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Top Floor Magazine November 2020 Top Floor Magazine Download

The document provides information about the November 2020 issue of Top Floor Magazine, featuring various models and articles related to the entertainment and adult industry. It includes links to download the magazine and other related issues, as well as a brief overview of the magazine's content, including celebrity shout-outs and pictorials. Additionally, there are disclaimers regarding copyright and the age of individuals featured in the magazine.

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100% found this document useful (4 votes)
436 views35 pages

Top Floor Magazine November 2020 Top Floor Magazine Download

The document provides information about the November 2020 issue of Top Floor Magazine, featuring various models and articles related to the entertainment and adult industry. It includes links to download the magazine and other related issues, as well as a brief overview of the magazine's content, including celebrity shout-outs and pictorials. Additionally, there are disclaimers regarding copyright and the age of individuals featured in the magazine.

Uploaded by

freezyilion
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Magazine

Cover Girl

Miss
Lexi
Makes Her
TFM debut
in
a sexy
Pictorial

November 2020
The players
Jeff Pobst
Learning the ropes from the film era
he tries to embrace the digital age
and technology to create the best
photographs he can.
IG: @jeffpobst

v
V Photography
Published 250+ times featuring
pinup/retro, fetish and bondage
photography.

Honey West
She was born in Hollywood,
california for real! yes,
Hollywood is a real place!), and
Grew up closely following the
entertainment world and the sexy,
wild people in it. she's had a blast
interviewing performers in the
adult industry, covering news,
writing reviews and much more.
General Offices: 7551 Ladywell Ct Worthington, Ohio 43085 Top Floor Magazine assumes no responsibility to return
unsolicited editorial, graphic or other material. All rights in letter and unsolicited editorial and graphic material will be
treated as unconditionally assigned for publication and copyright purposes and material will be subject to Top Floor
Magazine’s unrestricted right to edit and comment editorially. All persons were 18 years of age or older at the time of
creation of content. Records required by 2257 title 18 are maintained by the publisher at 7551 Ladywell Ct Worthington,
Ohio 43085. Top Floor Magazine and the TFM logo are marks of Top Floor Magazine. No part of this book may be
reproduced, stored in a retrieval system or transmitted in any form by any electronic, mechanical, photocopying or
recording means or otherwise without prior written permission of the Publisher. Any similarity between the people and
places in the fiction and semi-fiction in this publication and any real people and places is purely coincidental. For credits,
see the back inside page of this publication. Published in U.S.A
Contents
19 Stream it

20 The Y Factor

21 TFM Headliner

28 bye don

37 Jokes

38 Sexual Astrology

Pictorials

Model of the Month

6
GiGi

12 On the cover
22

Miss Lexxi Sixties


Meg
4 Celebrity Shout Outs

6 Model of the Month


31
Versus & Past Playmates
9
Eliza
10 Honey West Retro
Tyler
18 Rent it
Celebrity ShoutOuts
They say it’s leaked or Paparazzi - We say it Publicity!

Brazilian mixed
martial artist
Miley Cyrus is up Claudia Gadelha
to her extremely allowed the ocean
casual antics - I’m to kick both of her
not even sure how tits out in this
that nipple slipped shot!
out but it’s fucking
there for everyone And the winner
in NYC and STILL
champion…
WATER!!!

