Mr. Dulles. I remember you testified before and I asked you if you had heard him threaten any official or other person and your answer was no.
Mrs. Oswald. Because I forgot at that time about the incident with Nixon.
Mr. Dulles. I want to ask you again: In view of the fact that you knew—in view of the fact that he had threatened Walker by shooting at him, and he threatened Vice President Nixon can you not tell this Commission whether after that he threatened to hurt, harm any other person?
Mrs. Oswald. Nobody else. Perhaps I should be punished for not having said anything about all this, but I was just a wife and I was trying to keep the family together, at that time. I mean to say. I am talking, of course, of the time before President Kennedy's death. And if I forget to say anything now, I am not doing it on purpose.
Mr. Dulles. I am just asking questions. Will you say here that he never did make any statement against President Kennedy?
Mrs. Oswald. Never.
Mr. Dulles. Did he ever make any statement about him of any kind?
Mrs. Oswald. He used to read and translate articles from the newspaper about Kennedy to me and from magazines, favorable articles about Kennedy. He never commented on them and he never discussed them in any way but because of his translations and his reading to me he always had a favorable feeling about President Kennedy because he always read these favorably inclined articles to me. He never said that these articles never were true that he was a bad President or anything like that.
Mr. Dulles. I didn't catch the last.
Mrs. Oswald. He never said these articles were not true or that President Kennedy was a bad President or anything like that.