Mr. Statman. Yes.
Mr. Jenner. And line 12, the date is September 24, 1963?
Mr. Statman. Now, on the last two dates that he filed a claim—10-3-63 and 10-10-63, the symbol changes to C.C., which indicates "Continued Claim," which in turn indicates that it is an intrastate claim. In other words, he is now filing in Texas against Texas.
Mr. Jenner. Now, if he had not exhausted his interstate claim, that is the amount due him, and he returned to Dallas——
Mr. Statman. He didn't exhaust his interstate claim—you know, once you set up a claim, that's all the money you get, regardless of which State you are in. He just happened to return to the State in which he had earned his wage credits, so his claim reverted from an interstate claim to an intrastate only due to geographical location, not due to any monetary consideration.
Mr. Jenner. Then, the explanation is—although the classifications changed from interstate to intrastate, it was the same claim.
Mr. Statman. Right—it was the same claim, it's just a matter of changing geographical locations.
Mr. Jenner. Of the claimant?
Mr. Jenner. Back to the State of Texas?