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1943 T. Henry Moray attempts to reconstruct his radiant energy generator and is harassed by the FBI after seeking Gustave Le Bons book (see 1892). 1943 Diphtheria cases in Nazi occupied France rise to 47,000 after Germans force compulsory vaccina- tion. In nearby Norway, which refused vaccinations, there were 50 cases of Diphtheria. 1943 Hitler decides to not use chemical weapons against allies, fearing allied development of the same. British capture Nazi prisoner who turns out to be chemist from Spandau plant. 1943 The U.S. Office of Strategic Services (OSS) sends Allen Dulles to Bern, Switzerland, to work with top Nazis like Otto Von Bolschwing to arrange for the transfer of Germans to the U.S. under Operation Paperclip. At the same time, Americans are dying in the Battle of the Bulge. One vital aspect of the agreement was to extend the war until the Nazis could get their funds out of the country and begin again in the United States—this time at a covert level. German funds are transferred to Argentina, Brazil, and other countries. Dulles remains in Switzerland until 1945 in this capacity. 1943 “Tesla dies.” A boxcar full of his papers are taken to Los Alamos for storage. A significant amount of evidence suggests Tesla did not die at this time but was whisked off to England after sabotaging the ONR invisibility project. Other evidence suggests he did in fact die, but ONR was among the first to get a “crack” at his papers. 1944 Britain turns over anti-crop toxin research to United States. The U.S. would have mass production capability by 1945. 1944 American train in France carrying $10 billion in Nazi gold is blown up, killing 51 American sol- diers. The gold is then used to finance Montauk mind control projects later in New York. Later funded by ITT, owned by Krupp in Germany. 1944 The city manger of Grand Rapids, Michigan, announces that the Michigan State Department of Health is planning a long range experiment with fluoridated water and that Grand Rapids was selected as the location for the experiment. The city commission approves a motion to fluoridate on July 31, and decide it is to begin in January 1945, despite the warning issued three months earlier by the American Dental Association. Grand Rapids becomes the first city in the United States to conduct this experiment. It was to serve as the test city to be compared against unfluoridated Muskegon for a period of ten years relative to tooth decay, at which time it would be determined whether or not fluoride was “safe and effective.” Dr. H. Trendley Dean was put in charge of the project. The experiment was terminated early with the pronouncement that fluorides in public water supplies was “safe.” See 1945. 1944 An initial batch of 5,000 anthrax bombs comes off the production line at Camp Detrick. Main American plant at Vigo, Indiana, built at a cost of $8 million and employed 500 people. The plant was capable of producing 50,000 anthrax bombs per month. Plant ready for production by 1945 but never used, and eventually was leased for production of antibiotics. 369 Appendix F: General Chronology of Events 1943 U.S. Government sends citizens of Japanese descent to prison camps in the U.S. 1943 General Reinhard Gehlen infiltrates Soviet intelligence and forms a pact with Allen Dulles. 1943 Juan Peron and other pro-Nazi leaders take over power in Argentina. 1943 Pilots start reporting “foo fighters” in the air. 1943 Allies begin manufacture of anthrax bomb, using British design. 1943 U.S. gives Russia plans for atomic bomb under Lend Lease Program. 1943 U.S. delivers 1 kilogram of uranium to the Soviet Union. 1943 Dr.Ewen Cameron receives Rockefeller grant to set up Allen Memorial Institute. 1944 Asperger in Vienna describes the first cases of adult “autism” to appear. 1944 Uranium pile built in Clinton, Tennessee. New cyclotron completed at Wash. Atlantis, Alien Visitation, and Genetic Manipulation