Factbites
 Where results make sense
About us   |   Why use us?   |   Reviews   |   PR   |   Contact us  

Topic: Miko Tripalo


  
 1994/12/18 18:32 SOCIAL - DEMOCRATS HAVE A CHANCE
TRIPALO: My main idea, when I embarked on this, was to unite the existing Social Democratic Parties in Croatia, because otherwise the strengthening of the left could not be expected.
TRIPALO: From the international point of view we are not in a good position, irrespective of the fact that President Tudjman claims the opposite.
TRIPALO: I think that Croatia could take that as a platform for talks, which does not mean that it has to accept all the elements of that document.
www.aimpress.ch /dyn/trae/archive/data/199412/41218-003-trae-zag.htm   (2034 words)

  
 February 6, 1995 Vreme News Digest Agency No 175
If Tripalo hadn't said this or that, and in the "middle of Belgrade", the regime would certainly have quaked with fear in face of Croatia's readiness for war.
He disagrees with Tripalo's assessment that VREME is far from being a regime paper, but claims that it is the paper of Belgrade's vapid globe-trotting intellectuals, who find their environment limiting and are playing at being the "opposition".
Tripalo heads a small party and the campaign against him is not aimed so much at discrediting the Social Democratic option, inasmuch as Tripalo has been singled out by Seks and other watch dogs for having communicated, albeit, indirectly with someone from Belgrade.
www.scc.rutgers.edu /serbian_digest/175/t175-7.htm   (568 words)

  
 1993/12/26 18:40 OPEN ATTACKS ON OPEN SOCIETY
The new Chairman of the Managing Board of the Open Society Foundation, Mika Tripalo confirmed that Soros's aim was to create an intellectual infrastructure by educating young people.
Now, the appointment of Miko Tripalo as President of the Managing Board of the Open Society Foundation for Croatia meant adding insult to injury for the Presidnecy.
Tripalo says that Soros himself proposed him for this position, explaining that his intention was "bring closer the activities of the Foundation to its basic purpose - namely the struggle for an open society - through personnel changes".
www.aimpress.ch /dyn/trae/archive/data/199312/31226-002-trae-zag.htm   (1260 words)

  
 Croatian People's Party-Liberal Democrats - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
During Communism in the second Yugoslavia, the liberal leaders of the Croatian Communist Party were Savka Dabčević-Kučar and Miko Tripalo, which participated in the Croatian Spring of 1971.
The modern Croatian People's Party was formed in late 1990 by members of the Coalition of People's Accord (Koalicija narodnog sporazuma) which had participated on the first multi-party election of 1990, led by Savka Dabčević-Kučar, Miko Tripalo and others.
In the 1992 election they won 6.7% of the vote and attained 6 seats in the Croatian Parliament.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Croatian_People's_Party-Liberal_Democrats   (558 words)

  
 The Definitive Guide to Croatian Spring XXXX   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-11)
However, some of the high-ranked members of the Communist Party from Croatia such as Savka Dabčević-Kučar and Miko Tripalo also supported these ideas, so the government could not sweep it all under the rug.
In 1974, a new federal constitution was ratified that gave more autonomy to the individual republics, thereby basically fulfilling the main goals of the 1971 movement.
Savka Dabčević-Kučar and Miko Tripalo became founding members of the new Croatian People's Party.
www.applemacpro.com /s/Croatian_Spring   (871 words)

  
 Croatian Political Scene
The Croatians, made sleepy and confused by the God, still have not understood that some of the finest sons of Croatia, in the newpapers of the country which has occupied a quarter of Croatia for four years, not only malign their own country and its armed forces but also reveal military secrets.
For example, in that same ``Vreme", a parliamentary representative and ex-distributor of Soros' dollars Miko Tripalo, assured chetnik public about the weekness of the Croatian Army.
Miko Tripalo also failed to denounce them recently during the celebration of the 50th anniversary of the Partisan ``liberation" of Croatia; Rako and Curin were, besides him, the keynote speakers.
www.ex-yupress.com /trn/trn1.html   (901 words)

