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Warren Commission Hearings: Vol. VIII - Page 159« Previous | Next »

(Testimony of Marilyn Dorothea Murret)

Mr. Liebeler.
Miss MURRET. No, sir.
Mr. Liebeler.
Do you have any recollection of where Mrs. Oswald had been prior to the time that she moved back to New Orleans and lived on Exchange Alley?
Miss MURRET. I think they were in Texas, but I don't think we heard from them when she was somewhere else.
Mr. Liebeler.
Did you have any occasion to meet Lee Harvey Oswald when you saw Marguerite, during the time that she lived on Exchange Alley?
Miss MURRET. Well, then he was going to Beauregard, so I would see him occasionally.
Mr. Liebeler.
Was that Beauregard Junior High School?
Miss MURRET. Yes.
Mr. Liebeler.
Can you remember generally on what occasions you would meet Lee Harvey Oswald?
Miss MURRET. He came over to the house several times to eat, but I don't think he was over very much.
Mr. Liebeler.
About how old was he then? Do you remember?
Miss MURRET. I don't know--at that time I guess he would be getting out of high school--well, then, you would be getting out of high school when you were about 16, so he might have been around--I don't really know, because I think he was 17 when he got in the service, and it wasn't long after that, so he might have been about 15.
Mr. Liebeler.
Fifteen?
Miss MURRET. Yes.
Mr. Liebeler.
I did not ask you when you were born, and will you tell us?
Miss MURRET. July 14, 1928.
Mr. Liebeler.
Did you form any impression of Lee Oswald during the time that you saw him, when his mother lived on Exchange Alley?
Miss MURRET. He was just like anybody else, I guess, but he was very reserved. He was always very reserved, and he liked to be by himself. His reason for that was always that he didn't have the same interests with the other children. I mean, he liked to read, and he loved nature, and he would just go and sit out in the park and meditate, I guess. I don't know.
Mr. Liebeler.
Did you talk to him about these things, or how did you learn that he had this liking for nature and would sit in the park?
Miss MURRET. I remember it at that time, because he had gotten into a fight with children at Beauregard; however, this is what my mother told me, and I don't remember this, and, anyway, it seems that he was from the North, and so they ridiculed him at the school. I don't know if it was because of the way he was dressed or not, but I actually didn't see anything wrong with his appearance, and so, he was riding in the streetcar one day, I believe, and he sat next to some Negroes. Well, when he got out of the streetcar, or bus, or whatever it was, these boys ganged up on him, and hit him in the mouth, and loosened his front teeth, I believe. But this I only know from my mother.
Well, it was after that, and then another time, and I don't know if they were teasing him and they said, "Oh, Lee--" and when he turned around, they hit him. It was just actually that even though he was in fights, I think that it wasn't always his fault because I don't think he was an agitator in any way, because he really minded his own business. That much I know, but the incidents I only know from what my mother said. So, at that time I think he made the statement also, that it wasn't his fault, that he was minding his own business and "I don't have the same interests as the other students." They didn't like him because of his accent, and because he sat next to the Negroes, which was one incident. But he was extremely quiet.
Mr. Liebeler.
Was it in connection with the discussion of these various difficulties that he had, that you learned that he used to just go to the park and sit in the park and observe nature, and was fond of it, interested in that sort of thing?
Miss MURRET. I don't think he told me that--my mother must have told me that, because this came up when they told me this, when that boy, or that is, when some of the students from Beauregard were on TV and said that he was always in fights, and it was then that my mother said, actually, I mean, that
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