Mr. Senator. He never discussed these.
Mr. Hubert. You are familiar with what I am talking about? I think it was in the fall of 1962 when we discovered that Cuba had some possible atomic weapons over there, a subject of national interest.
Mr. Senator. Yes; I have read that.
Mr. Hubert. And the Berlin crisis of the year before?
Mr. Senator. Yes.
Mr. Hubert. That is the sort of thing I mean. Did he comment about that?
Mr. Senator. No; he didn’t.
Mr. Hubert. Is it your thought that he just had no interest in that sort of thing at all?
Mr. Senator. Well, if he did or not, he never discussed it too much. He would read a paper. He would read his ad. He reads these—of course, I am certain he reads all parts of the paper, but especially the entertainment part, he was very anxious in reading.
Mr. Hubert. Normally when two people share space such as you do, and are in each other’s company and have any conversation at all, the conversation normally relates to the topics of the day, as it were, as reflected by newspapers and other news media.