THE NEWSPAPERS-LIST AND DESCRIPTIONS
Behind the Iron Curtain
Új Szó (Bratislava, Hungarian-language daily paper of Communist Party of Slovakia, 1949-89)
Echo Krakowa (Krakow, afternoon paper, 1946-97)
Express Wieczorny (Warsaw, Polish national afternoon paper, 1946-99)
G³os Pracy (Warsaw, daily of Central Council of Polish Trade Unions, 1951-80)
S³owo Polskie (Wroc³aw, Lower Silesian daily, 1945-2004)
Sztandar M³odych (Warsaw, central daily of General Directorship of Polish Youth League, 1950-90)
Trybuna Ludu (Warsaw, paper of Polish United Workers' Party, 1948-90)
Trybuna Robotnicza (Katowice, central paper of Katowice Vojvodship Committee of Polish United Workers' Party, 1945-90)
¯o³nierz Wolnosci (Warsaw, paper of the Polish Army, 1943-91)
Pravda (Moscow, central daily of Communist Party of the Soviet Union, 1918-91)
Elõre (Bucharest, Hungarian-language paper of People's Council of the Romanian People's Republic, 1953-68, then of National Council of Socialist Democracy and Unity, to 1989)
Magyar Szó (Novi Sad, Hungarian-language daily paper of Socialist Federation of the Yugoslav Working People, 1944 and 1953-89)
Beyond the Iron Curtain
The Christian Science Monitor (Boston MA, 1908-)
The Los Angeles Times (Los Angeles CA, 1881-)
The New York Times (New York, 1851-)
The Wall Street Journal (New York, 1889-)
The Washington Post and Times Herald (Washington DC, 1954-9)
The Times (London, 1785-)
Le Figaro (Paris, 1866-)
L'Humanité (Paris, 1904-; paper of the French Communist Party, 1921-)
Le Monde (Paris, 1944-)
Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung (Frankfurt a. M., West Germany, 1949-)
Stuttgarter Nachrichten (Stuttgart, West Germany, 1946-)
Stuttgarter Zeitung, (Stuttgart, West Germany, 1946-)
Die Neue Zürcher Zeitung (Zurich, Switzerland, 1821)
Der Berner Tagblatt (Bern, Switzerland, 1888-1979)
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