Mr. Liebeler. Yes; at any time, just what your general impression and feeling about Marguerite Oswald was?
Miss Murret. I think she is a woman of very good character, but she had a very curt tongue, and she doesn't forget very easily. I mean if you have an argument with her, I don't think she forgets it immediately. But she also, I guess, and it is probably her reason for that, and I mean, if she worked, she had to work in these department stores, and she was not a gossipy type of woman, and I don't know but I worked a few summers in a department store, and I know that for these sales how they—I mean they will slit one another's throats.
Mr. Liebeler. The sales clerks?
Miss Murret. Yes. I think that the employees were arguing—she didn't engage in petty gossip as other employees and probably got in arguments over that, you know, and she was a little quick-tongued.
Mr. Liebeler. But other than that you have no——
Miss Murret. Other than that she was nice in her own way, you know.
Mr. Liebeler. There was a time in the spring of 1963 when Lee Oswald came to New Orleans, isn't that correct?
Miss Murret. Yes.
Mr. Liebeler. Tell us what you know about that?
Miss Murret. When he came in the last time, you mean?