EditorialWhen Imre Nagy announced that Hungary would leave the Warsaw Pact, the Soviets decided that the Revolution had gone too far and sent the Red Army to crush it. 42 years later, on February 18,1998,the Hungarian Parliament voted to apply for membership in...
EditorialImre Nagy, Hungarian liberal Reform-Communist, at his home. Hungarian Prime Minister from 1953-1955, destituted by the Stalinists under Matyas Rakosi, he was made Prime Minister at the beginning of the Revolution on October 24, 1956. After the Soviets ...
EditorialImre Nagy, Hungarian liberal Reform-Communist, at his home. Hungarian Prime Minister from 1953-1955, destituted by the Stalinists under Matyas Rakosi, he was made Prime Minister at the beginning of the Revolution on October 24, 1956. After the Soviets ...
EditorialImre Nagy, Hungarian liberal Reform-Communist, at his home. Hungarian Prime Minister from 1953-1955, destituted by the Stalinists under Matyas Rakosi, he was made Prime Minister at the beginning of the Revolution on October 24, 1956. After the Soviets ...
EditorialWhile Vienna's districts were allotted to one of the four occupation forces each, downtown Vienna, the first district, was divided monthly between the four. Change of guard from Soviets to the US in front of the Imperial Palace in Vienna.
EditorialMeeting of the Allied High Commission for Germany. Around the table Andre-Francois Poncet, France; John McCloy, USA; Sir Ivone Kirkpatrick, Great Britain. After 1948, the Soviets refused to take part in the meetings. Bonn, Petersberg, 1951.
EditorialЧч Чалдон,* украинец, донец Узнали правду наконец. *Сибиряк-крестьянин The Siberian native, Ukrainian, a Cossack from the Don river At last discovered the truth. A Siberian native, Ukrainia...
EditorialIN COPYRIGHT UNTIL JAN.2017 Kto protiv sovetov. [Those against the Soviets] [Written on the black flag]: Down with the Soviets. Depicts a general, a capitalist, a priest and a kulak. The general is holding a black flag stating 'Down with the Soviet...
EditorialLatvia. Riga. House of the Blackheads (Melngalvju nams). Erected in 14th century for the Brotherhood of Blackheads, a guild for unmarried German merchants in Riga. Major works were done in the years 1580 and 1886. The structure was bombed to a ruin by ...
EditorialImre Nagy, Hungarian liberal Reform-Communist, at his home with his granddaughter Katalin. Hungarian Prime Minister from 1953-1955, destituted by the Stalinists under Matyas Rakosi and made Prime Minister at the beginning of the Revolution on October...
EditorialThe Hungarian Revolution began with a first mass-rally in Budapest on October 23, 1956. It was crushed by Soviet tanks and artillery after days of street-fighting. A Hungarian soldier, the red star on his cap replaced by the Hungarian national emblem...
EditorialWhen Imre Nagy announced that Hungary would leave the Warsaw Pact,the Soviets decided that the Revolution had gone too far and sent the Red Army to crush it. 42 years later,on February 18,1998,the Hungarian Parliament voted to apply for membership in NATO.
EditorialImre Nagy, Hungarian liberal Reform-Communist, at his home. Hungarian Prime Minister from 1953-1955, destituted by the Stalinists under Matyas Rakosi, he was made Prime Minister at the beginning of the Revolution on October 24, 1956. After the Soviets ...
EditorialImre Nagy, Hungarian liberal Reform-Communist, at his home. Hungarian Prime Minister from 1953-1955, destituted by the Stalinists under Matyas Rakosi, he was made Prime Minister at the beginning of the Revolution on October 24, 1956. After the Soviets ...
EditorialImre Nagy, Hungarian liberal Reform-Communist, at his home. Hungarian Prime Minister from 1953-1955, destituted by the Stalinists under Matyas Rakosi, he was made Prime Minister at the beginning of the Revolution on October 24, 1956. After the Soviets ...
EditorialWhile Vienna's districts were allotted to one of the four occupation forces each, downtown Vienna, the first district, was divided monthly between the four. Change of guard from Soviets to the US in front of the Imperial Palace in Vienna.
EditorialMeeting of the Allied High Commission for Germany. Around the table Andre-Francois Poncet, France; John McCloy, USA; Sir Ivone Kirkpatrick, Great Britain. After 1948, the Soviets refused to take part in the meetings. Bonn, Petersberg, 1951.