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| Â | Origins of Jewish Names |
 | | As Jews began to adopt European names, it became necessary to give Jewish babies Hebrew names as well. |  | | This led to such names as Goldstein and Rubenstein and Silverstein, all connoting precious stones which, according to anti-Jewish sentiment, were all hidden in every Jewish home because “the Jews had all the money” (If we Jews had all the money, everybody would convert to Judaism this day). |  | | We now have well known Israeli politicians whose names are Ariel Sharon and Benjamin Netanyahu and Shimon Peres and ben Eliezer, etc. Some American Jews have adopted Hebrew names, which in our polyglot society arouse no particular interest any more. |
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http://www.jbuff.com/c120502.htm
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| Â | Germany & The EU |
 | | The Netherlands Government takes the initiative of submitting a draft paper advocating the revision of the treaties of Rome and Paris by the adoption of a convention setting up a single Council for the Communities and a European High Commission (Fusion of the Executives). |  | | Fostered by Christian Democrats, the Nouvelles Equipes Internationales, that later known as European Union of Christian Democrats (1965), is created |  | | In a speech inspired by Jean Monnet, Robert Schuman, the French Foreign Minister, proposes that France and Germany and any other European country wishing to join them pool their Coal and Steel resources ("Schuman Declaration"). |
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http://www.kjriffm.de/G&EU.htm
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| Â | Jewish History: Jewish Communities |
 | | Provides information about some 6,500 European (and some North African) Jewish communities that were destroyed or greatly affected by the Holocaust. |  | | The work has supplements and indexes, including maps; a country-by-country bibliography; a chronology of important events in Jewish communities through the Holocaust; and an index of communities and people. |  | | Provides a listing of 22,000 towns, including former, alternate and Yiddish names of communities as well as names of communities no longer in existence. |
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http://link.library.utoronto.ca/jewishhistory/getItems.cfm/majorCatID=13
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| Â | Croats at European universities in Middle Ages, Latinists, Encyclopaedists |
 | | Juraj Dragisic was in touch with the most outstanding names of the European Humanism of that time, and is the author of several books in the Latin language: "De natura celestium spiritum", Florence, 1499, "De natura angelica", Dubrovnik, 1498. |  | | This monumental book which has 2000 pages and more than 40,000 words is important not only for Croatian but also for European cultural history: at that time a similar dictionary existed only in Florence, prepared under uncomparably better conditions. |  | | His numerous writings in the Latin language were published first in Antwerpen (1544) and then extensively reprinted in many other languages: Italian, French, English, German, Spanish, Dutch, Hungarian, Polish, Czech etc. These extremely interesting testimonies about the Ottoman (Turkish) Empire can be found in the libraries of almost all larger European cities: |
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http://www.hr/darko/etf/lat.html
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| Â | European Missionaries and the Latin Church in India |
 | | European Missionaries and the Latin Church in India |  | | The Latin Christian communities emerged from the 16th century onwards, initially along the coastal region, in and around the Portuguese trade centers and forts and in the Portuguese enclaves. |  | | He even held that there was no sacredness about the Christian names of the western terminology. |
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http://www.indiacatholic.com/european.htm
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| Â | mondial-orgs-facts.flp |
 | | org("AMU"):organization[abbrev -> "AMU"; name -> "Arab Maghreb Union"]. |  | | org("AMF"):organization[abbrev -> "AMF"; name -> "Arab Monetary Fund"]. |  | | org("BSEC"):organization[abbrev -> "BSEC"; name -> "Black Sea Economic Cooperation Zone"]. |
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http://www.dbis.informatik.uni-goettingen.de/Mondial/mondial-orgs-facts.flp
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| Â | Encyclopedia4U - Latin names of cities - Encyclopedia Article |
 | | This list includes Azerbaijan, Kurdistan southeast of Arbil, Abkhazia, Chechnya, Tatarstan, Dagestan, Malta and Pantelleria, and the whole of Kazakhstan, and Russia east of the ural mountains. |  | | Calques are resorted to if the New World name is based on an Old World name; the various Parises in the United States are likely to become Lutetia, and Novum Eboracum or Neo-Eboracum represents New York, because Eboracum is the city of York in England. |  | | This rule is not always strictly observed in the New World |
