Mr. Hubert. August of 1962?

Mr. Senator. Yes; August.

Mr. Hubert. Where did you go then?

Mr. Senator. I moved in with a fellow whose name was Stan Corbat.

Mr. Hubert. And where was that apartment?

Mr. Senator. That was on Maple Avenue.

Mr. Hubert. You say that the reason why you moved from Jack’s was because you got a chance to be a salesman in the postcard business?

Mr. Senator. Yes.

Mr. Hubert. How does that relate, how does your getting this employment relate to your moving from Jack’s apartment?

Mr. Senator. Jack likes to live alone in the overall picture. First of all, it is an interference of the time that I wake up and the time that he goes to bed which don’t coincide. That is part. And then Jack don’t live too clean. I mean he is a type—in other words, he comes home, he is reading a newspaper, on the floor, if he is in the bathroom the newspaper goes on the floor and things of that nature. Though he was very clean about himself, he wasn’t clean around the apartment.