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Austrian train plays Hitler speech over loudspeaker
Instead of the normal announcements, a crowd could also be heard shouting “Heil Hitler” and “Sieg Heil” over the train’s speaker system.
The operator said there had been several such incidents in recent days.
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One passenger on the Bregenz-Vienna service told the BBC that everyone on the train was “completely shocked”.
David Stoegmueller, a Green Party MP, said the speech by the Nazi German leader was played over the intercom shortly before the train, an ÖBB Railjet 661, arrived in Vienna.
“We heard two episodes,” he said. “First there was 30 seconds of a Hitler speech, and then I heard ‘Sieg Heil’.”
Mr Stoegmueller said the train staff were unable to stop the recording and were unable to make their own announcements. “One crew member was really upset,” he added.
In a statement sent to the BBC, Austrian Federal Railways (ÖBB) said: “We clearly distance ourselves from the content.
“We can currently assume that the announcements were made by people directly on the train via intercoms. We have reported the matter to the police,” the ÖBB said.
It is understood that complaints have been filed against two people.
Mr Stoegmueller said he had received an email from a man who was on the train with an old lady who was a concentration camp survivor. “She was crying,” he said.
He said another passenger remarked that when other countries had technical problems, it involved the air conditioning breaking down.
“In Austria, the technical problem is Hitler.”
Hitler was born in Austria and emigrated to Germany in 1913 as a young man
Florida professor breaks record for time spent living underwater
Researchers are studying the 55-yearold’s health while he lives underwater
A US researcher has broken the record for the longest time spent living underwater without depressurisation.
Joseph Dituri has spent more than 74 days at the bottom of a 30ft-deep lagoon in
Key Largo, Florida.
And he does not have plans to stop yet. On Sunday, he said he would stay in Jules’ Undersea Lodge for at least 100 days.
“The curiosity for discovery has led me here,” he said.
“My goal from day one has been to inspire generations to come, interview scientists who study life undersea and learn how the human body functions in extreme environments,” he added.
The previous record for most days spent living underwater at ambient pressure - 73 - was established by two professors in 2014 in the same Key Largo lodge.
Unlike a submarine, the lodge does not use technology to adjust for the increased underwater pressure.
Prof Dituri - who goes by the nickname Dr Deep Sea - began his journey on 1 March at Jules’ Undersea Lodge, a small room that sits at the bottom of a lagoon in the Florida Keys.
It is named after Jules Verne, who wrote the well-known sci-fi book 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea.
For the project, called Project Neptune
100, the University of South Florida professor is studying how the human body reacts to long-term exposure to extreme pressure.
Researchers are studying the 55-yearold’s health, as well as the psychological effects of being isolated and confined for so long, by running a series of medical tests.
But his time underwater has not kept him from his professorial duties. Prof Dituri - who also served in the Navy for 28 years - is teaching his biomedical engineering classes online while he lives in the lagoon, according to the University of South Florida.
To keep busy, the professor wakes up at 05:00 each day to exercise. He stays full by reportedly eating protein-heavy meals such as eggs and salmon that he can keep warm with his microwave.
And while his underwater stay has proven ground-breaking, he is excited to get back to some above-ground activities.
“The thing that I miss the most about being on the surface is literally the sun,” he told the Associated Press.
Source: BBC