Mr. Ball. Yes; show it to us.

Mr. Frazier. I usually always come up, you know, you can come right, you see the building right down here, and you notice a series of railroad tracks, so usually early in the morning, now about 8 o'clock there is usually not any cars right here, but I say they are switching back and forth.

Mr. Ball. By "cars" you mean railroad cars?

Mr. Frazier. Yes, sir; they usually start switching around 8 o'clock. Usually, there are not any cars, it is usually a long train that moves up pretty soon but I usually move up in this direction here, especially when it is dry. When it is wet I walk on this because it is harder. But when it is raining, I usually walk around here, because in this area right here, when you get up closer to the railroad tracks it has more trenches, and it gets muddy and slimy and you can get bogged down.

So, when it is bad weather, I usually walk on this side. But I say nine times out of ten I come up right down here.

Mr. Ball. Let's look at the map. Here is the parking lot here, is that the parking lot where you usually park?

Mr. Frazier. Yes, sir; it is.

Mr. Ball. This is parking lot No. 1.

Mr. Frazier. That is parking lot No. 1, isn't it?

Mr. Ball. Right.