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Page "International relations within the Comecon" ¶ 3
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mid-1985 and used
These headlights were designed for the 1984 model, but regulations would not allow them to be used until the mid-1985 update.

mid-1985 and 40
Although Marilyn had scored three Top 40 hits throughout the 1983-84 period, his debut album was not released until mid-1985, 18 months after his biggest hit " Calling Your Name " was a top 10 hit.

mid-1985 and more
By mid-1985, when the number of active members was estimated at between 1, 500 and 2, 000 ( including a more noticeable urban presence ), the M-19 was the second largest guerrilla group in Colombia after the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia.

mid-1985 and .
Since mid-1985, the depreciated value of the currency has increased the competitiveness of Swazi exports and moderated the growth of imports, generating trade surpluses.
The introduction of Saturday Night's Main Event on NBC in mid-1985 marked the first time that professional wrestling had been broadcast on network television since the 1950s.
However, by 1984, Chacón reached her peak, and not being able to reach an " Anglo " market, ended her show in Puerto Rico by mid-1985 at the age of 35.
In mid-1985, Farrell was searching for a new bass player for the faltering Psi-com when he was introduced to Eric Avery.
In mid-1985, Rozz Williams left the band, partly due to his increasing interest in experimental music and surrealist performance art.
Following the name change, the band released the single " Shouldn't Do That " ( UK No. 63 ) in mid-1985.
Originally printed on a few pages of loose paper, the newsletter grew in content to eventually become a " small, colorful magazine " and was renamed in mid-1985 as the Last Days Magazine.
In mid-1985, Rossi, Parfitt and Bown, along with Edwards and Rich, started work on a new Status Quo album.
Recent UCLA graduate Shane Black wrote the screenplay in mid-1985.
Owing to such chronic inflation, the Peruvian currency, the sol, was replaced by the Inti in mid-1985, which itself was replaced by the nuevo sol (" new sun ") in July 1991, at which time the new sol had a cumulative value of one billion ( 1, 000, 000, 000 ) old soles.
The £ 4 million Aston relief road in Sheffield opened in mid-1985, with the old route now designated as the B6200.
Ferrari were back competing for race honours for the first time since mid-1985 from the Hungarian Grand Prix onwards.
In mid-1985, the band embarked on its first nationwide tour to promote the now completed Come on Down EP.
A new feature called " The Slipped Disk Show " appeared in mid-1985, starring a fictional disc jockey who answered computer-related questions submitted by readers.
Development began mid-1985 and was available for sale in mid-1988.
In mid-1985 Bob Shrum resigned to launch the media firm of Caddell, Doak and Shrum, and recruited Trippi to be the firm's vice president.
They had written most of the material for the album by mid-1985 and set out to complete a lineup with which to record.
By July 1979, despite the release of billions of dollars in construction funds by the U. S. Department of Transportation, Metro had pushed back the construction of the Anacostia Station to mid-1985 and the completion of the Branch Avenue Line to late 1986.
In mid-1985, the XT trim was added as the top-of-the-line version.
In mid-1985, KRLR began to introduce a few classic television programs, and in mid-1985 began airing World Class Championship Wrestling, a popular one-hour wrestling program originating from Dallas, Texas.

factories and Eastern
In the former Eastern bloc countries, the official doctrine viewed cooking as a mere necessity, and women should work " for the society " in factories, not at home.
This has enabled scientists to measure a range of natural phenomena including the transport of air pollutants in the region and a marked decline since 1990 in the amount of atmospheric mercury pollution, an effect which has been attributed to the post-1989 closure of polluting factories in the former Eastern Bloc states.
In the mid twentieth century at the climax of the manufacturing boom in the Great Lakes region, New London welcomed an influx of new residents from the Appalachian South-primarily Eastern Kentucky-to work in fields and factories locally and in nearby metropolitan Cleveland.
Large factories were built in the town and it became one of the important industrial and commercial centres of Eastern Poland.
Jews, along with many Eastern and Southern European immigrants, came to work the country's growing mines and factories.
Until 1850s several other small factories were located in the village, including ones for candles, soap, matches, paints, champagne wine and a brewery, as well as the first steam-powered laundry in Central and Eastern Europe.
The prisoners, at first Soviet, after 1939 from Eastern Europe and after the end of the World War II the Japanese POWs, constituted a considerable part of the labor force which built factories, ports, and cities in the Far East from 1930 through 1940.

