Mrs. Hall. Generally. I never heard sexual nothing; no. Only when I asked her about this, she told me. And that was, we don't talk any more about this. I didn't hear it. Maybe somebody else did. I didn't.
Mr. Liebeler. You had the feeling, I gather from what you said, that if there were difficulties in the Oswald marriage, they were not entirely Lee Oswald's fault? It also would be some of the fault of Marina?
Mrs. Hall. Yes.
Mr. Liebeler. What is your opinion?
Mrs. Hall. I think that she is stubborn, real stubborn, and she would pick up something little and go on and have an argument for nothing.
Mr. Liebeler. Did you ever hear them argue about politics?
Mrs. Hall. No, sir; I never did discuss politics because I saw the Marx books and everything on his table, and I never did even go to a conversation with him. But sometimes I would ask her, "How is life in Russia?"
And well, she would tell me that nothing, in what you go to the restaurant, and they don't have food, and things like that and he would get mad at her. "That is not true. They have everything." And so on. And she would tell, I guess, the truth, and he wouldn't like that.
Mr. Liebeler. Oswald sometimes expressed a more favorable view of life in Russia than Marina did?
Mrs. Hall. Yes.