Mr. Fain. Yes; he just advised about the matter of having been given an undesirable discharge had not been reviewed. We did ask him that because he brought it up and mentioned it before.

Mr. Stern. Did he seem——

Mr. Fain. He didn't know when it would be heard at that time. He said he didn't know when it would be heard.

Mr. Stern. Did he seem angry about it, the status?

Mr. Fain. No; just answered it and didn't seem ruffled.

Mr. Stern. At any point in the course of the interview did he display anger or irritation?

Mr. Fain. The only point he did, was when we asked him again why he went to the Soviet Union in the first place, and I didn't like his answer there. That is set out on the bottom of page 5. He still declined to answer questions as to why he went to the Soviet Union in the first instance. He said he considered it nobody's business why he wanted to go to the Soviet Union. Finally he stated he went over to Russia for his own personal reasons. He said it was a personal matter to him. He said, "I went and I came back." He said "It was something that I did." So he just bowed his neck and apparently wasn't going to tell anything further at all on that point.

Mr. Dulles. Could I ask a question? On the bottom of the earlier page, page 1, where it stated that Oswald was interviewed when he first arrived at the Soviet Union, and he stated he was interviewed when he was about to leave by representatives of the MVD, he was quite clear about the MVD and not the KGB?

Mr. Fain. That is right; he indicated the MVD.

Mr. Dulles. And he clearly said MVD?