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1Euro
Advanced Member



12448 Posts

Member since 17/07/2008

Posted - 07/12/2011 : 11:39:40  Show Profile Show Extended Profile  Send 1Euro a Private Message
Jel ima netko na forumu, da radi u nekakvom muzeju,antikvariatu, ili da ima nekog rodaka koji tamo radi,susjeda,...?

Jer ja sam kupio na ebayu ovaj magazin (casopis), koji izgleda da je skoro pa glancer:

http://www.ebay.com/itm/WW2-Time-Magazine-WW-II-Marshal-Tito-1944-/120820614704?pt=LH_DefaultDomain_0&hash=item1c21784630

Malo sam istraživao i saznao:

-Time magazin je ustanovljen 1923 i taj magazin je jedan od najvecih magazina na svijetu (znaci ima podružnice u Europi, Aziji,...)
-ovaj casopis (magazin) je vrlo lijepo ocuvan, vjerovatno se radi o dosta rijetkom primjerku NA NAŠIM PROSTORIMA (ako ne i jedini!), jer je bio izdat u Americi i to u drugom svetskom ratu 9.octobar 1944
-cijena vjerovatno zavisi od teksta koji je napisan unutra, ali pošto su stavili TITA na naslovnicu i napisali naslov (Maršal Tito, na križišcu- (crossroads) dviju Imperija), vjerovatno unutra ima dosta teksta o Titu, partizanima (ne Sawitch, ne radi se o FC Partizanu...haha), njihovoj borbi (koja je u to vriejme još uvijek trajala), pa sam siguran da možda unutra postoji neki zanimljiv tekst, možda fotografije, neki trag za nadaljnje istraživanje u vezi Tita,Partizana,....ono zanimljivo za istoricare, jer ipak ovo nije žuti press nego TIME koji je jedan od najvecih na politickom parketu
-zanimljiv je zbog toga jer pišu o TITU i to u Americi koja nije voljela komunizam, ali po drugoj strani TITO je bio i saveznik i borio se protiv Njemacke, iako ja mislim kako su stavili naslov "izmedu dva imperija" vjerovatno misle na Njemacki i Ruski "imperij" i sudeci po naslovu TITA su smatrali da je na raskršcu (crossroad), i bilo bi zanimljivo procitati šta su napisali svojoj americkoj publici i kako ga prikazali

Znaci ne želim da se ovdje komentariše TITO, 2 svijetski rat....jer nisam zbog toga otvorio topic i n eželim da ga se zakljuca, pogotovo jer ne znamo šta sve piše unutra jer ja taj magazin još nisam dobio, samo sam ga usvojio i trebam sacekati da mi ga pošalju iz Amerike.

ZNACI PITANJE JE KOLIKO JE OVO VRIJEDNO!??????????


Za ovog glupog amerikanca nije ništa vrijedno jer je stavio tako nisku cijenu, ali ja sam siguran da bi se ovdje istoricari, kolekcionari, muzej,...potukli medu sobom. Isto tako ovo bi bio zanimljiv i KINEZIMA I RUSIMA (zbog komunizma,....)i zbog toga jer je na engleskom pa mogu i oni to proucavati.

Da nisam ja odtkrio taj primjerak, ljudi cak ne bi znali da su Amerikanci napisali clanak o TITU 1944 godine.

Ljudi mislim da sam na pragu velikog odkrica i jedva cekam d adode ovaj magazin i da procitam šta piše unutra, jer sigurno cijena ovisi od teksta unutra, iako neki muzeji bi vjerovatno bili zainteresirani zbog same cinjenice da su TITA stavili na naslovnicu TIME-a.
I radi se o glanceru, što je možda jedini ovako lijepo ocuvan, bez mrlja, nije pocepan, sve stranice....


sawitch
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Serbia
39991 Posts

Member since 17/11/2007

Posted - 07/12/2011 : 11:47:54  Show Profile Show Extended Profile  Send sawitch a Private Message
Kod nas bi ti stari ljudi rekli na ovo: "Uzmi malo motiku u ruke!"
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1Euro
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12448 Posts

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Posted - 07/12/2011 : 11:50:11  Show Profile Show Extended Profile  Send 1Euro a Private Message
eto šta sam saznao na TIME stranici:

http://search.time.com/results.html?N=45&Ns=p_date_range|1&Ntt=Marshal%20Tito&Nf=p_date_range|BTWN+19441001+19441031

http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,803292,00.html

http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,803304,00.html
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KRAS
Advanced Member



Slovenia
7774 Posts

Member since 18/05/2003

Posted - 07/12/2011 : 11:53:19  Show Profile Show Extended Profile  Send KRAS a Private Message
quote:
Originally posted by 1Euro
iako ja mislim kako su stavili naslov "izmedu dva imperija" vjerovatno misle na Njemacki i Ruski "imperij"






vjerovatno misle na ova dva imperija- USA i SSSR... u svakom slucaju nadam se da ceš što pre dobiti taj TIME...
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1Euro
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12448 Posts

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Posted - 07/12/2011 : 12:04:36  Show Profile Show Extended Profile  Send 1Euro a Private Message
quote:
Originally posted by lwood

@1€ koliko ti misliš da ovo vridi?



ja mislim da ovo vrijedi 15.000 eura, ali znam da ce teško biti pronaci nekoga tko ce platiti više od 100 eura.....ali svakim danom ova ce revija biti starija i vrijednija, ako je ne prodam bar za 1500 eura, onda ce to biti obitelsjko naslede, za moje unuke npr,...pa ce možda za 100 godina oni to prodati nekome tko ce to više cjeniti.
Ako tamo neki Superman strip vrijedi 1,6 milijuna eura, ili neki LMS4 vrijedi 800 eura, ovo je isto tako raritet.
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cat claw
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5836 Posts

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Posted - 07/12/2011 : 13:10:39  Show Profile Show Extended Profile  Send cat claw a Private Message
Postoji jos jedan TIME sa Titom na naslovnoj i tekstom o njemu

http://img.timeinc.net/time/magazine/archive/covers/1955/1101550606_400.jpg
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adriano
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Croatia
4454 Posts

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Posted - 07/12/2011 : 13:52:01  Show Profile Show Extended Profile  Send adriano a Private Message
to vrijedi jako puno, ali vratimo se na Tita. Preporucam ti knjigu Zlatka Rendulica, pilota kraljevine Jug., RAF-a, Sovjetskog saveza i SFRJ, KOJI JE Poslije rata diplomirao na akademijama u SAD i SSSR-U. dok je bio kao stipendista u SAD- u, držao je predavanja o Titu kolegama studentima. Oni kao studenti aeronautike, blage veze nisu imali o WW2, niti o Jugoslaviji, SSSR-U I odnosima izmedu svih tih država.Jako je dobro u knjizi objašnjen položaj Tita izmedu dviju velesila. Kako se mijenjao taj odnos, tako su se mijenjali i avioni na kojima je letio. zahvaljujuci tome on je kao pilot letio na americkim i SSSR avionima.
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paro
stripovi.com suradnik



Croatia
8554 Posts

Member since 30/03/2005

Posted - 07/12/2011 : 14:13:27  Show Profile Show Extended Profile  Visit paro's Homepage  Send paro a Private Message
quote:
Originally posted by lwood

koliko bi ti procjenia da vridi ovaj TIME?