Photo of the Month


Lauren Goodger

Finally! We have been waiting for If you think


Christina Milian to show something. We were so fucking this is hot you
tired of Milian in a short skirt or Christina with pokies. I should watch
say finally…finally a nipple. It’s about fucking time! her blowjob
video on
Pornhub!
Another Random Scribd Document
with Unrelated Content
The Chairman. Do you have a headquarters?
Mr. Surrey. No, sir.
The Chairman. Do you have a telephone?
Mr. Surrey. No, sir.
The Chairman. Are you listed with the local authorities under a
fictitious or assumed name?
Mr. Surrey. Yes—doing business as?
The Chairman. Doing business as, yes.
Mr. Surrey. Yes.
The Chairman. And the names given are yourself and General
Walker?
Mr. Surrey. Yes, sir.
The Chairman. Where is that filed—with your county clerk?
Mr. Surrey. County clerk in Dallas.
Mr. Jenner. We have talked about General Walker. That is General
Edwin A. Walker, now resigned?
Mr. Surrey. Yes, sir.
Mr. Jenner. And do you know a Robert G. Krause?
Mr. Surrey. I refuse to answer on the grounds the answer may
tend to incriminate me.
Mr. Jenner. Was he not formerly employed by Johnson Printing
Co.?
Mr. Surrey. I refuse to answer for the same reason.
Representative Boggs. Excuse me. Mr. Chief Justice—we will have
testimony from Mr. Krause, I presume?
Mr. Jenner. Yes; do you know of a company, a printing company,
Lettercraft Printing Co.?
Mr. Surrey. I refuse to answer—same reason.
The Chairman. For the reason it would tend to incriminate you?
Mr. Surrey. Yes, sir.
Mr. Jenner. Did you not prepare the copy for Commission Exhibit
No. 996?
Mr. Surrey. I decline to answer on the same reason; that it would
tend to incriminate me.
Mr. Jenner. And, in turn, turn that copy over to Robert G. Krause,
of the Lettercraft Printing Co. for reproduction?
Mr. Surrey. I decline to answer, same reason.
(The document referred to was marked Commission Exhibit No.
996 for identification.)
Mr. Jenner. Exhibiting again Exhibit No.—Commission Exhibit No.
996 to you, you will notice a front and profile view of President
Kennedy. Did you bring to Robert Krause photographs of which this
is a reproduction?
Mr. Surrey. I decline to answer on the grounds it may incriminate
me.
Mr. Jenner. In fact, did you not bring to Robert G. Krause two
slick paper magazine photographs of President Kennedy and request
and engage him to make photographs of the slick paper magazine
photos for the purpose of reproduction?
Mr. Surrey. I decline to answer; same reason.
Mr. Jenner. And did you not pay Robert G. Krause and his wife for
printing some 5,000 to 10,000 of these handbills, of which
Commission Exhibit No. 996 is a copy?
Mr. Surrey. I decline to answer on the grounds it may incriminate
me.
Mr. Jenner. Did you thereafter—did you not in fact thereafter,
yourself—well, I will ask you first—yourself, distribute duplicates of
Exhibit No. 996 in and about the streets of Dallas, Tex., on
November 22 and days preceding?
Mr. Surrey. Point of order. Can I ask a question? If I now answer
one or two in through here, does this——
The Chairman. Well, this is connected with the entire situation—
the publication, the distribution of it is one and the same subject
matter, I would think.
Mr. Surrey. I decline to answer on the grounds it may incriminate
me.
Mr. Jenner. Mr. Chief Justice, I might bring this out. Having
received the rules and regulations of the Commission with respect to
the taking of testimony, you are aware of the fact that you are
entitled to have counsel present?
Mr. Surrey. Yes; I am, sir.
Mr. Jenner. And you appear without counsel?
Mr. Surrey. I cannot afford to bring counsel.
Mr. Jenner. But you do appear without counsel?
Mr. Surrey. Yes; I do.
Representative Boggs. I think, Mr. Chief Justice, the record
should show if this man requested counsel he would be entitled to
counsel, would he not?
Mr. Jenner. He certainly would. And he has not requested it.
Representative Boggs. I just want the record to show that.
The Chairman. Yes.
Senator Cooper. Did you request counsel?
Mr. Surrey. From whom, sir?
Senator Cooper. Did you request the Commission to appoint
counsel for you?
Mr. Surrey. No; I did not. I did not know this was available.
Representative Boggs. I might say it is still available.
Mr. Surrey. Would this be a court-appointed?
The Chairman. Beg pardon?
Mr. Surrey. Would this be a court-appointed attorney?
The Chairman. No; it would be an attorney appointed by the
Commission.
Mr. Surrey. Thank you.