  
 League of Communists of Croatia - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Things began to change in late 1960s with Josip Broz Tito allowing for reformist policies embodied of new generation of Communist leaders.
This generation included SKH leaders Savka Dabčević-Kučar and Miko Tripalo who would start movement called the Croatian Spring, advocating for more autonomy of Croatia within Yugoslavia.
They advocated against centralism which disproportionately benefited the eastern parts of Yugoslavia, especially Serbia and Macedonia.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Croatian_Communist_Party   (915 words)

  
 Croatia - Printer-friendly - MSN Encarta
A new generation of Croatian communist leaders centered around Miko Tripalo and Savka Dabčević-Kučar, initially supported by their mentor and veteran Croat leader, Vladimir Bakarić, pressed for even more liberalization and republican autonomy.
They argued that richer republics like Croatia and Slovenia were being exploited for the benefit of poorer republics and held back by the remaining federal controls and taxes.
In 1971 Josip Broz Tito moved to depose Tripalo and Dabčević-Kučar and suppress the Maspok.
ca.encarta.msn.com /text_761577939___18/Croatia.html   (2644 words)

  
 Tito’s Yugoslavia - History - Croatia - Europe
Freer expression of sentiments and interests, which previously had been suppressed as nationalist actions and a revival of prewar conflicts between the Yugoslav republics, were byproducts of these developments.
A new generation of Croatian Communist leaders centered around Miko Tripalo and Savka Dabcevic-Kucar, initially supported by their mentor and veteran Croat leader, Vladimir Bakaric, pressed for even more liberalization and republican autonomy.
In 1971 Tito moved to depose Tripalo and Dabcevic-Kucar and suppress the Maspok.
www.countriesquest.com /europe/croatia/history/tito's_yugoslavia.htm   (547 words)

  
 miko - OneLook Dictionary Search
Tip: Click on the first link on a line below to go directly to a page where "miko" is defined.
Miko : Basic Terms of Shinto [home, info]
Phrases that include miko: kannazuki no miko, mika miko, miko miko nurse, miko tripalo
www.onelook.com /?w=miko   (101 words)

  
 [No title]
In fact, the constitution of 1974 was Tito's answer to the intraparty opposition of national and modernizing provenance.
Tito countered the Croat Communist leaders Savka Davcevic-Kucar, Miko Tripalo, and many others, who were purged in December 1971 after a biennium of Croat national communism, with an ostensibly antiunitarist device predicated on the "national statehood" of the republics.
He countered Serbian Communist leaders Marko Nikezic and Latinka Perovic, who were purged in October 1972., with an ostensibly unitary device predicated on the "socialist self-managerial" status of the republics and party monopoly.
coursesa.matrix.msu.edu /~fisher/bosnia/readings/banac2.html   (1727 words)

  
 The Nationalism Project: Competing National Ideologies Chapter XI
It must be noted that the advantage that the Croat movement had over the Irish, and the Basques up until 1979, was that if possessed a constituent entity within the Yugoslav Federation that was ruled by a nationalist communist elite organised along the lines of a left wing ideational movement.
The President of the Croatian Republic, Dr Savka Dabcevic-Kucar, secretary of the LCC, Miko Tripalo, and the former head of the youth wing, Dr Pero Pirker, were to be key actors in the orchestration of civil disobedience, mass demonstrations and strike action (Lampe 1996: 301).
As the frustrations with the failure of the centre to observe their demands through parliamentary means grew, movement activism was seen as the sole means to prove to the Serbian dominated bureaucracy the significance that greater Yugoslav decentralisation held for the survival of the state (Banac 1995: 119).
www.nationalismproject.org /articles/Pero/ch11.html   (11600 words)

  
 Stephen Borsody: The Hungarians: A Divided Nation
In Croatia it reemerged with great force in the late 1960s following the fall of Aleksandar Rankovic, the vice president and the effective head of the security apparatus, whose downfall signaled the temporary weakening and disarray of the secret police.
Under younger leaders, such as Miko Tripalo, Dr. Savka Dabcevic-Kucar, Pero Pirker, Srecko Bijelic, and others, the then dominant faction in the Croat Communist Central Committee fought for greater autonomy for the Socialist Republic of Croatia and the transformation of Yugoslavia into a genuine federation.
On the fringe of the party, and outside its ranks, were nationalist elements grouped around the Matica Hrvtska and its various publications, notably the Hrvatski tjednik that wanted to go further to a real confederation.
www.hungarian-history.hu /lib/bors/bors25.htm   (2637 words)

