THE PRESIDENT: Would you ask the witness if he remembers what the contents were, not putting it in a leading form.
[ ... ]
Military Tribunal in the matter of: The THE PRESIDENT: Yes, Dr. Dix. BY DR. DIX: soon after your answers and that you [ ... ]
classically formulated by Kant. At the sane time, though, it speaks also of the isolation of the individual, the near depletion of nature and commun [ ... ]
THE PRESIDENT: Now, Mr. Jackson, this red light is on. I do not know why. MR. JUSTICE JACKSON:< [ ... ]
propaganda today in this courtroom. I want to request, therefore, that these documents be once more investigated to See whether this is a fact seriou [ ... ]
MR. JUSTICE JACKSON: Well, if Your Honor please, I do not think it is a mistake. It arises from a fundamental differen [ ... ]
My personnel, as this Tribunal well knows, is reduced very Seriously. I cannot undertake it in the pressroom here after an order comes from the Gener [ ... ]
SIR DAVID MAXWELL FYFE: May it please your Lordship, my understanding of the matter is that the Rosenberg documents had [ ... ]
THE PRESIDENT: Both the Prosecution and the Defense, I suppose, because the application which came to us after the ruli [ ... ]
which I do with great deference; I may be a biased judge of what ought to be done; I never pretended to complete impartiality--that the Tribunal appo [ ... ]