The Chairman. Proceed, Mr. Jenner.
Representative Boggs. You prefer not to have an attorney
appointed by the Commission?
Mr. Surrey. Yes, sir.
Representative Boggs. We might let the record show at this
point, also, that the American Bar Association has been closely
associated with the Commission.
Mr. Surrey. What does that mean? I mean what is the purpose of
that remark?
Representative Boggs. To show that the attorneys appointed are
completely objective.
Mr. Surrey. I did not imply they were not, sir.
Mr. Jenner. Do you know Mrs. Clifford Mercer, Dorothy Mercer?
Mr. Surrey. I decline to answer on the grounds it may incriminate
me.
Mr. Jenner. Do you know Mr. Clifford Mercer?
Mr. Surrey. I decline to answer; same reason.
Mr. Jenner. Do you know of a photoengraving company in Dallas,
2027 Young Street, Monks Bros.?
Mr. Surrey. I decline to answer on the grounds it may incriminate
me.
Mr. Jenner. Do you know J. T. Monk or J. T. Monk, Jr.?
Mr. Surrey. I decline to answer, same grounds.
Mr. Jenner. Did you have one of the workmen, printing workmen,
at Johnson Printing Co., set type for the copy which appears on
Commission Exhibit No. 996?
Mr. Surrey. I decline to answer on the grounds it may tend to
incriminate me.
Mr. Jenner. And thereafter, after that type was set, have
photographs made of that type?
Mr. Surrey. I decline to answer; same reason.
Mr. Jenner. Do you know Mr. Bernard Weissman?
Mr. Surrey. No. We are in another field now, I gather.
Mr. Jenner. Well, I don't want to represent to you that it is.
Mr. Surrey. I decline to answer on the ground it may tend to
incriminate me.
Mr. Jenner. Have you had any business relations with a man by
the name of Bernard Weissman?
Mr. Surrey. If this is in your opinion still part of the other—
concerning these leaflets, then I will plead the fifth amendment.
Mr. Jenner. Mr. Chief Justice, with the policy of the Commission to
be fully fair to all witnesses, may I respond to the witness and say to
him there is that possibility.
The Chairman. There is that possibility; yes—that is a sufficient
statement.
Mr. Jenner. And being that possibility, do you wish to decline to
answer the question on the ground an answer may tend to
incriminate you?
Mr. Surrey. Yes, sir.
Mr. Jenner. Mr. Chief Justice, unless you or other members of the
Commission have some questions on this line of examination, I will
not ask further questions with respect to it—unless you gentlemen
desire to ask questions.
The Chairman. Any further questions, Congressman Boggs?
Representative Boggs. Was anyone associated with you in the
publication of this leaflet?
Mr. Surrey. I decline to answer on the ground it may tend to
incriminate me.
The Chairman. Did General Walker have anything to do with it?
Mr. Surrey. I decline to answer on the ground it may tend to
incriminate me—but, no.
The Chairman. What? Now you have opened that up, sir—if you
say—was your answer no, or is your answer that you claim the
privilege?
Mr. Surrey. My answer is that I claim the privilege, sir.
The Chairman. That is different.
Senator Cooper. May I just ask one question? To return for a
moment to this book that you printed with newspaper clippings—
what was your purpose in printing it?
Mr. Surrey. As a memento, primarily.
Senator Cooper. You had no other purpose?
Mr. Surrey. No, sir.
Senator Cooper. Didn't you really have the purpose of impugning
the work of this Commission and giving the implication that it would
not go fully and thoroughly into all questions?
Mr. Surrey. No, sir. This was not the intent; no.
Representative Boggs. What was the allegation in the cease and
desist order which was issued against you by the Dallas newspaper?
Mr. Surrey. That this would be in competition to a book which
they were going to promote—I believe the AP. At the time—the
Osburns had this, and they were gathering it together, and they
brought it over one day, and it looked like a real good idea. Other
people had stacks and stacks of papers. And this was a compilation
of clippings of the paper. And everybody thought it was such a good
idea that we thought we would publish it. So I got it into brownline
form, which is a proof, a preliminary proof—silver prints, you may
call them in Washington.
The Chairman. For how much did you sell these books a copy?
Mr. Surrey. We gave them free to our presubscriber list.
The Chairman. I didn't ask you that.
Mr. Surrey. They were $5 per copy.
The Chairman. And how many did you say you sold?
Mr. Surrey. About 900 to a 1,000.
The Chairman. What happened to the money?
