F*ro Id Feldman 221 5. 4?th St root Philadelphia, P

CDf3
F*ro Id Feldman
221 5 . 4?th St root
P h ila d e lp h ia , P». 19139
THE UNSUnCABLE MARGUERITE OSWALD
I f th e oookoSuro rogues who fin g e re d Lee Harvey Oswald aa th e Iona
a s s a s s in o f Kennedy Had known h ia m other b e t t o r , th ln g a m ight have been d if f e r e n t.
C e r ta in ly , th e y would have ta k e n pause - perhaps locked around f o r an o th er p a tey .
Now th e y have h e r on t h e i r b a o k s, and th e y s n a r l w ith mockery and menace.
T h e ir p w b lit& ty men cannot w rite th r e e lin e s about h e r w ith o u t su g g estin g th a t
the p roper p la c e f o r t h i s aging Antigone who c r i e s J u s tio e f o r h e r murdered act*
i s an asylum o r a g ra v e .
T e e , th e r e i s a to u ch o f th e unsohooled prim s donna about “a rg u e rite
Oswald 89 ahe g le a n s some e g o is t ic com fort from h e r i s o l a t i o n .
Hers and th e re
ahe responds t o th e ic y d e afn ess o f th e dom inations and powers w ith ex trav ag an t
s u s p ic tio n and s p e c u la tio n .
But i f Ib een i s r i g h t and th e s tro n g e o t i s the one
who s ta n d s a lo n e f o r i n t e g r i t y and h o n o r, th e n M arguerite Oswald i s th e stro n g e st
w^T-an in iS e r i e s .
T f i r s t saw h e r i n a c tio n on f a tu r d a y , June 27.
M th two f r ie n d e , I oame
to D a lla s to review th e landm arks o f th e Kennedy a s s a s s in a tio n , and a tslsp h o n s
c a l l to Oswald’ s mother i n F o rt Worth brought an in v i t a t i o n to guide us on a to u r
o f Oak C l i f f .
That i s th e p a r t of D a lla s where Patrolm an J .D .T ip p it was k ille d
rsnd Lee was c a p tu re d th r e e c u a r te r e o f an hour l a t e r , an hour and a h a lf a f t e r
s n ip e r b u l l e t s had b la s te d th e P r e s id e n t.
The f i r s t s u r p r is e was h e r v o ic e .
h a rrid a n so o f te n d e sc rib e d by th e press*
Not a tr a c e of th e g r u f f paranoid
'7hat I heard in s te a d was a p leasan t
la d y lik e welcome, no c a u tio u s am bi.uiity in th e c o u rte sy t h a t o a r r ie d only a
f a i n t aug e s t i o n o f lo n a lin a a s .
M arguerite Oswald I s 56 y e a rs o ld but w ith h a rd ly a w rin k le on h e r round
pink-cheeked f a c e .
S h o r t, plump, even dumpy, h e r fa e e and fig u re a re li v e l y
so u v e n irs o f what m ist have been a p r e tty v iv a cio u s g irlh o o d , which added w e ig h t,
horn-rimmed b i f o c a l s , and salt-* n d © p ep p er h a ir p u lle d back in to a knot have w ily
tu rn e d in to an a g re e a b le T catro n lin ess.
-'fra. Oswald was a lUO-a-day p r a c t i c a l
n u rse when the P r e s id e n t's murder tu rn e d h er in to th e feuding defender o f th e
Oswald fam ily honor (she was f i r e d a few days l a t e r ) .
I t i s easy to im agine h e r
busy about a s ic k room, c a jo l in g , s o n s o lin g , c h a tt in g , and stan d in g fo r no
nonsense about ta k in g o n e 's nux vom ica.
The p a r t o f Oak C l i f f where Lee Oswald liv e d and J .D .T ip p it d ie d i s a
decaying neighborhood whose la rg e houses have tu rn e d in to so many rooms f o r low
re n t.
Our to u r came s e v e r a l days a f t e r th e papers re p o rte d hew Oswald was only
r e s tr a in e d from s t a r t i n g a h o m icid al c a r e e r w ith R ichard Hlxon by h is w ife
lo c k in g him in h is room,
l Tved a t the tim e.
“ e w ent to th e rooming house where Lee and Marina
M arguerite was ad m itte d w ith sym pathetic d eferen ce and she
went from r ^ m to room, p o in tin g ou t t h a t none o f th e doors had e v er had lo c k s
on them.