Pa piše ti, 5 baksa i 17 centi..

There he goes. One of God's own prototypes. A high-powered mutant of some kind never even considered for mass production. Too weird to live, and too rare to die.
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paro
stripovi.com suradnik



Croatia
8554 Posts

Member since 30/03/2005

Posted - 07/12/2011 : 14:24:00  Show Profile Show Extended Profile  Visit paro's Homepage  Send paro a Private Message
quote:
Originally posted by adriano

to vrijedi jako puno, ali vratimo se na Tita. Preporucam ti knjigu Zlatka Rendulica, pilota kraljevine Jug., RAF-a, Sovjetskog saveza i SFRJ, KOJI JE Poslije rata diplomirao na akademijama u SAD i SSSR-U. dok je bio kao stipendista u SAD- u, držao je predavanja o Titu kolegama studentima. Oni kao studenti aeronautike, blage veze nisu imali o WW2, niti o Jugoslaviji, SSSR-U I odnosima izmedu svih tih država.Jako je dobro u knjizi objašnjen položaj Tita izmedu dviju velesila. Kako se mijenjao taj odnos, tako su se mijenjali i avioni na kojima je letio. zahvaljujuci tome on je kao pilot letio na americkim i SSSR avionima.



Ako ništa Euro je sve lijepo zamolio da se ne spominje Tito ni ništa vezano uz njega osim doticnog casopisa

There he goes. One of God's own prototypes. A high-powered mutant of some kind never even considered for mass production. Too weird to live, and too rare to die.
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adriano
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Croatia
4454 Posts

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Posted - 07/12/2011 : 14:48:16  Show Profile Show Extended Profile  Send adriano a Private Message
Volio bi ga procitati, ali ne bi dao za njega takve cifre. Ja ti baš nemam kolekcionarskog duha.
quote:
Originally posted by lwood

koliko bi ti procjenia da vridi ovaj TIME?

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adriano
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Croatia
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Posted - 07/12/2011 : 14:48:57  Show Profile Show Extended Profile  Send adriano a Private Message
a kolika je njegova vrijednost, nemam pojma.
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zeljko
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Bosnia and Herzegovina
17757 Posts

Member since 02/08/2002

Posted - 07/12/2011 : 14:52:11  Show Profile Show Extended Profile  Send zeljko a Private Message
nema ljeba bez motike

Utabanim stazama ocaja!
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sawitch
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Serbia
39991 Posts

Member since 17/11/2007

Posted - 07/12/2011 : 15:39:53  Show Profile Show Extended Profile  Send sawitch a Private Message
quote:
Originally posted by adriano

to vrijedi jako puno, ali vratimo se na Tita. Preporucam ti knjigu Zlatka Rendulica, pilota kraljevine Jug., RAF-a, Sovjetskog saveza i SFRJ, KOJI JE Poslije rata diplomirao na akademijama u SAD i SSSR-U. dok je bio kao stipendista u SAD- u, držao je predavanja o Titu kolegama studentima. Oni kao studenti aeronautike, blage veze nisu imali o WW2, niti o Jugoslaviji, SSSR-U I odnosima izmedu svih tih država.Jako je dobro u knjizi objašnjen položaj Tita izmedu dviju velesila. Kako se mijenjao taj odnos, tako su se mijenjali i avioni na kojima je letio. zahvaljujuci tome on je kao pilot letio na americkim i SSSR avionima.



Kako se zove ta knjiga?
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Andrej
Senior Member



Croatia
1555 Posts

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Posted - 07/12/2011 : 16:00:13  Show Profile Show Extended Profile  Send Andrej a Private Message
Da nije ipak rijec o ovoj imperiji?

"War will cease when we refuse to fight"
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adriano
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Croatia
4454 Posts

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Posted - 07/12/2011 : 16:04:31  Show Profile Show Extended Profile  Send adriano a Private Message
"Zlatko Rendulic-general avnojske Jugoslavije". Inace, covjek je živa legenda. poznat je i kao najobrazovaniji general JNA. Procitao sam knjigu u jednom dahu. Nema di nije bio, i za vrijeme rata i nakon njega. Otišao je 43. preko Visa i Baria u sjevernu Afriku, di je letio na engleskim avionima, 44. iz Tunisa preko Egipta, srednjeg istoka do Cecenije, di je letio na ILjušinu, JAK-U. Poslije rata se vraca doma, leti na americkim sabre 86 i još nekim avionima, ne znam sad ime.
Kao stipendist odlazi na školovanja u SAD i SSSR. Kasnije prodaje u ime SFRJ avione Libiji i Zambiji, di i živi nekoliko godina.
Inace je veliki strucnjak u aerodinamici, napisao hrpu knjiga o tome iz vlastitog iskustva, kao test pilot. Trenutno piše novu knjigu o utjecaju naftnog lobija svijet.
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1Euro
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12448 Posts

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Posted - 07/12/2011 : 16:06:42  Show Profile Show Extended Profile  Send 1Euro a Private Message
quote:
Originally posted by cat claw

Postoji jos jedan TIME sa Titom na naslovnoj i tekstom o njemu

http://img.timeinc.net/time/magazine/archive/covers/1955/1101550606_400.jpg



uff super!
Iz kojeg ljeta je ovaj? Vjerovatno oko 1960-1970....ipak je tada bilo drukcije vrijeme, rat j ezavršio,...pitanje je šta zanimljivo piše u tom TIME casopisu, ali j amislim da je ovaj moj ipak zanimljiv, prvi put prikaziva TITA, uoci drugog svijetskog rata, sa puno informacijama o ratu, ratištima,....ali dobro da si pronašao i ovog.
Bilo bi lijepo saznati iz koje godine je ovaj drugi?

