Mr. Wulf. No.

Mr. Liebeler. Contact over this thing?

Mr. Wulf. No, no.

Mr. Liebeler. It was just a strongly presented argument?

Mr. Wulf. No. My father just took him by the arm, and when he started hollering about communism and all, and my father had gone through Communist affairs in Germany in the 1920's, and did not agree with him violently, and he asked him to leave the house.

Mr. Liebeler. Is your father a native of Germany?

Mr. Wulf. Hamburg.

Mr. Liebeler. And he had been involved in some political activities with or opposed to the Communists?

Mr. Wulf. Not that I know of. What I mean, he came back from Germany following the war, 1919–20, when it was all upheaval. The Democratic Party was fighting the Communist wing and all. He remembered that and he just—well, as most Germans, a lot of Germans, do, they just don't like Communists.

Mr. Liebeler. Can you remember anything about the details of your first meeting with Lee Oswald?