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  • Yale University LibraryManuscripts and Archives

    Copyright 2012 by the Yale University Library.

    Guide to the Bogdan Radica Papers

    MS 1588

    compiled by Paul I. Jukic and Diane E. Kaplan

    June 1991

    New Haven, Connecticut

  • Bogdan Radica papersMS 1588 - Page 2

    Table of Contents

    Paging Instructions 3Overview 3Administrative Information 3

    Provenance 4Ownership & Copyright 4Cite As 4Alternative Formats 4

    Biographical Sketch 4Biographical History 4Description of the Papers 5Arrangement 6Collection Contents 8

    Series I. OFFICIAL COMMUNIQUES AND REPORTS, 1940-1945 8Series II. TOPICAL FILES, 1940-1986 10Series III. INFORMATIONAL FILES, 1942-1943 14

    Access Terms 16

  • Bogdan Radica papersMS 1588 - Page 3

    Paging Instructions

    To request items from this collection for use in the Manuscripts and Archives reading room, please use the request links inthe HTML version of this finding aid, available at http://hdl.handle.net/10079/fa/mssa.ms.1588.

    To order reproductions from this collection, please go to http://www.library.yale.edu/mssa/ifr_copy_order.html. Theinformation you will need to submit an order includes: the collection call number, collection title, series or accession number,box number, and folder number or name.

    Overview

    REPOSITORY: Manuscripts and ArchivesSterling Memorial Library128 Wall StreetP.O. Box 208240New Haven, CT 06520Web: http://www.library.yale.edu/mssa/Email: [email protected]: (203) 432-1735Fax: (203) 432-7441

    CALL NUMBER: MS 1588

    CREATOR: Radica, Bogdan, 1904-

    TITLE: Bogdan Radica papers

    DATES: 1939-1986

    PHYSICAL DESCRIPTION: 5.75 linear feet (15 boxes)

    LANGUAGE(S): The papers are in Serbo-Croatian and English.SUMMARY: The papers consist of official reports, correspondence, subject files, extensive

    clippings, writings, and printed matter which document Bogdan Radica'swork as a press officer in the Yugoslav Legation in Washington, D.C. andthe Yugoslav Information Center in New York during World War II. Thepapers highlight Radica's efforts to inform his government of Americanpress (including the emigre press) coverage of affairs in Yugoslavia and theBalkans, his propagandistic work in support of governmental policies, andhis contacts with the Croat, Slovene, and Serb communities in the UnitedStates. The papers also illustrate Radica's personal and professional interestsin postwar Yugoslavia, including the political activities of the various exilecommunities.

    FINDING AID LINK: To cite or bookmark this finding aid, use the following address:http://hdl.handle.net/10079/fa/mssa.ms.1588.

    Administrative Information

  • Bogdan Radica papersMS 1588 - Page 4

    Provenance

    Gift of Bogdan Radica to the Slavic and East European Collection, Yale University Library, ca. 1988, and subsequentlytransferred to the Manuscripts and Archives Department, 1990.

    Ownership & Copyright

    The entire collection is available on microfilm. Patrons must use FILM HM 222 instead of the originals.

    Cite As

    Bogdan Radica Papers (MS 1588). Manuscripts and Archives, Yale University Library.

    Alternative Formats

    Entire collectionis also available on microfilm (26,057 frames on 22 reels, 35mm.) from Manuscripts and Archives, YaleUniversity Library, at cost. Order no. HM222.

    Biographical Sketch

    Bogdan Radica was born in Split, Croatia on August 26, 1904. He was educated in Ljubljana, Florence, and Rome. Radicaworked as a journalist and essayist and served as a press attache in the Royal Yugoslav foreign service. During World WarII Radica served as a press officer in Washington, D.C. and New York City. He eventually broke with the Communist regimethat came to power in Yugoslavia. Radica emigrated to the United States in 1946 and became a U.S. citizen in 1957, servingas an active member of the faculty of Fairleigh-Dickinson University until 1974.

    Biographical History

    Bogdan Radica* was born in Split, an Adriatic port town in the Habsburg province of Dalmatia (Croatia) on August 26, 1904.He was educated at universities in Ljubljana (Slovenia), Florence, and Rome.

