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| | Yugoslavia - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia |
 | | The king was highly unpopular, particularly among non-Serbs, and while on a visit to Marseille, France in 1934, he was assassinated by Bulgarian nationalist and IMRO activist Velichko Kerin (more popular with his revolutionary pseudonym Vlado Chernosemski). |  | | Serbian communist leader Slobodan Milošević, the new strong man of Yugoslavia, tried to play on the revived Serb nationalism, but ended up alienating all the other ethnic groups in the federation. |  | | Those inclined towards supporting the Communist Party (and against the King) joined the Yugoslav National Liberation Army, led by Josip Broz Tito, a Croat-Slovenian member of the Communist Party of Yugoslavia. |
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yugoslavia
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| | BBC - History - Yugoslavia: 1918 - 2003 |
 | | Yugoslavia was expelled from the communist bloc but Tito did not fall from power, as many had expected. |  | | Tito's Yugoslavia also gained enormous prestige as a founder of the non-aligned movement, which aimed to find a place in world politics for countries that did not want to stand foursquare behind either of the two superpowers. |  | | At home the federation appeared to have solved the bitter national questions of the past, living standards were high and, unlike in other communist countries, citizens were free to travel to the west, either to work or to take holidays. |
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http://www.bbc.co.uk/history/state/nations/yugoslavia_03.shtml
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| | Bosnia Genocide, Bosnia Massacres, Bosnia Human Rights Violations |
 | | Yugoslavia was composed of ethnic and religious groups that had been historical rivals, even bitter enemies, including the Serbs (Orthodox Christians), Croats (Catholics) and ethnic Albanians (Muslims). |  | | After his death in 1980 and without his strong leadership, Yugoslavia quickly plunged into political and economic chaos. |  | | A new leader arose by the late 1980s, a Serbian named Slobodan Milosevic, a former Communist who had turned to nationalism and religious hatred to gain power. |
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http://www.unitedhumanrights.org/Genocide/bosnia_genocide.htm
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| | Croatia in the second Yugoslavia - encyclopedia article about Croatia in the second Yugoslavia. |
 | | Croatia became part of the Democratic Federal Yugoslavia in 1944, which was run by Tito's Communist Party of Yugoslavia. |  | | Communist Party of Yugoslavia (after 1952 the League of Communists of Yugoslavia) was the ruling party of the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia from 1945 until the 1991. |  | | Serb politicians feared the loss of influence they previously had through their membership of the League of Communists in Croatia (that the Croats claimed was disproportionate). |
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http://encyclopedia.thefreedictionary.com/Croatia+in+the+second+Yugoslavia
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| | Michael Parenti: The Rational Destruction of Yugoslavia |
 | | Yugoslavia was the one country in Eastern Europe that would not voluntarily overthrow what remained of its socialist system and install a free-market economic order. |  | | And in fact they did work; they destroyed much of what was left of Yugoslavia, turning it into a privatized, deindustrialized, recolonized, beggar-poor country of cheap labor, defenseless against capital penetration, so battered that it will never rise again, so shattered that it will never reunite, not even as a viable bourgeois country. |  | | Ironically, while the Serbs were repeatedly charged with ethnic cleansing, Serbia itself is now the only multi-ethnic society left in the former Yugoslavia, with some twenty-six nationality groups including thousands of Albanians who live in and around Belgrade. |
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http://www.michaelparenti.org/yugoslavia.html
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| | The Yugoslav Civil War |
 | | The death of President Tito in 1980 emphasized the departure from leadership of a generation that had been united by the Partisan effort in World War II, leaders who believed in the benefits of unified socialist endeavor, and preferred it to regional rivalry and ethnic competition. |  | | In the face of small-scale dissent and criticism in 1966, Yugoslavia reached a turning point: the regime had to decide to what extent it would suppress or tolerate its opponents. |  | | By the 1980s, Communist leadership was subject to question, opening the way for alternative political and economic forms. |
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http://www.lib.msu.edu/sowards/balkan/lect25.htm
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| | Yugoslavia Timeline |
 | | Croatia, Slovenia, and Bosnia and Herzegovina had been part of the fallen Austro-Hungarian empire; Serbia and Montenegro existed as an independent state (Macedonia was then part of Serbia). |  | | Slobodan Milosevic begin his trial at the UN International Criminal Tribunal on charges of war crimes and crimes against humanity in Bosnia, Croatia, and Kosovo, as well as for committing genocide in Bosnia. |  | | After World War II, the monarchy becomes a communist republic under Prime Minister Tito, now called the Federal People's Republic of Yugoslavia. |
