Mrs. Gravitis. Yes.

Mr. Belin. She lived in Leningrad with her husband after she got married?

Mr. Mamantov. Would you mind if she started again?

Mr. Belin. Let's start at the beginning now.

Mrs. Gravitis. In Minsk she got married. This is White Russia. And then together with her husband arrived at Leningrad. They lived in Leningrad on this street, Ligovka Street.

Mr. Mamantov. Now mother stresses that so much, because she remembers this part in Petrograd very well, and this was the laborers, the poor part of Leningrad—I mean of Petrograd at that time, and somehow brought mother's memory back to Petrograd.

Mr. Belin. Did she say what she did in Leningrad and Minsk after she was married, or what her husband did?

Mrs. Gravitis. I asked her what is her profession. She said she is a pharmacist. And I was surprised at 22 years and pharmacist.

Mr. Belin. Did she say what her husband did in Russia?

Mrs. Gravitis. I didn't ask and she didn't say.