Mr. Shaneyfelt. That is correct.

Mr. Eisenberg. And you prepared this chart yourself?

Mr. Shaneyfelt. Yes; I did.

Mr. Eisenberg. May I have this admitted as 753, Mr. Chairman?

Mr. McCloy. It may be admitted.

(Commission Exhibit No. 753 was marked and received in evidence.)

Mr. Eisenberg. Before we get to this chart, I wonder whether you could take the negative itself, that is, Exhibit 749, and place it over the camera, Exhibit 750, so that the Commissioners can see how it runs across these—across the sides of the aperture you have been discussing?

Mr. Shaneyfelt. Yes. I might state that this film at the time it is put in the camera is in a long strip, and at the time of processing it is cut apart into separate negatives. There is an unexposed area between each exposure, and they are cut apart for printing and storage and returning. So that then this would be in a long strip of film—the camera being held in this position, which is the normal position for taking a photograph.

Mr. Eisenberg. And that is upright?

Mr. Shaneyfelt. Upright—will give you an image which on the film is upside down because of the light reflecting from the face, going through the lens and going down here; so this negative, Commission Exhibit 749, would have been on the film plane in this manner at the time the exposure was made.