Warren Commission | Media Library | Articles | FAQ | Links | Feedback | Contact | About |
The John F. Kennedy Assassination Homepage |
Navigation
Volumes
|
(Testimony of Marilyn Dorothea Murret)Miss MURRET. Who? Marguerite? Miss MURRET. When she came back you mean? Miss MURRET. I think she is a woman of very good character, but she had a very curt tongue, and she doesn't forget very easily. I mean if you have an argument with her, I don't think she forgets it immediately. But she also, I guess, and it is probably her reason for that, and I mean, if she worked, she had to work in these department stores, and she was not a gossipy type of woman, and I don't know but I worked a few summers in a department store, and I know that for these sales how they--I mean they will slit one another's throats. Miss MURRET. Yes. I think that the employees were arguing--she didn't engage in petty gossip as other employees and probably got in arguments over that, you know, and she was a little quick-tongued. Miss MURRET. Other than that she was nice in her own way, you know. Miss MURRET. Yes. Miss MURRET. When he came in the last time, you mean? Miss MURRET. Yes. Miss MURRET. He telephoned my mother, I think from the bus station. Of course, we didn't even know that he was back, and so he asked if he could stay there a while until he got a job, and he told my mother that he was married, and that he had a baby. So, my mother asked him if he was alone, because if he had a family she wouldn't have been able to accommodate him. But he was by himself, so she said O.K. He stayed there a while until he found a place on Magazine Street. And then the wife and this lady from Texas came down, and they moved into the place on Magazine Street. Miss MURRET. Yes. Miss MURRET. Yes. Miss MURRET. I am not sure whether it was a week or a little over a week. Miss MURRET. During the day he was usually looking for a job, and I was working. And in the evening maybe we would talk a little, but nothing in particular. I was usually working on lesson plans, and he went to work about 8:30 or 9 o'clock, and the only discussions that I really had was on religion. Miss MURRET. I beg your pardon? Miss MURRET. Yes. Miss MURRET. He just listened. Miss MURRET. And then he just said or I assumed that he was an atheist because a brother of mine is in the seminary, you know----
|
Found a Typo?Click here |
Copyright by www.jfk-assassination.com | Last Update: Wed, 3 Aug 2016 21:56:33 CET |