Before le a v in g , she photographed th e fence a g a in s t H I which Lee was
supposed to be stan d in g when he had h is p ic tu re ta k e n f o r fu tu re re fe re n c e ,
h o ld in g a r i f l e , a gun, and a B o lsh ev ik newspaper.
"Look h e re ," she s a id , and
p o in te d to th e bottom o f th e f e n c e , o b v io u sly v ery d i f f e r e n t from what appeared
on th e dubious cover of L i f e .
A fte r we lo c a te d th e e p e t on E. 10th S tr e e t where T l p r it was found dead,
we walked about a block and a h a l f t o th e home o f Helen Louise Markham.
the 'tm who, th e r e p o rts s a y , was th e lone w itn e ss to th a t sh o o tin g .
alm ost becomes a slum t h e r e .
She i s
Oak C l i f f
Mrs. Uarkhaa liv e s in a sm all apartm ent over a
b a rb e r shop and she was pacin g back and f o r t h , h e r in fa n t granddaughter i n h e r
arm s, when we a r r iv e d .
3
No, eho oould n o t t a lk to u* now, ah* had t o mind th * baby,
t o pay f o r a b a b y - a ltt« r .
No a g a in , bu t could we r e tu r n a t 2 i l J when h e r husband
would bo hoc* and wo could t a l k f r e e l y ,
b e a te n and s t i r l t l e s * .
iy* o ffe re d
Helen Markham ia e t i U young but shabby,
She Jumped when ~ re . Oswald reached f o r th * baby.
* t 2>15 p .a . w» plowed th ro u g h th* T u rk iah -b ath a fte rn o o n Texas h e a t,
c a r r y in g six-pack* o f Coke a g a in s t th* an x io u s hour we foresaw in th * hot s ta l e
a i r o f th* ’fa rk h a a a p a rtm e n t.
s id e th * p la c e .
Two D a lla a p o lic e s t a t i o n wagon* w*r* parked o u t­
J u s t as w* ap proached, th e y p u lle d away,
Ur*, 0 , guessed what th e p o lic e war* th e r e f o r .
Up th e s ta i r * *h* charged
ahead o f u s , and th e r e we co n fro n te d th * moet p i t i f u l s p e o ta o le ,
Mr. Markham
sto o d in th e doorway and behind him th e a lle g e d w itn o es t o th* T ip p it murder
cowered t o on* s id e .
The man wac a tiUiYering w reck.
Every ousel* i n h is under­
n o u rish e d frame was a -tre m b l* , h i* mouth tw itc h e d u n c o n tro lla b ly , and hi* te e th
wore a c tu a lly c h a tte r in g from f r i g h t ,
" P le a s e ," he groaned lik e a whipped c o y o t* , "p le ase go away, pleas* d o n 't
cone b a c k ,"
'T ou'v* been ESOMfflttfiflt th r e a te n e d , h a v e n 't y o u ," Mr*. Oswald * ald ,
"Te*.
P le a s* go away,"
O u ts id e , Mrs. O sw ald's eyC* grew r*d f ig h t in g back th e te a r* th a t w elled
up.
That poor* n an !" she k ep t r e p e a tin g .
She wanted t o go to Washington a t
once t o re p o rt th e in c id e n t to th * b a rre n Coenmisalcn.
t o th r e a te n him?
"What r ig h t do they hav*
Thl* i* s t i l l A m erica, by God," ah* e tte d .
"We're going to
ae* I f th e y can g e t away With t h i s . "
B i l l Markham, 2 0 -y ear o ld aon o f Helen Markham, follow ed u* o u te id * .
H is m other and s te p f a th e r , he s a i d , were to o s c a re d t o t a l k to ue b u t ho w a sn 't.
!'* g o t in to our c a r and began t o t a l k ,
p a re n t* showed in ev ery word.
A c h illin g contempt f o r hi*
Also c l e a r was h is d e sp e ra te need o f money.
k
Would we pay for in fo rm atio n ?
I t only tak ea an hour o f independent work on the
Oswald c ase t o make on* c irc u m sp e c t.
V.e might bo oharged w ith b rib in g a w itn e ss ,
and how d id we know th a t th e boy was not every b i t o f th e l i a r he s a id hi*
r a th e r w as.
