Mr. Gregory. No; he evidently must have talked to someone if he came back with a schedule, because I remember looking at the schedule.

Mr. Liebeler. Did he come back with the schedule before or after the occasion on which you were driving in your car to TCU?

Mr. Gregory. No; it seems the first evening I went over there he referred to the schedule.

Mr. Liebeler. So, it was after that that he asked you during your drive whether you thought anybody would be present at TCU?

Mr. Gregory. Yes.

Mr. Liebeler. Your first Russian lesson was approximately when?

Mr. Gregory. I would say August 10. I would hit it within a week either way. All this time I thought he had his high school degree and I was encouraging him to go back. I said, "Why don't you?" And he used as an excuse that he had to work. And he never did tell me that he did not finish high school.

Mr. Liebeler. Going back to the statements that he may have made about his activities in Russia, did he ever indicate to you in any way that he had a source of income in the Soviet Union other than the income he received from his job at the factory?

Mr. Gregory. No; he never did. He always spoke as if he didn't have enough money over there but he never indicated another source of income.

Mr. Liebeler. Did he tell you how much he was paid for his work at the factory?