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         Shaw Anna Howard:     more detail
  1. The story of a pioneer. an autobiography. By Anna Howard Shaw. w by Shaw. Anna Howard. 1847-1919., 1915-01-01
  2. The story of a pioneer. by Anna Howard Shaw with the collabo by Shaw. Anna Howard. 1847-1919., 1915-01-01
  3. A Voice From the Wilderness: The Story of Anna Howard Shaw by Don Brown, 2001-09-24
  4. Anna Howard Shaw: Suffrage Orator and Social Reformer by Wil A. Linkugel, Martha Solomon,

41. Index S
Adrian, Michigan), 690 Shaw Family (Shiawassee County, Michigan), 689 Shaw, Alexander(18541892), 689 Shaw, Anna Howard (1847-1919), 65, 321 Shaw, Brackley
http://www.si.umich.edu/HCHS/HCHS-GUIDE/indexS.html
Introduction Help Index Guide HomePage
[S] Index Terms
Terms are presented in groups of approximately 20. The first short list of terms can be used to jump rapidly down the Index listing. Navigational links to return to the top of this Index are provided at the end of each group of Index terms. Individual citation numbers following Index terms provide links to the text of each citation. Sabin Sanford Schneider Sewage ... Surline Sabin, Marden, 667
Sackner Foundation, 469
Sager, Abram (1810-1877),
Sager, Evie, 669
Saginaw County Hospital,
Saginaw County Medical Society, 239
Saginaw County, Michigan,
Saginaw Valley Medical College, 324
Saginaw, Michigan,
Saint Mary's Hospital, Grand Rapids, 491
Sakada, Harry S., Saline Community Hospital, 808 Saline, Michigan, 310, 439 Salk polio vaccine, 273, Salk, Jonas (1914- ), 273 Salmonella typhosa, 245 Salt, iodization of, 177, Sample, Chester Harris (1850- ), 673 Sanatoria, Sanborn, ?, [Top of Index] Sanford, Amanda, 674 Sanford, Mrs. M. L., 674 Sanitarians, 915

42. Period6
Anna Howard Shaw(18471919) -She devoted her oratorical talents full-time to thewoman suffrage cause and served as president of the NAWSA from 1904 to 1915.
http://www.mcps.k12.md.us/schools/rmhs/departments/socialstudies/apus/women6/
Susan B. Anthony
-Leader of the American woman suffrage movement. Her dedication was responsible for the passage of the 19th Amendment in 1920. Interesting fact: In 1872, she was arrested for voting!
Alice Stone Blackwell
Harriet Stanton Blatch
Amelia Bloomer
-Wrote an article defending the pantaloons and short skirt worn by reformer Elizabeth Miller. These
clothes became known as "bloomers."
Carrie Chapman Catt
-She rose to the top ranks of the suffrage movement. When Susan Anthony retired, she took her place as president of the NAWSA. She was also leader of the international suffrage organization and the peace movement.
Lucretia Coffin Mott
Anna Howard Shaw -She devoted her oratorical talents full-time to the woman suffrage cause and served as president of the NAWSA from 1904 to 1915. Elizabeth Cady Stanton Lucy Stone Interesting Fact: When Lucy married, she refused to take the name of her husband and kept her maiden name. Convention at Seneca Falls -New York state in 1848 passed the , which allowed the property of the wife at the time of marriage to remain under her control.

43. The Broadway Theatre Archive Catalog
fight against child labor; and Dr. Anna Howard Shaw (18471919), who as a frontierminister, protected herself by carrying a fully-loaded pistol at all times.
http://www.broadwayarchive.com/catalog_detail.asp?id=90050068&referral=Harley005

44. Shaw, Anna Howard
Shaw, Anna Howard. 18471919, American woman-suffrage leader, b. England.She emigrated (1851) to the United States in early childhood
http://nl.slider.com/enc/48000/Shaw_Anna_Howard.htm

45. The Readings
Press). Anna Howard Shaw (18471919), The Story of a Pioneer. 4 Tu 1/27 AnnaHoward Shaw (1847-1919), The Story of a Pioneer (1915), pp. 1-145.
http://courses.knox.edu/hist214/syllabus.html
HIST/GWST 214/314, Winter 2004 Penny S. Gold, 314 OM Women's History through Autobiography http://courses.knox.edu/hist214/ This course will explore the history of women in Europe and America from the 17th through the 20th centuries, using autobiographies written by women as our major source of evidence. Within the accounts, we will look for commonalities and divergences in women's experiences across place, time, religion, race, class and sexuality. Putting the accounts in a larger historical context, we will explore the changes in gender roles and relations as influenced by social, economic, and political change. In what ways is autobiography a reliable historical source, in what ways not, and why?
The Readings
Harriet Jacobs (1813-1897), Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl, Written by Herself , edition by Jean Fagan Yellin (Harvard Univ. Press) Anna Howard Shaw (1847-1919), The Story of a Pioneer Gertrude Stein (1874-1946), The Autobiography of Alice B. Toklas Vera Brittain (1893-1970), Testament of Youth Life As We Have Known It By Co-Operative Working Women (1931), ed. M. L. Davies