Ali kod moga TIME casopisa, prikazuje "prvo pojavljivanje" Tita.....ipak je to nešto drugo.
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1Euro
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12448 Posts

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Posted - 07/12/2011 : 16:17:16  Show Profile Show Extended Profile  Send 1Euro a Private Message
eto o kojim temama su sve prilozi u mom TIME magazinu:

U.S. At War: Enter the Chinese
okt 09, 1944
After six weeks of secret discussions, the first phase of the Dumbarton Oaks conference ended; the Russians went home, the Chinese moved in. The Chinese had everyone's sympathy. They, like everyone else, knew that they were there largely to put their own thoughts on record, and then to give approval to what had already been ...
268 words | view cover
TIME Cover
The Last Rounds
okt 09, 1944
Tom Dewey, dressed in sweater and grey flannels, played golf last week† to relax from the first round of his campaign, and studied ring technique to prepare for his next. The question he faced: should he try to outbox Franklin Roosevelt, or to out-slug him? On his 8,545-mile cross-country trip, he had been content to ...
297 words | view cover
TIME Cover
World Battlefronts: Unselfish Death
okt 09, 1944
On the southern slope of a hill on furnace-hot Peleliu, two hospital corpsmen came upon a badly wounded marine, a young Southerner. They lifted him on a stretcher and started toward the beach through the machine-gun fire that corpsmen often brave to rescue fallen comrades. One of the corpsmen dropped. He had been shot between ...
232 words | view cover
TIME Cover
U.S. At War: Serenade for Harry
okt 09, 1944
Democratic Vice-Presidential Nominee Harry Truman was serenaded at a Kansas City political dinner: We sing our praise of Vice President Truman, parley-vous, The man who's loved all over the world by me and you. Vice President by acclamation, An American credit to our nation—hinkey dinkey parley-vous! Harry Truman, who rose to the U.S. Senate under ...
118 words | view cover
TIME Cover
Science: Super X Ray
okt 09, 1944
A new X-ray tube which can shoot more concentrated radiation through twelve inches of steel than could all past commercial tubes combined plus all the radium ever mined, was announced last week at the Radiological Society of North America. It is the first commercial tube to operate at two million volts. In any X-ray tube ...
449 words | view cover
TIME Cover
World Battlefronts: BATTLE OF GERMANY (South),MEN AT WAR: Mystery
okt 09, 1944
BATTLE OF GERMANY (South) At first it appeared that the British and Americans had finally made the grand invasion of the Balkans. Allied headquarters in Rome permitted correspondents to go all out, announce that a new organization known as the Land Forces of the Adriatic had landed in Albania and the Yugoslav islands. From the ...
442 words | view cover
TIME Cover
World Battlefronts: Perfect Score
okt 09, 1944
To supply its Kwantung Army in Manchuria and its growing legions in China, Japan has begun to lean more heavily upon its steel industry in Manchuria. Blast furnaces there are closer to the source of coking coal, and the finished products can be shipped overland to the armies, easing the burden on the Japs' overtaxed, ...
149 words | view cover

Read more: http://search.time.com/results.html?No=75&sid=1341914ABBF1&Nf=p_date_range%7cBTWN+19441001+19441031&Ns=p_date_range&N=45&Nty=1#ixzz1frVZYsc6

Education: International Insults
okt 09, 1944
¶ Non-Greeks, to Greek ears, sounded like stammerers. From a root of this meaning they derived "barbaros," "barbarian." ¶ The Carthaginians, in the Roman view, were treacherous fellows. "Punica fides" ("Punic faith") became Latin for double-dealing. ¶ The Swedes, to Danes, were models of drunkenness. "Full som Svensker" "Drunk as a Swede," is the Danish ...
207 words | view cover
TIME Cover
U.S. At War: The Big Barrage
okt 09, 1944
The political guns, big & little, were now zeroed on the plain U.S. citizen, the man who "doesn't know" in the polls, or is "leaning." There he stood, without benefit of foxhole, raked in a withering crossfire that would last on into November, until the blessed peace of the polling booth descended on him. Over ...
866 words | view cover
TIME Cover
Medicine: Daughters for Harvard
okt 09, 1944
Resolved: That no woman of true delicacy would be willing in the presence of men to listen to the discussion of the subjects that necessarily come under the consideration of the student of medicine. Resolved: That we are not opposed to allowing woman her rights, but do protest against her appearing in places where her ...
388 words | view cover
TIME Cover
Religion: Greeting
okt 09, 1944
Reported New York Times Correspondent Anne O'Hare McCormick from Rome last week: "A story is going the rounds of a lanky, soft-voiced Texan in a large group of soldiers received by the Pope in a recent audience. First in line, he didn't quite know what to do when the Holy Father offered his ring to ...
77 words | view cover
TIME Cover
World Battlefronts: BATTLE OF ASIA: Disaster Unalloyed?
okt 09, 1944
Hiding by day, riding by night, the Japanese last week ground out new and ominous gains in their China offensive—the greatest land campaign ever fought by the men from the little island empire. Although the nearest battlefield was almost 350 miles from Chungking, the atmosphere in the capital was heavy with disaster. The Jap drive ...
563 words | view cover
TIME Cover
Army & Navy - MARINES,OCCUPATION,SUPPLY: Man of War
okt 09, 1944
MARINES In front of Bloody Nose ridge on Peleliu. a Marine colonel fretted in his command post—a piece of tin under a poncho which shaded him from the sun. He worried the end of a frazzled cigaret, surveyed the field before him with hard, bloodshot eyes. For many days his regiment had been fighting it ...
683 words | view cover
TIME Cover
CORPORATIONS: Autopsy
okt 09, 1944
For the second time in 60 years Procter & Gamble, makers of Ivory Soap ("It Floats"), faced the embarrassing situation. A customer had sent in a bar that would not float (TIME, Oct. 2). Last week the baffled research staff performed a thorough autopsy on the sullen bar, came up from its powdered remains still ...
90 words | view cover
TIME Cover
Miscellany, Oct. 9, 1944
okt 09, 1944
Comeuppance. Near Swift Current, Sask., Bachelor-Farmer Alfred Bessant lived alone in his cellar through 16 profitless, bad crop years, grew a $2,500 crop this year, came out of the hole. Pastoral. In The Bronx, William Sher man, who identified himself as a nature lover and salesman of physical-culture books, was found guilty of the charge ...
359 words | view cover
TIME Cover
World Battlefronts: INTERNATIONAL
okt 09, 1944
Why As the Russian delegates moved out of Dumbarton Oaks last week, and the Chinese delegates moved in, a crucial fact was highlighted again: no factor is more important to the world's future peace and security than the mind and the mood of Russia. Few could doubt that Russia passionately desires postwar peace and security. ...
360 words | view cover
TIME Cover
Foreign News: Britain Acts
okt 09, 1944
With the war almost won, Britain acted swiftly and powerfully in domestic and foreign affairs last week. A momentous social security plan (see below) laid a firm floor under British internal policy. Three days later the Conservative Government turned to foreign affairs. In two important speeches, on successive days, Prime Minister Churchill and Foreign Minister ...
147 words | view cover
TIME Cover
The First 2,000,000
okt 09, 1944
SHORTAGES Russia tried to buy 2,000,000 artificial legs on the American market last week. The small U.S. factories, already far behind on domestic orders, could not help out—none of them produces more than 5,000 artificial limbs a year. The Soviets, who must step up their own small output, are already studying American methods. For 2,000,000 ...
80 words | view cover
TIME Cover
Education: M. O. T. for Schools
okt 09, 1944
U.S. schools and colleges now awn some 15,000 sound-film projectors. Last week the MARCH OF TIME was distributing to them the first issues of its new Forum Edi tion. Early subjects: Brazil, Texas, Future Airways. Adapted from regular M.O.T. productions, the eight monthly issues of the Forum Edition rent for $20 a year. ...
53 words | view cover
TIME Cover
INDIA: Adjournment
okt 09, 1944
The door of Mohamed AH Jinnah's Bombay bungalow swung open. Out stepped Mohandas K. Gandhi. Eighteen days after they began, the Moslem-Hindu unity talks between the leaders of the Moslem League and the All-India Nationalist Party had ended. Result: stalemate. Said Jinnah: "I regret to say that I have failed in the task of converting ...
128 words | view cover
TIME Cover
Books: Engineers of the Soul
okt 09, 1944
From Moscow, TIME Correspondent John Hersey cabled this account of Soviet writing and publishing in 1944: The Russian alphabet is still away at war. Even on the eve of victory not a word is written in this country which is not a weapon. Every sentence written in Russia must help beat Hitler or help build ...
2086 words | view cover
TIME Cover
JUDICIARY: The Dissenting Court
okt 09, 1944
This week the nine justices of the Supreme Court donned their black silk robes and marched in through the crimson-draped entrances behind the mahogany bench. The Court's 154th year began. Chief Justice Harlan Fiske Stone, 71, had spent the summer in a shingle house in Bethel, Me. There he leafed through legal briefs, examined a ...
522 words | view cover