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http://www.encyclopedia4u.com/l/latin-names-of-cities.html
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| Â | 300 Multiple Choices |
 | | However, we found documents with names similar to the one you requested. |  | | Please consider informing the owner of the referring page about the broken link. |
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http://www.world-gazetteer.com/info.htm
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| Â | Byzantine and Medieval Web Links |
 | | CatholicMobile Despite its odd name, this is one of the best guides to Catholicism on the Internet, with links to sites presenting many perspectives. |  | | Cambridge University Library:The Taylor-Schechter Genizah Research Unit The Genizah was the document house of a Cairo Jewish community. |  | | Augustine on the Internet Another coup by Professor O'Donnell. |
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http://www.fordham.edu/halsall/medweb/links.htm
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| Â | INDO-EUROPEAN LANGUAGES - LoveToKnow Article on INDO-EUROPEAN LANGUAGES |
 | | European is in an article in the Quarterly Review for I8I3~ by Dr Thomas Young. |  | | The birch is a more widely spread tree than the beech, growing as luxuriantly in the Himalayas as in western Europe, but notwithstanding, the Latin fraxinus, which is almost certainly of the same origin, means n.ot birch but ash, while the word akin to ash (Ge. |  | | Names of deities worshipped by the Aryan branch are reported to have been discovered in the German excavations at Boghaz-Keui (anc. |
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http://www.1911encyclopedia.org/I/IN/INDO_EUROPEAN_LANGUAGES.htm
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| Â | Pfizer Names Presidents for U.S., European Pharmaceuticals Businesses |
 | | "Under Ian's leadership, Pfizer Latin America, Europe and Canada have achieved industry-leading growth despite difficult operating environments," she said. |  | | Read, who had served as Senior Vice President of the Pfizer Pharmaceutical Group and Executive Vice President of Europe and Canada, has been named President of Pfizer's Europe and Canada operations. |  | | Foran, currently Vice President of Corporate Governance, has been named Secretary of Pfizer. |
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http://www.prnewswire.com/cgi-bin/stories.pl?ACCT=104&STORY=/www/story/07-02-2002/0001757793&EDATE=
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| Â | Proto-Semitic Language and Culture. The American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition. 2000 |
 | | (No masculine counterpart is reconstructible; slaves were perhaps acquired as prisoners of war, the males being killed.) Communities had judges who adjudicated ( dyn) over local disputes. |  | | The names of the months of the Jewish calendar and the months of the Muslim calendar have naturally entered English from Hebrew and Arabic, respectively, but it is interesting to note that most of the Jewish month names were originally at home in ancient Mesopotamia and were borrowed into Hebrew from Akkadian. |  | | This last pattern is also found, for example, in the personal name |
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http://www.bartleby.com/61/10.html
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| Â | Aromanian Vlachs: The Vanishing Tribes |
 | | This culminated in the crucifixion of Ame Pofey, constable of (Frankish) ‘ |  | | The Latins blamed Michael, but it may have been more a question of him being unable to control his followers which included ferocious Vlach and Albanian tribesmen |  | | As George Padioti, an Aromanian Vlach author (born and living all his life in Greece) writes, in February of 1952 the last Aromanian churches were being closed by the then Greek government, amongst them the Church of Gramaticuva (Anno Grammatikon) whose fate was to be sealed off without consulting the parishioners. |
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http://www.vlachophiles.net/
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| Â | Etymology of some names of places |
 | | One possible explanation is that the name comes from a (Germanic) family name Haro ingis which led to Eroens and finally Hérens while moving up in the valley. |  | | Tracing the origin to a Germanic name is less exotic than it may sound since also Sion and Hérémence have such a (and better proven) origin (respectively from Suens and Aremens). |  | | This page concentrates on the origin of common components in names of places in the Jura, the French speaking parts of the Valais and the Mt Blanc area. |
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http://rjd.home.cern.ch/rjd/Walk/etymology.html
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| Â | Accessing European Union Information |
 | | European Reference Centers (ERC): universities and other organizations, which receive a limited number of basic publications and annual reports. |  | | European Court of Auditors Reports - full texts from 1997; |  | | Delegation of the European Commission to the United States |