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http://www.infoplease.com/spot/yugotimeline1.html
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| | Yugoslavia on Encyclopedia.com |
 | | In Mar., 1999, following mounting repression of ethnic Albanians and the breakdown of negotiations between separatists and the Serbs, NATO began bombing military targets throughout Yugoslavia, and thousands of ethnic Albanians were forcibly deported from Kosovo by Yugoslav troops. |  | | Although Serbia and Montenegro declared a new Yugoslavian federation, the EC announced in June, 1992, that the new government could not claim the international rights and duties of the former Yugoslavia, because those rights and obligations had devolved onto the different republics. |  | | The constitution of 1946 gave wide autonomy to the six newly created republics, but actual power remained in the hands of Tito and the Communist party. |
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http://www.encyclopedia.com/html/section/yugoslav_history.asp
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| | Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia |
 | | The Economy of SFRY is known for the organization of that country, and its particular brand of workers' self-management system. |  | | The primary political leader of the state was Josip Broz Tito, but there were several other important politicians, particularly after Tito's death: see the list of leaders of communist Yugoslavia. |  | | The Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia was the Yugoslav state that existed from the end of World War II (1945) until it disintegrated in the Yugoslav wars in the 1990s. |
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Socialist_Federal_Republic_of_Yugoslavia
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| | MSN Encarta - Yugoslavia |
 | | Together with Montenegro, Serbia formed what its leaders claimed to be the successor state to Yugoslavia, the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia (now called Serbia and Montenegro). |  | | Following Tito’s death in 1980, ten years of economic crisis and growing political and ethnic conflicts led to the federation’s disintegration in 1991 and 1992. |  | | Yugoslavia was unique among Communist countries in its relatively open and free society and its international role as a leader of nonaligned nations during the Cold War. |
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http://encarta.msn.com/encyclopedia_761567145/Yugoslavia.html
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| | Human Rights Watch: Europe and Central Asia : Serbia and Montenegro |
 | | Over the last few years, as the prosecution presented evidence that the former Serbian strongman orchestrated Europe's worst crimes of the late 20th century, he used every opportunity not only to challenge the facts but to tell the Serbian audience back home that they were all victims of an international conspiracy. |  | | This series of questions and answers provides background information, explains key concepts, evaluates the progression of the trial thus far, and describes what is yet to come. |  | | By Bogdan Ivanisevic, Human Rights Watch researcher on the former Yugoslavia and Géraldine Mattioli, International Justice advocate |
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http://www.hrw.org/europe/fry.php
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| | [No title] |
 | | He was asked by Hague prosecutors to testify; although his data exonerates the Serbs and supports the charge that NATO and the KLA organized the Albanian exodus during the NATO bombing, he reached the opposite conclusion. |  | | Life in Yugoslavia after the October 2000 coup. |  | | Prior to the coup, the G-17 economists put forward plans to 'democratize' Yugoslavia. |
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http://emperors-clothes.com/yugo.htm
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| | Croatia within ex-Yugoslavia |
 | | The idea of Yugoslavia was in fact the best opportunity for Serbian nationalists to create the Greater Serbia, which was completed in 1918 according to the 1844 secret programme. |  | | Altogether 62 Yugoslav concentration camps are known to have existed in the period from 1945-1951 (including the Jasenovac camp from 1945-1947), with unknown number of victims of communist terror, see here. |  | | Formal accaptance of this new state (F.R. of Yugoslavia) in United Nations occured by the end of 2000. |
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http://www.hr/darko/etf/et112.html
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| | WHKMLA : Historical Atlas, Yugoslavia Page |
 | | External Online Map : CIA World Factbook, Yugoslavia |  | | External Online Map : Die Historischen Teilgebiete Jugoslawiens (Historical Regions of Yugoslavia, 1918), from Osteuropa Handbuch (W. Markert, 1954), posted by Balkan Archive; comment in German |  | | External Online Map : Yugoslavia partitioned, 1941, from Osteuropa-Handbuch (Q. Markert, 1954), posted by Balkan Archive, comment in German |
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http://www.zum.de/whkmla/histatlas/balkans/haxyugoslavia.html
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| | Bob Ostertag |
