Mr. Jenner. In June. So likely it was that you knew him in April, May, and in June until you were transferred out?
Mr. Thornley. Right.
Mr. Jenner. When in June were you transferred out?
Mr. Thornley. Once again the exact date would be available in my military record, but offhand——
Mr. Jenner. Give it to me as best you recall it, forepart, latter part, middle?
Mr. Thornley. Let's see, it was toward the latter part. In fact, I can give you pretty close to the exact date. It was around June 25, because we arrived in Japan on July 4 and it took 11 days to get over there. It took us some time to get debarked or to get embarked, rather.
Mr. Jenner. All right. I take it from the remark you have made in your reflecting on this matter that you were—you devoted yourself to some fairly considerable extent to reading?
Mr. Thornley. Yes, sir.
Mr. Jenner. And in what fields?
Mr. Thornley. Completely omniverous. Anything that I would happen to get a hold of I would read. At that time I was reading, well, at Oswald's advice I read "1984." At someone else's advice I was reading a book called "Humanism," by Corliss Lamont, as I remember, and I was reading either "The Brothers Karamazov" or the "Idiot" by Dostoievsky, I forget which, at that time.