Mr. McCloy. We had testimony this morning whether he had an opportunity to dry sight the rifle in his New Orleans house.
Mrs. Paine. I was just discussing what would be visible in the front of his house.
Mr. Jenner. We were having some testimony, Representative Ford, of Lee Harvey Oswald's dry sighting of the rifle when he was in New Orleans.
Representative Ford. Marina so testified when she was here.
Mr. McCloy. You don't purport to say it was impossible for him to do it without observation but it was difficult.
Mrs. Paine. It was difficult.
My then 2-year-old boy found a number of boys with trucks to play with right on that immediate driveway or alley as it is marked on the paper and small boys would have been very interested and they went right by there and Marina complained that Junie couldn't get her nap because there were so many children.
Mr. McCloy. He could have done it very early in the morning without observation?
Mrs. Paine. Yes.
Mr. Dulles. Have you any idea generally how Lee Oswald used his time, I mean when you weren't observing him when he wasn't at your house? Did he talk, tell you how he used his time? Did he use it on television? What I am trying to get at is—is there a great deal of time he had available to him that there is no way of knowing what he did. But did he talk about that, did he give you an idea of what he was, how he occupied himself, reading, television?