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Reuter's Revisionist History and Wa



Subject: Reuter's Revisionist History and Waldheim the Nazi UN Secretary General

This is what is happening to history on the net. get this,
Waldeim, who I personally know, and had ocassion often to talk to
at the UN. Not an honor believe me. He was a NAZI and manipulated
because of it, only after he stepped down did the Israelis and the
Americans, and for that matter the Russians, let the truth be known.
It has been all through the press. This is revisionist history, and
further, it is not a highmark of the United Nations at all. A former
NAZI secretary general. You probably can find the photos of him wearing
his boots. He may even have been SS, but I dont remember that. He was a
commanding officer linked to atrocities.

One very wierd thing, his confidential special advisor at the United 
Nations, a former secretary general of the socialist international,
is a jewish american austrian. This world is a very strange planet.

dawn star

1918 - Kurt Waldheim, former Austrian president and former
secretary-general of the United Nations, born. On the same date in 1971,
he was elected U.N. secretary-general to succeed U Thant of Burma. 




> Reuters historical calendar - December 21
> 
> 
> LONDON, Dec 14 (Reuters) - Following are some of the major events to
> have occurred on December 21 in history:
> 
> 1118 - Thomas Becket born. As Archbishop of Canterbury from 1162 he
> fought with England's King Henry II over the rights of the church. He
> was murdered in Canterbury Cathedral in 1170.
> 
> 1375 - Giovanni Boccaccio, Italian poet and scholar, died. Best
> remembered as the author of the earthy stories taken from popular tales
> of the time titled ``The Decameron.''
> 
> 1401 - Masaccio, Influential Florentine painter, born as Tommaso di
> Giovanni di Simone Guidi. His realistic depiction of biblical events
> made him a pioneer of the early Renaissance.
> 
> 1804 - Benjamin Disraeli, British statesman, novelist and twice prime
> minister (1868 and 1874-80), born in London.
> 
> 1846 - The first surgical operation under anaesthesia in Britain was
> performed at University College Hospital, London by Robert Liston who
> amputated the leg of a servant.
> 
> 1879 - Josef Stalin born. After the death of Lenin, he transformed the
> Soviet Union by brutal industrialisation and party purges. He
> successfully repulsed the German invasion in World War Two and his
> armies carried on to occupy most of Eastern Europe. He died in 1953.
> 
> 1913 - The first crossword puzzle was published in the weekend edition
> of the New York World and was compiled by Liverpool-born Arthur Wynne.
> 
> 1917 - Heinrich Boell, German novelist, born. Noted for his novels ``The
> Clown'' and ``Acquainted with the Night,'' he won the Nobel Literature
> Prize in 1972.
> 
> 1918 - Kurt Waldheim, former Austrian president and former
> secretary-general of the United Nations, born. On the same date in 1971,
> he was elected U.N. secretary-general to succeed U Thant of Burma.
> 
> 1937 - ``Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs,'' the first full length
> feature cartoon in colour, by Walt Disney, was premiered in Los Angeles.
> 
> 1937 - Jane Fonda, U.S. film actress and daughter of film star Henry
> Fonda, born. Her films include ``Klute'' and ``Coming Home'' for which
> she won Oscars. She also appeared with her father in the film ``On
> Golden Pond.''
> 
> 1940 - F. Scott Fitzgerald, U.S. short story writer and novelist, died.
> Famous for his depictions of the jazz age, (the 1920s) he is best
> remembered for his novel ``The Great Gatsby.''
> 
> 1945 - General George Patton, brilliant tank commander in World War Two
> and referred to by his men as ``Old Blood and Guts,'' died after a car
> accident in Germany.
> 
> 1948 - The Republic of Ireland Bill was signed by the president of Eire,
> ending the association with Britain.
> 
> 1958 - Charles De Gaulle was elected the first president of the fifth
> Republic of France with 78.5 percent of the votes cast by the electoral
> college.
> 
> 1960 - King Saud took over the government of Saudi Arabia after Crown
> Prince Faisal resigned as prime minister.
> 
> 1963 - Sir Jack Hobbs, English cricketer, died. Regarded as one of the
> world's greatest batsman of his time, in 1953 he became the first
> cricketer to be knighted.
> 
> 1967 - Louis Washkansky, the world's first heart transplant patient,
> died 18 days after surgery.
> 
> 1968 - Apollo 8, with astronauts Frank Borman, James Lovell and William
> Anders, was launched by a Saturn 5 booster from Cape Kennedy. Three days
> later they carried out the first manned flight around the moon.
> 
> 1972 - After nearly two decades of Cold War hostility, East and West
> Germany established diplomatic ties in a treaty which committed them to
> good-neighbourly relations, paving the way for international recognition
> of East Germany.
> 
> 1973 - The first peace conference between Israel and its Arab neighbours
> opened in Geneva attended by Jordan, Israel, Egypt, the United States,
> the Soviet Union and the United Nations.
> 
> 1975 - Terrorists of the ``Arm of the Arab Revolution'' led by ``Carlos
> the Jackal'' raided the OPEC headquarters in Vienna and held 11 oil
> ministers and their staff hostage.
> 
> 1979 - In Britain, the Lancaster House conference on Rhodesia ended
> after a peace agreement was signed.
> 
> 1988 - A Pan Am Boeing 747 was blown up over Lockerbie, Scotland,
> killing all 259 passengers and crew and 11 people on the ground.
> 
> 1989 - Romanian President Nicolae Ceausescu declared a state of
> emergency in the western district of Timis, where security police had
> earlier crushed anti-government riots.
> 
> 1990 - Albania tore down eastern Europe's last towering statues of
> Soviet dictator Josef Stalin.
> 
> 1992 - 54 people were killed when a Martinair DC-10 charter plane
> carrying Dutch holidaymakers crashed in flames at Faro, Portugal; the
> plane was carrying 327 passengers and 13 crew.
> 
> 1993 - President Boris Yeltsin abruptly abolished the former KGB
> security police, saying the huge force Russian citizens feared for
> decades was ``incapable of being reformed.''
> 
> 1995 - In the worst disaster on the accident-prone Egyptian railways for
> more than 15 years, 75 people were killed and 76 injured when a crowded
> train ran into the back of another in fog at in the town of Badrasheen,
> 28 km (17 miles) south of Cairo.
> 
> 1997 - Milan Milutinovic, Socialist candidate and a close ally of
> Yugoslav President Slobodan Milosevic, won 58.6 percent of the vote in
> Serbia's presidential election run off.
> 
> 18:57 12-14-99