Mr. Steele. Yes.

Mr. Jenner. Did you call the television stations?

Mr. Steele. Yes, sir.

Mr. Jenner. What did you tell them?

Mr. Steele. I asked them if they would take my picture off of the television screen. I told them who I was, and I told them about it, that I was the gentleman that had passed out the literature, and I told them that my father was with the sheriff's office, and it wouldn't be too good with him, and at the time didn't know what I was passing out, until I had seen the cameras, and then looked at them, and they said, "Well, all right then," and it never came on television anymore, until the President's death.

Mr. Jenner. Describe this man who came along with Oswald.

Mr. Steele. Right now I haven't the slightest idea what he looked like. I think, as I recall, he was about Oswald's height.

Mr. Jenner. Oswald was 5 foot 9. You say he was the same height, or taller, or what?

Mr. Steele. Well, he wasn't shorter. He was either the same height or slightly taller.

Mr. Jenner. Would it refresh your recollection if I told you that when you were interviewed by special agents of the Federal Bureau of Investigation on the 24th of November, 1963, that you told them that he was aged 19 or 20 years, that he was about 6 feet tall, slender built, dark hair, and olive complexion?