The s u lle n te e n -a g e r w ith th e handsome ta n n ed face topped w ith blaok
c u rl* a d m itte d he had a p o lic e re c o rd .
The p o lic e had g o tte n him f ir e d from
s e v e r a l Job* by a o -c a llo d p a ro le checkup*.
He w a s n 't working and he wanted,
more th a n a n y th in g e l s e , money.
" I need i t , ma’ am,” he draft&ed, "and I'm going t o g e t m yself some."
Tea,
th e S e a r e t S e rv ic e had to ld h i* p aren t* " th e re would be tro u b le ” i f th e y ta lk e d
t o o u ts id e r * .
"But I ’ a n o t a f r a i d , ma’ am.
I need ooney and I f I don’ t g e t i t
one w ay. I ’ l l g e t i t a n o th e r,"
V<hy n o t go away to an o th er s t a t e and s t a r t c le a n , Mrs. Oswald pleaded
w ith him .
"The p o l i c e 'l l be a l t e r sc anyway, ma'am, and I c a n 't a ffo rd a law yer.
I c a n 't a f f o r d a n y th in g .”
"P le a se be c a r e f u l ," a re s a id .
"Ch ;o r d , poor paopl* are so h e lp le s s .
I f you were n d d d le -c la s * , you w o u ld n 't have th e se problem *.
ynp can w in a g a in s t th e p o lic e ,
And don’ t be so sure
My le e was ao m ire."
As he was le a v in g th e c a r , she to r k h is hand.
T o u 'l l take c a re ," s h e
e i i d , "and i f you g e t in to tro u b le and need h e lp , p le ase g e t in touch w ith me.
I ' l l f in d s o n way t o h e lp you."
Two day* l a t e r M arguerite c a lle d u s to coins over f a s t .
h o ld in g up s new spaper in h e r hand.
b u rg la ry and p a ro le v i o l a t i o n .
She g re e ted u s ,
The .larkhaa boy had been picked up fo r
I t r e c a lle d th e s im ila r a r r e s t a few weeks
b e fo re o f Abraham B olden, th e f i r s t Negro S e c re t S e rfic # nan assigned to th e
? r e s i d e n t i a l bodyguard, on chargee o f co o p eratin g w ith c o u n te r f e ite r s .
There
to o th e a r r e s t was made a f t e r Bolden announced he had in fo rm atio n re le v a n t to
th e noirder of th e P r e s id e n t.
■
There to o th e charge was e n t i r e l y based on th e
5
te stim o n y of two w itrw seos who them aelve* were under p o lio * charge*.
"I keep th in k in g , maybe t a lk in g t o us got th e boy a r r e s te d ,* U rs. Oswald
s a id ,
" " o 're g o t to h elp him ."
’ nd fo r seven hours M arg u erite Oswald was on tha phone tr y in g t o go t a
law yer f - r young Itarkham.
‘Tie c a ll e d Mark lane In New York, Or«g Old* o f th e
? a l l a s C iv il L ib e rtie s Union who made vague u n f u l f i l l e d pledge*, th e Lawyer#
R e f e r r a l S e rv ic e , s ix a tto rn e y # i n F o rt E o rth who bogged o f f ,
them a t le a s t v i s i t th e boy in J a i l ?
Shadow linage# croased h e r mind o f Vlarkham
bein g k ille d in J a i l J u s t ao h e r sen w as.
b u t i t was no go,
W ouldn't on# of
She o ffe re d to pay th e le g a l expense*
She g o t p ro a lo e * , recommendations, ap o lo g ia* , t u t no law yer,
(Lrar< Lane f i n a l l y managed to persuade a r e lu c ta n t c o lle ag u e in Dali®*
t o 3#o young Markham).
Mrs. hawald i a unemployed.
a s s a s s in a tio n .
No Job has m a te ria liz e d fo r h e r wince th e
Her income 1* based alm ost s o le ly on th e s a le o f d o c u aa n ts.
L ife bought a p ic tu re o f h e r and M arina f o r £1000 and re q u ire p a id }1&0Q fo r
s ix te e n l e t t e r s Lee had w r itt e n h e r d u rin g h is e x ile in R u ssia,
r e p o r te r s paid f o r In te rv ie w * .
Come fo r e ig n
Sh* liv e * i n & o n e -flo o r 9 th re e -ro ^ n house
(•■ent:v30 a m onth), she spends l i t t l e f o r fo o d , h er wardrobe i* alm ost empty,
and she h ates to touch a d o l l a r o f th e money she has put a sid e to f ig h t her
case.
