Mrs. Grant. So, he never got that—that’s the wrong date.
Mr. Burleson. That date really should be early Friday morning, November 22, 1963?
Mrs. Grant. Yes.
Mr. Burleson. Which would have been following Thursday. All right. Now, directing your attention——
Mrs. Grant. Can I add in over here something. When he was at my apartment Friday the phone rang and Andy, who is our bartender, said, “Jack, call Don Safran.”
Mr. Burleson. Just a minute, we are coming to that, but I want to direct your attention now to the next statement after the one I just read. “She advised that after President Kennedy was assassinated on November 22, 1963, he called the newspapers to change the advertisements to show that the club would be closed Friday, Saturday and Sunday, November 22d, 23d, and 24th, 1963.” Would you care to explain that just a little bit?
Mrs. Grant. Yes; I heard him call the Dallas Morning News, because there was a paper coming out at 10 o’clock at night and it seemed to me that they said it was too late—the Dallas news—you know how it comes out?
Mr. Burleson. The first edition?
Mrs. Grant. Yes; but he said, anyway, put it in Friday, Saturday, and Sunday, and I heard——
Mr. Burleson. And it was on the afternoon of November 22d?