Mr. Jenner. All right. Now, Mr. Voshinin, I think my questioning is about concluded, but I do want to ask this general question in any event. Is there anything you think factually that hasn't been brought out that occurs to you that might be of assistance to the Commission in its investigation?
Mr. Voshinin. I think so.
Mr. Jenner. Would you state it, please?
Mr. Voshinin. I think, first of all, there are persons which you did not question and which knows De Mohrenschildt, I think, much better than I do.
Mr. Jenner. Who is that?
Mr. Voshinin. For example, Mr. Basil Zavoico.
Mr. Jenner. All right. Now give us that full name and spell it, please?
Mr. Voshinin. [Spelling] B-a-s-i-l—that's the first name. Second is Z-a-v-o-i-c-o—or k-o—I don't know. And he lived in Texas before and he's living now in Green Farms, Conn., his house being called Cronomere.
Mr. Jenner. Spell that, please?
Mr. Voshinin. [Spelling] C-r-o-n-o-m-e-r-e. And why I know Mr. Zavoico because his wife lived in Yugoslavia before the war and me and my wife we were close friends with her. And I think that Mr. Zavoico knows George De Mohrenschildt many years before we did, and he once even warned us against him.