A. These prisoners said they volunteered in order to help people who might have malaria.

Q. In this report the individual persons were asked, five or six of them were—one says that he volunteered because he is condemned to life imprisonment, and he has applied to oblige the army. Another says that he is doing it because his brother is a soldier at the front and has malaria. And another one says—two of my brothers in the army had malaria; and a third one says in the last war—

Mr. Hardy: Dr. Servatius refers to Document NO-3450, Prosecution Exhibit 519 for identification, and I request that he supply the passages so that Dr. Ivy can properly testify.

Dr. Servatius: Witness, from this radio report I shall read the answers of the experimental subjects to you. One Mr. Quail says: “I expect, Captain Jones, that these men have many reasons for their volunteering for this war.”

Captain Jones: “Yes, they have. Many have sons and brothers in the armed services, others have other patriotic motives, but I am not the one to tell about them.”

Quall: “I get the point.”

Captain Jones: “With the permission of Warden Rangen we are going to talk to several of these volunteers right now. Here is a man who is older than some of the others. What is your name?”

Johnson: “I am George Johnson, number so and so.”

Quall: “Johnson, I have heard you have a pretty high fever as a result of these tests.”

Johnson: “That is right; at one time my temperature was 108 degrees.”