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http://www.eurunion.org/infores/resguide.htm
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| Â | Explanations and notations [The ISO Latin 1 character repertoire] |
 | | For communicative purposes, such jargon names should be avoided at least outside contexts and communities where they are generally known and uniquely understood. |  | | Calling them by names reserved for other characters would lead to confusion, especially when support to large character repertoires becomes more and more widespread and people will be able to use real angle brackets, too. |  | | In addition to official names, there is a large number of unofficial names for characters, and they vary from one context, culture, and group of people to another. |
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http://www.cs.tut.fi/~jkorpela/latin1/5.html
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| Â | Latin names of European cities Articles and Information |
 | | Latin names of European cities Articles and Information |  | | One caveat that must be observed, however, is that even Latin place-names are not always exclusive to one place -- for example, there were several Roman cities whose names began with Colonia and then a more descriptive term. |  | | For genealogists and historians of pre-Modern Europe, knowing alternate names of places is vital to extracting information from both public and private records. |
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http://www.neohumanism.org/l/la/latin_names_of_european_cities.html
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| Â | Letters to the Editor economic justice environment politics tax reform democracy society |
 | | The problem is that the privately owned and operated for profit banks around the world who issue money in the name of the countries they operate in, are able to issue as much fiat money as they wish, independently of the gold reserves in either that banks or nations treasury. |  | | The notes are issued by a private bank with the backing of the full faith and credit of the Government of the country it is acting as central banker for. |  | | WC: The fact is, that it is free market banking that we now have, disguised as a government owned and operated, public utility that is causing all the problems. |
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http://www.progress.org/letters.htm
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| Â | natu1b |
 | | The information on the Alpine species can be found at the environmental Ministries of the Alpine countries, of the European Organisms (European Counsel), The Museums for Natural History of the Alpine Countries. |  | | List of names in Latin, classifies according to taxonomic order |  | | In each family the Latin names are given in alphabetical order; the English names. |
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http://www.soia.int/preAC/en/natu1b.htm
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| Â | Welcome to the Home Web Page of Star Haven Community Services: www.rhfweb.com/sh.html, Email:sh@rhfweb.com |
 | | The communities should also hire security guards and utilize sensing monitors to monitor the perimeter of the communities and neighborhoods so that they are safe from trespassers. |  | | If the trust makes a profit or more profit by global or international trade and ventures with other communities and cultures not part of the trust goals, then profit must go back into the trust to be applied locally to encourage the local goals of the trust and preserve the local culture of the trust. |  | | Earth also could place ring world space stations in its own Earth's orbit in addition to using them to travel to other solar systems. |
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http://www.rhfweb.com/aebylaws.html
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| Â | Sigma Xi: The Scientific Research Society: International Committee |
 | | a public corporation created by the Canadian government to help communities in the developing world find solutions to social, economic, and environmental problems through research |  | | a research and development organization devoted to the advancement of electronic scholarly communication which provides technological support, publication, and enhancement of scholarly journals and educational resources; ICAAP specializes in developing technology for the delivery of scholarly content |  | | a non-governmental organization, dedicated to the dissemination of New Information and Communication Technologies (NICT) in developing countries, especially in Latin America and the Caribbean, in collaboration with international organizations, NGO's, the states, administrations, and public or private institutions, with the objective of contributing to regional development and integration; in Spanish, English or French |
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http://www.sigmaxi.org/programs/international/resource.shtml
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| Â | LATIN |