Read more: http://search.time.com/results.html?No=90&sid=1341914ABBF1&N=45&Ns=p_date_range&Nf=p_date_range%7cBTWN+19441001+19441031&Nty=1#ixzz1frVyeruQ

Medicine: Typhus Time
okt 09, 1944
Typhus is at present no menace to the U.S. But it might conceivably become the dreaded scourge it is in Europe. The heavy U.S. typhus season was just beginning last week, and the best guess was that 1944 would break all records. The mild U.S. variety of the disease (fever, rash, aches, prostration) was in ...
344 words | view cover
TIME Cover
Education: Psychology 1
okt 09, 1944
"So amazing a performance demands an explanation, and the key perhaps is to be found in the fact that in civil life Lieut. Magill was a student of psychology. . . ." So spoke the august London Times last week of the feat of U.S. Army Lieut. Samuel ("Sammy") Wallace Magill, who, with only 30 ...
138 words | view cover
TIME Cover
World Battlefronts: BATTLE OF THE PACIFIC: Pause for Estimates
okt 09, 1944
Both the U.S. and Japan took stock of the war in the Orient. Facing certain defeat, the Japs could only take steps to ward off the final assault as long as possible. Example: the Japs decided that their aluminum industry must be re-geared to the use of low-grade ore found in their own islands and ...
1061 words | view cover
TIME Cover
Milestones, Oct. 9, 1944
okt 09, 1944
Married. Private Mickey Rooney, 23, pint-sized cinemadolescent; and Betty Jane Rase, 18, blond, 5 ft. 7 in., Miss Birmingham of 1944, fifth placer in the 1944 Miss America competition; he for the second time; in Birmingham, Ala. Private Rooney wooed & won his beauty in a week, married her on a three-day pass, expected to ...
380 words | view cover
TIME Cover
POLAND: Fruits of Appeasement
okt 09, 1944
Reluctantly, last week, the Polish Government in Exile made its most drastic gesture of appeasement to Moscow. It ousted anti-Soviet General Kazimierz Sosnkowski, commander in chief of the Polish Army, replaced him with General Bor (Lieut. General Tadeusz Komorow-ski), leader of the underground uprising in Warsaw. To perform General Bor's duties in London, the Government ...
258 words | view cover
TIME Cover
Medicine: What About Cancer?
okt 09, 1944
The influence of heredity on cancer was a topic for 40 experts in Bar Harbor, Me. last week. They concluded that they knew very little about it. The meeting was called by Dr. (of Science) Clarence Cook Little, head of the Roscoe B. Jackson Memorial Laboratory where, since its founding in 1929, the devious ways ...
179 words | view cover
TIME Cover
The President's Week, Oct. 9, 1944
okt 09, 1944
At his Friday press conference, Franklin Roosevelt did not chain-smoke, as usual; in fact, he did not smoke at all. His voice had a hoarse, stopped-up quality, indicating a head cold. Well knowing the acute national interest in Mr. Roosevelt's health, the White House promptly announced that the President's ailment was no more than a ...
180 words | view cover
TIME Cover
Emissary?
okt 09, 1944
One night during the Quebec Conference, Jean Marie Rodrigue, Cardinal Villeneuve, Archbishop of Quebec, had dined with President Franklin Roosevelt and Prime Minister Winston Churchill. Thereupon he canceled a projected trip to Mexico. A big Lancaster bomber flew him from Montreal to Britain (it was the first plane trip of his 60 years and he ...
278 words | view cover
TIME Cover
Business & Finance: Autos by Fisher?
okt 09, 1944
A break came last week in the fog of rumor which has swirled about the Fisher Brothers since they quit General Motors (TiME, Aug. 14). The Brothers filed incorporation papers in Lansing, Mich, for two new companies, Fisher Brothers, Inc. and Fisher Motor Car Co. (They had previously incorporated in Delaware.) The companies, each of ...
140 words | view cover
TIME Cover
GREAT BRITAIN: Inevitability of Gradualness
okt 09, 1944
Nothing that the war had done to England was so important. Last week, with no more warning than a gliding buzz-bomb, the Conservative Government launched its "prosperity and happiness program," Lord Woolton's plan for cradle-to-grave social security. Famed Sir William Beveridge, stepfather of the plan, gave it his blessing, even thought it an improvement on ...
499 words | view cover
TIME Cover
Foreign News: The Prime Minister
okt 09, 1944
Prime Minister Churchill's speech cleared the ground for Foreign Minister Eden's. Churchill's was a day-long speech, broken by a noon recess. The first part covered the war which Churchill said might not end until next year. The second part was devoted to foreign policy. It was less a typical Churchill speech than a series of ...
901 words | view cover
TIME Cover
Canada at War: Royal Wildcatter
okt 09, 1944
ALBERIA The latest wartime wildcatter is H.R.H. the Duke of Windsor. Last week on his E.P. (stands for Edvardus Princeps) ranch, 65 miles southwest of Calgary, a rotary drill was gouging the earth. The Duke had joined the search for the elusive oil pool under Alberta. To supervise the job the Duke had called in ...
161 words | view cover
TIME Cover
Sport: Fast Molasses
okt 09, 1944
Gentle, happy-go-lucky Pavot is indifferent to almost everything but food. He eats like a farm horse, but races like a champion. He is solid brown and in a race looks like fast-pouring molasses. He seems to be on springs when he jogs, hugs the ground when he runs. If he were less rangy, he would ...
288 words | view cover
TIME Cover
Mr. Field & the Word Business
okt 09, 1944
Walking through Manhattan's Grand Central Station several months ago, platinum-haired Publisher Marshall Field paused in a drugstore, riffled through a 25¢ paperbound book. It was love at first sight. The book's format, price and easy proximity to masses of people pleased Publisher Field, just as it had pleased millions of other Americans. Enamored as he ...
640 words | view cover
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Army & Navy - OCCUPATION: First Trial
okt 09, 1944
Maria Wrobel, small, fiftyish, wore a stylish black hat and real silk stockings. Friedel Souvignier, who is in her middle 40s, sported a blue turban. Blond, 18-year-old Marianne Souvignier's plump legs were bare. Pretty Inger Schoneneberg, 20, wore a black hat on her black hair and a plaid sports skirt. The four trooped nervously into ...
308 words | view cover

