Mr. Jenner. The minimum necessary—is there a minimum standard?

Mrs. Cunningham. A necessary for what, of course, is the immediate question.

Mr. Jenner. Well, for you to decide, for example, "Well, this man does have capability for college study."

Mrs. Cunningham. I have not reviewed these figures that are in our manuals recently, but if I recall correctly, 100 is thought sufficient to do a junior college or possibly in some—a 4-year course; that about 125 is required on the "G" score for professional schools, and 110 is quite good for finishing a 4-year college. As you see, this score is close to that, and we consider the test only about 15 percent of the total in making decisions about vocation and it is not the biggest factor.

Mr. Jenner. Off the record a minute.

(Discussion between Counsel Jenner and the witness, Mrs. Cunningham, off the record.)

Mr. Jenner. Now, I think we had better be on the record on this.

Mrs. Cunningham. None of our tests are personality tests.

Mr. Jenner. You see, I want you to tell me what these are, and if I misinterpret them, I want you to correct me. It is important that we know what testing was done and that we don't misinterpret it ourselves.

Now, is any of this a personality test?