    During the interwar period Radica was a member of Yugoslavia's itinerant intellectual elite. He was a journalist and essayistwho found his themes mainly in European literature and culture. Radica wrote for many Yugoslav publications, and alsocontributed articles to newspapers and magazines in Italy, France, and Switzerland. He was a correspondent for Obzor, aleading Zagreb daily newspaper, and wrote for the journals Nova Evropa, also published in the Croatian capital, and Srpskiknji evni glasnik of Belgrade.

    Radica served in the Kingdom of Yugoslavia's foreign service for over a decade before the Axis invasion of that countryin 1941. In 1929 he was appointed correspondent for the official Yugoslav press agency Avala in Athens. The followingyear he entered the diplomatic corps and became the first press attach at the Yugoslav Legation in the Greek capital,where he remained until 1935. While serving in Athens, Radica wrote about contemporary Greece for Yugoslav and Greekpublications. He also participated in the founding of a journal devoted to Balkan affairs, titled Les Balkans.

    In the succeeding five years, Bogdan Radica served as press officer attached to the Yugoslav delegation to the Leagueof Nations in Geneva. During this time he also resumed his studies of nineteenth-century politics under the noted Italianhistorian Guglielmo Ferrero, an anti-fascist Italian migr and a professor at the University of Geneva. In 1939, a book ofinterviews with his mentor, titled Conversazioni con Guglielmo Ferrero, was published in Lugano. That series of encounterswas included in Radica's book, Agonija Evrope, in which he recounted his meetings with prominent European intellectualsof the interwar period - among whom were Benedetto Croce, Andr Gide, Maksim Gorky, Paul Valry, Thomas Mann, andCarlo Sforza. The book was published in Belgrade in 1940.

  • Bogdan Radica papersMS 1588 - Page 5

    Radica was appointed to a position in the Yugoslav government's central press bureau in Belgrade in June 1940, but wasnamed chief of the Press Department of the Yugoslav Legation in Washington, D.C. before he could assume his dutiesin Belgrade. According to Radica, his original assignment was opposed by the German and Italian foreign ministries, whoobjected to his liberal political views and frequent associations with anti-fascist circles. Radica assumed the work of thelegation's press section in Washington, D.C. in the autumn of 1940.

    As the Second World War progressed and various national and political feuds rent the ranks of the royal Yugoslavgovernment-in-exile, Radica found himself increasingly at odds with official politics, especially as directed from Washingtonby the Yugoslav ambassador, Konstantin Fotich. Partially as a result of these ideological frictions, Radica was transferredto the newly-established Yugoslav Information Center in New York City in March 1942, where he remained until September1943, when the center itself was closed.

    Radica refused official reassignment to Buenos Aires in October 1943. He regarded this transfer as a bald attempt to removehim from the ongoing political debate in America over the question of Allied support for the competing anti-fascist factions inYugoslavia. He decried the nationalistic biases of many Serbian members of the Yugoslav government and army in exile whosupported Draza Mihailovich's Chetniks (of which Ambassador Fotich was a prominent example), and increasingly favoredTito's all-Yugoslav partisan movement. From the beginning of 1944, Radica was no longer on the exile government's payroll.

    Radica continued his journalistic efforts in the United States as a specialist on Yugoslav and Balkan issues, as well asItalian affairs. He wrote for The Nation and The New Republic, and was accredited as The Nation's correspondent for Italyand the Balkans in October 1944. Still, throughout 1944 he maintained various contacts with representatives of the royalYugoslav government whose views were similar to his own. After the change in government in June, which led eventually tothe unification of Tito's provisional government and the exile government, Radica was reappointed to the diplomatic service.In the autumn of 1944 Radica arrived in London, and by a decree of February 1945 he was officially reinstated. In April he leftfor Yugoslavia to assume his new duties in the Ministry of Information in Belgrade.

    Radica quickly became disillusioned with the new Communist order in Yugoslavia. At the end of May 1946, he resignedhis post, condemned the Yugoslav regime and its "totalitarian Communism," and refused to return to Yugoslavia, havingtravelled to Rome on an official passport in October 1945. Radica emigrated to the United States in June 1946. He served asdirector of studies on Yugoslavia at the Mid-European Studies Institute in New York from 1949-1950. He accepted a teachingposition at Fairleigh-Dickinson University in Teaneck, New Jersey in 1948, becoming a regular member of the faculty in theDepartment of History in 1950, and Emeritus Professor of History in 1974. Radica became a United States citizen in 1957.

