Liviu Floda

[1][2] From 1940 to 1944, he was assistant principal at the Cultura B lyceum in Bucharest, and from 1947 to 1948 he was a lecturer at both the Commercial Academy and at the college of the Museum of Science.

[1] He could not work as a journalist for some time, so he focused his skills onto co-authorship (with Ștefan Tita) of a play called Flacăra vie ("The Living Flame"), which ran from 1957 to 1958.

[2] In 1964, he emigrated to New York City, where he was hired by Radio Free Europe and worked under the pseudonym Andrei Brânduș.

When RFE got shut down in 1993, he continued working for the Voice of America,[2] and then left to assemble his archives for the Hoover Institution.

[5] Floda also worked for the Israeli newspapers Viața Noastră and Facla, and for MicroMagazin and Mele in North America.