Mrs. Grant. No. I think his name is something like Denson or Jensen. I think he said New York Times.
Mr. Griffin. At the time were you watching television when your brother shot Lee Oswald?
Mrs. Grant. Let me explain this. I got up early in the morning. I took a pill. I freshened up myself. I didn’t get dressed into my clothes. I went back into the bed. Then I decided to get out, and I turned on television, and all I saw is important people passing the coffin on television, people from all over the world.
I started to put on water, and I didn’t feel good, and I was listening, and then all of a sudden they started, they changed the scene themselves, and I saw a guy with, it seems to me a three-quarters length coat with glasses and a lot of hair, and he is talking, and is mumbling.
Mr. Burleson. Tom?
Mrs. Grant. I don’t know who to this very day. I don’t know who they were talking about.
Mr. Griffin. This was on the occasion——
Mrs. Grant. This was after 11 o’clock now.
Mr. Griffin. But this was how you learned that Jack had shot Oswald?
Mrs. Grant. Let me explain this. My phone rang, and I heard this guy say—this may be twisting the words around. “There has been a little excitement here,” and he stopped and he says. “I think they shot Oswald.”