    In 1990, in the wake of the first free, multi-party elections in Croatia in the postwar period, Radica returned to Yugoslavia forthe first time since he had fled in 1945. He was welcomed with honors in his hometown of Split by various dignitaries of thenew, non-Communist government.

    Radica married Nina Ferrero, daughter of Guglielmo Ferrero, on April 24, 1935. The Radicas had two children, a son Leo,and a daughter Bosiljka.

    *The anglicized version of his surname, which he used professionally in America, is Raditsa.

    Description of the Papers

    The Bogdan Radica papers primarily and most extensively document the period of Radica's interrupted wartime diplomaticservice. The papers consist largely of Radica's files from his work in the press sections of the Yugoslav Legation inWashington, D.C. and the Yugoslav Information Center in New York. These files are composed of official correspondenceand records, various confidential reports, and documentation, including a considerable collection of clippings from theAmerican media, covering a range of important and controversial political issues concerning wartime Yugoslavia. The papersalso provide a record of Radica's postwar career. For this period, however, the papers are neither comprehensive norauthoritative. The papers include personal material, correspondence from the wartime period through the 1970s, and topicalfiles relating to Radica's academic interests in Yugoslav, Balkan, and East European affairs, his organizational associations,and his diverse activities in Croat migr circles after the war.

    The Radica papers are arranged in three series: I. Official Communiques and Reports, 1940-1945; II. Topical Files,1940-1986; and III. Informational Files, 1939-1945.

  • Bogdan Radica papersMS 1588 - Page 6

    The material used or compiled in the course of Radica's tenure at government posts in Washington, New York, London, andBelgrade, dating from 1940-1945, is divided roughly among the above series. All material from the postwar period is groupedtopically and located in Series II. In 1991, the entire collection was microfilmed. The fragile clippings files in Series III werenot retained after filming was completed.

    SERIES I, OFFICIAL COMMUNIQUES AND REPORTS, documents Radica's work in monitoring, gathering, and analyzingthe American and Yugoslav emigrant communities' press coverage of Yugoslav and Balkan affairs. This series includes thebulk of the telegraphic correspondence between Radica and the exile government; confidential reports on the mainstreamand migr press sent to his superiors in London; various reports received through official Yugoslav channels; and pressreleases produced specifically for the consumption of the Yugoslav emigrant press.

    The series also reflects Radica's propagandistic work in the United States in support of official Yugoslav policies and thecollaboration of the Yugoslav emigrant media. For these efforts he utilized various reports from other Yugoslav intelligencecenters, especially in Switzerland. He maintained contacts with various emigrant groups and provided their newspapers withtimely and relevant information about their homeland, and especially its wartime struggles. The files reflect Radica's work withthe communities of Croat, Slovene, and Serb immigrants in the United States and Canada (and to a lesser extent in SouthAmerica as well), each of which had their own religious, cultural, and social organizations and native-language publications.

    Series I is divided into two subseries, Incoming and Outgoing. The outgoing reports, both regular mail and telegraph, areconcerned with press and media summaries and include press releases to migr publications. Incoming reports includeinquiries, instructions, official pronouncements, intelligence reports, and any other information necessary for the efficientfunctioning of the Yugoslav propaganda apparatus in the United States.

    SERIES II, TOPICAL FILES, is composed of a variety of materials dating from 1940 to the 1970s, including administrativefiles, correspondence, personal documents, and writings. The series is organized by subject.

    The series includes a number of files of an official nature dating from the wartime period, such as consular correspondence,press bureau records, and subject files divided according to the theme, issue, or event addressed. The series documentsRadica's associations with various cultural and professional organizations in the Croat migr community, as well asAmerican society at large, and other personal activities.

    Correspondence with individuals, groups, or agencies is also found in Series II. Frequent correspondents includefriends and fellow Yugoslav diplomats such as Ante-Smith Paveli, Veeslav Vilder and Mato Vuceti; wartime editors ofmigr newspapers, Petar Stankovi of Hrvatski Glas and Mladen Trbuhovi of Amerikanski Srbobran; and professionalacquaintances like the American journalist Blair Bolles. Radica also corresponded with a large number of Yugoslavs afterthe war: American and Croat migr academics; prominent cultural figures, such as the sculptor Ivan Mestrovi; andordinary immigrants, refugees, or relatives, many of whom sought his help or intercession in some way. This personalcorrespondence, and other incidental or infrequent correspondence, is arranged chronologically in folders labelled"Correspondence: chrono file."

