Mr. Hubert. Was that a resignation from the department?
Captain King. It was a resignation from the department and I entered into private business.
Mr. Hubert. It was voluntary?
Captain King. Yes.
Mr. Hubert. And did you start at the bottom, as it were?
Captain King. Yes; as a patrolman.
Mr. Hubert. I notice that in the report of the proceedings at which you made a speech, I think, in Washington, there was a description of you and your career given and I am going to read it into the record here and ask you if it is correct.
You were introduced as follows: That you are an administrative assistant to Chief Curry and that you are a former newspaperman, that you were a police reporter on the Dallas Morning News when you joined the police department in 1948; that you have served in every division of the department until you have risen to the position you now hold; that you had studied journalism in college at the University of Texas and SMU; that you have attended a number of police institutes and lectured at some of them; that you have written in the field of political science and that you are the author of two books and numerous magazine articles; is that all correct, sir?
Captain King. Sir, this is correct.
Mr. Hubert. What was your specific assignment on November 22 and for some months or weeks or whatever it was prior to that date, the year being 1963?