Exhibit 2 for identification appear to be the picture that you described yesterday of the Walker house that you thought your husband had taken and put in his book?
Mrs. Oswald.
No. Perhaps this was in his notebook. But I don't remember this particular one.
The Chairman.
Mr. Rankin, do you want this in the record?
Mr. Rankin.
Mr. Chairman, she hasn't been able to identify that sufficiently.
Mrs. Oswald.
Excuse me. Perhaps there are some other photographs there that I might be able to recognize.
Mr. Rankin.
I will present some more to you, and possibly you can then pick out the Walker house.
Mrs. Oswald.
I know these photographs.
Mr. Rankin.
I now hand you a photograph which has been labeled Exhibit 4 for identification. I ask if you can identify the subject of that photograph, or those photographs.
Mrs. Oswald.
All of them?
Mr. Rankin.
Whichever ones you can.
Mrs. Oswald.
I know one shows Walker's house. Another is a photograph from Leningrad. P-3---this is probably New Orleans. P 4 Leningrad. It is a photograph showing the castle square in Leningrad.
Mr. Rankin.
Can you point out by number the photograph of the Walker house?
Mrs. Oswald.
P-2.
Mr. Rankin.
Do you know whether the photographs on Exhibit 4 for identification were part of your husband's photographs?
Mrs. Oswald.
Yes.
Mr. Rankin.
Mr. Chairman, I offer Exhibit 4 for identification in evidence.
The Chairman.
It may be admitted.
(The document referred to was marked Commission Exhibit 2, and received in evidence.)
Mr. Dulles.
What is being offered---the whole of it, or just P-2?
Mr. Rankin.
No, all of it--because she identified the others, too, as a part of the photographs that belonged to her husband. And she pointed out P-2 as being the Walker residence.
When did you first see this photograph of the Walker residence, P-2, in this Exhibit 2?
Mrs. Oswald.
After the Walker incident Lee showed it to me.
Mr. Rankin.
And how did you know it was a photograph of the Walker residence?
Mrs. Oswald.
He told me that.
Mr. Rankin.
I hand you Exhibit 3 for identification. I ask you if you can identify the photographs there.
Mrs. Oswald.
Yes, these are all our photographs. P-1 is Walker's house. P-4 and P-3 is a photograph showing me and a girlfriend of mine in Minsk, after a New Year's party, on the morning, on January 1. Before I was married. This was taken early in the morning, after we had stayed overnight in the suburbs. P-5 shows Paul--Pavel Golovachev. He is assembling a television set. He sent us this photograph. He is from Minsk. He worked in the same factory as Lee did.
Mr. Rankin.
Can you tell us which one is the picture of the Walker house on that exhibit?
Mrs. Oswald.
P-1.
Mr. Rankin.
And when did you first see that exhibit, P-1, of Exhibit 3?
Mrs. Oswald.
Together with the other one P-2 and P-6, I know that they are Lee's photographs, but I don't know what they depict.
Mr. Rankin.
Were you shown the P-1 photograph of that Exhibit 3 at the same time you were shown the other one that you have identified regarding the Walker house?
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