i national Battalion/Page 10 April 6,1982 Japs said to use GIs in WW II germ tests Offering a friend a little help staff photo by Eileen Manton A shuttle bus, which stalled at the corner of Anderson Parkway and Holleman Drive, gets pushed out of the line of traffic by another shuttle bus. Construction union leader United Press International NEW YORK — U.S. officials reportedly knew Japanese germ warfare researchers ex perimented on American pris oners during World War II, but never tried them for war crimes because they feared the Soviets would copy their “bacteria bomb” if the information was made public in a trial. The Japanese experiments began in Manchuria during the invasion of China in the 1930s and continued during World War II, using captured Amer icans as guinea pigs, infecting them with pathogens and syste matically killing them to study the effects, Morley Safer re ported Sunday in a CBS “60 Mi nutes” interview with John Powell, a former editor of China Weekly Review. Safer said U.S. officials learned of the Japanese experi ments after the war and found plans for producing bacteria bombs. Safer said the officer in charge of the project was Gen. Shiro Ishii, whose top secret 731-Corps operated under the mtm of water purification guise unit. “Sometimes they were unbe lievably scientific,” Powell said. “On day 3 they would select one man out and kill him and auto psy him to the extent to which the disease had affected his va rious internal organs. Then a few days later they would kill another man. “In one experiment with hemorrhagic fever, they killed everybody,” he said. A documentary supplied to “60 Minutes" by the Japanese Broadcasting System revealed that the 731-Corps was one of the biggest germ factories in the world, experimenting with pla gue, cholera and typhoid germs. Safer said at the end of the war the prisoners were killed and their bodies incinerated. The death factories then were blown up. Neither Ishii nor any mem bers of his corps of hum perimenters were brouji trial as war criminals. Ishii was taken to the Am chemical warfare center Detrick, Md., and interroj Afterward, he was grantt freedom. Powell was born in Chit was called back to the l| States to testify before tl ate after he published J that the United States germ warfare in Korea.I his wife, Sylvia, later ueij dieted for sedition and ti but the charges were dropi 1961. The U.S. Armydeclilti mem on the Japanese! ments and officials at thtf Department and the ment of Defense deniedIj ledge of germ warfares part of Japan. raps Reagan before speech lOOOOOOOOOOOOOg Campus 1 846-6512 SCHULMAN 6 THEATRES United Press International WASHINGTON —The lead er of AFL-CIO construction un ions Monday blasted President Reagan’s economic plan just be fore Reagan himself appeared before the group. Prior to Reagan’s speech, AFL-CIO President Lane Kirk land told the delegates Amer ican workers are facing the bleakest outlook since.the Great Depression and pointed to the low rate of housing construction in particular. The union group is the same one Reagan addressed last year before being shot. Fifty-three weeks after the March 30 assassi nation attempt, Reagan re turned to the Washington Hil ton Hotel with a message similar to the one he carried a year ago — a plea for support for his sweeping fiscal program. Reagan was expected to de fend his plan in the face of mounting criticism that intensi fied last week when it was announced March’s unemploy ment rate reached 9 percent, matching the post-World War II high. Both speakers addressed ab out 3,000 delegates to a legisla tive conference of the AFL-CIO Building and Construction Trades Conference. “Young families despair of ever having a home they can call their own,” Kirkland said. Those who scrape together enough money in spite of high interest rates face possible fore closure in the event of unem ployment or illness, he added. Kirkland responded strongly to Reagan’s comments that his policies must be given more time to work. rate of 17.9 percent. A year ago the construction jobless figure stood at 14.7 percent. Nobody leans on “If you see a house burning, a ship sinking, or a man drown ing, do you give it more time to complete the disaster?” Kirk land said. Kirkland said organized labor must help elect members of Congress who will put America on the road back to social and economic justice. Regional conferences of the 15 million-member labor feder ation indicated that a consensus can turn the economy around with political action, he said. In the March unemployment figures released Friday, con struction workers had a jobless ^jsStudjmNSMT^S Ky Get it all at PORKY ’S(R) You II be glad you came! Akx Ktm* ■ Sana Chut 7:40 9:45 846-6714 Open 7:00 Corner Univ & College yVeff SImhm’s I Ought To Be In PicturesiVG) Walter Matthau Ann-Margrot 7:30 9:30 BURT REYNOLDS SHARKYS MACHINE 7:30 9:50 tooooooooocx 7T5- 2468 mi E. 29ttv 2463 7:25 9:35 ROBIN HOOD Walt Disney ' - 7:35 9:55 - ON GOLD dne Picfureof DEN ^TCumker dneXclureoWieSear' 1* • »J f A * ■ t • • 7:2Q9:40 SILENT RAGE Chuck Norris Julie Andrews/James Qarnei 7:25 9:35 ""l RICHARD PRYOR Live On The Sunset Strip 7:20 9:40 RAIDERS OF THE LOST ARK LA nous These i 142-inch Tuesday Seven te sponsored computinj team was cards — 20-minute United Pres: VASHINGTO igan is leaving the warm stir let which he w developmei ter. 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