Until 1992 he headed the foreign desk of Reflex and he was the editor-in-chief of the PRO weekly and daily Lidové noviny and later at the Czechoslovak Ministry of Foreign Affairs.
It obtained a publishing permit from the Czechoslovak Ministry of Information (allegedly issued in response to the banning of foreign communist periodicals in Yugoslavia), and was printed at the printing shop of the Svoboda newspaper.
Next, he was employed as a dentist in the Central Military Hospital in Prague (1955-1964), then served at Czechoslovak Ministry of National Defence (1964-1968).
In July 1945 the camp was put under the control of the Czechoslovak Ministry of Interior.
In 1948 the building was acqainted by then Czechoslovak Ministry of Foreign Trade.
It is the direct successor of the Czechoslovak Ministry of Defence.
Officially, they were all delivered to the Czechoslovak Ministry of Interior.
After modification, the Czechoslovak Ministry of Defence placed an order for B-34s.
According to the newspaper Mladá fronta Dnes, the Czechoslovak Ministry of Interior in 1966 even compiled a detailed map of the frequency of occurrence of long-haired males in Czechoslovakia.
For example, it has been used to describe the death of Jan Masaryk, who was found below the bathroom window of the building of the Czechoslovak Ministry of Foreign Affairs on 10 March 1948.