 | | Find graves of people named LATIN at Find-a-Grave.com (or add one that you know). |  | | people with the surname LATIN found in the MyFamily People Finder search. |  | | Comparison and Contrast of liberalism and conservatism in Latin America |
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http://www.worldhistory.com/surname/US/L/LATIN.htm
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| Â | Linguistic Exploration |
 | | This is a program of courses and workshops in language engineering, with a likely geographic focus on languages of eastern Europe, the middle East, and the former Soviet Union. |  | | The project will develop methods for transcribing, annotating, accessing, and analyzing communicative interactions, involving the direct linkage of transcripts to digitized audio and video. |  | | The Oykangand and Olkola Dictionary is a website containing wordlists for several Australian languages, with extensive coverage of flora, fauna and material culture, including many scientific names and photographic images. |
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http://www.ldc.upenn.edu/exploration/
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| Â | Clifford A. Wright's Links |
 | | www.iatp.org : The web site of The Institute for Agriculture and Trade Policy which promotes resilient family farms, rural communities and ecosystems around the world through research and education, science and technology, and advocacy. |  | | www.epicureantable.com : Quality food with a European flair for the discriminating palate and those with an appreciation for the sensuousness of good food. |  | | It is constructed and maintained by a vast, global community of volunteer editors. |
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http://www.cliffordawright.com/links.html
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| Â | NodeWorks - Encyclopedia: European Union |
 | | The term European Community (or Communities) was used for the group of members prior to the establishment of the European Union. |  | | It is also the cradle of the historical institutions of the "large Europe" (Council of Europe, European Court of Human Rights), with which the EU cooperate. |  | | The Government and Politics of the European Union by Neill Nugent (Palgrave Macmillan, 2002) ISBN 0333984617 |
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http://pedia.nodeworks.com/E/EU/EUR/European_Union
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| Â | European Communities (Amendment) Act, 2002 |
 | | (2) The text of the definition of "the treaties governing the European Communities" in the said section 1, as amended by subsection (1) of this section and by other enactments, is set out in the Table to this section. |  | | —(1) This Act may be cited as the European Communities (Amendment) Act, 2002. |  | | Amendment of section 1 of European Communities Act, 1972. |
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http://www.irishstatutebook.ie/2002_27.html
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| Â | European Union - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia |
 | | The European Communities are one of the three pillars of the European Union, being both the most important pillar and the only one to operate primarily through supranational institutions. |  | | In 1992, the European Economic Community, which of the three original communities had the broadest scope, was renamed the "European Community" by the Treaty of Maastricht. |  | | Other European states claim that denying Turkey to a membership would brew future hostilities with other Muslim nations. |
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/European_Union
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| Â | EUROVOC - Management audit |
 | | Communication from the Commission - Report on progress at 30 june 2004 of the modernisation of the accounting system of the European Commission /* COM/2004/0565 final */ |  | | Communication from the Commission to the Council and the European Parliament on Preventing and Combating Corporate and Financial Malpractice /* COM/2004/0611 final */ |  | | European Parliament resolution on the report of the Court of Auditors on the operational efficiency of the management of the European Monetary Institute and the European Central Bank for the financial year 1998 together with the replies of the European Central Bank (C5-0319/2000 - 2000/2163(COS)) |
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http://www.ius-software.si/EUII/Eurovoc/management_audit.htm
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| Â | Racism in the United States - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia |
 | | From the 1920s, the Southern Jewish communities were attacked by the Ku Klux Klan, who objected to Jewish immigration, and often used 'The Jewish Banker' in their propagander. |  | | The derogetory term ' kike ' was adopted when reffering to Jews (because they often couldn't write so they may have signed their immigration papers with circles - or kikel in Yiddish). |  | | (Redirected from Racism in the Southern United States) |
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Racism_in_the_Southern_United_States
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