Mrs. Paine. I wasn't interested.

Mr. Jenner. Because of the nature of the document?

Mrs. Paine. If I had had time to do much reading, I might have taken an interest but I had no time, insufficient time to do the reading I really wanted to do. He also subscribed to the Worker.

Mr. Jenner. Is that the publication of the Communist Party USA?

Mrs. Paine. I have been told so.

Mr. Jenner. Did you read that?

Mrs. Paine. No.

Mr. Jenner. Did you observe—have you now concluded the list of newspapers, periodicals or magazines to which he was a subscriber?

Mrs. Paine. I believe so. I might say that my awareness of his subscribing to these last two, the Militant and the Worker, came after the assassination. There was mail awaiting for him for that weekend which he did not pick up on the 21st, and after the assassination, indeed, after Saturday evening, the 23d, when it was announced on television that they had a photograph of Lee Oswald holding two papers. I looked at this pile of mail waiting for him which consisted of these two newspapers, the Militant and the Worker, and I threw them away.

Mr. Jenner. You threw them away?