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partisan and rule
During World War II, in the village of Bela Crkva, partisan Žikica Jovanović Španac killed two gendarmes on July 7, 1941, which would become the official date of celebration of the people's uprising against occupiers in Serbia during communist rule.
The significance of this election was broader than merely a change of partisan rule ; new issues, such as the environment, Aboriginal affairs, abortion, multiculturalism, and a broader acceptance of state spending, resulted from the Whitlam government, which in many respects created a bipartisan consensus on major issues of social policy.
Some scholars have argued that the Archbishop of Novgorod became the head of the Republic and stood above the fray of partisan politics that raged among the boyardom, but the archbishops seem to have shared power with the boyardom and the collective leadership tried to rule by consensus.
" With a new tide of independence movement sweeping throughout Georgia in the late 1980s, the anti-Soviet fighters of 1924, particularly, the leading partisan officer Kakutsa Cholokashvili, emerged as a major symbol of Georgian patriotism and national resistance to the Soviet rule.

partisan and British
** The British 8th Army, together with Slovene partisan troops and a motorized detachment of the Yugoslav 4th Army, arrives in Carinthia and Klagenfurt.
After World War II broke out, he fought as a partisan, before he met up with British soldiers of the 1st Scots Guards and became their interpreter.
As the office has developed historically, however, it has taken on a clearly partisan cast, very different from the speakership of most Westminster-style legislatures, such as the Speaker of the British House of Commons, which is meant to be scrupulously non-partisan.
The return of the British force to Boston following the search operations at Concord was subject to constant skirmishing, using partisan forces gathered from communities all along the route, making maximum use of the terrain ( particularly trees and stone field walls ) to overcome the limitations of their weapons-muskets with an effective range of only about 50 – 70 metres.
The 2nd Division ( New Zealand ) of the British 8th Army arrived on the next day and forced the surrender of 2, 000 German Army troops holding out in Trieste which warily had refused to capitulate to partisan troops.
Some partisan fund allocation for the churches by the British officials triggered a breakdown in the relationship between Saint Thomas Christians and prominent Hindu castes, at least temporarily.
He was one of the harshest critics of British repressive policy against Boer civilians in the South African partisan War.
They are convinced that he will be a partisan Zionist and that he represents a Jewish and not a British Government.
For example " the American mediascape is becoming increasingly partisan " or simply to denote " what's on " as in " a quick survey of the British mediascape shows how much Channel 4 has lost its way ".
Sources for her analysis included a paper from the National Bureau of Economic Research, a non profit, non partisan research organization, and an article in the British medical journal, Lancet Oncology, that analyzed 2000-2002 cancer survival figures from Europe.
In August 1795, during an outbreak of yellow fever, he was the chairman of the city's Health Committee, appointed by Governor George Clinton the previous year, and kept on by Clinton's rival John Jay despite Broome's prominence at a partisan rally to oppose the treaty Jay had just negotiated with the British, since health was not considered a partisan issue.
The legally separate but closely related affiliate, the Canadian Federation of Students-British Columbia ( CFS-BC ), in participation with the British Columbia Civil Liberties Association and British Columbia Teachers ' Federation, won a case against Translink for refusing to put CFS-BC Vote Education advertising on buses that Translink deemed to be partisan advertising during an election.
Following an upsurge in partisan activity in her area, she is forcibly evacuated from her village by the Germans and their collaborators and witnesses an attack on the German forces by a group of British partisans, during which a number of her friends from the village are killed in the crossfire.
His chief work, History of British Commerce and of the Economic Progress of the British Nation, 1763-1870, is considered to be a partisan account of British economic development, but its value as a work of reference cannot be gainsaid.
The appointment process for the Order of Canada is notable for being mostly removed from the active partisan influence normally seen in the British honours system.
There was criticism of Suhrawardy, Chief Minister in charge of the Home Portfolio in Calcutta, for being partisan and of Sir Frederick John Burrows, the British Governor of Bengal, for not having taken control of the situation.

partisan and authorities
The Rhodesian authorities resisted the temptation to nationalise major enterprises without paying proper compensation, consistently refused to radically alleviate unemployment, and shied from filling civil service posts with partisan appointees.
German and local security authorities were kept busy by Soviet partisan activities in Belarus.
He is noted for his pointed critiques of the partisan " operative criticism " of previous architectural historians and critics like Bruno Zevi and Siegfried Giedion and for challenging and overturning the idea that the Renaissance was a " golden age " as it had been characterised in the work of earlier authorities like Heinrich Wolfflin and Rudolf Wittkower.
In September 1945, Zygmunt Szendzielarz moved with a large part of his unit to Gdańsk-Oliwa, where he remained underground while preparing his unit for a new partisan offensive against the Soviet-backed communist authorities of Poland.
In Latvia, preparations for partisan operations were begun during the German occupation, but the leaders of these nationalist units were arrested by Nazi authorities.

