Mr. Hubert. Now there is one other matter. You indicated you didn't know what day this occurred on, and I wonder if there is any way you could fix it? It would have been, I suppose, after the shooting of Oswald?
Mr. Fenley. Yes; certainly.
Mr. Hubert. How long after?
Mr. Fenley. It wasn't too long after that. Now I remember one other person who came in, and oddly enough he didn't hear the conversation, but there is sort of a coincidence that at the door was a fellow by the name of Marsh Clark who is also a full-time Time man.
Mr. Hubert. With what?
Mr. Fenley. I believe he is in Detroit or Chicago.
Mr. Hubert. With what?
Mr. Fenley. Time. And also I saw that he had a long thick file, and I casually inquired who he was with, and it turned out he was with Time also. Marsh, I don't believe—in fact I am fairly certain—did not hear what Hamblen had told me.
Mr. Hubert. Did Marsh Clark come in, or did you see him after your conversation was over?
Mr. Fenley. Yes; I made myself acquainted to him after the conversation with Hamblen, but he was the only other person that I could identify as being there. I was trying to think by that—now Marsh was still in town, so it must not have been—we could go back to the file on this thing and find that story, and it would have been about 2 days before that story appeared.