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| | "Dizziness From Success" -- Monday, Sep. 25, 1939 -- Page 4 -- TIME |
 | | Although a joint German-Russian communique announced a common aim in Poland (restoring order) and hinted at a buffer state between their frontiers, it gave no outlines of the geographical position of that unhappy country of the future. |
 | | Nobody expected Germany to give up Drohobycz, Jaslo and Stanislawow, which produce 500,000 tons of oil annually, the potash at Kalusz and Kukawy, the zinc-lead smelters at Katowice, the salt deposits between Wieliczka and Bochnia, Upper Silesia's coal or the sugar factories near Poznan. |
 | | Nor was Germany likely to give up West Poland, source of fat and pork, needed in Germany as much as oil. |
| www.time.com /time/magazine/article/0,9171,761966-4,00.html (681 words) |
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