Mr. Liebeler. There never was anything peculiar about Oswald that caused you to form a peculiar judgment about him or think he was peculiar in any way?

Mr. Gregory. No.

Mr. Liebeler. But he was the kind that easily flared up, although he never did it in your presence, he was the type that would, and you did think that about Oswald?

Mr. Gregory. Yes. But as far as any violence, I couldn't picture him.

Mr. Liebeler. Did Oswald ever indicate to you that the world situation was not due to the people in the world, but was caused by the leaders in the various countries?

Mr. Gregory. I think so. Once or twice he made that exact statement, and I can't remember if it was Marina or Lee. That is the exact words.

Mr. Liebeler. Was that translated into any animosity against the leaders of the two countries, either Khrushchev or Kennedy?

Mr. Gregory. I could not say. I would not think so, because of what I have already said about the fact that Lee had expressed admiration of Khrushchev and had expressed that positive feeling toward Kennedy.

Mr. Liebeler. Now that I have called to your attention and you recall that either Lee or Marina did make a remark about the world troubles being caused by the leaders and not the people, does that cause you to reflect on your prior testimony?

Mr. Gregory. No; I don't think so. There was no animosity in the statement. It was more or less——