Mr. Hubert. Are you willing to go so far as to state that since it did not awaken you, that there was no phone call?
Mr. Senator. I couldn’t quote because I don’t know if there was a phone call.
Mr. Hubert. That is not what I asked you. I am asking you whether you are willing to state that if there had been a phone call, it would have awakened you?
Mr. Senator. I would assume so.
Mr. Griffin. Let me go back a bit here. Up until the time you went to bed early Saturday morning, had Jack told you what he had done since the President was shot?
Mr. Senator. Yes; I know of some of them. I know that he went to the synagogue.
Mr. Griffin. Let me ask you did he tell you that night? I am not asking you what you know now, but before you went to bed Saturday morning had Jack told you what he had done that night, rather what he had done since the President had been shot?
Mr. Senator. I think he went to the—wait, I don’t remember if he told me that night or it was the next day. This is the thing I don’t remember.
Mr. Griffin. That is what I am trying to get at is whether you have any recollection.
Mr. Senator. I don’t remember, but I do know that he had told me that he went to a synagogue and that he brought sandwiches around to the police station, these are things I knew that he did. But I don’t remember if he told me that night or the next morning. I don’t remember which time it was.