 | | Yugoslavia Suite is a major work for sound and video created in 1999 in response to the crisis in Kosovo and the bombing of Yugoslavia. |  | | I also come to this as an artist who has used technology extensively in his art. |  | | I come to this from the position of an American citizen, whose government is unique in the world at having amassed the technological means to project military power anywhere in the world, at no risk to itself or its soldiers. |
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http://www.detritus.net/ostertag/yugosuitelive.html
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| | MapZones.com : Yugoslavia Map |
 | | From 1945 to 1991 Yugoslavia was a larger Communist federal state, called the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia (SFRY) beginning in 1963, consisting of six republics. |  | | Socialist Realism was also a force after Yugoslavia emerged from World War II in 1945 as a Communist state. |  | | The constitution provides for a democratic form of government, with a president and a Federal Assembly. |
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http://atlas.mapzones.com/yugoslavia/yugoslavia.php
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| | Yugoslavia |
 | | In the worst case of ethnic cleansing since the end of WWII, NATO cleans more than ONE MILLION SERBS from their ANCESTRAL LANDS. |  | | Yugoslavia, member state and one of the founding states of the U.N. is derecognized in record time. |  | | This was done in disregard of ALL international laws. |
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http://www.srpska-mreza.com/library/facts/preface.html
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| | Serbia Info News / Front page |
 | | Czech President Václav Havel and Serbian Prime Minister Zoran Djindjic issued a joint condemnation of terrorism in all its forms during their meeting in Prague on Friday, and the Yugoslav visitor requested that any policy which encourages terrorism be condemned as well, expressing the readiness of Serbia to join in the fight against this evil |  | | Serbian Finance Minister Bozidar Djelic stated on Friday, September 21 that he had launched an initiative for Yugoslavia's membership in the OECD during his talks with officials in Paris |  | | Serbian Prime Minister Zoran Djindjic stated on Tuesday, September 18, after talks with US Deputy Assistant Secretary of State Janet Bogue, that he was promised support for economic reforms in Serbia despite altered global situation following terrorist attacks in the United States |
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http://www.serbia-info.com
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| | ethnic cleansing in former Yugoslavia |
 | | here to see the ethnic map of former Yugoslavia before ethnic cleansing (200+kb). |  | | Without possibility to get feedback on their actions from the world outside, their perpetuated hatred serves their leaders purposes by providing reasons for continuation of the war. |  | | This number increased with the expulsion of Serbs from Croatia and with the ferocious atrocities committed by Serbs against the Albanian majority in Kosovo, prior and during (in spite of) NATO air strikes. |
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http://balkansnet.org/ethnicl.html
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| | Yugoslav Law |
 | | The Federal Assembly (Savezna Skupstina), consisting of the Chamber of Republics (Vece Republika) and the Chamber ofCitizens (Vece Gradjana), is the law making body of the Government of the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia. |  | | Report on Human Rights Practices 2000 (U.S. Department of State) |  | | JURIST's Yugoslavia Correspondents are Dr. Obrad Stanojevic, Professor, Faculty of Law, University of Belgrade, and Milan Parivodic, LL.M., Lecturer, Faculty of Law, University of Belgrade and Attorney-at-Law. |
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http://jurist.law.pitt.edu/world/yugo.htm
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| | Geography - Merriam-Webster's Atlas |
 | | Form of government: federal multiparty republic with two legislative houses (Chamber of Republics [40]; Chamber of Citizens [138]). |  | | The constitution of April 27, 1992, maintained the tricolor but omitted the star. |  | | Official name: Savezna Republika Jugoslavija (Federal Republic of Yugoslavia). |
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http://www.m-w.com/cgi-bin/nytmaps.pl?yugoslavia
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| | Complaint in Campbell v Clinton |
 | | Defendant's decision represented the largest activation of reservists since the 1991 Persian Gulf War against Iraq. |  | | In testimony before Congress on April 21, 1999, Secretary of State Madeleine Albright, referring to the hostilities against Yugoslavia, stated that "As the President and our military leaders have made clear, this struggle may be long." On April 29, 1999, President Clinton stated that the air attacks are likely to continue for many months. |  | | In the report the President states that he is "providing this report as part of any efforts to keep Congress fully informed, consistent with the War Powers Resolution." The report states that to "limit his [Yugoslavian President Slobodan Milosevic's] ability to make war. |
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http://www.counterpunch.org/warlaw.html
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| | Yugoslavia |