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The Press: Choosing Up
okt 09, 1944
This week is celebrated by the press as National Newspaper Week. Candidates Roosevelt and Dewey vied with each other in tributes to the U.S. press—to its "courage, loyalty and integrity" (Roosevelt), to "the freest, most interesting and most informative press in the world" (Dewey). Despite the Presidential overture, a considerable majority of the U.S. press ...
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NORWAY: Lysistrata In Oslo
okt 09, 1944
Out of a soldiers' bordello in the heart of Oslo's streamlined business section slipped four Paris trulls. Well-bribed German sentries let them pass. Members of the underground guided them on their four-night walk to Sweden. In Stockholm last week, over their first good meal in nearly a year, chunky, raucous Suzette and waspish, salty Marianne ...
419 words | view cover
TIME Cover
Books: Postwar Commonwealth
okt 09, 1944
WORLDS BEGINNING—Robert Ardrey —Duell, Sloan & Pearce ($2.50). Fifteen years after World War II, the U.S. was bankrupt. Industry had not exported so much as a mousetrap since the rest of the world had gone all out for synthetics and self-sufficiency. Unemployment and race riots swept the country. A terrible apathy descended upon the people ...
286 words | view cover
TIME Cover
Canada at War: Canada's Loss?
okt 09, 1944
The Ottawa Journal, listening to the political whoop-de-do across the U.S. border, commented: "American elections differ from our own; [Americans] have more of the gift for the snappy phrase. . . . Thus we have John L. Lewis describing Sidney Hillman . . . as 'a Russian pants-maker who is trying to take over the ...
117 words | view cover
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COSTA RICA: To the Barricades
okt 09, 1944
In Costa Rica, a handful of the 40,000-odd Nicaraguan fugitives from the dictatorship of General Anastasio Somoza decided to go home to make a revolution. Led by General Alfredo Noguera Gomez, they set out for Nicaragua in a 30-passenger bus. Costa Rica's President Teodoro Picado sent a party of soldiers and police in pursuit, in ...
171 words | view cover
TIME Cover
Medicine: Wonder of Nature
okt 09, 1944
The 17-year-old Arab girl had no business to be still alive : when Captain W. W. Wilson of the Royal Army Medical Corps first saw her, she had been shot in the abdomen eight days before and the wide wound, leaking intestinal contents, was untended except for a packing of tow, a dressing of mud ...
226 words | view cover
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FOREIGN RELATIONS: Decline of the Good Neighbor
okt 09, 1944
At least three main facts about U.S. diplomacy became clear last week. First, the U.S. is no longer sure of its policy, if it had one, towards Argentina, and as a result is handling it badly. Second, if the continued ill-treatment of Argentina is the present shape of the Good Neighbor policy, it is no ...
694 words | view cover
TIME Cover
World Battlefronts: MEN AT WAR: Close to Bloodshed
okt 09, 1944
A group of British parachutists, taken prisoner by the Germans, lost no time getting into a brisk argument with their captors—not about the ideology of the war, or about peace aims, but about who started the bombing of cities. Was it the Luftwaffe, by bombing Coventry and London, or the R.A.F., by bombing German cities? ...
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Sport: Streetcar Series
okt 09, 1944
Whatever happened in the World Series would be an anticlimax. For the first time since 1908 the American League pennant race had gone smack down to the wire; on the last day of the season, after 153 games, the Detroit Tigers and St. Louis Browns were even Stephen, with 88 wins and 65 losses apiece. ...
357 words | view cover
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World Battlefronts: BATTLE OF GERMANY (East): On to Riga
okt 09, 1944
Winter was coming in the Baltic; the Red armies moved swiftly. Driving down the eastern shore of the Gulf of Riga, they crossed the Latvian border, freed the whole mainland of Estonia. In Tallinn, an ice-free port most of the year, work crews began repairs on the harbor installations, the power plant generators spun again, ...
318 words | view cover
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Religion: The Story of My Life
okt 09, 1944
In an Oakland, Calif, hotel room one morning last week Aimee Semple McPherson, the most spectacular U.S. evangelist since Billy Sunday, died gasping in the arms of her son Rolf—a bottle of sleeping pills on the bed table beside her. Though tired and ill, she had come up from Los Angeles to conduct a series ...
998 words | view cover
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COMMODITIES: The Cotton Grab
okt 09, 1944
Last June Alabama's desk-farmer, Senator John H. Bankhead, headed the Congressional bloc that shoved through a law forcing the Government to make every effort to buy cotton, wheat and other farm products at 100% of parity.* Cotton prices had soared over 100% since 1939, but John Bankhead wanted more: specifically, he wanted cotton prices to ...
633 words | view cover
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Army & Navy - The Last-Minutemen
okt 09, 1944
The Army has definite ideas for postwar national defense. And this week Washington was discreetly talking about them. The Army wants: 1) universal military training; 2) a continuation of the present Army setup into postwar. But in the first murmurs of discussion the Army's chance of getting all it wanted did not look bright. Such ...
437 words | view cover
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MANPOWER: Racket on the Alleys
okt 09, 1944
A new black market burgeoned in Chicago. The commodity: bowling-alley pin boys, who are the key cog in the industry, and are at a premium because of the manpower shortage. To beat this bottleneck, some alley proprietors are hijacking the "pin boys" (usually older men) working for other alleys. Hijackers lure experienced pin boys away ...
153 words | view cover
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Letters, Oct. 9, 1944
okt 09, 1944
"Phooey!" Sirs: All this blah-blah about those nine WAC officers (TIME, Sept 11). Phooey! We got a gal in the WAVEs, Lieut. Commander Tova Louisiana Petersen Wiley. She is in Washington running the whole show by herself. And she's better-looking than all those WACs put together. Why don't you give the WAVEs (and the public) ...
1393 words | view cover

