Mr. Jenner. Yes.
Mr. De Mohrenschildt. I remember the picture was called "Poland Will Never Die." It was an assembly job.
Mr. Jenner. Now, your interest was a business interest?
Mr. De Mohrenschildt. No; we also cut it together. We put the music together. I learned a little bit about the technical end of it. We did not own the studio, but we used the studio on the west side in New York to have the technical facilities. Not very complicated. But we did it all together.
Mr. Jenner. Was your grandfather born in this country?
Mr. De Mohrenschildt. No; great grandfather, or great, great grandfather.
Mr. Jenner. Sergius Von Mohrenschildt, born somewhere in Pennsylvania, later went to Russia, entered the oil business?
Mr. De Mohrenschildt. I will be darned. I didn't know that.
Mr. Jenner. I am not saying it is so.
Mr. De Mohrenschildt. I don't remember. We have in the family some Baltic Swede, an ancestor of ours, who was an officer of the Independence Army. But his name was not Mohrenschildt. He was Baron Hilienfelt. My brother knows of that, because he is more interested in it. He became an officer in the Army of Independence, took the name of Ross. He was an officer in the Army of Independence, and then went back to Europe and died there. And somebody was telling me there was on his tomb in Sweden, I went later on to Sweden, and I was curious and inquired about it. It was said he was a lieutenant or captain in the American Army of Independence. So my brother, I think, because of that, being an older member of the family, had the right to be—what do you call it—a descendant——