You are here:
Home / Archives for Raoul Wallenberg
ADVERTISEMENT Lying gets a bad rap but, oftentimes, it can help keep life interesting. Lies can inspire people to greater heights of achievement, even as they often sink the liar to lower depths. Lies save more lives and livelihoods than you’d ever believe (trust us; we’d never lie about that.) So here’s to ten of [...]
Posted by Dustin Koski on Monday, January 14, 2013 at 12:01 am
Filed under People · Tagged Alan Abel, Aleister Crowley, Count of St. Germain, Dustin Koski, famous liars, Harry Gerguson, herodotus, Jasper Maskelyne, Jean Eugène Robert-Houdin, Raoul Wallenberg, Ripley's Believe It Or Not, Robert Ripley, TopTenz, Wilhelm Voigt
While Spielberg guaranteed that the world would remember Oskar Schindler, there were others who also saw the plight of the European Jews and went the extra mile to save as many as possible. While TopTenz has already mentioned Raoul Wallenberg and Chiune Sugihara there were others who rose to the challenge, taking incredible risks and [...]
Posted by Eric Yosomono on Wednesday, April 25, 2012 at 12:01 am
Filed under History, People · Tagged Ángel Sanz Briz, Aristides de Sousa Mendes do Amaral e Abranches, Auschwitz concentration camp, Auschwitz POW camp, Charles Coward, Chiune Sugihara, Eric Yosomono, Ernst Werner Techow, Gaijinass.com, Georg Ferdinand Duckwitz, Giorgio Perlasca, Giovanni Palatucci, Irena Sendler, José Castellanos, José Castellanos Contreras, Monsignor O'Flaherty, Oskar Schindler, Raoul Wallenberg, The Holocaust
It is a fact that literally thousands of people disappear or go missing every year in this country alone; some of these are likely well-covered up homicides, but most are voluntary—either teenage runaways or people who just want to start over again—with a few as yet undiscovered suicides thrown in for good measure. However, there [...]
Posted by Jeff Danelek on Thursday, March 24, 2011 at 12:01 am
Filed under Bizarre, Crime, People · Tagged active head, amelia earhart, America, archaeologist, Asia, Australia, author, biplane, Boeing, Boeing 727, brazil, Budapest, cement overcoat, Charles Lindbergh, Charles Nungesser, Christmas, Coast Guard, Colorado, Columbia river, Crater, Cultural anthropology, D.B. Cooper, Denver, Detroit, diplomat, Disappeared people, Electra, English Channel, Europe, France, François Coli, Fred Noonan, Giant’s Stadium, Glenn Miller, good judge, GPS, Guinea, Harold Holt, head of state, Howland Island, jazz musician, Jeff Danelek, jimmy hoffa, John Cabot, joseph force crater, judge, Judge Crater, Knowledge, Machus Red Fox Restaurant, Maine, Marshal, Marshal Islands, mysterious disappearances, New, New Jersey, New York, New York Atlantic, Newfoundland, North America, Oskar Schindler, Paris, percy fawcett, president, Prime Minister, Raleigh Rimmell, Raoul Wallenberg, Rio de Janeiro, Sally Lou Ritz, Supreme Court, Sweden, Swedish people, The Boeing Company, Tony Jack, Tony Pro, Unexplained disappearances, union leader, United Kingdom, United States, USD