Mrs. Voshinin. Yes, uh-huh. We lived all the time in Dallas—all those years.
Mr. Jenner. What do you know about his trip to Yugoslavia—and start from the beginning, as you recall it?
Mrs. Voshinin. Only what he told me about it. I remember very well that he was getting an offer from somebody in Washington, D.C., to go to Yugoslavia. And, somehow, George didn't like very much this idea, because he told me he will go to Yugoslavia if he will have to go—something to that extent. I understood that if he goes very well in money that, you know, his financial status requires, he will go to Yugoslavia.
But, at that time, he was preferring to work in Texas and drill wells rather than his foreign work—which he did later after he returned from Yugoslavia.
You see, there actually are two periods in George's life.
Mr. Jenner. All right. Tell us about it.
Mrs. Voshinin. Before he went to Yugoslavia and after he went to Yugoslavia. Because—of course, I might be quite wrong about it. This is my own impression of the whole thing.
Mr. Jenner. Yes; well, that's what we want.
Now, you were living here in Dallas when he went to——
Mrs. Voshinin. Before he went.