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World Battlefronts: To Save Men's Lives
okt 09, 1944
September was the worst month of the war for Japanese aviation. U.S. flyers destroyed more than 1,300 planes — close to the maximum monthly output credited to Jap factories by the most conservative U.S. authorities. About 200 planes were credited to pilots from the Mountbatten, MacArthur and Chennault commands, but carrier-based navymen of Vice Admiral ...
655 words | view cover
TIME Cover
Radio: Congress on the Air?
okt 09, 1944
The idea of putting Congress on the air might appeal to many a U.S. citizen, but to most Congressmen the idea is nightmarish. Last week the nightmare threatened them: Senator Claude Pepper of Florida had introduced a joint resolution calling for Congressional debate on the national networks. Congress can be expected to keep Senator Pepper's ...
432 words | view cover
TIME Cover
RUSSIA: Get Thee Behind Me, Satan!
okt 09, 1944
The Soviet Government has been very reluctant to let its citizens travel outside Russia. Since the Revolution, few Russians have been exposed to the seductions of capitalism. But last week, with Red armies overrunning Rumania, Bulgaria and entering Hungary, more Russians than ever before were face to face with the blandish ments of the other, ...
308 words | view cover
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CURRENT & CHOICE: New Picture, Oct. 9, 1944
okt 09, 1944
Frenchman's Creek (Paramount) is a minor masterpiece of mush. A color-drenched $4,000,000 cinemadaptation of Daphne du Maurier's best-seller laid in 17th-Century England (TIME, Feb. 2, 1942), it offers male cinemaddicts little for their money except innumerable coyly brazen veilings and half-unveilings of Joan Fontaine's Restoration bosom, and a startling scene in which Miss Fontaine, alone ...
613 words | view cover
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ITALY: Waiting to See
okt 09, 1944
Italy declared herself in the war on Japan last week. The announcement was made by aging Under Secretary for Foreign Affairs Giovanni Visconti-Venosta. The declaration meant little in a military way. But it did mean that to resurrect their standing in the world, Italians would do anything — even commit themselves to a war which ...
251 words | view cover
TIME Cover
Butch to Italy?
okt 09, 1944
The old rumors swirled up again, as heady as the smell of garlic to New York's duck-bottomed little Mayor Fiorello LaGuardia. But he would have none of them. Had he not been deceived 17 months ago? Then he had gone confidently to a Manhattan haberdasher and bought a resplendent gabardine uniform, suitable for one silver ...
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AUTOS: Nine Months or Two
okt 09, 1944
Detroit's automakers last week sat down on one side of a long table in Detroit's New Center Building. Their faces were grave. On the other side of the table sat some 30 newsmen from New York, Washington, Chicago and Cleveland. They had been invited to Detroit so that they could hear and tell the U.S. ...
584 words | view cover
TIME Cover
Canada at War: THE DOMINION: Jobs for All?
okt 09, 1944
In Toronto last week canny Finance Minister James Lorimer Ilsley did what he has seldom done—went out on a limb. He told Canadians there would be jobs for all after the war in Europe ends. Minister Ilsley had a good reason for reassuring 1,300,000 workers now employed, directly or indirectly, in war industry. Starting Oct. ...
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Foreign News: The Foreign Minister
okt 09, 1944
The punch in Foreign Minister Eden's speech came at the end. He said: "In several speeches members have referred to the need for our close collaboration with our neighbors in western Europe and with the small powers, particularly in western Europe. I agree with everything that has been said on that subject and I think ...
234 words | view cover
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The Press: Wolf! Wolf!
okt 09, 1944
The Washington Post last week printed a sensational report that started a great cackling among Washington newshens. According to the report, there is a secret list which Capitol Hill's 135 female reporters are supposed to keep of U.S. Senators and Representatives "to stay on the other side of the desk from." Appended to prominent names ...
179 words | view cover
TIME Cover
MEXICO: Big Wind
okt 09, 1944
A cyclone struck Mexico's west coast. Another roared up the rainy Gulf, obliterating tropical Tuxtepec, near Vera Cruz. Thousands of refugees took refuge in treetops. Over hundreds of bodies flocks of buzzards wheeled. Banana and corn crops were destroyed. In Mexico City, it was announced that the storm had broken the oil pipeline from Tampico ...
184 words | view cover
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Battle of the Statler
okt 09, 1944
After Franklin Roosevelt's crashing speech to the Teamsters' union fortnight ago, happy Teamsters streamed out of the Statler Hotel's Presidential Room, full of good food and high enthusiasm. On the hotel's mezzanine, some of the Teamsters met two naval officers, bound for a Navy dance. What happened then was suppressed for a week. This week ...
557 words | view cover
TIME Cover
World Battlefronts: Anticlimax
okt 09, 1944
Fifth Army headquarters in Italy had confidently announced that the Gothic Line was pierced in the center. But some how the Germans were not running. Some how there seemed to be more mountains just ahead. Somehow the Fifth was just inching along. Part of the explanation was filthy weather — cold, autumn rain that fouled ...
487 words | view cover
TIME Cover
Music: Opera at the Golden Gate
okt 09, 1944
In its handsome, classic auditorium, the San Francisco Opera last week opened its 22nd season with Aïda. A capacity house was pardonably proud, from the cheering galleries to the McNears, Ehrmans and Fleishhackers in their beige and gilt boxes. A roster of the finest stars (many from the Metropolitan), a superb orchestra (the San Francisco ...
445 words | view cover
TIME Cover
World Battlefronts: BATTLE OF GERMANY (West): Again the Offensive
okt 09, 1944
The Germans did their best along the western front. Everything considered, their best was good—and the weather helped them out by being thoroughly bad. The Germans struck smartly, swiftly, skillfully, sometimes recklessly to buy a little more time, stalemate the front until winter comes. For two weeks the Germans had achieved stalemate—of a kind. Pressed ...
634 words | view cover

