Mr. Ford. There was, most of the conversation was in Russian which I don't understand. I had very little conversation with Lee himself because he spoke Russian most of the time that afternoon and Marina didn't speak any English at all.
Mr. Liebeler. Did you have any conversations in English with Oswald about living conditions in Russia, about his expenses in Russia?
Mr. Ford. A little bit. He showed me pictures of people that he had worked with in Russia. I believe they were on a picnic together, a group of men, and various other pictures of places he had seen in Minsk, and he briefly described the living conditions in Russia, I guess the conditions under which he had lived in Russia, the small room they had to live in, and he said something about how much money he made there. I don't remember how much it was though.
Mr. Liebeler. Did he tell you what kind of a job he had?
Mr. Ford. No, he didn't. I think George Bouhe told me he had been a sheet metal worker or something similar to that.
Mr. Liebeler. In Minsk?
Mr. Ford. In Minsk, yes.
Mr. Liebeler. Did Oswald compare to you the amount of money that he was paid with the amount of money that other workers in the plant were paid?
Mr. Ford. No; he said nothing about it.
Mr. Liebeler. Did he indicate in any way any source of income other than from his job?