Mr. Rankin. That will be marked Exhibit 336.
(The document referred to was marked Commission Exhibit No. 336 for identification.)
Mr. Rankin. Will you tell us what that is, Mr. Lane?
Mr. Lane. Yes; 336 is an 8½-by-11 glossy photograph of a picture appearing in Newsweek magazine, March 2, 1964, credited by Newsweek magazine to the Detroit Free Press. I would suggest that that is an identical picture with the other two pictures in every respect, except that it has no telescopic sight on the rifle, and there is a great deal of metallic materials present on that rifle clearly not present in the other two pictures.
The Chairman. Did you say metallics?
Mr. Lane. Metallics.
Mr. Rankin. Will you tell us what you mean by that, Mr. Lane?
Mr. Lane. Yes. Just below the hand, the left hand of Lee Harvey Oswald, there is clearly visible a series of pieces of metal, allegedly part of the rifle, which are in no way clear—which are in no way present in the other pictures.
The Chairman. I see.
Mr. Lane. To make that clearer, I would like to offer Exhibit 337, which is an enlargement of the picture 335, the New York Times picture.