Mr. Surrey. It was put into the American Eagle Publishing Co.
account.
The Chairman. Do you have a regular bookkeeping system?
Mr. Surrey. Yes, sir.
The Chairman. And those figures would be available, showing
how many you had sold, would they?
Mr. Surrey. Yes, sir.
The Chairman. In your books?
Mr. Surrey. Yes, sir.
Representative Boggs. Is the American Eagle Publishing Co. an
incorporated company?
Mr. Surrey. No.
Representative Boggs. What is it?
Mr. Surrey. Partnership, sir.
Representative Boggs. Who are the partners?
Mr. Surrey. Myself and General Walker.
Representative Boggs. And this presubscription list, how many
people on that?
Mr. Surrey. I would say 700, 800.
Representative Boggs. You publish a newspaper?
Mr. Surrey. No; we don't.
Representative Boggs. What do you publish besides this book?
Mr. Surrey. Pamphlets—pamphlets.
Mr. Jenner. You receive part of your income from the American
Eagle Publishing Co.?
Mr. Surrey. No; I do not.
Mr. Jenner. You serve as president, but you receive no
compensation for that?
Mr. Surrey. That is true.
Mr. Jenner. Would you tell us, please, the address of the
American Eagle Publishing Co.?
Mr. Surrey. P.O. Box 750, Dallas 21.
Mr. Jenner. It has no physical office itself—just the post office
address?
Mr. Surrey. That is correct. That mail comes to my desk at
Johnson Printing Co. That is the same post office box as Johnson
Printing Co.
Mr. Jenner. I see. And where do you keep—where does American
Publishing Co. warehouse or keep or store its pamphlets and books?
Mr. Surrey. 4011 Turtle Creek Boulevard, Mr. Walker's residence. I
have a room.
Mr. Jenner. That is General Walker's residence?
Mr. Surrey. Yes.
The Chairman. That is General Walker's residence?
Mr. Surrey. Yes; it is.
The Chairman. Who owns the Johnson Printing Co.?
Mr. Surrey. It is—the stock is split, four or five different people.
The Chairman. A corporation?
Mr. Surrey. Yes; it is.
The Chairman. Who are they?
Mr. Surrey. Mr. Bryan Snyder is chairman of the board. Mr. Emil
Borak is president, and Mr. Lewis C. Owens is treasurer. I believe
some stock is held by Oliver Snyder, and I have some stock. And Mr.
Fallon Snyder.
The Chairman. It is a commercial company?
Mr. Surrey. Yes; it is.
The Chairman. Is General Walker connected with it?
Mr. Surrey. No; he is not.
The Chairman. Or with the other people, as far as you know?
Mr. Surrey. No, sir.
Mr. Jenner. Is Mr. Borak the general manager of the plant itself?
Mr. Surrey. No; he is president of the company.
Mr. Jenner. I see. Who is the general manager of the plant?
Mr. Surrey. Mr. Owens.
Mr. Jenner. Mr. Owens.
Did you acquaint Mr. Owens or Mr. Borak, either of them, with
the fact that you had Commission Exhibit No. 996 printed at the
Lettercraft Printing Co.?
Mr. Surrey. I decline to answer on the ground it may tend to
incriminate me.
Mr. Jenner. Did you make either or both of them aware of the fact
that some of the copy or all of the copy with respect to Commission
Exhibit No. 996 was prepared by way of printing at Johnson Printing
Co.?
Mr. Surrey. I decline to answer on the ground it may tend to
incriminate me.
Mr. Jenner. How many printers do you have at Johnson Printing
Co.?
Mr. Surrey. How many employees?
Mr. Jenner. No—that operate linotypes or operate these machines
that produce these slugs—what is the name of that kind of machine?
Mr. Surrey. Well, it would be a monotype or a linotype or a
Ludlow.
Mr. Jenner. Are these lines on Exhibit No. 996 Ludlow
productions?
Mr. Surrey. I decline to answer on the ground it may tend to
incriminate me.
Mr. Jenner. Who are the Ludlow machine operators at Johnson
Printing Co.?
Mr. Surrey. Oh, I would say there are probably 10 or 15 that
operate the Ludlow machine.
Mr. Jenner. Does your recollection serve you to name those who
operated the Ludlow machines any time during the first 22 days of
November 1963? If so, name them.
Mr. Surrey. I decline to answer on the ground it may tend to
incriminate me.
Mr. Jenner. Are you able to name any of the linotype operators
who were employed during the first 22 days of November 1963?
Mr. Surrey. Who were employed at Johnson Printing Co.?
Mr. Jenner. Yes, sir.
Mr. Surrey. Well, I gather this has nothing to do with this. So
may I answer?
Mr. Jenner. I don't want to lead you to believe it doesn't, sir.
Mr. Surrey. I decline to answer on the ground it may incriminate
me.
Mr. Jenner. From whom was the paper purchased on which
appears the imprinting on the exhibit identified here as Commission
Exhibit No. 996.
