Mr. Liebeler. He never discussed with you beyond the extent you have indicated, his experience in the Marine Corps?
Mr. Gregory. No; he was disgusted with it.
Mr. Liebeler. Did he ever indicate anything about his discharge from the Marines?
Mr. Gregory. No; he never did. I think a lot of things which he told me were like the way he talked, that he graduated from high school, from the same high school that I had gone to, and I read in the papers that he was only there a month or so. So, possibly a lot of information which he had given me would not be right, but he never did speak of a discharge.
Mr. Liebeler. Whether it would be right or not, it is important that you tell us what he told you. You indicate now that he did tell you that he graduated from Arlington Heights High School, is that correct?
Mr. Gregory. Yes.
Mr. Liebeler. And you believed that until after the assassination and you read in the newspaper that he had not, in fact, graduated from Arlington?
Mr. Gregory. Yes, sir.
Mr. Liebeler. Did he tell you what kind of job he had in the Soviet Union?
Mr. Gregory. He was in some kind of factory. Evidently, according to him, it had something to do with radio equipment, because I remember asking him once about thievery in the Soviet Union, because I always read or had thought that factory workers take what they need and barter because they don't get enough or are not able to make enough money to buy all they need. And he said that he himself had stolen a radio and phonograph. From that I know it was some kind of a shop and he ran some kind of a machine. Because he told me of some incident when he had to—the shop had to be changed, or they moved the equipment into another building, and the first thing they moved was the picture of Lenin and later they moved the equipment. It was heavy equipment, and they set the machines so that the men could work facing Lenin. And then they decided Lenin had to be hung in the most favorable place in the shop, and the Commissar came in and inspected the next setup and decided Lenin wasn't in the right place, and, therefore, they had to come back in and completely remount all the machinery and turn it around to face Lenin's new position.