Einstein was filled with good humor and sagacity, both qualities lacking in Godel, whose intense logic sometimes overwhelmed common sense. This was on glorious display when Godel decided to become a U.S. citizen in 1947. He took his preparation for the exam very seriously, studied the Constitution carefully, and (as might be expected by the formulator of the incompleteness theory) found what he believed was a logical flaw. There was an internal inconsistency, he insisted, that could allow the entire government to degenerate into tyranny. Concerned, Einstein decided to accompany -- or chaperone -- Godel on his visit to Trenton to take the citizenship test, which was to be administered by the same judge who had done so for Einstein. On the drive, he and a third friend tried to distract Godel and dissuade him from mentioning this perceived flaw, but to no avail. When the judge asked him about the constitution, Godel launched into his proof that the internal inconsistency made a dictatorship possible. Fortunately, the judge, who by now cherished his connection to Einstein, cut Godel off. 'You needn't go into all that,' he said, and Godel's citizenship was saved.