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Milosevic cheats death.


NEW YORK, MARCH 14

THE inside story: The date was October 15, 1946. The Nazi war criminals would be hanged the next day. It was an event so momentous that the president of United Press announced to his staff in New York City New York City: see New York, city.
New York City

City (pop., 2000: 8,008,278), southeastern New York, at the mouth of the Hudson River. The largest city in the U.S.
 that he personally would superintend su·per·in·tend  
tr.v. su·per·in·tend·ed, su·per·in·tend·ing, su·per·in·tends
To oversee and direct; supervise. See Synonyms at supervise.
 the story from UP's central office in the Daily News building. He shoved the pros to one side, donned a green eyeshade, and sat over his Teletype. The 10-bell sign went off, indicating a story of the first magnitude. He got the news and typed out a headline for UP's 5,400 subscribers worldwide. It read: "GOERING CHEATS DEATH BY COMMITTING SUICIDE."

Fifty-four hundred varieties of snickers
''This entry is about the confectionery named Snickers. For other uses, see Snickers (disambiguation).


Snickers is a sweet bar made by Mars, Incorporated.
 and derision poured in from offices around the world. The president doffed his green eyeshade and returned silently to his administrative quarters, leaving the news cockpit to the regular night editor.

There was fury in Nuremberg over what happened. Goering was by far the most conspicuous of the captured Nazis. It had been a very long trial, almost a year from arraignments to executions. There were 21 defendants, and the sentences were varied, including three acquittals. There was plenty to do the next day to keep the hangman HANGMAN. The name usually given to a man employed by the sheriff to put a man to death, according to law, in pursuance of a judgment of a competent court, and lawful warrant. The same as executioner. (q.v.)  busy, but Hermann Goering had ruined the party.

An effort was made to immure im·mure  
tr.v. im·mured, im·mur·ing, im·mures
1. To confine within or as if within walls; imprison.

2. To build into a wall: immure a shrine.

3.
 in the confines of Spandau Prison the news of Goering's outsmarting his jailers, but the word got out, and what was feared indeed happened: There was quiet celebration by vanquished Germans inclined to ignore the crime and daydream of the glories of the Third Reich, whose last surviving grandee gran·dee  
n.
1.
a. A nobleman of the highest rank in Spain or Portugal.

b. Used as the title for such a nobleman.

2. A person of eminence or high rank.
 had had the last laugh at the expense of the hangman.

Slobodan Milosevic didn't cheat death by committing suicide, or by contriving to weaken mortally his health, but he certainly removed such satisfaction as was owed to mourners for the 250,000 people killed in the former Yugoslavia owing substantially to Milosevic and the Serbian terrorism he mobilized.

The day in 2001 when Milosevic was turned over to an international tribunal for trial was exhilarating for hundreds of thousands. Briefly it appeared that the international court in The Hague would provide such satisfaction as could be had from establishing formal guilt. Not the kind of satisfaction that Nuremberg brought, because the code in The Hague forbade capital punishment. The prosecutors'job was to establish Milosevic's guilt and to give him a life sentence in jail.

Upon his death, the prosecutor passed out word that she had expected the case against Milosevic to be successfully concluded within two months. We cannot know whether that might have happened. Or whether Milosevic could have protracted pro·tract  
tr.v. pro·tract·ed, pro·tract·ing, pro·tracts
1. To draw out or lengthen in time; prolong: disputants who needlessly protracted the negotiations.

2.
 his trial another four years. His position was simple: He was president of Serbia The President of Serbia is the head of state of the Republic of Serbia. The current President of Serbia is Boris Tadić, who won a majority of votes in the Serbian presidential elections, 2004. , the court had no jurisdiction over him, and he would refuse to cooperate in any pantomime of a genuine trial.

There isn't a great deal a prosecution can do if the defendant is entirely inert. Milosevic was not inactive to the point of absenting himself from the proceedings. Day after day, month after month, year after year, he ranted on, presenting irrelevant documents and seizing the histrionic histrionic /his·tri·on·ic/ (his?tre-on´ik) excessively dramatic or emotional, as in histrionic personality disorder; see under personality.  moment to reiterate his defiance.

But the failure to convict him, let alone to hang him, contributes that attenuation Loss of signal power in a transmission.
Attenuation

The reduction in level of a transmitted quantity as a function of a parameter, usually distance. It is applied mainly to acoustic or electromagnetic waves and is expressed as the ratio of power densities.
 to political crime which has permitted prime-time murderers to leave the stage unimpeded by basic requirements to observe international law, to desist from genocide, to fear epochal ep·och·al  
adj.
1. Of or characteristic of an epoch.

2.
a. Highly significant or important; momentous: epochal decisions made by Roosevelt and Churchill.

b.
 transgressions against civilized behavior.

It has been instantly conceded in foreign dispatches that Milosevic has now become a martyr. A martyr, no less!--even as Goering was thought a martyr. But at least Goering's death was brought on by successful prosecution, even if the consummation was denied us, Goering swinging from a rope, rather than dying, as Milosevic has done, from drugs that killed him, drugs that, on the dramatic stage, played the role of impostors.

--UNIVERSAL PRESS SYNDICATE
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Title Annotation:on the right
Author:Buckley, William F., JR.
Publication:National Review
Geographic Code:4EXYU
Date:Apr 10, 2006
Words:643
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