Mr. Ruby. Right; and Jack’s idea about managing the club.

Mr. Hubert. Now, I show you another report of an interview of you by FBI Agent Alfred Sayres on November 27, 1963, which I have marked for identification as follows: “Dallas, Texas, May 29, 1963, Exhibit No. 2, deposition of Sam Ruby,” and I have signed my name and all of which appears in the right margin of this one page document and I ask you the same question with respect to that, that is, if it is correct?

Mr. Ruby. Which paragraph is that?

Mr. Hubert. The entire document—I am speaking of the entire document—I think you have just read it.

Mr. Burleson. That’s the one you said was all right.

Mr. Ruby (reading instrument referred to). I think I recall when Jack was hospitalized, I think it was in Chicago.

Mr. Burleson. All right, let me ask you a question—in regard to the second paragraph which says—“He said he knows of no time when Jack Ruby has ever been hospitalized for any reason.” Does something come to your mind in reference to the hospitalization of Jack?

Mr. Ruby. Yes; he was struck in back of the head, I think he was scalping tickets at one of the sporting events—at football or one of those events in Chicago—and the police officer told him not to scalp, told him to leave the premises where the sporting event was being held, and Jack refused to do so, and anyway—I don’t know what the deal was, but Jack was hit on the back of the head with a club or something like that, and he had a big bandage on the back of his head, and he was hospitalized then, but I don’t remember what year it was—I don’t remember.

Mr. Hubert. All right, with that amplification or correction of Exhibit No. 2, is the exhibit otherwise correct?

Mr. Ruby. Well, they tell me—I talked to the family and they say that my mother was hospitalized in Elgin.