Mrs. Paine. That is right.
Mr. Jenner. Were there any occasions in which he related or recounted, or she, of his having made any friendships in Dallas?
Mrs. Paine. He never mentioned anyone he knew.
Mr. Jenner. Did he say anything about what he did after hours, after work hours in Dallas?
Mrs. Paine. Only the reference I have already related, of having been to the National Indignation Committee meeting.
Mr. Jenner. That was the only occasion? What was your impression of what he did, from all you heard and saw in your home when he was there, or any conversations you had with Marina, as to how he occupied his time after work hours, during the week when he remained in Dallas?
Mrs. Paine. My impression, insofar as I have one, is that he spent evenings at his room, and he had mentioned, as I have said, that the room he had moved to had television privileges, and I, therefore, guessed that he made use of that opportunity.
Mr. Jenner. Did you have the impression, or what impression did you have on this score—as to whether he was a man who had—who somewhat lacked confidence in himself, or might have been resentful that he was not generally accepted as a man of capacity?
Mrs. Paine. I think he had a combination of a lack of confidence in himself and a mistaken, as I have said, overblown impression of himself, these operating at the same time.
I think he felt that he wanted more skilled work than he was doing at the School Book Depository. But the major impression I carry about his feeling of work at the School Book Depository was that it was income, and he was glad to have it.