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. They stayed there a very short while and Marina was petrified---- Miss MURRET. Well, on meeting us for the first time, and the language barrier, and the baby was cross and crying because of all the people there, I guess, and probably tired. I think Marina was nervous or probably thinking that we would think that it was a bad or a spoiled child. So they left very shortly after, and I don't think Marina ever came in the back. Mrs. Paine came in the back to get a root beer, and I can't remember if that is when she introduced herself, or I was in the front when they introduced them, or not. I met Marina when she came into the living room. I don't remember whether he introduced me to Mrs. Paine formally, or whether she introduced herself. Miss MURRET. Yes; he had moved out---- Miss MURRET. Yes. Miss MURRET. She doesn't speak English. On that day we hardly said anything. Miss MURRET. Yes. Miss MURRET. Yes. Miss MURRET. It was exasperating. Miss MURRET. I think she understood more than she could speak, but still there is a lot she doesn't understand. Miss MURRET. Yes. Miss MURRET. Just petty things, you know, like if she would eat something, how to make that, and "no like," or through mannerisms and small words to say a few things. She also commented, you know, when they would eat over there a few times on the food, but other than that, she---- Miss MURRET. Mrs. Paine? I don't know--my mother had said that Lee had been invited to this professor's house, or something, to show slides, a professor out at Tulane, a professor of languages. Miss MURRET. That was when he was living on Magazine, and I think they telephoned my mother to find out if anybody had called the house for an application, or different things, and I think he said he was going that night, that they were suppose to show slides. Now, this man had one daughter, I think, who was in Russia, and he was a friend of Mrs. Paine's. Miss MURRET. No. Miss MURRET. No; I don't know the language professor's name. Miss MURRET. I don't think so, because I think it was the other Secret Service man who tried to get her to remember and she couldn't.
|
Found a Typo?Click here |
Copyright by www.jfk-assassination.com | Last Update: Wed, 3 Aug 2016 21:56:33 CET |