Mr. Surrey. I decline to answer on the same grounds.
Mr. Jenner. Did you see another reproduction of Commission
Exhibit No. 996 at any time from the 1st of November 1963 to and
including the 22d of November 1963?
Mr. Surrey. I decline to answer on the grounds it may incriminate
me.
Mr. Jenner. Mr. Chief Justice, I will now depart from this particular
phase, if that is permissible.
The Chairman. Very well.
Mr. Jenner. I am now going to turn, Mr. Surrey, to the attempt on
the life of General Walker.
First I would like to have you examine a series of photographs
which purport to be photographs of the area of the Walker house.
Mr. Chief Justice, may I approach the witness for this purpose?
The Chairman. Yes.
Mr. Jenner. I show the witness Commission Exhibit No. 2, Item
No. 7, and subdivision item No. P-2. Do you see that, sir?
Mr. Surrey. Yes; I do.
Mr. Jenner. Examining the subitem, P-2, is the area depicted in
that photograph familiar to you?
Mr. Surrey. Yes; it is. It is the alley in behind Mr. Walker's
residence, looking west.
Mr. Jenner. Looking west?
Mr. Surrey. Yes.
Mr. Jenner. Would you be able to help us as to an estimate,
perhaps from the nature of the foliage, and your familiarity with the
Walker premises, as to when that photograph might have been
taken, as to season of the year?
Mr. Surrey. I would say late fall.
Mr. Jenner. Could it have been the early spring, mid-March, for
example? 1st of March, along in there?
Mr. Surrey. It could have been; yes.
Mr. Jenner. Either in the fall, when there is a deleafing or lack of
foliage on trees, or the early spring?
Mr. Surrey. Yes, sir.
Mr. Jenner. I show you what purports to be the same thing, also
marked—it is a larger photograph—Commission Exhibit No. 2, Item
No. 7. Directing your attention to the subdivision P-2 you have just
testified about, are they photographs——
Mr. Surrey. Basically the same thing. It looks like this one was
taken a little closer to the ground.
Mr. Jenner. When you say this one, you mean the larger of the
two?
Mr. Surrey. Yes.
Mr. Jenner. On Commission Exhibit No. 3, Item 14, subitem P-1,
directing your attention to that, you recognize that?
Mr. Surrey. That is a picture of the back of the residence of 4011
Turtle Creek.
Mr. Jenner. General Edwin Walker's home?
Mr. Surrey. Yes.
Mr. Jenner. I perhaps should have asked you this: You are
familiar with the area surrounding General Walker's home?
Mr. Surrey. Yes, I am.
Mr. Jenner. You have been there a good many times, have you?
Mr. Surrey. Yes, I have.
Mr. Jenner. On all sides of the home?
Mr. Surrey. Yes.
Mr. Jenner. And are you familiar with the inside of the home?
Mr. Surrey. Yes; I am.
Mr. Jenner. And have you worked there from time to time over
the years?
Mr. Surrey. Yes.
Mr. Jenner. How long have you been associated with General
Walker?
Mr. Surrey. Since the beginning of his campaign, when that was
—I think the spring—about 3 years now.
The Chairman. What campaign is that?
Mr. Surrey. When he ran for Governor of Texas.
Mr. Jenner. That initiated your association with him?
Mr. Surrey. Yes, sir.
Mr. Jenner. And what are your duties in your association with
General Walker?
Mr. Surrey. I am just a volunteer helper, whatever he needed,
volunteer help in doing, I would help.
Mr. Jenner. Are you compensated?
Mr. Surrey. No; I am not.
Mr. Jenner. You have never received any compensation?
Mr. Surrey. No; I haven't.
Mr. Jenner. You have never received any compensation from the
publishing company we have identified that published that book?
Mr. Surrey. No, sir.
The Chairman. Do you handle any funds for General Walker?
Mr. Surrey. Of General Walker's fund?
The Chairman. Yes.
Mr. Surrey. No, sir.
The Chairman. Or any funds——
Mr. Surrey. Except what——
The Chairman. Or any funds that come to General Walker?
Mr. Surrey. No; only that comes to American Eagle Co., which is
in fact, I guess, technically his funds.
The Chairman. Well, what funds do come to American Eagle Co.?
Mr. Surrey. Funds for purchasing of materials, and some
donations. That is it.
The Chairman. Outside of donations, how do you get your funds
for publishing?
Mr. Surrey. From the sale of materials.
The Chairman. And the rest of it is all donations?
Mr. Surrey. Donations are extremely small, as a matter of fact,
yes. We operate on the sale of materials.
The Chairman. How much in the aggregate of donations have you
had?
Mr. Surrey. To American Eagle Publishing Co.?
The Chairman. Yes.
Mr. Surrey. I would say a hundred dollars.
The Chairman. A hundred dollars?
