Mr. Eberhardt. Okay.
Mr. Griffin. I am going to mark for identification——
Mr. Eberhardt. Let me make you a better picture.
Mr. Griffin. You are going to go down in history. A thousand years from now, they are going to look at this and say, “That is what Eberhardt did.” I have marked this diagram that you have made of the assembly room Exhibit No. 5025, and I have labeled it “Police Assembly Room, Oswald Press Conference.” Now, this is the diagram that you have just finished drawing, is it not?
Mr. Eberhardt. Yes, sir. Yes, sir.
Mr. Griffin. Would you sign that and date it? [Pause.] You are going to mess up the historians. The year is—1267, that is your police number?
Mr. Eberhardt. Yes.
Mr. Griffin. I thought you were writing the year on there. Now, I am going to also mark for identification the report of Smith and Chapoton.
Mr. Eberhardt. I don’t like that, I mean this part here, I mean they didn’t get this exactly right.
Mr. Griffin. All right. Let us change it. Let me mark it, “Dallas, Texas, Detective Eberhardt, 3-25-64, Exhibit 5026.” Now, would you look at that, and what corrections or changes do you want to make?