Mrs. Paine. This is the rough draft, to which I just referred, written to Marina.

Mr. Jenner. And you thereupon prepared the final draft and sent it?

Mrs. Paine. That is correct.

Mr. Jenner. This represents, does it not, your best recollection of the contents of the letter, the letter in its final form as you transmitted it to Marina?

Mrs. Paine. I think this is probably a very accurate representation of the letter in its final form. It was the first time I put on paper an invitation to her to come and stay with me for anything more than a few weeks around the birth of the baby.

Mr. Jenner. Have you supplied the Commission with a translation of your letter?

Mrs. Paine. Yes; I have.

Mr. Jenner. And that appears at the bottom of page 7 of your notes which you have supplied to me?

Mrs. Paine. That is correct.

Mr. Jenner. I direct your attention, if I may, and the attention of the Commission as interpreted by Mrs. Paine, the first sentence reads, "Dear Marina, if Lee doesn't wish to live with you any more and prefers that you go to the Soviet Union, think about the possibility of living with me."