Mrs. Cheek. I was waiting for the plumber to fix some plumbing there at the apartment house. That is where I was living. I don’t remember all the things I did that day.

Mr. Griffin. Did you remain there all day and watch TV all day?

Mrs. Cheek. I just turned it on when the plumber wanted—he said the President is in the city and he said, “Let’s look at TV a little,” he said, “I haven’t listened to any of the news.”

So his name is Louis Zmolik and I turned on the TV.

Mr. Griffin. Did you continue to watch television the rest of the day, or did you go back to your business?

Mrs. Cheek. Watched it off and on. I was answering the phone, talking on the phone.

Mr. Griffin. Do you remember if there were business calls that you had or social calls, or talking with people about the assassination, or what?

Mrs. Cheek. Well, they might have been business calls, some of them and some I was talking about how terrible it was the President had been killed, what an awful thing.

Mr. Griffin. Did your sister call you that day?

Mrs. Cheek. No; I don’t think she did. I didn’t learn that, I think, until someone else called me to watch TV, that she had been on TV. I didn’t see her on TV.