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Topic: Borivoj Celovsky


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In the News (Fri 18 Dec 09)

  
  Borivoj Celovsky - Encyclopedia Glossary Meaning Explanation Borivoj Celovsky   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-09)
Borivoj Celovsky - Encyclopedia Glossary Meaning Explanation Borivoj Celovsky.
But a few years later, after the quickly forming communists took over the political power in Czechoslovakia in 1948, Čelovský escaped into exile, not willing to participate or passively linger on any kind of totality.
Čelovský got to various places during the exile, but Canada became his final second home country; there he is rather known as Boris Celovsky, a name that he used there, as the original was unpronounceable for English-speakers.
www.encyclopedia-glossary.com /en/Borivoj-Celovsky.html   (623 words)

  
 The Prague Post Online
Celovsky, author of The End of the Czech Press, says that the country's national identity is threatened because nearly all the nation's newspapers are owned by foreign media companies.
Celovsky's comments and book, which recently went into its second edition, are inspired by the fact that foreign capital controls more than 80 percent of the Czech national newspaper market and 100 percent at the regional level.
Celovsky said that he is worried that the newspapers will side with Germany in disputes between the two countries.
www.praguepost.com /P03/2003/Art/0605/news2.php   (1104 words)

  
 Worries about the foreign ownership of media in the Czech Republic - 26-07-2003 - Radio Prague
The End of the Czech Press by Borivoj Celovsky
In his book The End of the Czech Press, Borivoj Celovsky argues strongly against the dominance of the Czech print media by foreign - mostly German and Swiss - capital.
Borivoj Celovsky says if a newspaper is German-owned, it is bound to adopt a pro-German position on such questions as the post-war expulsion of the Sudeten Germans.
www.radio.cz /en/article/43408   (573 words)

  
 Borivoj Celovsky -- Facts, Info, and Encyclopedia article   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-09)
Borivoj Celovsky -- Facts, Info, and Encyclopedia article
But a few years later, after the quickly forming (A socialist who advocates communism) communists took over the political power in Czechoslovakia in 1948, Čelovský escaped into exile, not willing to participate or passively linger on any kind of totality.
Konec českého tisku (The end of Czech press), 2001 - a warning note on the fact that most of the Czech newspapers and magazines are owned by German companies
www.absoluteastronomy.com /encyclopedia/b/bo/borivoj_celovsky.htm   (540 words)

  
 The Prague Post Online
Czech historian Borivoj Celovsky, who himself lived through the war, also feels that a German presence would be inappropriate.
Given that Celovsky was forced into compulsory labor by the Germans during the war, his antipathy is perhaps understandable.
Considering also that he fled Czechoslovakia when the communists came to power in 1948, after the liberating Red Army had become an army of occupation, his openness to Soviet veterans attending is more complex.
www.praguepost.com /P03/2005/Art/0331/news5.php   (688 words)

  
 Selected New Acquisitions in German, December 2003 - University of California, Berkeley Libraries   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-09)
Main Stack DB2190.P47 2003 Deleni Ceskoslovenska : deset let pote-- / Karel Vodicka editor.
(Series: Rublikon) Main Stack DB2238.7.D45 2003 Celovsky, Boris.
Kdo navratil se, neutika : dovetek ke knize Sel jsem svou cestou / Borivoj Celovsky.
www.lib.berkeley.edu /Collections/Germanic/ger1203.html   (4782 words)

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