Mr. Surrey. Over 2 years or 2½ years.
The Chairman. Where did you get the money to publish your
book?
Mr. Surrey. At the beginning of American Eagle Publishing Co.,
we started with a backlog of books which had been used in the
campaign. This was Mr. Walker's contribution to the American Eagle
Publishing Co.
The Chairman. Did General Walker sell his campaign books?
Mr. Surrey. I don't know if he did or not.
The Chairman. Well, you don't pay publishing funds with books,
do you?
Mr. Surrey. From the sale of the books which were turned over to
American Eagle Co. at its inception, from the sale of those books, we
have accumulated funds to go on with others.
The Chairman. At its inception, where did you get the money to
publish?
Mr. Surrey. I don't understand your question, sir.
The Chairman. Well——
Mr. Surrey. At its inception we didn't have any money.
The Chairman. When you publish books, you have to have some
capital of some kind.
Mr. Surrey. The capital was raised from the sale of a book called
"Walker Speaks Unmuzzled" which sells for 35 cents. We started with
that.
The Chairman. You published that first?
Mr. Surrey. No, sir.
The Chairman. Who published that?
Mr. Surrey. I believe General Walker did.
The Chairman. And how much money came from the sale of those
books?
Mr. Surrey. I do not know offhand, sir.
The Chairman. Approximately.
Mr. Surrey. We are still selling them.
The Chairman. Beg pardon?
Mr. Surrey. We are still selling them.
The Chairman. But you handle the funds, don't you, for the
company?
Mr. Surrey. Yes; but I don't know specific items.
The Chairman. Well, I am not asking you for specific items. But I
would like to know approximately how much money.
Let me put it this way: How much money have you handled for
that company in the last—since it has been established?
Mr. Surrey. Oh, as a rough estimate, $10,000 to $15,000.
The Chairman. And only a hundred dollars of that was
contributions from outsiders?
Mr. Surrey. I would say that would be it.
The Chairman. And was there any of that $10,000 or $15,000 that
came from any individual other than from people who purchased the
hooks?
Mr. Surrey. Yes; at one time the General put some more money
into the company.
The Chairman. How much money did he put into it?
Mr. Surrey. I believe a thousand dollars.
The Chairman. That is all?
Mr. Surrey. Yes.
The Chairman. Anybody else put any money into it?
Mr. Surrey. No, sir.
The Chairman. Did you?
Mr. Surrey. No, sir.
The Chairman. Very well.
Mr. Jenner. Mr. Chief Justice, may I revert to the other subject
matter? I have an additional question I would like to ask. And I warn
the witness in advance I am returning to the pamphlet.
The Chairman. Yes.
Mr. Jenner. Your questions have stimulated me to ask another
question.
The Chairman. Yes.
Mr. Jenner. Were any of the funds that reached Eagle Publishing
Co. by way of contributions or proceeds of sale of materials
employed or used to pay for the leaflet, Commission Exhibit No.
996?
Mr. Surrey. Now, I understand that if I answer that question, it
opens up the whole thing again. So I decline to answer on the
grounds it may incriminate me.
The Chairman. Gentlemen, I have asked our Chief Counsel, Mr.
Rankin, to have a search of our files made and our telephone calls to
see if we have received anything from Congressman Alger
concerning this book. And Mr. Rankin, will you report to us what
your finding is, please?
Mr. Rankin. I had a search made of our files, and any incoming
calls from the Congressman to see if we had received any such
material, and such a search showed that we had not received any
such material. I then called Congressman Alger's office to ask there
if there had been any communication from them, and was informed
that they had not sent anything to us, but that one of the booklets
had been given away by Congressman Alger, and they had one left,
and I have sent for that one to have for our records.
Representative Boggs. I would like to see it when it gets here.
You expect it pretty soon?
Mr. Rankin. I sent him on the run.
Representative Boggs. Good.
Mr. Jenner. Mr. Surrey, I will return to the General Walker incident
now.
I would like you particularly to examine the next photograph,
which appears in Commission Exhibit No. 4, Item 6, as subletter P-5.
This depicts, Mr. Chairman, and gentlemen, a railroad track—in
the far distance a tall building. Is that area at all familiar to you?
That is undoubtedly the MKT line, or some spur line.
You are familiar with the MKT line, are you not?
