Dr. Jenkins. Because the wound with the exploded area of the scalp, as I interpreted it being exploded, I would interpret it being a wound of exit, and the appearance of the wound in the neck, and I also thought it was a wound of exit.
Mr. Specter. Have you ever changed any of your original opinions in connection with the wounds received by President Kennedy?
Dr. Jenkins. I guess so. The first day I had thought because of his pneumothorax, that his wound must have gone—that the one bullet must have traversed his pleura, must have gotten into his lung cavity, his chest cavity, I mean, and from what you say now, I know it did not go that way. I thought it did.
Mr. Specter. Aside from that opinion, now, have any of your other opinions about the nature of his wounds or the sources of the wounds been changed in any way?
Dr. Jenkins. No; one other. I asked you a little bit ago if there was a wound in the left temporal area, right above the zygomatic bone in the hairline, because there was blood there and I thought there might have been a wound there (indicating).
Mr. Specter. Indicating the left temporal area?
Dr. Jenkins. Yes; the left temporal, which could have been a point of entrance and exit here (indicating), but you have answered that for me. This was my only other question about it.
Mr. Specter. So, that those two points are the only ones on which your opinions have been changed since the views you originally formulated?
Dr. Jenkins. Yes, I think so.
Mr. Specter. On the President's injuries?