Mr. Weissman. About; yes, sir.

Mr. Dulles. Did anybody have the key to the box in addition to yourself?

Mr. Weissman. Up to that point, only I had the key. After that, I left Dallas on Wednesday, I believe——

Mr. Jenner. I misspoke—it was the 24th of November rather than the 25th.

Mr. Weissman. I left Dallas on the following Wednesday. And at that time I didn't see Larrie personally—he couldn't get to the apartment that Bill and I were staying at for some reason or another. And I left all the dishes and things he had given us to use while we were there, and in one of these dishes I left the key to the box.

Since that time, communications I received from Larrie, he says the tenor of the letters had changed, they are more favorable than unfavorable in the ensuing weeks and months. Of these letters—he sent me one that called me all sorts of names, a lot of anti-Semitic remarks, and he sent another, and he gave excerpts in one of his personal letters, of letters that he received in support of the position of the ad.

Mr. Dulles. Do I understand that you got all the letters that came in up to Wednesday after the assassination, and that your associates have the rest, or Larrie, I presume, has the rest?

Mr. Weissman. I don't know who has the rest. I don't know if it is Larrie or Joe.

Mr. Dulles. Larrie had the key.

Mr. Weissman. Yes. I left him the key—I left him access to the key. I received the letters written during the 2 days following the assassination—the Friday afternoon and Saturday following the assassination—because I picked the mail up the following Sunday morning.