Beside Antonín Švehla, it was - without question - Alois Rašín, who influenced the process of the coup the most. His vision of the coup was not dull, simple or technological; it was a perfectly prepared and managed action, which was also to be enjoyed by its participants. In the centre of Rašín's thoughts were the preparations of the law drafts (also called The Founding Law of the State and above all The First Law), which should have given a legal framework to the new state. A coup that did not get out of hand and which was, once completed, immediately sealed by a law was his ideal but attainable vision. Rašín was probably the only one who tried to prepare such a law. No other proposal is known. All of this attests to his capabilities as statesman and his ability to act. and Článek zahrnuje odkazy pod čarou
Lokality nad horní hranicí lesa představují z hlediska diverzity vegetace jedno z nejzajímavějších prostředí v Evropě. S různou intenzitou se kombinuje zpravidla několik faktorů prostředí, takže na poměrně malých plochách můžeme sledovat velkou pestrost vegetačních typů. To platí především pro kary, ledovcem modelovaná údolí, kde existují příkré gradienty klimatických a substrátových podmínek. Článek přibližuje metody a výsledky studia těchto jevů na hoře Pop Ivan v Ukrajinských Karpatech. and Localities above the timberline are some of the most interesting environments in Europe in terms of vegetation diversity. Several environmental factors combine here to different degrees of intensity, which results in a great diversity of vegetation types on a relatively small area. This phenomenon is typical mainly for glacial cirques – valleys shaped by glaciers – where sharp gradients of climatic and substrate conditions exist. The article deals with the methods and results of the study of such phenomena in the Ukrainian Carpathians.
Cities in socialist Czechoslovakia were meant to constitute the setting for an ideal socialist society. The dogmatic embracement of this objective by the ruling Communist Party eventuated in complete intolerance towards any manifestation of free-thinking of alleged opposition to socialism. Starting in the 1960s, part od Czechoslovak youth were inspired by the Western countercultural hippie movement and the Beat generation, as well as by punk subculture beginning in the 1970s. These people openly displayed their alienation from the official cultury by disrupting the established societal standards of appearance, behaviour, and leisure activities.