Mr. Wright. Yes.
Mr. Griffin. What was there about him that gave that impression?
Mr. Wright. I don’t know. He never impressed me that way, but he himself thought that people thought he was that way.
Mr. Griffin. Had you ever heard anyone say that they thought he was a homosexual?
Mr. Wright. No; not personally.
Mr. Griffin. How would Jack mention this to you?
Mr. Wright. Well, in a joking manner. As I remember, one time someone gave him a cigar or something, and he put it in his mouth and lit it and said to me, “I don’t look gay now, do I?” It was Jack’s attitude toward people that I imagine some people might have thought he was that way.
Mr. Griffin. Can you be more explicit about his attitude toward people?
Mr. Wright. Well, he seemed, and I imagine in the eyes of most people, to go out generally with more men than women. But there were more women that came to the club to see Jack than men. George Senator is about the only guy that I know that he ran around with who was his roommate, and Ralph Paul, who was one of his partners. But other than that——
Mr. Griffin. Was the Carousel Club frequented, to your knowledge, by homosexuals?