  
 [No title]
His removal was also motivated by the desire of the rest of the ruling class in Yugoslavia to stigmatize, finally and completely, centralism and Serbianism as one and the same ill in Yugoslavia.
However, to underscore the persistence of the Yugoslav national question, the debate regarding modernization and bureaucracy in the 1960s followed national lines: the reformist Slovenes and Croats assuredly believed that market processes would accelerate modernization, and that those processes could only be implemented in a decentralized state; Serbs sincerely felt the opposite.
[note: The Croat Communist Miko Tripalo explained that "at that time, in the opinion of many people, Rankovic personfied the conception of bureaucratic-etatist socialism and the centralistic system in Yugoslavia." Thus both sides in the debate could claim to be fighting the effects of bureaucratism.]
coursesa.matrix.msu.edu /~fisher/bosnia/readings/miller1.html   (6430 words)

  
 FERAL TRIBUNE: Rewriting of Croatian History
Thus we obtained a book which instead of an objective depiction of the historical intra-party clashes offers one-sided attacks whose purpose is to discredit the then leaders of an opposition party.
"Savka and Tripalo didn't know how to position themselves as the defenders of Croatia and instead blamed others for the 'contrarevolution', showing readiness for the co-operation in bureaucratic battles", is the basic Dodan's thought.
He continues: "The most important thing for them was to please serbo-yugo-lovers, who constituted their Praetorian guard, and every demand of Croats for equality was labeled as nationalism and chauvinism".
www.ex-yupress.com /feral/feral53.html   (3633 words)

  
 Politics of Croatia - Article from FactBug.org - the fast Wikipedia mirror site   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-11)
Among the most important was the so called "Croatian Spring" in 1971 when some leaders of the SKH, most notably Savka Dapcevic Kucar and Miko Tripalo attempted to increase the political and economical independence of Croatia from other Yugoslav republics.
The right-wing was represented by the Croatian Democratic Union (HDZ), led by the communist general, later Croatian nationalist and dissident Franjo Tudjman.
Somewhere between SDP and HDZ, there was the so called "coalition" of many parties, like the Croatian Democratic Party (HDS), the Union of Social Democrats of Croatia (SDSH), and the Croatian Social Liberal Party (HSLS), led by persons known from "Croatian spring", including S. Dapcevic Kucar and M. Tripalo.
www.factbug.org /cgi-bin/a.cgi?a=5577   (1491 words)

  
 ZoomInfo Web Summary: Savka Dabcevic-Kucar   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-11)
At the same moment Pero Pirker, Secretary of the Central Committee announced his resignation.
Miko Tripalo, one of Croatia's two representatives to the 15-member "Presidency" of Yugoslavia, followed suit that afternoon.
It was soon announced that the president of the party for the city of Zagreb had resigned the day before.
www.zoominfo.com /directory/Dabcevic-Kucar_Savka_75108865.htm   (253 words)

  
 History: Balkan Peninsula - What's Been Published - Alphabetically by Title Beginning: O
Offensive in the Balkans : the potential for a wider war as a result of foreign intervention in Bosnia-Herzegovina
Adil Zulfikarpasíc, Vlado Gotovac, Miko Tripalo, Ivo Banac ; moderator razgovora Mladen Maloca ; tekst priredio Vlado Pavlini c.
Old frontiers--new frontiers : the challenge of Kosovo and its implications for the European Union
www.pitbossannie.com /ti-dr-o.html   (341 words)

  
 Off-air Recordings of Television News and other Political Programs: Container List
Continuation of the discussion on "The Croatian Spring of 1971".
The speakers included: Miko Tripalo, Damir Begović, Vlado Gotovac, Jozo Ivičević, Mirko Veselica, Academic Vlatko Pavletić, and some others.
Video Press Sarajevo producer; Bosnia and Hercegovina/Bosnian language; 1993, 16 min
www.osa.ceu.hu /db/fa/310-0-2-1.htm   (4484 words)

Try your search on: Qwika (all wikis)

Factbites
  About us   |   Why use us?   |   Reviews   |   Press   |   Contact us  
Copyright © 2005-2007 www.factbites.com Usage implies agreement with terms.