Mr. Curry. Yes, sir.

Mr. Hubert. And you were aware of that too—you were still in the Building?

Mr. Curry. Yes.

Mr. Hubert. Do you recall a meeting—it has sometimes been called a showup or a lineup—I don't know that that is accurate, but it took place in the assembly room.

Mr. Curry. And some of the members of the press were there, yes, sir.

Mr. Hubert. Well, can you tell us what that was about? About what time?

Mr. Curry. I don't recall exactly the time it was—it was in the evening, sometime after they had interrogated, I think, Oswald. I think he had been in the showup once or twice previous to this for witnesses to observe him, and there were so many newsmen in the halls that they were not all of them able to see or to get any pictures or any thing else in the north corridor of the third floor, and some of them asked me to—sometime during the evening—when they could see Oswald, how does he look, can we see him?

At this time Henry Wade, the district attorney, was up there and Alexander was up there.

Mr. Hubert. He is the assistant district attorney?

Mr. Curry. Yes; and something was said about—how about letting us see him or could we see him?