Mr. Blalock. Yes, sir. I know his face. I recognized his face.
Mr. Liebeler. But you don't remember that he mentioned the name Lee Harvey Oswald at that time?
Mr. Blalock. No.
Mr. Liebeler. Did Oswald say anything about having been a Marine?
Mr. Blalock. Yes, sir; he did, and he explained that he took training in guerrilla warfare, and he told us how to blow up bridges, derail trains, make zip guns, make homemade gunpowder.
Mr. Liebeler. He told you about this in detail?
Mr. Blalock. He told us how to blow up the Huey P. Long Bridge.
Mr. Liebeler. Tell us just what he told you about that. I know you can't remember the exact words, but you can remember the substance of the conversation. We want you to tell us about it.
Mr. Blalock. He told us to put powder charges at each end of the bridge from the foundation to where the foundation meets the suspension part, and to blow that part up and the center part of the bridge would collapse.
Mr. Liebeler. Did he talk about any other aspect of guerrilla warfare that you can remember?