Mr. Jenner. Now, give me your best recollection of what George Bouhe said to you about the Oswalds on that occasion.
Mr. De Mohrenschildt. He said rather a complimentary account of them—I don't think he met them yet. I think he just heard about them.
Mr. Jenner. It is your recollection he had just heard about them, and heard she is very pretty, and comes from an excellent family—supposedly. And he is a fellow who got disappointed in Soviet Russia and returned to the United States, and that met with George Bouhe's approval—somebody who did that.
Mr. De Mohrenschildt. I don't think he even knew that he had been an ex-Marine, and all that. I don't think he knew anything about that.
Mr. Jenner. When George Bouhe spoke to you then—have you exhausted your recollections as to the conversation right at that point?
Mr. De Mohrenschildt. I am trying to think about it. I just remember that I got curious, what kind of a fellow he is, and what kind of a woman she is.
Mr. Jenner. Were you particularly interested when you heard she was pretty?
Mr. De Mohrenschildt. No, no; not particularly. No; because—but it is nice to know a good-looking girl rather than to know some monster.
Mr. Jenner. You have——
Mr. De Mohrenschildt. I am always curious to find somebody better looking than horrible. We are talking about serious things.