Mr. Liebeler. But even though you had heard before you had gotten out of the Marine Corps that Oswald had gone to the Soviet Union, while you were in the Army in Germany you gained the impression that somehow that he was in Berlin, going to school?
Mr. Delgado. Yes; in the university there.
Mr. Liebeler. But you don't have any recollection of where you got this idea?
Mr. Delgado. No.
Mr. Liebeler. You were under the impression, then, that he had left the Soviet Union?
Mr. Delgado. Yes. I couldn't—Oswald loved to travel, right, but if he couldn't take military life, where everything was told to him, I'm sure he couldn't take no life in Russia, where he was subjected to strict, you know, watching. I couldn't picture him living over there. I thought he had gone to, you know, like I said, the university in Berlin, to study there. He wanted to study psychology.
Mr. Liebeler. Did you think that he was perhaps at the same university that you spoke of before, that he had applied for when he was in the Marines?
Mr. Delgado. No; because I—the way I understand it, it's—there's two big psychologists institutes in Europe. One is in Switzerland. If he was a devout Communist or pro-Russian, as they say he was—one was in East Berlin, and one was in Switzerland—he couldn't have gone to Switzerland. I knew he applied for Switzerland.
Mr. Liebeler. So you figured that because he had this interest in psychology, and since he was interested in communism, he probably wouldn't have gone to the university in Switzerland, but he might very well have gone to the one in Berlin?
Mr. Delgado. Well, actually it was on their own level. They would train him their way.