secution's having to get up and interrupt, put on the earphones, and take the time for an individual objection to each document to which they wish to [ ... ]
THE PRESIDENT: Sir David, the Tribunal would like you to state now your objections to these documents. They will then [ ... ]
Prosecution give of it being in entirely general terms is, I submit, justified by the warding of the document, and it is difficult to see the basis wh [ ... ]
documents D-5, D-9, D-10, D-12, D-13, D-29, D-48, D-60, D-74. to introduce by way of a footnote some of the documents which the Tribunal dealt with wh [ ... ]
with the evidence of the Witness Heisig. The first purports to be an affidavit by a witness who speaks to the sort of statements the defendant Doeni [ ... ]
contraband control, what articles were contraband, declarations of different governments, and it is submitted that details of the contraband control a [ ... ]
it is not that it was a reprisal, but the defense is that the order did not mean destruction but merely meant non-rescue. these matters become relevan [ ... ]
THE PRESIDENT: Sir David? SIR DAVID MAXWELL-FYFE: If Your Lordship pleases. [ ... ]
done it before today, even if I had thought of it. THE PRESIDENT: Dr. Kranzbuehler, the Tribunal considers that in vie [ ... ]
not in the order in which the prosecution has made its objections. That would entirely disturb the trend of thought of my presentation, and, as defe [ ... ]