Mr. Jenner. Anything said about it?

Mr. Weissman. I don't recall. First, what was said, like, I hope he is not a member of the Walker group—something like that—I hope he is not one of Walker's boys. Because it is like a clique, and it is guilt by association from thereafter. So it came over later this guy was a Marxist. This was the same afternoon, I believe. It was found out this fellow was a Marxist. And then the announcers—they left the rightwing for a little while, and started going to the left, and I breathed a sigh of relief. After 4 hours in the bar, Bill and I went back to the apartment, and Larrie went to the Ducharme Club. He was afraid to go home.

Mr. Jenner. I thought the Ducharme Club was closed.

Mr. Weissman. It was open at that time. We drove by. It was open. Larrie went in. We dropped him off there. And Bill and I went back to our apartment. We just waited. We knew we were going to get involved in this thing because of the ad. And we figured that if anybody at all in Dallas was on the ball, they know who we were and where we were. So we waited. Nothing happened. We waited there until we left. We barely left that house. As a matter of fact——

Mr. Jenner. You remained in the house all that evening, did you—the apartment?

Mr. Weissman. I think the—yes; late that evening Larrie came home.

Mr. Dulles. That is Friday evening, November 22?

Mr. Weissman. Yes; I think Larrie went home late that evening, and Bill and I met him there.

Mr. Jenner. You went to Larrie's home?

Mr. Weissman. To Larrie's apartment; yes. And I said what are we going to do? And Larrie said, "Well"—he had talked to Joe Grinnan, and Joe said don't say anything, don't do anything, don't get any more involved than you have to, lay low, keep out of it, it is going to be pretty bad. And it was. Thereafter, a day or so later—