Mr. Burleson. Mrs. Grant, on page 1 of this—it is correct to the best of your present memory, is it not?
Off the record.
(A discussion between Counsel Hubert and Counsel Burleson off the record.)
Mrs. Grant (reading instrument referred to). Let me go ahead and say this now—you do want me to say it—when Jack looked at that Weissman ad, it seems to me this is what he said——
Mr. Burleson. Wait, are you making reference to a specific sentence in here, or are you adding to something?
Mrs. Grant. Well, I didn’t say here that he called. I think he was over there. I’m almost sure, but I may have said it—will you tell him about me? I was so sick—I mean—I was——
Mr. Burleson. Well, we will get into that in just a minute. Is there anything in this—on this first page that is incorrect as you now view things?
Mrs. Grant (reading). Well, you see, right here, “he said he contacted”—he was in the Dallas Morning News when the President was assassinated. He was placing his ads and he was in the building from 11 until, maybe, at 1:30, and that should have been put in here and I thought I told him that.
Mr. Burleson. Well, let’s refer to that—on this last sentence on page 1, it starts out with, “She stated that Jack Ruby told her that he was at the Dallas Morning News which ran his advertisements and asked them. ‘Where in the hell do you get off taking an ad like that? Are you money hungry?’”
What do you want to say about that?