Mr. Surrey. This I do not recognize the area.
Mr. Jenner. I will ask you this. Is there a railroad near General
Walker's home?
Mr. Surrey. Facing out of the house, facing Turtle Creek, across
the creek, and then another half block or so, there is a railroad.
Mr. Jenner. Within a half a block?
Mr. Surrey. Well, it would be a full city block to the railroad.
Perhaps even more. I have never been in that area, as a matter of
fact.
Mr. Jenner. Having that in mind, I show you a photograph, aerial
view photograph, which we have marked Commission Exhibit No.
998.
Mr. Chief Justice, that is a copy of the exhibit.
That purports to be an aerial photograph taken of the vicinity of
General Walker's residence. And you will notice there is an encircled
building and the designation "A."
First, do you recognize that general area?
Mr. Surrey. Yes; I do.
(The document referred to was marked Commission Exhibit 998
for identification.)
Mr. Jenner. And does the encirclment of the home there appear
to be General Walker's home?
Mr. Surrey. Yes, sir; it does. I don't see a house that should be in
the corner.
Mr. Jenner. You say corner—you mean——
Mr. Surrey. Right there.
Mr. Jenner. To the left?
Mr. Surrey. Yes; there is a house there between Walker's
residence and the next house, and the street here, which is
Avondale, I believe.
Mr. Jenner. And you are talking about the street here—you are
pointing to a street that runs obliquely from left to right towards the
upper corner of the picture?
Mr. Surrey. Yes.
Mr. Jenner. To the left of the house encircled as General Walker's
house?
Mr. Surrey. Yes. Oh, I see, I am sorry. It is much further back
from the street. That is the house.
Mr. Jenner. Now, the house you say that is next is the one
immediately to the left of the one encircled?
Mr. Surrey. Yes; I was looking in this area for the houses. That is
correct. That is General Walker's residence, as depicted in the
picture.
Mr. Jenner. And the house to the left is the house you thought at
first was not shown, but in fact it is shown?
Mr. Surrey. It is.
Mr. Jenner. And who is the owner of that home?
Mr. Surrey. I do not know. A doctor.
Mr. Jenner. A lady doctor?
Mr. Surrey. Yes; it is a woman, runs the household.
Mr. Jenner. Dr. Ruth Jackson?
Mr. Surrey. It sounds familiar, but I do not know.
Mr. Jenner. Does she have a dog that is sometimes obstreperous,
does a lot of barking?
Mr. Surrey. Yes; she does.
Mr. Jenner. You are quite familiar with that fact, are you?
Mr. Surrey. Yes, sir; I am.
Mr. Jenner. How and why did you become familiar with that fact?
Mr. Surrey. Anyone approaching the house, generally her house
or General Walker's house, would be barked at, in the middle of the
night noises.
Mr. Jenner. And you have approached General Walker's house, I
assume, at night, have you?
Mr. Surrey. Yes.
Mr. Jenner. If the dog is out in Dr. Jackson's yard, the dog is
alerted and barks?
Mr. Surrey. Not so much any more. Evidently he knows who I am
now.
Mr. Jenner. I see. But before the dog became familiar with you,
he did bark?
Mr. Surrey. Yes, sir.
Mr. Jenner. What kind of a dog is it, by the way?
Mr. Surrey. A small Collie, I guess—shaggy, brownish dog.
Mr. Jenner. Do you recall whether or not at or about the time of
the attempt on General Walker's life that dog became or was ill.
Mr. Surrey. Yes; it was. This was reported to me. I do not know
of firsthand knowledge.
Mr. Jenner. I would prefer not to have your hearsay. You have no
knowledge firsthand, however?
Mr. Surrey. No; I do not.
Mr. Jenner. Unless, Mr. Chairman, you desire to pursue the
hearsay——
The Chairman. No, no.
Mr. Jenner. Continuing with Exhibit No. 998, and looking at the
footnotes, would you tell us whether that footnoting is accurate—A
through G?
Mr. Surrey. I am not familiar with Gilbert Street.
Mr. Jenner. Which is designated as G?
Mr. Surrey. It very well could be Gilbert Street. I just don't know
the names of those streets.
Yes; to the best of my knowledge that is accurate.
Mr. Jenner. There is a tall building to the left, rather nice-looking.
Are you familiar with that building?
Mr. Surrey. No; there are several new ones going right up in that
area. I think that is the Spa, or something.
Mr. Jenner. I am referring, Mr. Chief Justice, to the tall building
with a lattice design immediately to the right of the letter "A".
What did you think that was?
Mr. Surrey. A new development in there called 21 Turtle Creek,
the Spa, or something. I only know it from newspaper ads.