    Other topical files illustrate Radica's personal and professional interests in all aspects of postwar Yugoslav and EastEuropean affairs, including the political activities of the various exile communities. Series II also includes Radica'sunpublished writings and manuscripts, along with various notes, lectures, and radio broadcasts.

    SERIES III, INFORMATIONAL FILES, contains intelligence reports from various Allied sources, and a large collection ofnewspaper and magazine clippings covering Yugoslav political affairs from 1939-1945.

    In the course of his work, Radica received intelligence information from American, British, and Soviet-sponsored agencies,as well as from official Yugoslav sources. The reports, which were culled from monitored media in occupied Europe andYugoslavia, concern the course of the war and resistance in Yugoslavia, and the general political situation in the country.

    The clippings files are composed primarily of articles from the mainstream American media The New York Times, New YorkHerald Tribune, Christian Science Monitor but include some emigrant press news and commentaries as well, especially fromthe newspaper Hrvatski Svijet of New York. The clippings are arranged chronologically, though a handful of folders containmaterial grouped topically.

    Arrangement

  • Bogdan Radica papersMS 1588 - Page 7

    Arranged in three series: I. Official Communiques and Reports, 1940-1945. II. Topical Files, 1940-1986. III. InformationalFiles, 1939-1945.

  • Series I. OFFICIAL COMMUNIQUES AND REPORTS Bogdan Radica papersMS 1588 - Page 8

    Collection Contents

    Series I. OFFICIAL COMMUNIQUES AND REPORTS

    Box Folder Reel Description Date(s)

    Series I. OFFICIAL COMMUNIQUES ANDREPORTS2.50 linear feet (6 boxes)

    1940-1945

    The material in this series is arranged in two sub-series: Incoming andOutgoing. In each sub-series, the material is arranged according to thetype and nature of the report.

    Incoming

    1 1-4 1 Confidential reports from Bern 1942 Jan-Nov

    1 5 1 Confidential reports from Bern 1941-1942

    1 6 1 Ministry of Foreign Affairs: Press Departmentconfidential bulletin

    1940 Dec-1941 Jan11

    1 7 1 Ministry of Foreign Affairs: Press Departmentconfidential bulletin

    1941 Jan 15-Mar

    1 8 1 Special reports 1942 Aug-1943 Jul,1944 Nov-Dec, 1945Jan-Mar

    1 12 1 Tanjug reports 1945 Jan-Mar

    1 13 1 Telegrams 1941 Feb-Jun

    2 14-23 1 Telegrams 1941 Jul 2-18, 20-26,Aug 1-30, Sep 1-21,Oct-Dec, 1942 Jan-Mar 7

    2 24-25 2 Telegrams 1942 Mar 24-Apr,May 2-11

    3 26-30 2 Telegrams 1942 May 12-27,1942 Jun-1943 Sep

    Outgoing

    3 31-36 2 Confidential reports 1940 Nov-1941 Mar,1942 Jul-1943 Jun14, Jun 22

    4 37 2 Confidential reports 1943 Jun 25-Sep

    4 38-40 2 Daily review of the U.S. press 1940 Nov-1941 Mar

    4 41 2 Official reports to migr press 1940 Aug-1941 Mar16

    4 42-48 3 Official reports to migr press 1941 Mar 27-Jun,1941 Jul 2-28, 1941Aug

  • Series I. OFFICIAL COMMUNIQUES AND REPORTSOutgoing

    Bogdan Radica papersMS 1588 - Page 9

    Box Folder Reel Description Date(s)

    4 49-51 3 Telegrams 1940 Jul-1941 Jun

    5 52-61 3 Telegrams 1941 Jul-Sep 29,1941 Oct-1942 Feb16, Feb 18-Apr

    5 62-66 4 Telegrams 1942 May-Nov

    6 67-77 4 Telegrams 1942 Dec-1943 Sep

  • Series II. TOPICAL FILES Bogdan Radica papersMS 1588 - Page 10

    Series II. TOPICAL FILES

    Box Folder Reel Description Date(s)

    Series II. TOPICAL FILES2.75 linear feet (7 boxes)

    1940-1986

    The material in this series is arranged in alphabetical order by subject.

