Today is the anniversary of the dropping of the atomic bomb. It brings to 
mind a useful experience.

Sometime in the mid- or early-1950s, I was having dinner at my great aunt's 
house with my brother, my parents, and my mother's cousin, Morris Fiterman 
(sp?).  Morris was a medical doctor, who served in the Army as an hospital 
administrator and was a close friend of the President's son, John 
Eisenhower. Morris was telling us about his work on any military commission 
to decide whether or not to use nuclear weapons against North Korea. He 
said that military rejected the idea only because the prevailing winds 
would have brought too much radiation down upon South Korea and the US 
soldiers.

I don't remember any of the other details, except what he told us about the 
Bataan Death March in which the Japanese army supposedly starved American 
prisoners.  He said that the rations given to the Americans were identical 
to the Japanese. He also said that the Japanese prisoners complained that 
their American captors were putting their lives at risk by feeding them 
unpalatable food, such as bacon and eggs.


-- 
Michael Perelman
Economics Department
California State University
Chico, CA 95929

Tel. 530-898-5321
E-Mail michael at ecst.csuchico.edu
michaelperelman.wordpress.com
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