Mr. Jenner. I see. Was that building in that condition or being
erected in the spring of 1963?
Mr. Surrey. If that is the building I think of, it has just been
finished a month or so now.
Mr. Jenner. How long has it been under construction?
Mr. Surrey. Possibly a year, a year and a half.
Mr. Jenner. Does that photograph fairly depict and represent the
area it shows as that area existed in the spring of 1963?
Mr. Surrey. No; you are missing a Jesuit high school which was
here.
Mr. Jenner. When you say was here, I have to identify the spot to
which you are pointing. And the spot to which you are pointing is
the open field area that is shown immediately to the right of the
building we have identified, near which the letter "A" appears?
Mr. Surrey. Yes.
Mr. Jenner. Tell us about that.
Mr. Surrey. That was the old Jesuit high school, which has been
torn down just recently. I believe just recently finished tearing it
down.
Mr. Jenner. All right. I will identify these other photographs rather
quickly. In each instance, will you look at the photograph and tell us
whether the sub-lettering is correct.
I have now handed the witness Commission Exhibit No. 999.
(The document referred to was marked Commission Exhibit No.
999 for identification.)
Mr. Surrey. I believe that to be generally correct. This area of
Walker's residence here is difficult——
Mr. Jenner. It is some distance away, and the area of Walker's
residence to which the witness referred is a circle to which the letter
"A" is affixed?
Mr. Surrey. Yes.
Mr. Jenner. Otherwise, this is an accurate representation of that
area and as it existed in the spring of 1963?
Mr. Surrey. Again, the high school is—I don't believe that that
Jesuit high school was to the ground as it shows here, in the spring
of 1963.
Mr. Jenner. I now call your attention to the building that appears
immediately to the right of the circle.
Mr. Surrey. That is, I believe, the same building that shows in the
previous exhibit.
Mr. Jenner. Thank you. That is just exactly what I was going to
ask you. All right. Now, would you look at Commission Exhibit No.
1000.
(The documents referred to were marked Commission Exhibits
Nos. 1000 and 1002 for identification.)
Mr. Jenner. Are those footnotings correct?
Mr. Surrey. Yes, sir; I believe they are.
Mr. Jenner. Would you look at 1002.
Mr. Surrey. Yes, sir; I believe they are substantially correct.
Mr. Jenner. All right. For the purposes of the record, Mr. Reporter,
Commission Exhibit No. 1000 also has a sticker on it marked
Commission Exhibit No. 1001. Would you please note in the record
we will not be using Commission Exhibit 1001. It got on there by
mistake. Now, you just covered Exhibit No. 1002. Now, Exhibits Nos.
1003, 1004.
(The documents referred to were marked Commission Exhibits
No. 1003 and 1004, respectively, for identification.)
Mr. Surrey. Yes; that street previously mentioned was Avondale.
That is the street immediately to the west.
Mr. Jenner. And it appears on Commission Exhibit No. 1003?
Mr. Surrey. That is correct.
Mr. Jenner. Have you yet examined Commission Exhibit No. 1004?
Mr. Surrey. No; I have not.
Mr. Jenner. The witness is now examining Commission Exhibit No.
1004.
The Chairman. Very well.
Mr. Surrey. I believe that is correct, sir.
Mr. Jenner. All right. I will ask you a general question to be sure
we have covered all of these.
Calling your attention to Commission Exhibits Nos. 998, 999,
1000, 1002, 1003, and 1004, which are aerial photographs—are they
aerial photographs of the vicinity of General Walker's house?
Mr. Surrey. Yes; they are.
Mr. Jenner. And do they, except for the high school matter which
you have pointed out to us—do they represent fairly the area as it
was in the spring of 1963?
Mr. Surrey. Yes, I would say that is generally correct.
Mr. Jenner. All right, sir. Now, the Commission is interested, Mr.
Surrey, in whether there are some open areas or fields near General
Walker's house in which an object such as a firearm or rifle could be
buried.
Mr. Surrey. Directly across from in front of the house—of course,
Turtle Creek Boulevard, and across from Turtle Creek Boulevard is
Turtle Creek itself, with a lawn area coming up to the street of 20 to
30 yards in some places.
Mr. Jenner. Using the blank sheet of paper I hand you, would you
just give us a diagram—a rough diagram of the area of General
Walker's house, so that I can locate the field about which you now
speak?
Mr. Surrey. It is not actually a field.
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