Read more: http://search.time.com/results.html?No=135&sid=1341914ABBF1&Nf=p_date_range%7cBTWN+19441001+19441031&Ns=p_date_range&N=45&Nty=1#ixzz1frWHHJ9x

Religion: Youngest Archbishop
okt 09, 1944
To be the late, famed William Cardinal O'Connell's successor as Archbishop of Boston, Pope Pius last week named Boston's Bishop Richard J. Gushing, who thus became the youngest Archbishop in the U.S. For the 1,133,075 Roman Catholics of the nation's second largest See, the Holy Father's choice could not have been happier. Son of Irish ...
133 words | view cover
TIME Cover
Business & Finance: Down to the Minimum
okt 09, 1944
The U.S. is down to the last thin line of motorcars essential to the maintenance of its civilian economy. At the rate of 4,000 a day, the nation's much-enduring cars (average age 6.3 years) are rolling off the roads into the junk piles. By year's end, the Office of Defense Transportation predicts, only 23,750,000 privately ...
171 words | view cover
TIME Cover
INSURANCE: The Women
okt 09, 1944
Rosie the riveter is buying more insurance. The Life Insurance Sales Research Bureau, an insurance fact-finding agency, last week found that women will buy 35% of all life-insurance policies this year, v. 25% in 1942. The average policy bought by a woman, they found, is $1,544, v. $3,894 for the average male policy. So, women ...
85 words | view cover
TIME Cover
Foreign News: FRANCE
okt 09, 1944
First Step Was it a tocsin? Last week the French government, prodded and pushed on by the Resistance, took control of one of France's biggest industrial enterprises—the Renault automobile plant (peacetime employes: 34,000). Next it nationalized the coal mines of the Pas-de-Calais and Nord departments. Soon, it announced, some 50 major plants.would be controlled by ...
310 words | view cover
TIME Cover
Radio: According to Huth
okt 09, 1944
For years to come the world is likely to depend on the U.S. as the supplier of radio sets and tubes. This cheerful hint to the U.S. radio industry was offered last week as a serious opinion by a man entitled to have one—Arno Huth, encyclopedic international radio investigator of Switzerland's Geneva Research Center (TIME, ...
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Foreign News: Harold!
okt 09, 1944
Wendell Willkie, Hanson W. Baldwin, William C. Bullitt and others who have been slapped down by the Russian press were joined by unexpected company last week. Soundly slapped down by Izvestia were British ex-Pacifist philosopher Cyril Edwin Mitchinson Joad (The Adventures of a Young Soldier in Search of the Better World) and Harold Laski, British ...
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The Press: Gloat
okt 09, 1944
John O'Donnell, Washington columnist for the New York Daily News, who hates the New Deal and loves to gloat, found something to gloat about last week. Having just read a supplement to the ardently internationalist New Republic taxing Thomas E. Dewey with onetime isolationist leanings and general inconsistency in foreign policy, Columnist O'Donnell had dug ...
148 words | view cover
TIME Cover
CUBA: Fermenting Sugar
okt 09, 1944
After four weeks of stormy haggling, the Cubans had gone home emptyhanded. The mission of sugar-growers and mill-owners had come to Washington in August to negotiate a new U.S. contract for their five-million-ton 1945 sugar crop. Their objective: to get the U.S. to jack up its offer ½ a lb. higher than the wartime sugar ...
344 words | view cover
TIME Cover
The Battle for Peace Terms
okt 09, 1944
Henry Morgenthau's devastating plan for Germany (TIME, Oct. 2) was dead—or was it? Franklin Roosevelt took a sideswipe at the U.S. press for even reporting it. At his press conference, the President announced that he had written a letter to Foreign Economic Administrator Leo Crowley. The letter was a full set of instructions for FEA ...
447 words | view cover
TIME Cover
World Battlefronts: At the Bridge
okt 09, 1944
At Calais, the thunder of bombardment died and white flags fluttered in a short truce. Beside a demolished bridge eight miles from the town's center the British general commanding the Canadian besiegers waited to confer with the Calais commander, a Colonel Schroeder. The German colonel, apparently assigned just before the siege to hold Calais as ...
230 words | view cover
TIME Cover
Art: From Paris
okt 09, 1944
For four years the art circles of three continents have wondered what was happening to the artists in occupied Paris. What had become of the famed Paris School of modern painting branded "decadent" by the Nazis? Was there a new, underground art movement? Were there many new paintings by such modern masters as Pablo Picasso ...
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McNaughton Talks
okt 09, 1944
Last December Lieut. General Andrew G. L. McNaughton resigned as commander of Canada's overseas armies and came home. Last week at 57, after 34 years of soldiering, he asked to be retired from the Army. The National Defense Ministry was almost effusive: "Canada will be forever grateful." Then it upped Andy McNaughton to the rank ...
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TIME Cover
Sport: Pro Prospects
okt 09, 1944
A new coast-to-coast professional-football league is a dead certainty for 1945—if everyone doesn't get killed in the rush. Born of surplus wartime dollars and a seductive box-office boom, various plans for postwar leagues had been growing quietly since last winter. By last week three rival groups, each padded with big names and bankrolls, had announced ...
575 words | view cover
TIME Cover
EXCHANGE: The Banks and Bretton Woods
okt 09, 1944
Rising from his labors at Bretton Woods last July, England's Lord Keynes challenged the critics of the Keynes-White plan (for an international Fund and Bank — TIME, July 31). Said he, in sum, the critics must do more than criticize; they must show a better program. Last week W. Randolph Burgess, vice chairman of the ...
975 words | view cover
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Army & Navy - Persistent Poles
okt 09, 1944
Someone in the Army Service Forces, which thinks of everything, thought that U.S. invasion troops would need a lot of telephone poles. Two years ago troops had scarcely landed on North Africa when ships and trucks arrived laden with poles from the U.S., poles from Argentina, native poles — 8,000 in assorted sizes from 20 ...
240 words | view cover

