| United States. Office of Chief of Counsel for the Prosecution of Axis Criminality - 1946 - 1020 pages
...indisputable necessity for the solution of the mobilization of labor program in this war. All the men must be fed, sheltered and treated in such a way as...extent at the lowest conceivable degree of expenditure. It has always been natural for us Germans to refrain from cruelty and mean chicaneries towards the... | |
| United States. Office of Chief of Counsel for the Prosecution of Axis Criminality - 1946 - 1030 pages
...indisputable necessity for the solution of the mobilization of labor program in this war. All the men must be fed, sheltered and treated in such a way as...extent at the lowest conceivable degree of expenditure. It has always been natural for us Germans to refrain from cruelty and mean chicaneries towards the... | |
| United States. Office of Chief of Counsel for the Prosecution of Axis Criminality - 1946 - 1154 pages
...undisputable necessity for the solution of the mobilization of labor program in this war. "All the men must be fed, sheltered and treated in such a way as...highest possible extent at the lowest conceivable degrees of expenditure." (016-PS). In pursuance of the Nazi plan permanently to reduce the living standards... | |
| 1949 - 1318 pages
...The treatment of slave laborers •*! prisoners of war was based on the principle that they should * fed, sheltered, and treated in such a way as to exploit them to ^"greatest possible extent at the lowest expenditure. I Daring the period from approximately May 1942... | |
| 1956 - 252 pages
...The keynote for the treatment of these workers was struck in Sauckel's original program. They were to be "fed, sheltered, and treated in such a way as to...at the lowest conceivable degree of expenditure." 40 ** Quoted by Sauckel in speech to officials of the Generalkommissariat Kiev, 27 May 42, in KTB Ruestungskommando... | |
| Berel Wein - 1990 - 538 pages
...language of Fritz Sauckel, the head of the Allocation of Labor Office, was: "Jews are to be exploited to the highest possible extent at the lowest conceivable degree of expenditure." This meant that they would be worked to the limits of their endurance and fed so little that they would... | |
| Yitzhak ("Antek") Zuckerman - 2023 - 754 pages
...Plenipotentiary General for the Allocation of Labor, "ordered that foreign workers were to be exploited 'to the highest possible extent at the lowest conceivable degree of expenditure'" (Ferencz 1979:25). He was sentenced to death at Nuremberg and hanged in 1946. The situation was serious... | |
| Edgar M. Howell - 1997 - 231 pages
...The keynote for the treatment of these workers was struck in Sauckel's original program. They were to be "fed, sheltered, and treated in such a way as to...possible extent at the lowest conceivable degree of expenditure."397 Although volunteers were originally called for, almost immediately the local administrations... | |
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