 | | This is an in depth overview of what politicians, journalists, analysts and scientists had to say and write about the civil war and the consequences it caused in the former Yugoslavia. |  | | The Federal Republic of Yugoslavia (Serbian: Savezna Republika Jugoslavija), the successor state to the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia, was formally proclaimed on April 27, 1992. |  | | Find out about the latest events in the region. |
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http://www.umiacs.umd.edu/users/lpv/YU/HTML/yu.html
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| | Country Browser: Yugoslavia |
 | | Visit the links in the left hand area of this page to access the different reports. |  | | This area contains a list of interesting reports based around the 5514 titles in the IMDb from Yugoslavia (including international co-productions). |  | | The form below allows you to search the database for titles from Yugoslavia only. |
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http://us.imdb.com/Sections/Countries/Yugoslavia
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| | Governments on the WWW: Yugoslavia |
 | | Nova Komunisticka Partija Jugoslavije (NKPJ) [New Communist Party of Yugoslavia] |  | | Embassy of the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia in Washington, United States of America |  | | Permanent Mission of the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia to the United Nations in New York |
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http://www.gksoft.com/govt/en/yu.html
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| | Savez Izvidjaca Jugoslavije, Yugoslav Scout Association |
 | | Originally one of the founding members of the World Organization, Savez Izvidjaca Jugoslavije remained active for a period in the former Federal Socialist Republic of Yugoslavia. |  | | Yugoslavia was one of the 20 countries that founded WOSM in 1922 and the Yugoslav Scout Association was recognized again by WOSM on 1 September 1995. |  | | The first Scout units in Yugoslavia were founded in 1911. |
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http://pinetreeweb.com/yugohome.htm
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| | Tito divides the Serbs in Communist Yugoslavia |
 | | Tito, The Communist Tyrant of Yugoslavia was himself half-Croat and half-Slovene. |  | | "Serbian-dominated Yugoslavia" was rulled by Croat and Slovene Communists |  | | Thanks to American and British intelligence services Vatican (using Croatian priests) smuggles tens of thousands of Nazi war criminals. |
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http://www.srpska-mreza.com/library/facts/after-WWII.html
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| | Yugoslavia - Free Encyclopedia |
 | | The first was a kingdom formed in 1918 as the Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes, which was re-named the Kingdom of Yugoslavia in 1929 and existed under that name until it was invaded in 1941 by the Axis powers. |  | | As a result, a federation called the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia was formed between the remaining republics of Serbia and Montenegro, which in 2003 remade its internal structure into a loose commonwealth and changed its name to Serbia and Montenegro. |  | | Yugoslavia is a term casually used for three separate political entities. |
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http://www.wacklepedia.com/y/yu/yugoslavia.html
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| | Yugoslavia |
 | | Yugoslavia has about 0.4 hectares of agricultural land and 0.18 hectares of grassland land per citizen, which is almost double the value compared to Europe (0.25 hectares) and the world (0.27 hectares). |  | | There is no need to mention that there are many parts of Yugoslavia, which are considered as ecological oases. |  | | Yugoslavia has 6.2 million hectares of agricultural land of which 60 % is arable land, 4.3 % are orchards, 1.4 % vineyards and 33 % are natural grassland. |
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http://www.organic-europe.net/country_reports/yugoslavia
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| | The history of the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia (–2003) |
 | | Hartford Web Publishing is not the author of the documents in World History Archives and does not presume to validate their accuracy or authenticity nor to release their copyright. |  | | The contemporary political history of the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia |  | | The economic history of the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia |
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http://www.hartford-hwp.com/archives/62/index-o.html
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| | Yugoslavia |
 | | Occupation by Nazi Germany in 1941 was resisted by various partisan bands that fought themselves as well as the invaders. |  | | 4 Dec 1943 State reconstituted (Democratic Federative Yugoslavia) while |  | | In the early 1990s, post-TITO Yugoslavia began to unravel along ethnic lines: Slovenia, Croatia, and The Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia all declared their independence in 1991; Bosnia and Herzegovina in 1992. |
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http://www.vdiest.nl/Europa/yugoslavia.htm
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| | Amazon.com: Yugoslavia: Music: Tonio K. |