" h a t a c o n tr a s t t h i s makes t o th e f a n ta s tio concern shewn f o r th e a lle g e d
a s s a s s i n 's w ife , M arina!
The R u ssian g i r l , whoa Lee m arried a f t r ho decided
t o r e tu r n to A f r i c a , has re c e iv e d some ®6 ‘ 75,000 in dona*inn* and payment*.
e i s th e o b je c t o f every te n d e r s o l i c i t u d e , p u b lic and in tim a te , from the
S e c re t S e rv ic e ,
’ bon th e F o r t TCorth C ouncil o f Churohes s ta r te d a fund fo r th e
Oswald*, they soon made i t c le a r t h e i r c h a r ity was n o t meant f o r the mother who
wa* so tinmothcrly as to defend h e r so n .
Check* f o r the r e l i e f o f M arguerite
n ero re tu rn e d to the se n d e rs.
The roaeon f o r t h l a d ie c rim in a tio n , th e la v is h accep tan ce, alm ost se d u c tio n
o f M arina, th e h o s tile o stra cism o f M a rg u e rite , i s obvious enough.
ra te s .
Marina o o-ope-
She stakes th e p ro p er n o isee f o r th e S e c re t S e rv ic e and th e FBI.
A fte r
f i r s t p r o te s tin g M s innocence, she now h a rd ly l e t s a month go bey w ith o u t adding
t o th e monstrous H a t o f h e r h u sb an d 's In ten d ed v ic tim s .
th e o th e r hand. I s in f le x ib le In d e fe n se o f h e r so n ,
M arguerite Oswald, on
"The inoney i s running o u t,"
she s a y s , b u t, l ik e 'licaw ber, she is sure som ething w i l l tu r n up.
Almost ev ery day she v i s i t s L e e 's grave in R o s e h ill Cem etery, jd e t o u ts id e
o f F o r t Worth.
The re p la c e s th e flo w e rs s n itc h e d by so u v en ir h u n te rs , weeds th s
g ra s s and te n d s the s a p lin g t h a t w avers over h i s g ra v e .
In h er c a r she c a r r i e s
a garden hose which she a ttach eS a to th e s p ig o t a t th e g rav esid e and w aters th e
g ra v e ,
4 hard brown w alk had been b e a te n around th e grave by the d a ily v i s i t o r s ,
and keeping fa c e b efo re hundreds o f c u rio u s w a tc h e rs day a f t e r day has made h e r
a b i t of a show off.
Every in ch o f h er b e a rin g i s a p o lite d efian ce o f her s i t u ­
a tio n and an aw areness o f h is to r y .
She l a p ro u d , i f n o t o f h er son, c e r ta in ly of
h e rs e lf,
'4rs« Oswald i s a S o u th ern er, w h ite and L u th eran .
Like UadameDreyfus
sev e n ty y e a rs ago, n o th in g b u t h er p o s itio n a s th e v ic tim of an o f f i c i a l fra/neup
(Madaiashreyfus always c a lle d i t a " .J u d ic ia l e r r o r " ) could have put h e r In touch
w ith th e h a n d fu l o f r a d le a la who tak e up h e r c a u s e .
A p a ro c h ia l Texan, Mrs, 0 .
i s n o t a lto g e th e r com fortable w ith th e volum inous sympathy she g e ts from E urope.
She i s a b i t uneasy about 'iark L ane's o ru sad e f o r J tia tio a to Lee in P a r le , Rome,
B udapest and London.
She would p re fe r t o see th s case fought out between Ameri­
c a n s , w ith o u t in te r f e r e n c e from B ertran d R u s e e ll and Je sn -P a u l S a r tr e , - bu t
now and th e n d e s p a ir g rip s h er h e a rt and she wonders w hether she h e r s e lf w i l l n o t
wind up in a European e x i l e .
7
In N»w Or la an* she was b o rn , nog, C la r e r ia , and grow up*
h e r fa m ily In F o r t K o rth ,
She ra is e d
Ths word " n ig g e r” comae n a tu r a lly t o h er l i p * , J u st
a s i t d id t o h e r so n '* ( b u t th e l e a s t i n j u s t i c e a g a in s t Negros* o r Mexican*
e t a r t e h e r in d ig n a tio n ta n k b o ilin g ag ain )*
'Vher a r e r we o a st doubt on h * r ps'oppoct*, ahe would r e p ly , "This i s A f ­
r i c a " o r "This i s T exas", som ething w* ooam ppolitans fr o n P h ila d e lp h ia could
n o t be expeated t o comprehend.
