Mr. Dulles. Is this the one that is the nose portion?

Mr. Eisenberg. You are handing, Mr. Dulles is handing Mr. Nicol Commission Exhibit 569.

Mr. Nicol. No, that would be the base portion.

Mr. Dulles. That is what I thought. Are those different parts of the same bullet possibly?

Mr. Nicol. That is possible, because there appears to be an interval of approximately an eighth of an inch that is not present, so that the area where one begins is not even with the other, so it is not possible to tell, at least I couldn't to express an opinion.

Mr. Eisenberg. That is, they might be two separate bullets or two parts of the same bullet?

Mr. Nicol. Two parts of the same or separate bullets that is right.

Mr. Eisenberg. I hand you Commission Exhibit 572, which for the record consists of two bullets, and ask you whether you are familiar with those bullets?

Mr. Nicol. These are the two projectiles which were given to me as K-1, and were used by me as standards or tests.

Mr. Eisenberg. Now, when you say "standards or tests," could you amplify that?