 | | Unfortunately, a lot of current Tonio K fans discovered him only after his mid 80s foray in to CCM and didn't know his blistering earlier work, nor that he has continued to turn out the music at a steady clip over the years since then. |  | | Yugoslavia is a wonderful core sample of the music he has made post-CCM. |  | | I'm a fan of his late 80's work ("lost civilization..."), and this album revives a lot of the same tone and feeling. |
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http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/tg/detail/-/B00001IVA5?v=glance
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| | Yugoslavia (1992-2003) |
 | | Since Serbia and Montenegro still uses the flags formerly used in Yugoslavia from 1992 to 2003, we present those flags on pages dedicated to Serbia and Montenegro, this in order to avoid unnecessary duplication of information. |  | | On 6 December 2002, the 27-member commission on constitutional reform presented a first draft of the new federal constitution for Serbia and Montenegro. |  | | Therefore, the national flag, arms and anthem of Serbia and Montenegro are still those of the former Federal Republic of Yugoslavia. |
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http://flagspot.net/flags/yu.html
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| | Yugoslav IAESTE committee |
 | | IAESTE Yugoslavia has been a full member since 1952. |  | | To provide students at institutions of high learning with technical experience abroad relative to their studies in the broadest sense; |
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http://www.iaeste.org.yu
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| | GO |
 | | The GOSJ (GO Society of Jugoslavia) seat is in Nis, Pariske komune 7/8. |  | | With that goal in mind we have began a cooperation with Hungary and Romania. |  | | Go players from Yugoslavia are very much interested in establishing contacts with go clubs and players from other countries. |
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http://www.cs.caltech.edu/~petrovic/go
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| | Yugoslavia (Serbia and Montenegro) - Record International Players |
 | | Duljaj 5 of his 21 below); the same holds for various matches against a Hong Kong League XI (Savo Milosevic played in three of these unofficial matches; for two of them (which Yugoslavia won in 1995 and 1997) he was awarded caps; for the last in 2000 which Yugoslavia lost he was not). |  | | NB: includes Serbia and Montenegro since February 2003; file to revised w.r.t. |  | | You are free to copy this document in whole or part provided that proper acknowledgement is given to the authors. |
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http://www.rsssf.com/miscellaneous/joeg-recintlp.html
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| | FAIR Archives: Browse By Region |
 | | The Serbs: History, Myth and the Destruction of Yugoslavia, by Timothy Judah. |  | | Balkan Tragedy: Chaos and Dissolution After the Cold War, by Susan L. Woodward. |  | | Assessment of the Environmental Impact of Military Activities During the Yugoslavia Conflict, prepared for the EU by the Regional Environmental Center. |
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http://www.fair.org/index.php?page=18®ion_id=8
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| | Cyber Yugoslavia |
 | | Official launch of Cyber Yugoslavia is set for September 9, 1999 (9-9-99) |  | | This site will be updated before that, so please check its development |
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http://www.juga.com
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| | Yugoslavia tour Guided and Self-guided Yugoslavia tours Yugoslavia tourism |
 | | Below you'll find some of the best guided and self-guided Yugoslavia tours available. |  | | Whether you are looking for a self-guided Yugoslavia tour or want to join a guided tour, you will likely find one here at InfoHub.com. |  | | Many of these Yugoslavia tour packages feature unique Yugoslavia tourism opportunities that you are not likely to find anywhere else. |
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http://www.infohub.com/TRAVEL/SIT/sit_pages/Yugoslavia.html
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| | Flags of Yugoslavia - geography; Flags, Map, Economy, Geography, Climate, Natural Resources, Current Issues, ... |
 | | Maps of serbia_and_montenegro; Flag, Map, Economy, Yugoslavia Map Geography, Climate, Natural Yugoslavia Maps Resources, Current Issues, International Agreements, The Bahamian Maps Population, The Bahamian Map Social Statistics, The Bahamian Maps Political System HTML Colors; Greece The Bahamian Maps Geography Economy, people, The Bahamian Map communications, transportation,The Bahamian Maps flags, maps |  | | Flags of Yugoslavia - geography; Flags, Map, Economy, Geography, Climate, Natural Resources, Current Issues, International Agreements, Population, Social Statistics, Political System |  | | Click on the flag to see the map. |
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http://www.theodora.com/flags/yugoslavia_flags.html
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| | Yugoslavia / Jugoslavija |
 | | For JNA Vojnik and others who liked yugoslavia |  | | What do you think of Communism in ex SFRJ? |
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http://pub18.ezboard.com/fbalkansyugoslaviaforum
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