Mr. Liebeler. Did you form an opinion as to whether or not Marina Oswald did understand any English, or to what extent she understood English?
Mr. Hall. All the time, every meeting we had, I didn't feel like she could understand anything further than hello.
Mr. Liebeler. You first met them, as you said, in Fort Worth in the fall of 1962, and the last time you saw them was at Easter of 1963?
Mr. Hall. Yes.
Mr. Liebeler. And you maintain that opinion about Marina's ability to use English throughout that entire time, is that correct?
Mr. Hall. That's right.
Mr. Liebeler. Did Oswald ever express any resentment against the U.S. Government for any reason that you can remember?
Mr. Hall. Not specifically. Just feeling. Like on capitalism, and I don't know if this is related to the time Max Clark and I were together with Oswald, and I don't know, Oswald didn't say this, somebody told me like George Bouhe, that Oswald felt—and we are just middle-income people—but he felt he didn't like us, because he felt like we were true capitalists, and that was just because we had a television set in the bedroom and one in the living room.
This was bitter to him. He didn't like that fact and didn't like electric can openers and things like that.
Mr. Liebeler. He expressed that, a general resentment of the social system?