General Walker. I will answer that at some later date if you find it necessary, I will reconsider it.
Mr. Liebeler. Now, aside from the matter we have just discussed, can you tell us what other common acquaintances Mr. Ruby and Mr. Oswald had, as that is the statement that started all this? You indicated that Ruby and Oswald had common acquaintances.
General Walker. I thought DeMar's statements—I believe the man is DeMar—were very interesting, and they were only by hearsay from the newspaper, if you call that hearsay.
Mr. Liebeler. Do you have any other indication that Oswald and Ruby were connected?
General Walker. I am going back on the other question. I say it was only from newspapers. They have been also from the owner or editor of the newspaper, who may have told me that his reporter had been in touch with DeMar. I believe the town is on the Tennessee-Kentucky border or somewhere up there. I don't recall the name of the town where he was at the time.
Mr. Liebeler. This is DeMar that was up there?
General Walker. Yes. Have I got the right name? DeMar is the man that was on the program in one of Rubenstein's clubs.
Mr. Liebeler. The name seems familiar to me. I don't know the man's name actually myself.
General Walker. As I recall, it was DeMar, the one that made the original statement that he saw Oswald in the club one night. That was printed in the press.
Mr. Liebeler. Aside from the fellow DeMar having made the statement, do you know of any other connection between Ruby and Oswald or any other common acquaintances that they may have?