Miss Murret. No.
Mr. Liebeler. Do you speak any foreign language?
Miss Murret. I studied French and Spanish, but was hopeless.
Mr. Liebeler. Did he tell you about any school that he might have gone to when he was in Russia, any training that he might have gotten?
Miss Murret. No sir; he didn't say anything at all about any kind of training. When he first came out, I couldn't understand how he had gotten out, in the first place.
Mr. Liebeler. How he had gotten out of Russia to come back, you mean?
Miss Murret. With a Russian wife, and he did say her father was—was he a Russian officer? Anyway——
Mr. Liebeler. Did he say her father——
Miss Murret. He was, or she might have said that in her broken English, so I couldn't conceive of how they had gotten out of Russia, and how he had access to Russia, I mean to work there, et cetera, and then just to be allowed to leave, with a Russian wife, and her father being in the Army. And I think that she had an uncle—I don't know—but I think it was in the papers, or in some magazine recently that he is with the Intelligence Service in Russia.
Mr. Liebeler. Her uncle?