Mr. Jenner. All right. Now, Port-au-Prince is encircled. Then at the bottom, which is the lower right-hand quadrant, there is an arrow pointed to Pationville. And that arrow leads to some handwriting.
Mr. De Mohrenschildt. "Ibolele Hotel."
Mr. Jenner. Now, to the left of that inscription, and in the center of the map, the lower half, there is an encirclement that encircles an area, the chief town of which appears to be what?
Mr. De Mohrenschildt. Lescayes.
Mr. Jenner. And what is written there?
Mr. De Mohrenschildt. "Oil possibilities."
Mr. Jenner. Now, I guess we have gotten everything you have written on there. Now, with those papers, would you proceed to tell us now about your Haitian venture, and take those papers, since they seem to be in some order of sequence as to time, and tell us all about it.
Mr. De Mohrenschildt. Well——
Mr. Jenner. In other words, this venture is no mite, is it?
Mr. De Mohrenschildt. No. It started—it already started by my previous work there in 1956. It is the result of many trips I took to Haiti in the meantime. And it is a result of an effort which started in 1961.