Mr. Hubert. How did he manifest that shock?
Mr. Crafard. How is that?
Mr. Hubert. How did he manifest the shock? What did he do or say that gave you the impression that he was suffering from shock like everybody else?
Mr. Crafard. About the same thing as any of us said. We couldn’t really believe it.
Mr. Hubert. Was he crying, for example?
Mr. Crafard. He seemed to be very nervous. As far as really being crying, I couldn’t say for sure he had been crying. He wasn’t crying at the time, anyway.
Mr. Hubert. Was his nervousness, or his shock greater than, say, that which you could observe in Armstrong?
Mr. Crafard. Yes; I believe it was. He was much nervouser than Andy or I, either one was.
Mr. Hubert. Now, how did that come across to you, by what he said or did?
Mr. Crafard. It come across that it struck him pretty deep that Kennedy had been assassinated, had been shot.