Mr. Knight. No; but he told me to read it, and evidently he had read it.
Mr. Griffin. Did he say anything to you which would indicate what his feeling was about the substance of that radio script?
Mr. Knight. No; there again is the hazy part. He seemed to be giving it to me for me to read it just to get my impressions of it.
Mr. Griffin. Did you have any impression that he was looking for you to tell him whether he should agree or disagree with the content?
Mr. Knight. That is a possibility.
Mr. Griffin. What was said that might indicate that to you?
Mr. Knight. Well, for the simple matter of him not being yes or no about it. He just like, here’s the speech, read it. He didn’t seem to have any, although at the time I assumed that—I feel like I’m talking in circles—I assume that he did or had read it and did not agree with this theory that was portrayed in the copy of “Heroism” but wanted to see what my reaction to it would be.
Mr. Griffin. What made you think he didn’t agree with it?
Mr. Knight. See, I’m speculating; I don’t know. That was my first reaction. And then we just broke up after that. I went my way and in fact I think I went back up to the station and he went out to his car.
Mr. Griffin. Had Ike Pappas left at the time you walked out?