partisan and brought
In that decade the partisan zeal to defend Mr. Hoover, and the party's failure to anticipate or cope with the depression, caused a great majority of Americans to see the Republican party as cold and lacking in any sympathy for the problems of human beings caught up in the distress and suffering brought on by the economic crash.
Soon, social and economic differences between Honduras and its regional neighbors exacerbated harsh partisan strife among Central American leaders and brought the collapse of the Federation from 1838 to 1839.
It was aimed to achieve equitable distribution of development resources across regions and to control imbalances in regional development brought about by partisan politics.
The government brought in auto insurance reforms ( including a price cap ), rolled-back a series of corporate and personal tax cuts that had been scheduled for 2004, passed legislation that enshrined publicly-funded healthcare into provincial law, hired more meat and water inspectors, opened up the provincially-owned electricity companies to Freedom of Information laws and enacted a ban on partisan government advertising.
The church was used as garrison and all male residents suspected of involved in partisan activity were brought to the back of the Dasmariñas Elementary School where they were tortured and murdered.
In 1947, List and 11 former subordinates were brought before a U. S. military court, charged with war crimes and crimes against humanity — primarily the reprisal killing of hostages in retaliation for partisan activity.
… ltimately, the exigencies of the war effort and mounting partisan warfare behind the lines prevented Nazi leaders from fully developing and realizing their colonial aims in Ukraine … In addition to the immediate destruction of all Jewish communities, Himmler insisted that the Ukrainian civilian population be brought to a ' minimum.
Though firmly a Democrat, Haskell found the middle ground and usually brought the belligerent partisan forces and rival interests into friendly agreement.
Ohio's Secretary of State filed a motion for sanction against the plaintiffs, alleging that the claim in Moss v. Bush was meritless, did not meet the standards of evidence required by law, and was brought only for partisan political purposes.

partisan and peasants
His writings made him popular both among the peasants and the gentry, which enabled the partisan units under his command to grow rapidly.

partisan and into
Even a city of thirty thousand might have six baseball teams, sponsored by grocers and hardware merchants or department stores, that played two or three times a week throughout the summer, usually in the cool of the evening, before an earnest and partisan audience who did not begrudge a quarter each, or even more, to be dropped into a hat when the game was half over.
Separating from his superior, Metropolitan Acacius of Caesarea, a partisan of Arius who taught that Jesus was a divine being created by — and therefore inferior to — God the Father, St. Cyril took the side of the Eusebians of the post-Nicene conciliation party and thus got into difficulties with his superior that were increased by Acacius's jealousy of the importance assigned to St. Cyril's See by the Council of Nicaea.
After liberation from the fascist occupation on 29 November 1944, several Albanian partisan divisions crossed the border into German-occupied Yugoslavia, where they fought alongside Tito's partisans and the Soviet Red Army in a joint campaign which succeeded in driving out the last pockets of German resistance.
The Germans also decided to bring rear forces ( mostly Waffen-SS units and Einsatzgruppen ) into the conquered territories to counter the partisan activity they knew would erupt in areas they controlled.
* Liberals Vs Conservatives Non partisan community where both sides of the fence may enter into debate.
In that election Dewey felt that he had allowed Roosevelt to draw him into a partisan, verbal " mudslinging " match, and he believed that this had cost him votes.
After Saddam Hussein's regime was removed from power, the Iraq campaign moved into a different type of asymmetric warfare where the coalition's use of superior conventional warfare training, tactics and technology were of much less use against continued opposition from the various partisan groups operating inside Iraq.
During the Second Temple era, when Jews were divided into sects, the Pharisees were one sect among many, and partisan.
Once partisan feelings became tense and hostilities began, Frederick Russell Burnham, who later became a celebrated scout and the inspiration for the boy scouts, was drawn into the conflict on the losing side.
He was a zealous partisan in the failed effort made to extend slavery into Kansas.
As a young man, Barrès carried his Romantic and individualist theory of the Ego into politics as an ardent partisan of General Boulanger, locating himself in the more populist side of the heterogenous Boulangist coalition.
He was not a partisan of Napoleon Bonaparte, but, being a moderate Liberal, was impressed into service by the First French Empire, and Napoleon made him a count and put him into the senate.
* Partisan ( political ) In politics, partisan literally means organized into political parties.
The fire of 1910 convinced him that Satan was at work and it saw his conversion into a fire extinguishing partisan who elevated firefighting to the raison d ' être — the overriding mission — of the Forest Service.
On March 14, 1944, she and colleagues Yoel Palgi and Peretz Goldstein were parachuted into Yugoslavia and joined a partisan group.
The following lines are from the last poem she wrote, " Ashre Hagafrur ", after she was parachuted into a partisan camp in Yugoslavia:
In Berlin, somewhat against his will, he was drawn into a controversy on the Apostles ' Creed, in which the partisan antagonisms within the Prussian Church had found expression.
He was quite belligerent in this role, usually on the floor during a session, slumped in a front row seat holding a dead cigar, ready to leap into debate with a partisan bite.
John Conway states in ONAG that the inspiration for the theory of partisan games was based on his observation of the play in go endgames, which can often be decomposed into sums of simpler endgames isolated from each other in different parts of the board.
It was fiercely partisan and righteously judgemental, dividing the personnel of the past into the good and the bad.
A strong partisan of English interests in France during the latter years of the Hundred Years ' War, his role in arranging Joan of Arc's downfall led most subsequent observers to condemn his extension of secular politics into an ecclesiastical trial.
These small partisan units blew up bridges, attacked police stations, and eventually organized into larger combat units of more than 300 men each.
This form of runoff election weakens political parties and transforms a partisan election into a partly nonpartisan election.

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