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The Press: Argentinity
okt 09, 1944
Slapping back at U.S. critics of Argentina's nationalism, Buenos Aires' rabidly nationalist Cabildo last week proclaimed itself and its readers possessed of "an Argentine conception of Argentinity," proceeded to furnish an example: "Do we love our country above everything else in the world? Then we are Nazis. Are we ready to defend the sovereignty of ...
74 words | view cover
TIME Cover
THE BALKANS: Area of Decision
okt 09, 1944
(See Cover) Russia's Red Army lunged last week across the Danube into Yugoslavia. British forces landed on the coasts of Albania, on the islands of Dalmatia, inched into Greece. From two sides of the Balkan massif, Europe's two greatest powers were approaching a junction in the Balkans. Waiting at this mountainous meeting place of empires ...
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U.S. At War: Return
okt 09, 1944
Harry Hopkins, still gaunt from long illness, was finally back on his old six-day work week at the White House. Each day last week his familiar slouched figure could be seen entering the East Wing at 9 a.m. Shut off, even from telephone calls and intimate friends, he worked until 7 p.m., and sometimes far ...
152 words | view cover
TIME Cover
World Battlefronts: Operation Berlin
okt 09, 1944
The British Army, whose tradition lists gallantry in defeat alongside glory in victory, had one more gallant fight against insuperable odds to add to its lists. There had been about 8,000 men in the First Airborne Division when red-bereted Major General Robert Eliot Urquhart made the drop with them to seize the bridge over the ...
1063 words | view cover
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People: People, Oct. 9, 1944
okt 09, 1944
Bette Davis, vacationing in Columbus, Ga., spiked rumors that she had come South to marry her "very old friend," Corporal Louis Riley, peacetime Manhattan real-estate dealer, now stationed at nearby Fort Benning. The once divorced, once widowed cinemactress gave a party for the Corporal, invited his entire company, later said: "I am a woman of ...
716 words | view cover
TIME Cover
BRAZIL: Pif-Paf
okt 09, 1944
Brazil was in the throes of a domestic crisis last week. In war-prosperous Rio de Janeiro well-to-do wives had caught the gin rummy fever. They called it "Pif-Paf" (pronounced peef-paff). They began their games at teatime, played for high stakes. At dawn they went to bed white with exhaustion, slept with the aid of sedatives. ...
96 words | view cover
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Cinema, Also Showing Oct. 9, 1944
okt 09, 1944
The Impatient Years (Columbia) converts a promising situation—the readjustment problems of a returning soldier and his wife—into fair-to-middling, coarsegrained comedy (typical shot: the shy pair, on their first night of reunion, prowling round & round the nuptial bed like two suspicious alley cats). Halfway through, the story goes fancy, loses touch with its touching subject ...
338 words | view cover

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To su naravno samo izsecki, jer da bi se procitalo sve drugo treba biti clan tog TIME portala (platiti clanarinu) ili kupiti ovakav TIME magazin kao moj.

JEDVA CEKAM DA GA DOBIM!
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sawitch
Advanced Member



Serbia
39991 Posts

Member since 17/11/2007

Posted - 07/12/2011 : 19:08:40  Show Profile Show Extended Profile  Send sawitch a Private Message
quote:
Originally posted by adriano

"Zlatko Rendulic-general avnojske Jugoslavije". Inace, covjek je živa legenda. poznat je i kao najobrazovaniji general JNA. Procitao sam knjigu u jednom dahu. Nema di nije bio, i za vrijeme rata i nakon njega. Otišao je 43. preko Visa i Baria u sjevernu Afriku, di je letio na engleskim avionima, 44. iz Tunisa preko Egipta, srednjeg istoka do Cecenije, di je letio na ILjušinu, JAK-U. Poslije rata se vraca doma, leti na americkim sabre 86 i još nekim avionima, ne znam sad ime.
Kao stipendist odlazi na školovanja u SAD i SSSR. Kasnije prodaje u ime SFRJ avione Libiji i Zambiji, di i živi nekoliko godina.
Inace je veliki strucnjak u aerodinamici, napisao hrpu knjiga o tome iz vlastitog iskustva, kao test pilot. Trenutno piše novu knjigu o utjecaju naftnog lobija svijet.



Gde se to ima kupiti? Ko je izdavac? Koliko kosta?
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Obi-wan
Advanced Member



Croatia
13782 Posts

Member since 29/08/2004

Posted - 07/12/2011 : 19:53:41  Show Profile Show Extended Profile  Send Obi-wan a Private Message
Evo, ja kupujem. Ne mogu dati 15000 eura, imam 14300 i to je moja zadnja ponuda.
Takoder tražim magazine s Kerol Bejker na naslovnoj strani...

What you call sanity, it’s just a prison in your minds that stops you from seeing that you’re just tiny little cogs in a giant absurd machine.

Edited by - Obi-wan on 07/12/2011 19:54:39
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ned_lynx
Senior Member



2340 Posts

Member since 06/08/2005

Posted - 08/12/2011 : 01:18:51  Show Profile Show Extended Profile  Send ned_lynx a Private Message
quote:
Originally posted by Obi-wan

Evo, ja kupujem. Ne mogu dati 15000 eura, imam 14300 i to je moja zadnja ponuda.
Takoder tražim magazine s Kerol Bejker na naslovnoj strani...


Ne, Obi, kupujem ja; na tvoju zadnju ponudu dodajem 1€+!

Piši propalo!
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adriano
Advanced Member

Croatia
4454 Posts

Member since 12/11/2009

Posted - 08/12/2011 : 08:49:11  Show Profile Show Extended Profile  Send adriano a Private Message
quote:
Originally posted by sawitch

quote:
Originally posted by adriano

"Zlatko Rendulic-general avnojske Jugoslavije". Inace, covjek je živa legenda. poznat je i kao najobrazovaniji general JNA. Procitao sam knjigu u jednom dahu. Nema di nije bio, i za vrijeme rata i nakon njega. Otišao je 43. preko Visa i Baria u sjevernu Afriku, di je letio na engleskim avionima, 44. iz Tunisa preko Egipta, srednjeg istoka do Cecenije, di je letio na ILjušinu, JAK-U. Poslije rata se vraca doma, leti na americkim sabre 86 i još nekim avionima, ne znam sad ime.
Kao stipendist odlazi na školovanja u SAD i SSSR. Kasnije prodaje u ime SFRJ avione Libiji i Zambiji, di i živi nekoliko godina.
Inace je veliki strucnjak u aerodinamici, napisao hrpu knjiga o tome iz vlastitog iskustva, kao test pilot. Trenutno piše novu knjigu o utjecaju naftnog lobija svijet.



Gde se to ima kupiti? Ko je izdavac? Koliko kosta?



http://www.profil.hr/knjiga/general-avnojske-jugoslavije/6528/
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