Because " th is i s A m erica", eh* waved a sid e our
o p in io n t h a t th e Warren Commission would n o t v in d ic a te h e r son and h e rs e lf*
She g lo r i e s in the f a c t t h a t a l l h e r son* were M arin es, and Lee, she say* over
and e v e r , was a o tln g f o r th e U nited S ta te s government fro n th e day he Joined
th e L eathernecks i n 1956 t o th e day he was handcuffed and sh o t in a D a llas J a i l .
Sometimes we g o tS I th e im p ressio n t h a t ahe was f i l i n g a c laim fo r Gold S ta r
Mother s ta t u e .
The son o f h er f i r s t m a rria g e , John “ dward P ic , ha* sp en t li» year* in
un ifo rm and i s now an A ir Pore* s e r g e a n t.
was Lee H arvey's "big b r o th e r " .
R obert E. Lee Oswald J r . , h er second,
She remembers Lee in h i* * a r ly teen* stu d y in g
th e p r i n t o f f of R o b e rt's M arine manual.
One day she found Lee p tu a lin g over
th e manual and b e sid e i t was a paper-bound Communist pam phlet.
I t was t h i s
b ro c h u re which was in f l a te d in th s p o s t- a s s a s s in a tio n p re s s u n t i l I t could be
passed o f f as Dae C a p ita l. no l e s s , always mentioned w ith th e German t i t l e , mind
you.
Lee c u lt high sch o o l i n th s 10th g rad s to jo in th e M arines, and h i* mother
w i l l t e l l you t h a t even th e n he was co n tem p latin g undercover work f o r Uncle Sam
among th e Red*.
Lee Oswald never was a Coraraunist and h ie mother i s c e r ta in ly no t one.
B u t, c o e x is tin g w ith a ta k e n -fo r-g ra n te d p a t r i o t i a n in b o th , 1* a upontanseusly
r a d i c a l p o in t o f a view t h a t burgeoned ou t o f a lif e lo n g war w ith d e p riv a tio n .
M arg u erite Oswald knows in h e r bones t h a t th e poor a re a b e ate n and h a ra sse d
8
flo o k and th a t tho p o l i t e e q u a lity o f th e law ia u s u a lly * boon f o r th e r ic h and
a rawhide whip f o r th e p o o r.
to d a y ,” she say*.
" I f v y oon had been w ealth y , he m ight be a liv e
In on* p a r t o f h er h e a rt she i s a s ta lw a rt who b e lie v e s , l i k s
T * il Abner, in th e f l a g , th e FB I, and th e C a p ito l in W ashington,
In th e o th e r ,
ehe u n d erstan d s t h a t t h i s i s a land where money and p r e s tig e rule® th e ro o a t.
But i f tfa rg u e rit* Oswald i a poor and k een ly aware o f th e meaning of
p o v e rty , her p o v e rty i* s t i l l s e lf -c o n s c io u s ly g e n te e l.
"We were d««n and o u t,"
ahe s a y s , "but we were n ev er t r a s h . "
She kept h e r boys c le a n and n e a t, th e y a te t h e i r pork and beans napkin
in la p , and her h oaa, however h a r e , always m an ifested a m id d le -c la ss t a s t e .
She was p la in ly e la te d when L e e 's lan d lad y in D a lla s s a id th a t Lee was the only
te n a n t who wished th e tu b ou t a f t e r he to o k a b a th .
The Oswalds p a id t h e i r
d e b ts , liv e d on sandw iches when th e y had t o , and saved t h e i r s c ra p in g s .
Cnal
day she saw her n u rs in g house em ployer browbeat an old p a tie n t and ahe q u it h e r
Job in h e lp le s s ra g e .
’’I d i d n 't know where :ay n e x t m eal was coming fr o n ," ahe
to ld Jack Langguth o f th e New York Tim es. "but I have my prinoip&e* and I 'v e
le arn ed not to w o rry ."
"Lee never l i e d to me," ehe s a id .
V.hen he was having a h ard time o f i t
keeping a w ife and c h ild on unemployment b e n e f its o r $1.25*-an-hour Jobs, Mrs.