    7 78-80 5 Administrative correspondence: Washington, NewYork, Ottawa

    1942 Mar-1943

    7 81 5 American-Croatian Academic Club (Cleveland,Ohio)

    1961, 1966 1975, nodate

    7 82 5 American Friends of the Captive Nations (NewYork, New York)

    1958, 1968-1969

    7 83 5 Anti-Yugoslav propaganda in the U.S. 1942-1943

    7 84 5 Assembly of Captive European Nations 1962, 1965, 1976

    7 85 5 Association of Yugoslav Journalists in London 1943-1944

    7 86 5 Bolles, Blair 1942-1943

    7 87 5 Clerical links with the Ustae regime in Croatia no date

    7 88 5 Congress of American Croats (Chicago, Illinois) 1943 Feb 20-21

    7 89-98 5 Correspondence: chrono file 1940 Jun-1944 Nov,1946 Jul-1947 Mar

    8 99-108 6 Correspondence: chrono file 1947 Apr-Dec,1949-1963,1965-1986, no date

    8 109 6 Croatia: proposed quarterly journal about 1949, no date

    8 110 6 Croatian Academy of America (New York, NewYork)

    1967-1969, 1972,1974, 1977

    8 111 6 Croatian Foundation of America (Cleveland, Ohio) 1967, 1974

    8 112 6 Dezeli, Berislav Djuro 1975

    8 113 6 East European affairs 1943-1944,1949-1950

    8 114 6 East European affairs 1957, 1964,1967-1969, no date

    9 115-116 6 migr affairs: Croat 1946-1966,1968-1977

    9 117 7 migr affairs: Croat no date

    9 118 7 migr affairs: Serb, Slovene, and other 1942-1975, no date

    9 119 7 Hrvatski narodni odbor [Croatian NationalCommittee] (Munich)

    1950-1954, 1965, nodate

    9 120 7 Hrvatsko narodno vijee [Croatian NationalCouncil]

    1976-1977, no date

  • Series II. TOPICAL FILES Bogdan Radica papersMS 1588 - Page 11

    Box Folder Reel Description Date(s)

    9 121 7 Human rights organizations 1944, 1957, 1962,1974, 1976-1977, nodate

    9 122 7 Instituto Croata Latino-americano de cultura(Buenos Aires)

    1961, 1963

    9 123 7 Jeri, Ante R. K. 1949, 1969,1973-1976, no date

    9 124-125 7 Journalistic activities 1943-1944,1946-1947

    9 126 7 Juki, Ilija: polemic with Radica 1965-1966, no date

    9 127 7 Juki, Ilija: reactions and notes to polemic 1956, 1965-1967, nodate

    9 128 7 Juki, Ilija: review of his article by Radica 1967

    9 129-130 7 King Peter's visit to the U.S.: correspondence 1942 Jun-Jul

    9 131 7 King Peter's visit to the U.S.: transcripts ofspeeches; radio broadcasts; other documents

    1942 Jun-Jul

    9 132 7 Maier, Ruth: publicity and public relations activitiesin U.S.

    1942

    9 133 7 Mihailovich controversy 1942-1945, no date

    10 134 7 Mihailovich controversy: Knezevich report 1945

    10 135 7 Military coup in Yugoslavia 1941 Mar

    10 136 7 Nedi, General Milan: report 1942 Oct

    10 137 7 Personal affairs: documents in Italian 1945-1946

    10 138 7 Personal affairs: papers from time betweengovernment appointments

    1944 Apr-Aug

    10 139 7 Personal affairs: papers from time betweengovernment appointments

    1944 Sep-Oct

    10 140 7 Personal affairs: records; documents 1940-1946

    10 141-143 8 Personal memorabilia 1943-1976, no date

    10 144 8 Prince Paul's government 1940 Nov-Dec

    10 145 8 Royal government-in-exile: statements;declarations; memoranda

    1941-1943, 1945, nodate

    10 146 8 Simovi government in Yugoslavia 1941 Mar

    See also: box 10, folder 135 (p. 11)

