Mr. Hardin. Okay, sir.

Mr. Hubert. There is another ambulance call record which I am marking as follows: “Dallas, Tex., March 31, 1964. Exhibit 5126. Deposition of Michael Hardin,” and signing my name on it. Finally there is a call ticket bearing number 35127, which I am marking, “Dallas, Tex., March 31, 1964. Exhibit 5127, Deposition of Michael Hardin,” and signing my name on the bottom of it, and for the purposes of identification and so that the record may show that we are both talking about the same documents I will ask you to sign your name near mine, or below on each one of the three.

Mr. Hardin. All right.

Mr. Hubert. Now, Mr. Hardin, I hand you the document which has been marked for identification as Exhibit 5125, and ask you to identify that document for the record.

Mr. Hardin. That is the ambulance call sheet—we—that was the original call sheet from the—made from the call itself, or at the time of the call itself.

Mr. Hubert. Now, whose handwriting appears on that?

Mr. Hardin. That is our dispatcher, or Hal Priddy, this is his handwriting.

Mr. Hubert. That is Harold—Hal Priddy. [Spelling] P-r-i-d-d-y?

Mr. Hardin. Yes, sir.

Mr. Hubert. He is outside in the hall right now?