Mr. Specter. Do you know at approximately what time this procedure was started?
Dr. Shaw. I will have to refresh my memory again from the record. We had at the time I testified before, we had the——
Mr. Specter. Permit me to make available to you a copy of the Parkland Memorial Hospital operative record and let me ask you, first of all, if you can identify these two pages on an exhibit heretofore marked as Commission Exhibit 392 as to whether or not this constitutes your report?
Dr. Shaw. Yes; this is a transcription of my dictated report of the operation.
Mr. Specter. Are the facts set forth therein true and correct?
Dr. Shaw. Yes. On this it states that the operation itself was begun at 1300 hours or 1 o'clock, 1 p.m., and that the actual surgery started at 1335 or 1:35 p.m.
The operation was concluded by me at 3—1520 which would be 3:20 p.m.
Mr. Specter. You have described, in a general way, the chest wound. What other wounds, if any, was Governor Connally suffering from at the time you saw him?
Dr. Shaw. I will describe then the wound of the wrist which was obvious. He had a wound of the lower right forearm that I did not accurately examine because I had already talked to Dr. Gregory while I was scrubbing for the operation, told him that this wound would need his attention as soon as we were able to get the chest in a satisfactory condition. There was also, I was told, I didn't see the wound, on the thigh, I was told that there was a small wound on the thigh which I saw later.
Mr. Specter. When did you first have an opportunity then to examine Governor Connally's wound on the posterior aspect of his chest?