Mr. Jenner. Do you know if Oswald received any financial assistance in addition to that which he received from Mr. Bouhe? Did Oswald ever discuss his finances with you and your husband?

Mrs. De Mohrenschildt. I don't think so. I don't think we talked much about that. It is just that it is pretty tight because they have to pay out the debt.

Mr. Jenner. Did he ever express any views that were antagonistic to the United States and its form of government?

Mrs. De Mohrenschildt. Never. He objected to the way the integration question was handled, in this way. And I think we all do.

Mr. Jenner. He was opposed to segregation, was he?

Mrs. De Mohrenschildt. Of course, he was opposed to segregation. He wanted complete equality of rights because those people are just American as everybody else so it is really one of the worst problems we have.

Mr. Jenner. I appreciate that, but I am trying to find out what his views were.

Mrs. De Mohrenschildt. Yes; he is completely in accord with President Kennedy's policy on the subject. That is why it doesn't make exactly sense. He has no reason whatsoever, to our knowledge. Maybe he had something inside which he never disclosed to us, you know.

Mr. Jenner. Now, there have been interruptions yesterday and today in which we have been off the record and we have had some discussions. Is there anything that you have said to me or I have said to you off the record, that is, not when it was taken down, that I have failed to bring out that you might regard in any degree pertinent to this investigation?

Mrs. De Mohrenschildt. Well, the only thing, the question I actually brought up yesterday, it was not about Oswald. I mean in my thinking it was. I think you should investigate Ruby inside out because it just doesn't make any sense. That is what bothers me.