Mr. Jenner. Tell us about it.

Mr. Glover. He was a very cynical sort of person. He was a Bohemian sort of person.

Mr. Jenner. What do you mean by that? I think I know what you mean, but what do you mean by "Bohemian type of person"?

Mr. Glover. I mean he lived the kind of life where he went the way he wanted to go and he did what he wanted to do and he didn't care very much about what anyone said.

He wanted to play tennis, morning, noon and night. He wanted to dress the way he wanted to. He was not very conforming in his physical dress or in his appearance or anything else. But the main thing that impressed me most about him was his immaturity. He acted like a fellow who is in his teens, who was reacting against everything in the world and never settled down, and acted like this minor revolution which occurs in most people, of being against authority and so forth, and wanted to travel over the world and do things himself. He is sort of a revolution inside of him. It never stops. He was sort of a rebel.

Mr. Jenner. Would you say he really had somewhat adolescent tendencies and had never grown up?

Mr. Glover. I would say that he was very much so; yes.

Mr. Jenner. In your time and my time, we talked about "Joe College." Is that expression familiar to you?

Mr. Glover. Yes.

Mr. Jenner. Was he that kind of a person, breezy?