■'swald «sksd him why he l e f t H u ssla , where h is job was easy and th e pay r e g u la r ,
to come home t o I l f * a s a v i r t u a l d e r e l t i t .
"Not even Uarina know* t h a t , " he
answered,
’■hat ’Ir» . 0 , I n s i s t s on as rmioh as L e e 's innocence i s h e r proud c o n v ic tio n
t h a t le e was an .American s e c r e t a g e n t.
and r e p o r ts o f th e a s s a s s in a tio n ,
Day a f t e r day eh* s tu d ie s th e p ic tu re *
"tn a ly a ln g " ehe c a l l s i t .
I saw h e r d riv e
ground F o rt ’’'o rth and D a lla s to fin d and q u estio n p o te n tia l w itn e s s e s .
I watched
hep on th e phone to rm en tin g L ie b le r , Bedlloh and Nankin o f th e b a rre n C ocnission
V
w ith a c a l* d ig n ity .
Interv iew ed on th e le a k o f Lee1* "d iary " t o th e p ro a* ,
aha h e U f o r th on TV Ilk a a dowager cuoen In c o u r t.
E xpressing g r a titu d e fo r
th e p u b lic a tio n , she s e re n e ly proceeded t o -u o to and a n a ly se .
"They shew, you
s e e , what I have always m a in tain ed t " she s a i d , " th a t Lfca wee an American a g e n t."
B efore we l e f t , ehe p o in te d o u t how F e d e ra l agent* had tw ice v io la te d
th e lawe o f Texas by absconding w ith ev id en ce t h a t may have proved h e r eon'®
in n o cen ce.
"They took th e P r e s id e n t's body o u t o f Texas.
The D a lla s d o c to rs
th o u g h t he was s h o t fro n th e f r o n t b u t th e F e d e ra l men had a s e c r e t au to p sy in
B eth ee d a, M aryland, when i t should have been done here f o r th e c o u rt re c o rd .
Then th e y rushed the P r e s id e n t's lim o u sin e ou t o f th e e t a t e .
They d ism an tled
I t b e fo re anyone here could examine I t f o r b u l l e t h o le s ."
The J o u r n a lis ts who e a rn t h e i r d a l l y bourbon on assignraont f r o a L i f e .
Tim a, and th e news netw orks have n ev er sto p p ed p o rtra y in g M arguerite Oswald as
a dom ineering, paranoiac showoff ^ i t h f r e c u e n t d e lu sio n s o f p e rs e c u tio n .
Tt
rem inds roe o f F r a u d 's remark t h a t th e r e would be no suoh th in g as a p e rs e c u tio n
complex i f th e re were n ^ t r e a l p e rs e c u tio n .
a u th o ritie s .
She i s th e re fo re a u t h o r i t a r i a n .
M rs. 0 . w o n 't play b a ll w ith th e
?he i n s i s t s on th e l e a s t o f h er
rifcfrts and w o rrie s over th e p lace o f h e r fa m ily In th e h ie to r io a l re c o rd ,
l a c o n se q u e n tly an e x h i b i t i o n i s t .
Ohs
Fhe d e v o te s every day to uncovering what she
b e lie v e s and m llllo n e b e lie v e is a r e a l c o n sp ira c y in v*hich h e r youngest son
w*s th e bnuo d m ls s a lrs .
*s a r e s u l t , she I s h e ld t o sco rn as a b i t t e r old wo*an
who se e s s n a re s and p lo ts everyw here.
A fte r L ee'* a r r e s t and she faced h e r u p h i l l way l i o n s , she s a id , "They
tu rn e d t h e i r backs on me b e f o r e , th ey - 111 tu r n t h e i r backs on me a g a in , b u t qy
f a i t h w i l l see me th ro u g h ."
M arg u erite Oswald i s u n b reak ab ls.
That is why th e
powers a re o ffended.
I s M arguerite Oswald "em o tio n al" and " u n sta b le " a s th e Maedchen f » T a lif t
10
o f th e p re s* eayV
p re ssu re .
'Vo sp e n t f iv o day* in her houeo and w atched hor under high
I f oho lo e m o tio n a l, th e n Molly P itc h e r was a h y s t e r i c .
u n s ta b l e , th e n VTount RuBhmore io p u tty .
e *' **■- * <
I
I f ahe i*