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Romanian and general
* Gheorghe Manu, Romanian general and politician
** Romanian general election, 1946: The Romanian Communist Party wins 79. 86 % of the vote through widespread intimidation tactics and electoral fraud.
* November 9 – Ion Dragalina, Romanian general ( killed in action ) ( b. 1860 )
In the Romanian general election of November 1946 that the Soviets had promised the western allies, the Romanian Communist Party ( PCR ) was trounced, with U. S. embassy estimates of the bloc receiving only about 8 % of the vote compared to 70 % for the rival Peasant Party.
Various critics have traced links between Eliade's fiction works and his political views, or Romanian politics in general.
Overall, the Romanian folk, in general, could be marked as an underground cultural movement, somewhere between non-aligned and protest music.
* Puzzle ( Arabic, Croatian, German, Greek, Hungarian, Italian, Polish, Portuguese, Romanian, Russian паззл, Turkish ) — jigsaw puzzle ( rather than puzzle in general )
The term judeţ started to be used in Romanian as a general term for all administrative divisions since mid 19th century.
In 1992 – 93 he was stationed as general affairs manager for Shell Romania Exploration, where he was responsible for setting up the Romanian branch of Shell.
Romania's most portant general, Petre Dumitrescu, was commander of the Romanian Third Army at Stalingrad.
Gheorghe Gheorghiu-Dej speaking at a workers ' rally in Piața Unirii | Nation Square, Bucharest after the Romanian general election, 1946 | 1946 elections.
He also condemned the foundation ( before his coming ) of the first two elementary schools with general knowledge curriculum aimed at the Jewish children in Bucharest, projects which were encouraged during that period by Romanian officials, who agreed for a while to a better integration of the Jews into Romanian life.
He usually referred to the Jewish community in general with the insulting term jidani, and accepted their presence on Romanian soil as a concession to their alleged " too numerous and too powerful presence in Europe ".
According to historian Ilarion Ţiu, the trial and verdict were received with general apathy, and the only political faction believed to have organized a public rally in connection with it was the outlawed Romanian Communist Party, some of whose members gathered in front of the tribunal to express support for the conviction.
He reached the rank of general in the Romanian Army, and later became mathematics professor at the National School of Bridges and Roads in Bucharest.
Groza became Premier in 1945 when Nicolae Rădescu, a leading Romanian Army general who assumed power briefly following the conclusion of World War II, was forced to resign by the Soviet Union's deputy People's Commissar for Foreign Affairs, Andrei Y. Vishinsky.
To confirm Groza's installment as the Romanian premier, elections were held on November 19, 1946 ( see Romanian general election, 1946 ).
With Paul Blocq he was the first to describe senile plaques and with Romanian neurologist Ion Minea confirmed in 1913 Hideyo Noguchi's discovery of Treponema pallidum in the brain in patients with general paresis.
Petre Dumitrescu (; 18 February 1882 – 15 January 1950 ) was a Romanian general during World War II, who led the Romanian Third Army on its campaign against the Red Army in the eastern front.

Romanian and election
According to Romanian political analysts such as Daniel Barbu or Dan Pavel, his election was based almost exclusively on the rural population and disoriented lower class industrial workers, controlled through manipulation from the state-controlled media ( Televiziunea Română, the state television, was the only wide-scale TV channel until 1993 ).
( see: Romanian election, 1996 )
For the first time since 1990, after the election of November 30, 2008, he and his party were no longer present in either of the Romanian legislative chambers.
The PDSR lost the 1996 election, which was won by the multi-party coalition Romanian Democratic Convention ( CDR ).
Alleged text transcripts of PSD meetings surfaced on an anonymous Web site just before the 2004 Romanian presidential election.
In February 2004, he was chosen as the alliance's candidate in the Romanian presidential election of November 2004.
At the same time, his connections within Freemasonry, mirroring the conviction and affiliation of most 1848 revolutionaries, were an important factor in ensuring the success of Romanian causes abroad, and arguably played a part in the election of Cuza, who was himself a member of the secretive organization.
During the same period, federal Minister of Citizenship and Immigration Judy Sgro was criticized for granting a temporary residency permit to Romanian exotic dancer who had worked on her election campaign.
According to Iliescu's analysis, this declaration alienated the Romanian ultra-nationalist electorate who voted for Traian Băsescu, thus costing Adrian Năstase the 2004 presidential election.
However, the bill died in the Senate following the 2008 Romanian legislative election.
# REDIRECT Romanian general election, 1996
The Romanian opposition announced on 30 November that they were demanding a re-run of the election, because some of the void votes were allegedly awarded to the PSD.
# REDIRECT Romanian general election, 2004
# REDIRECT Romanian general election, 2004
# REDIRECT Romanian general election, 1990
# REDIRECT Romanian general election, 1992