    10 147 8 Sino-Soviet conflict: Yugoslav perspectives 1960, no date

    10 148 8 Slovene news from Yugoslavia 1950

    10 149 8 Socit Europenne de Culture (Venice) 1966, 1973-1974,1976

    10 150 8 Stankovi, Petar 1940-1944

  • Series II. TOPICAL FILES Bogdan Radica papersMS 1588 - Page 12

    Box Folder Reel Description Date(s)

    10 151 8 Stankovi, Slobodan 1962, 1968-1969,1972

    11 152 8 Stepinac, Archbishop Alojzije: rally for (New York,New York)

    1948 Mar 15

    11 153 8 Stepinac, Archbishop Alojzije: trial and persecutionof

    1945-1947, 1952, nodate

    11 154 8 Tito-Stalin split: documents 1948, no date

    11 155 8 Trbuhovi, Mladen 1941

    11 156 8 Union of Liberals from Croatia 1958, no date

    11 157 8 United Committee of South Slavic Americans 1943-1944, 1947

    11 158 8 U.S. government agencies 1942

    11 159 8 Vilder, Veeslav 1942-1943

    11 160 8 Vuceti, Mato 1941-1943 Aug

    11 161 9 Vuceti, Mato 1943 Sep-1944

    11 162-163 9 Wartime Yugoslavia 1941-1945, [ca.1941-1945]

    11 164 9 Wartime Yugoslavia: eyewitness accounts 1941-1942

    11 165 9 Writings: Balkans and Europe 1943, no date

    11 166 9 Writings: emigration no date

    11 167 9 Writings: Italy 1944, no date

    11 168 9 Writings: lectures; discussions 1944, 1951,1961-1963, 1968,1975, no date

    11 169 9 Writings: letters to the editor 1943-1944, 1952,1960, 1968

    11 170 9 Writings: outlines; fragments 1950, no date

    12 171 9 Writings: problems of postwar Europe no date

    12 172 9 Writings: published 1943, 1947, 1949,1951, 1976, no date

    12 173 9 Writings: radio broadcasts 1943-1945

    12 174 9 Writings: Reader's Digest article draft; notes 1946 Oct

    12 175 9 Writings: Reader's Digest article manuscript 1946 Oct

    12 176 9 Writings: various 1965, no date

    12 177 9 Writings: Yugoslavia 1944, no date

    12 178 9 Writings: Yugoslavia no date

    12 179 9 Yugoslav cultural affairs 1940 Dec-1941 Feb

    12 180-181 9 Yugoslav intellectuals in exile 1949-1978, no date

  • Series II. TOPICAL FILES Bogdan Radica papersMS 1588 - Page 13

    Box Folder Reel Description Date(s)

    12 182 10 Yugoslav leaders' speeches 1943, 1947-1949,1952, 1969, no date

    12 183 10 Yugoslav peasant parties in exile 1953-1954,1966-1967, 1976, nodate

    12 184 10 Yugoslav Press Bureau: financial records 1940-1943

    12 185 10 Yugoslav Press Bureau bulletin: copies 1941 Oct-1942 Mar

    12 186 10 Yugoslav Press Bureau bulletin: numbered roughcuts and drafts

    1941 Sep

    12 187 10 Yugoslav Press Bureau bulletin: numbered roughcuts and drafts

    1941 Oct

    12 188 10 Yugoslav Press Bureau bulletin: numbered roughcuts and drafts

    1941 Oct

    12 189 10 Yugoslav Press Bureau bulletin: numbered roughcuts and drafts

    1941 Nov, 1942 Feb

    13 190-194 10 Yugoslav Press Bureau bulletin: source material 1941 Sep-1942 May,1941-1942

    13 195 10 Yugoslav radio broadcasts: monitored reports 1957-1958

    13 196 10 Yugoslav-Soviet conflicts 1948-1950, 1955,1958, no date

    13 197 10 Yugoslavia: Communist Party 1944,1952, 1956,1962-1963, 1969, nodate

    13 198 10 Yugoslavia: economic affairs no date

    13 199 11 Yugoslavia: foreign affairs 1947, 1949-1952,1955, 1961-1963,1967, 1970, no date

    13 200 11 Yugoslavia: military issues 1949, no date

    13 201 11 Yugoslavia: postwar analyses; reports; testimony 1945-1948,1950-1951,1967-1968, 1972

