Mr. De Mohrenschildt. This is something that is much more familiar to me because I was interested in the town itself.
Mr. Jenner. And this is the paragraph beginning, "The reconstruction of Minsk is on an interesting story reflecting the courage of its builders."
Mr. De Mohrenschildt. Yes; that was something that interested me because I lived in my childhood in this town and I remembered some of the buildings. I remember asking Oswald about what happened to this street and that street, you see. But I forgot the names. I just described them. What happened to this street and that street?
He gave me some sort of an answer that now it is full of big buildings, you see, and I remember it as being full of small provincial houses, you see. And again I cannot swear to the fact that that is the same paper I saw.
Mr. Jenner. But this seems to you more familiar?
Mr. De Mohrenschildt. More familiar maybe because I paid more attention to the city than I paid to something else.
Mr. Jenner. This is quite a long diatribe.
Mr. De Mohrenschildt. It couldn't be the same document because that wasn't as long as that.
Mr. Jenner. It was not?
Mr. De Mohrenschildt. No.