23-02-2014, 03:08 AM
Here is a page of handwritten notes by Mr. Golz about the Top 10 record store in Dallas on 11/22/63 (if anyone has found a better copy, please contact me at: jimbotopia@gmail.com):
[ATTACH=CONFIG]5729[/ATTACH]Sorry the scan above is so terrible. I compressed the hell out of it nearly 15 years ago when most of us were still on dial-up connections and bandwidth was scarce. The last two lines were pretty hard to read even on the copy I scanned from. They say: "Stark claims he sold Oswald a ticket to Dick Clark Show at 7:30 am Nov. 22." Squeezed in at the lower right side are the words: "Still had stub after assass."
John Armstrong's explanation:
Russian-speaking HARVEY Oswald didn't drive and didn't have a driver's license. Around 7:15 AM, he walked the short distance to Wesley Frazier's house in Irving, TX and rode with Frazier to the Texas School Book Depository (TSBD) in Dallas, where he was employed. While HARVEY was riding in Frazier's car, American-born LEE Oswald, wearing a white shirt, was seen in Oak Cliff, a suburb of Dallas. J.W. "Dub" Stark was the owner of the Top 10 Record Store located at 338 W. Jefferson, across the street and a block and a half west of the Texas Theater. On December 3, 1963, FBI agent Carl E. Walters wrote a memo to the FBI's SAC (Special Agent in Charge) in Dallas. The memo stated, "On 12/3/63, Mr. John D. Whitten, telephonically advised that he heard Lee Harvey Oswald was in the Top 10 Record Shop on Jefferson on the morning of 11/22/63. Oswald bought a ticket of some kind and left. Then some time later, Oswald returned to the record shop and wanted to buy another ticket." News reporter Earl Golz confirmed this story in his interview with Mr. Stark (notes of Earl Golz). This story was further confirmed by Top 10 Record store employee Louis Cortinas, also in an interview conducted by Earl Golz (notes of Earl Golz).
Earl Golz was trying to find the truth almost immediately after JFK's murder, which is WAY more than you can say about almost everyone else, including yours truly.
[ATTACH=CONFIG]5729[/ATTACH]Sorry the scan above is so terrible. I compressed the hell out of it nearly 15 years ago when most of us were still on dial-up connections and bandwidth was scarce. The last two lines were pretty hard to read even on the copy I scanned from. They say: "Stark claims he sold Oswald a ticket to Dick Clark Show at 7:30 am Nov. 22." Squeezed in at the lower right side are the words: "Still had stub after assass."
John Armstrong's explanation:
Russian-speaking HARVEY Oswald didn't drive and didn't have a driver's license. Around 7:15 AM, he walked the short distance to Wesley Frazier's house in Irving, TX and rode with Frazier to the Texas School Book Depository (TSBD) in Dallas, where he was employed. While HARVEY was riding in Frazier's car, American-born LEE Oswald, wearing a white shirt, was seen in Oak Cliff, a suburb of Dallas. J.W. "Dub" Stark was the owner of the Top 10 Record Store located at 338 W. Jefferson, across the street and a block and a half west of the Texas Theater. On December 3, 1963, FBI agent Carl E. Walters wrote a memo to the FBI's SAC (Special Agent in Charge) in Dallas. The memo stated, "On 12/3/63, Mr. John D. Whitten, telephonically advised that he heard Lee Harvey Oswald was in the Top 10 Record Shop on Jefferson on the morning of 11/22/63. Oswald bought a ticket of some kind and left. Then some time later, Oswald returned to the record shop and wanted to buy another ticket." News reporter Earl Golz confirmed this story in his interview with Mr. Stark (notes of Earl Golz). This story was further confirmed by Top 10 Record store employee Louis Cortinas, also in an interview conducted by Earl Golz (notes of Earl Golz).
Earl Golz was trying to find the truth almost immediately after JFK's murder, which is WAY more than you can say about almost everyone else, including yours truly.