Q. After you had undergone the various experiments at the hands of Dr. Schilling, did you then become a worker in Dr. Schilling’s laboratory?
A. After my first so-called immunization treatment had been concluded, the chief medical officer of that department sent me over to Dr. Schilling’s department for laboratory duties.
Q. On what date did you assume those duties?
A. I am afraid I can’t tell you that exactly, but it must have been on or about August 1942.
Q. What were your duties in Dr. Schilling’s experimental station?
A. In Dr. Schilling’s department I was in charge of animals. In other words, I cultivated animals, white mice, and canaries; in fact, I was in charge of that department.
Q. Did you have any other or additional duties, such as file clerk or typist, Witness?
A. For a certain period, I substituted for the clerk and I was in direct contact with Dr. Schilling on various occasions. I had a certain amount of business with the chemistry department, purchases from Dachau, and I was also in charge of the detachment which had to search the water near Dachau for anopheles mosquitoes.
Q. While with Dr. Schilling, did you have the opportunity to read any of Dr. Schilling’s correspondence?
A. I had frequent occasions to see the reports which Dr. Schilling sent in every 3 months, and sometimes I saw the answers which Dr. Schilling received from Berlin, as well as from some other chemical manufacturers.