Mrs. Cheek. I would have to look back, because managers for boarding houses is like waitresses and cooks, they come and go because you don’t pay them very much.

Mr. Griffin. Do you recall when your sister, Mrs. Roberts, was working at or managing your boarding houses?

Mrs. Cheek. Not the exact date.

Mr. Griffin. Do you recall whether she was managing any boarding house for you back in 1959 or 1960?

Mrs. Cheek. She might have been at 5430. You would have to ask her. I believe you would have a more correct answer on that.

Mr. Griffin. Is there anything that makes you recall that the two Cubans lived at 5212?

Mrs. Cheek. I don’t know right now just what brought that up or anything. Now my son was there, I think, while the two FBI men were there, and he might have mentioned it, or my sister might have mentioned it, I don’t remember. There were two Cubans there, I think. They might have been Cuban and they might not have been.

Mr. Griffin. What made you think they were Cubans?

Mrs. Cheek. I don’t know how they got that they were Cubans, because I don’t know a Cuban from a Spanish or a Spanish from a Mexican. Like Dr. Florescent, when he come in, he was real dark. I wasn’t going to rent because I don’t rent to dark Spanish people or Mexicans or Indians. I always rented to light-colored people my own race. But another color, and he was so well dressed and everything and he insisted—this is in 1948, I think. He came in there from the Philippine Islands. He was going to Baylor Hospital to school.

Mr. Griffin. How about the two Cubans?