factories and Europe
The city also supports many other industries, shipbuilding, including high-speed catamaran factories such as the world renowned Incat and ore refinement zinc smelters operated by Nyrstar, large breweries such as Cascade manufactures many different beers exported nationally with its premium and boutique beers being found in Europe, as well as smaller breweries around the city.
Camp prisoners from all over Europe and the Soviet Union — Jews, non-Jewish Poles and Slovenes, religious and political prisoners, Roma and Sinti, Freemasons, Jehovah's Witnesses, criminals, homosexuals, and prisoners of war — worked primarily as forced labor in local armament factories.
As a consequence of the poisons discharged into the air by the factories in the area ( most notably the ILVA steel plant, part of Gruppo Riva ), Taranto is the most polluted city in Italy and western Europe.
In the Second World War, Erith found itself in the thick of the conflict, being directly on the German bombing routes from Europe to London, and also because of the nearby armament factories.
After the discovery of mauveine, many new aniline dyes appeared ( some discovered by Perkin himself ), and factories producing them were constructed across Europe.
Slavonski Brod is also home to some of the most important metal companies in Southeastern Europe, the Djuro Djakovic consortium, consisting of a number of factories producing very diverse products, mainly for export.
Later, in the 1920s and 1930s, factories were built that commercially extracted pectin from dried apple pomace and later citrus-peel in regions that produced apple juice in both the USA and in Europe.
In Europe, many automobile factories had been destroyed during World War II, and it took many years before war-devastated economies recovered enough to make large cars popular again.
The design team in the company ’ s Sweden office controls the steps of production from merchandise planning to establishing specifications, and production is outsourced to approximately 800 factories in Europe and Asia.
* " Bata-ville – We are not afraid of the future ": somewhere. org. uk / bata-ville / bata-ville. com, Somewhere, 2007 United Kingdom " Against the backdrop of economic regeneration, former employees of two now closed UK Bata factories are led on a unique journey through Bata's legacy and across a changing Europe.
There are five factories in Germany and 13 throughout the rest of Europe.
Weetabix has factories in Europe, the United States and Canada.
Shliapnikov left Russia in 1908 and continued his revolutionary activities in Western Europe, where he also worked in factories and was a devoted trade unionist.
Thousands of planes used BW1 as a stepping stone on their way from the aircraft factories in North America to the battlegrounds of Europe.
Salt, wheat ( grown in vast quantity in North Africa in area literally desertified by the effort ), and even water ( carried by the massive aqueducts which stand to this day in many parts of Europe ) were however controlled by the central government in Rome, along with many other functions of a military dictatorship-such as the making of denarius ( Roman coins ), which took place in massive state factories.
It found especial fame during World War II, when its aircraft were used for devastating night-time air raids on Germany and occupied Europe, principally the former, their bombing raids causing tremendous destruction of urban areas and factories.
The population is growing fast, due in great part to many retired people coming to the area and migrant workers from eastern Europe working in the many food processing factories or on the land.
Clogging is thought to be considered a very early form of street dance, since it evolved in the streets, factories and dance parties during the 18th century ( or before ) amongst dancers that were considered a part of the UK, Western Europe and Appalachian urban countercultures at the time.
The tenants lost, but Europe, being at war, depended on the industrial factories on Granville Island.
In Europe, where production and use of whip cream chargers originated, there are presently 3 factories doing production.
The businessmen of the Second Industrial Revolution created industrial towns and cities in the Northeast with new factories, and hired an ethnically diverse industrial working class, many of them new immigrants from Europe.
In May 1940, soon after the World War II broke out in Europe, Nancy Love wrote to Lt. Col. Robert Olds, then in the Plans Division of Air Corps Headquarters but who a year later would be in charge of establishing the Air Corps Ferrying Command, that she had found 49 excellent women pilots, who each had more than a thousand flying hours and could help transport planes from factories to bases.
Nonetheless, a number of factories did emerge in Istanbul, Ottoman Europe and Anatolia.
It has offices and factories throughout Asia, as well as branches in Europe, Canada, United States, Australia and New Zealand.

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