Word: serbians
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...seeking the top job in the Serbian government. Would you settle for anything less? Since voters in the pro-democracy camp just gave a spectacular lead to my party, and, since the party designated me as its pick to be Prime Minister, the answer to your question can only...
...until the Austrian ultimatum to Serbia on the evening of July 23 that investors began to feel nervous. Its terms were truly formidable, particularly the demand that Austrian officials be allowed into the country to investigate alleged Serbian sponsorship of the terrorists. The government in Belgrade immediately dismissed the ultimatum as "impossible." Germany took the Austrian side; the Russians lined up with the Serbs. By Aug. 4, a little Balkan difficulty had become a full-scale European...
...color film), is the care with which the directors treat their films. Today, we seem to regard bigger and faster as inherently better, with more dialogue, scenes, and spectacular effects popping up in film after film.In a New York Times piece on the movie, critic Manohla Dargis quoted Serbian director Dusan Makavejev: β[Yugoslavian filmmakers] had to use artistic means to work around the government so we could tell a story,β he said. βIn Hollywood you have to deal with a mass-market society where everything is judged against the best seller...
...predict how notions of the family may change in the next 60 years. Maybe Baby On any given weekday, you'll be lucky to find Riccardo Rosati and Lidija Markovic at either of their homes, in London or Belgrade. The 35-year-old Italian met his Serbian spouse, 34, in London. Rosati's job as vice president of an American investment fund keeps him on the road, but doesn't demand quite as much traveling as Markovic's role as a consultant specialising in direct foreign investment in the Balkans. Their schedules invariably separate them during the week, but they...
...visitor can attest that they feel like two different countries. Cross the border into the Serb Republic from the Muslim-Croat Federation and Latin script road signs give way to Cyrillic, mosques to Serbian Orthodox churches. Locals prefer Serbian beer and loza, a grape brandy, and the only flags visible, even on official government buildings, are Serbia's red, blue and white rather than Bosnia's official blue and yellow. "We've got everything here," said Predrag Andelic, 50, over a cigarette and a bottle of beer. He's a war veteran from near the city of Prijedor, site...