Mr. Liebeler. Other than these contacts we have discussed, did you have any other contacts with Oswald ever?

Mr. Gregory. Well, I was at home when my son Paul answered a telephone call from Lee Oswald and he asked if Paul would come to get them, I guess they were at his brother's, they were going to Dallas, they moved to Dallas by then, so it must have been in October or maybe it was——

Mr. Liebeler. Was it Thanksgiving?

Mr. Gregory. It could have been Thanksgiving. It was Thanksgiving. It was Thanksgiving Day. Paul went to Oswald, Robert Oswald, and brought Marina and Lee Oswald and the baby to the house. He fixed some sandwiches for them and he took them to the bus station and they went to Dallas where they had already established residence. That was the last time I saw Lee Oswald and Marina Oswald until after the assassination of the President.

Mr. Liebeler. On the basis of your contacts with Lee Oswald during this period of time, did you form any judgment of him?

Mr. Gregory. Yes, sir; I think I did. He impressed me as a man that, first, he carried some sort of a chip on his shoulder. I also had the impression that, probably unfounded on my part, I don't know, I just formed that impression, that he, Lee Oswald, felt that he did not get proper recognition from the people, say, in the United States, maybe even in the Soviet Union. I don't know. In other words, I felt like he thought that he was a better man than the other people thought he was.

Mr. Liebeler. Did you have the feeling that he desired to achieve recognition?

Mr. Gregory. That is my distinct impression of him.

Mr. Liebeler. Did you have any opinion as to whether he was ever able to command this recognition and respect that he was seeking?

Mr. Gregory. I don't think so.