Mr. Jenner. I beg your pardon?

Mrs. Paine. I think she meant dreamed while sleeping.

Mr. Jenner. Did she indicate anything beyond that—that is, that she had a dream—did she indicate any hope or desire or affinity, willingness to come to America?

Mrs. Paine. Yes; that this was also a hope on her part.

Mr. Jenner. Did she indicate this was a hope prior to the time she had married Lee Oswald?

Mrs. Paine. It wasn't clear to me when this hope arose.

Mr. Jenner. Did she indicate it was a hope or desire on her part wholly divorced from Lee Oswald?

Mrs. Paine. Yes.

Mr. Jenner. Now, you were telling me about your impressions of Marina's personality, her character, her integrity.

Mrs. Paine. We spoke once, to my recollection, about our respective beliefs in God. She told me that she observed, looking at the nations of the world, and their religious books, like the Bible, the Koran, that people all over the world for centuries believed in God, had this faith, and she felt that such an idea could not arise so many places as it were spontaneously and live on so many places unless there were something to it.