    13 202 11 Yugoslavia: postwar analyses; reports; testimony no date

    13 203 11 Yugoslavia: religious persecution 1947, 1952, 1955,1957, 1974, no date

    13 204 11 Yugoslavia: various political issues 1947, 1964-1965,1967, 1972, no date

    13 205 11 Yugoslavia in the U.S. press 1941-1942

    See also: box 9, folder 132 (p. 11)

    13 206 11 Yugoslavia in U.S. radio broadcasts 1942-1943

    13 207 11 Zebot, Cyril A. 1967-1969, no date

    13 208 11 Zorkin, Mladen G. 1959, 1969-1970, nodate

  • Series III. INFORMATIONAL FILES Bogdan Radica papersMS 1588 - Page 14

    Series III. INFORMATIONAL FILES

    Box Folder Reel Description Date(s)

    Series III. INFORMATIONAL FILES0.50 linear feet (2 boxes)

    1942-1943

    The material in this series is arranged alphabetically according to thesource of the information. Clippings files are arranged at the end of theseries in chronological order.

    14 209 12 British Information Services: press summaries onoccupied Europe

    1942 Apr-May

    14 210-212 12 British Information Services: press summaries onoccupied Yugoslavia

    1942 Jan-May, 1942Jun-1943 Sep

    14 213 12 British Information Services: press summaries onoccupied Yugoslavia

    1942

    14 214-224 12 Inter-Continent News: reports on the fighting inYugoslavia

    1942 Jan-1943 Feb,Mar 2-Sep

    15 225-226 12 Inter-Continent News: reports on the fighting inYugoslavia

    1943 Oct-Dec

    15 227 12 U.S.A. Monitor radio intelligence: Croatian broad-casts; personal intelligence

    1943 Oct

    15 228 12 U.S.A. Monitor radio intelligence: German-controlled Italian broadcasts; propaganda themes

    1943 Oct-1944 Jan

    15 229 12 U.S.A. Monitor radio intelligence: German-organized broadcasts

    1943 Oct-1944 Feb

    15 230 12 U.S.A. Monitor radio intelligence: official Germanbroadcasts

    1943 Oct-1944 Jan

    15 231 12 U.S.A. Monitor radio intelligence: various officialbroadcasts

    1943 Oct-1944 Jan

    15 232 12 Yugoslav government radio service reports:broadcast summaries

    1942 Nov-Dec

    15 233 12 Yugoslav government radio service reports:broadcast summaries

    1943 Jan-May

    15 234 12 Yugoslav government radio service reports:various

    1943

    13 Clippings 1939 Aug-1940 Apr,1940 Oct-1941 Mar

    14 Clippings 1941 Apr 1-27

    15 Clippings 1941 Apr 28-May 31,Jun 2-Aug 12

    16 Clippings 1941 Aug 13-Nov

    17 Clippings 1941 Dec

    17 Clippings: political cartoons 1941

  • Series III. INFORMATIONAL FILES Bogdan Radica papersMS 1588 - Page 15

    Box Folder Reel Description Date(s)

    17 Clippings 1942 Jan 1-Feb 27,Mar-May

    18 Clippings 1942 Jun-1943 Jun16

    19 Clippings 1943 Jun 17-Nov 11

    20 Clippings 1943 Nov 12-1944Apr 13

    21 Clippings 1944 Apr 14-Sep 10

    22 Clippings 1944 Sep 11-1945Apr 12

    22 Clippings: on Italy 1942-1943

    22 Clippings: from London 1944-1945

    22 Clippings from Croat migr press 1943 Apr-Nov

  • Bogdan Radica papersMS 1588 - Page 16

    Access Terms

    Bolles, Blair, 1911-Fotich, Konstantin.Mestrovic, Ivan, 1883-1962.Radica, Bogdan, 1904-Smith-Pavelic, Ante.Stankovic, Peter.Trbuhovic, Mladen.Vilder, Veceslav.Vucetic, Mato.Croatia--Emigration and immigration.Croatian Americans.Diplomats.Journalism--Political aspects--Yugoslavia.Journalists.World War, 1939-1945--Yugoslavia.Yugoslavia--Foreign public opinion.Yugoslavia--Politics and government--1918-1945.