Mr. Liebeler. After looking at this picture, are you more convinced, or less convinced, or do you still have about the same feeling that you had before you looked at it that the man who was in your apartment late in September was the same man as Lee Harvey Oswald?

Mrs. Odio. I have to be careful about that, because I have the same feeling that it was, but at the same time I have been looking at papers for months and months of pictures, and these help you to remember too much. I wish I could isolate the incident without remembering the other pictures. I have a feeling there are certain pictures that do not resemble him. It was not the Oswald that was standing in front of my door. He was kind of tired looking. He had a little smile, but he was sunken in in the face that day. More skinny, I would say.

Mr. Liebeler. Well, do you have any doubts in your mind after looking at these pictures that the man that was in your apartment was the same man as Lee Harvey Oswald?

Mrs. Odio. I don't have any doubts.

Mr. Liebeler. Do you want to run the picture once more, John?

Mrs. Odio. What I am trying to establish is the man with the bald in the back was similar to the profile, but he seems lighter in this picture. But the men looked like Mexicans. They did not look like Cubans.

Mr. Liebeler. Now we have here two pictures that have been made from films of this movie.

Mrs. Odio. In that picture he didn't resemble that at all [pointing].

Mr. Liebeler. You are referring to Pizzo Exhibit No. 453-B; the man marked with the number 2?

Mrs. Odio. That's right.