Romanian and elections
In the autumn of 1919, elections for the Romanian Constituent Assembly were held in Bessarabia ; 90 deputies and 35 senators were chosen.
The PND, running in elections under a square-in-square logo ( 回 ), was rapidly becoming a minor force in Romanian politics.
When the PDSR lost the 1996 elections, Năstase became leader of the opposition PDSR parliamentary group, vice-president of Chamber of Deputies, and member of Standing Bureau and Member of the Romanian delegation to the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe where he was the Recording Secretary of Council of Europe commission on judicial problems and human rights with reference to illegal activities by religious sects.
The PNŢ only came to power in November 1928, after both King Ferdinand and Brătianu had died ( in the elections of that year, it allied itself with the Romanian Social Democratic Party and the German Party ).
Following the Romanian elections of 1912, he became a parliamentarian with the Conservative-Democrat Party led by Take Ionescu, and five years later he became a member of the government of Ion I. C. Brătianu as Minister of Finance.
Originally a trade unionist ( between 1990 and 1996, he was leader of the Federation of Free Trade Unions in Education, FSLI, and, between 1990 and 1993, leader of the nation-wide National Confederation of Free Trade Unions of Romania-Brotherhood ) and member of the National Peasants ' Party ( PNŢCD ), he was backed for the premiership by the Romanian Democratic Convention after the elections of 1996.
On 5 November 2004, during a press conference, Verheugen mentioned that the future prime-minister of Romania would be Mircea Geoană ( of the PSD ) and that Romania would end negotiations with the EU with just four days before the Romanian legislative and presidential elections.
Romania acquiesced after amendments following a December 2001 agreement between Orbán and Romanian prime minister Adrian Năstase ; Slovakia accepted the law after further concessions made by the new government after the 2002 elections.
After the Romanian legislative elections of 2004, he was replaced by Mihai Răzvan Ungureanu from the Justice and Truth Alliance.
In 2000, Tudor received the second largest number of votes in Romania's presidential elections, partially as a result of protest votes lodged by Romanians frustrated with the fractionalization and mixed performance of the 1996-2000 Romanian Democratic Convention government.
* 1945: The party ran in elections with the Romanian Communist Party
The PCR and its allies won the Romanian elections of 19 November, although there is evidence of widespread electoral fraud.
The newspaper was purchased along with its parent company throughout the 2004 Romanian elections.
From 1996 until the 2008 Romanian legislative elections, UDMR was a member or supporter of every government.
From 1996 until the 2008 Romanian legislative elections, UDMR was part of all of Romania's governing coalitions, although not always a formal partner in government.
From 1996 the party governed in a coalition with the Romanian Democratic Convention ( Convenţia Democrată Română, CDR )— a wide alliance that won the elections that year — and obtained some positions in the government of Victor Ciorbea.
In the 2004 elections, the UDMR made an alliance to back Adrian Năstase of the Social Democratic Party, who was the favourite to win the presidential elections, but the surprise victory of Traian Băsescu rocked the Romanian political spectrum.
After the 2008 Romanian legislative elections UDMR entered in opposition.
# the eighth point of the Proclamation of Timişoara: leading members of the Romanian Communist Party and the Securitate not to be allowed to be candidates in the elections

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