Mr. Hubert. When did you talk to him?

Mr. Crowe. Let’s see, I called—maybe that wasn’t—Saturday, Sunday morning, there wasn’t much time, it must have been after Oswald was shot before I even spoke to Andrew.

Mr. Hubert. Well, as I understand it then, there was no contact of any sort whatsoever between you and any of those persons I mentioned, and I will mention them again so that the record can be straight: George Senator, Ralph Paul, Breck Wall, Joe Peterson, and Larry Crafard, there was no contact between you and Andrew Armstrong, no contact between you whatsoever, between the time the President was shot and the time Oswald was shot, of any sort whatsoever?

Mr. Crowe. No.

Mr. Hubert. How did you learn that the show would not go on on Saturday?

Mr. Crowe. Well, I didn’t figure it would go on on Saturday. I wasn’t going to go down there until they called me, or somebody called me, and they knew where I was, and if I did not get a call, why I wasn’t going.

Mr. Hubert. When was payday, when were you supposed to be paid?

Mr. Crowe. Sunday.

Mr. Hubert. Did you make any inquiry Sunday about your pay?

Mr. Crowe. No; there was nobody to ask.