Mr. Hubert. The first time you went there you didn’t tell him about the President being shot?
Mr. Armstrong. No; I told him somebody shot at the President, and Larry—I noticed the couple of times that I had woke him up he always went back to sleep and he did the same thing this time, but when I told him that the President had been shot, he jumped straight up—he got up immediately and put his clothes on.
Mr. Hubert. Now, what interval of time elapsed between the first time you woke him up and then went back to the toilet and the second time when you came back and told him the President had been shot?
Mr. Armstrong. I don’t know, it couldn’t have been longer than a couple of minutes—I don’t think.
Mr. Hubert. All right. What did you all do then?
Mr. Armstrong. We just walked around and listened to the radio, shaking our heads and waiting on more reports.
Mr. Hubert. Did you have a television in the place?
Mr. Armstrong. Yes; we had a television—I turned the television on.
Mr. Hubert. Did you all listen to both the television and the radio?
Mr. Armstrong. Both the television and the radio—there wasn’t too much on the TV, so you could get more on the radio.