Mr. Liebeler. The Stemmons Freeway sign from where you were standing?

Mrs. Baker. No; I couldn't see the sign because I was angled—we were stepping out in the street then and it was approximately along in here, I presume, the first sign—I don't know which one it is, but I saw the bullet hit on down this way, I guess, right at the sign, angling out.

Mr. Liebeler. You think the bullet hit the street, only it was farther out in the street?

Mrs. Baker. Yes.

Mr. Liebeler. Even though you couldn't see the sign, you could see this thing hit the street near the sign?

Mrs. Baker. Yes, sir.

Mr. Liebeler. It appears to me from looking at Commission Exhibit No. 354, that you can in fact make out where the signs are located along the side of the road and let's see if these do look like the signs. Now, as you come down Elm Street past the place you were standing going toward the triple underpass, there is a tree here on this little grassy triangular spot that is on the side of Elm Street toward the Texas School Book Depository Building, right on Dealey Plaza here by this concrete structure. Then, after the tree, going on down toward the triple underpass, it appears in the aerial photograph—a spot that looks like a sign or a shadow—it looks like a sign to me.

Mrs. Baker. There is a sign there.

Mr. Liebeler. And then there's another sign farther on down there.

Mrs. Baker. This was a big sign here and there was a small one here.