46. BRIEF AUTHOR BIOGRAPHIES
else. Anna Howard Shaw (18471919). Shaw was born in England, emigratingto the US with her family when she was a small child. She
http://courses.knox.edu/hist214/AuthorBios.html
Brief Author Biographies
She married at age 14 to Chaim Segal, who became a prosperous merchant of gems and precious metals. Her autobiography chronicles her married life, her years of widowhood, and her second marriage, illuminating much about women's roles in family and economy in early modern Europe. The text is also a window onto Jewish life of this period.
Harriet Jacobs (1813-1897)
Born into slavery in North Carolina, Harriet Jacobs had a somewhat protected childhood living with her grandmother, a freed slave. But as a teenager, she was moved into her owner's household, where she faced continual pressures for a sexual liaison from the father of the house. Jacobs rejected these pressures and began a long-term relationship with a local white lawyer, with whom she bore two children. Facing continued pressure and threats from her master, Jacobs escaped, went into hiding, and then eventually escaped to the north. She was finally freed only through purchase by a friend and employer. This autobiography tells us much about the place of women in the southern slave system, the interior life of a female slave, the place of education and religion in the life of enslaved persons, and much else.

47. THE STRUGGLE TO CREATE CHILD LABOR LAWS
X. S534 Shaw, Anna Howard, 18471919. The story of a pioneer, by Anna Howard Shaw… with the collaboration of Elizabeth. Jordan; illustrated from photographs.
http://www.chicagohistory.org/collections/historyfair/subjects/bibliographies/su
IS SUFFRAGE A REFORM OR A REVOLUTION? Stanton, Elizabeth (Cady) 1815-1902, ed. History of woman suffrage. Ed. by Elizabeth Cady Stanton, Susan B. Anthony, and Matilda Joslyn Gage…Rochester, N. Y., Susan B. Anthony, 1889-[1922] Contents.—v. 1. 1848-1861.—v. 2. 1861-1876.—v. 3. 1876-1885.—v. 4. 1883-1900.—v. Kraditor, Aileen S. The ideas of the woman suffrage movement, 1890-1920 [by] Aileen S. Kraditor. New York, Columbia University Press, 1965. Bibliography: p. [283]-306. Flexner, Eleanor, 1908-. Century of struggle; the women’s rights movement in the United States. Cambridge, Belknap Press of Harvard University Press, 1959. Includes bibliography. Chute, Marchette Gaylord, 1909- The first liberty; a history of the right to vote in America, 1619-1850 [by] Marchette Chute. st ed.] New York, Dutton, 1969. Includes bibliographical references. Buechler, Steven Michael. The transformation of the woman suffrage movement : the case of Illinois, 1850-1920 / Steven M. Buechler. – New Brunswick, N.J. : Rutgers University Press, c1986. Bibliography: p. [245]-250.

48. Frauenbewegung - Wikipedia
Anna Howard Shaw (1847-1919); Judith Butler (*1944). Schweiz.
http://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frauenbewegung
Frauenbewegung
aus Wikipedia, der freien Enzyklopädie
Die Suffragette "Mrs. Suffern" hält ihr Transparent hoch. (1914, vermutlich in New York) Die Frauenbewegung ist eine Soziale Bewegung , die sich für die Rechte der Frau einsetzt.
  • Ältere Frauenbewegung oder Frauenrechtsbewegung ( w:first wave ), kämpfte für die politischen und bürgerlichen Rechte der Frauen Neue Frauenbewegung oder Feminismus - heute, w:second wave ); steht unter dem Motto
Die Mitstreiterinnen der ersten Frauenbewegung wurden Frauenrechtlerinnen oder pejorativ (abwertend) Suffragetten genannt, in der neuen Frauenbewegung werden sie als Feministinnen oder abwertend Emanzen bezeichnet. Wichtigste angestrebte Ziele der ersten Frauenbewegung: Hier unterscheidet man zwischen sozialistischen Frauen wie Clara Zetkin , den bürgerlich-gemäßigten und den bürgerlich-radikalen Feministinnen. Vor allem der bürgerlich-radikale Flügel, strebte anfangs das Frauenwahlrecht und das Recht auf Zugang zu den Universitäten an, später auch gemeinsam mit den Sozialistinnen.

49. Women Who Cared
Anna Howard Shaw (18471919) Methodist preacher and social activistShaw felt the call to preach at the age of 14. Two years earlier
http://www.nv2.cc.va.us/home/vawilliams2/cared.html
Women Who Cared
These are very brief profiles of just a few of the many women whose caring attitudes
and concern for others have made a difference in some way. The Resources link in
"The History" section lists web sites with more detailed information on these and other caring women.

Jane Addams
Clara Barton Mary McLeod Bethune Dorethea Lynde Dix ... Anna Howard Shaw Jane Addams
Social worker and peace activist

Addams worked to abolish child labor, to establish juvenile courts, and to limit women's working hours to eight hours per day. She is probably best known as the founder of "Hull House" in Chicago in 1889, a community center whose purpose was to improve conditions for poor immigrants. The center offered English language classes, childcare, health education, and recreational opportunities. Addams won the Nobel Peace Prize in 1931. Clara Barton
Pioneering nurse and humanitarian

Although best known as the founder of the American Red Cross, Barton first made her mark during the Civil War. She solicited for supplies (food and medical) to help take care of Union soldiers. Barton didn't stop thereshe took the donated supplies to the battlegrounds. She also helped document the 22,000 men killed or missing in action so their families could be notified. She headed the American Red Cross from its founding in 1881 until 1904. top Mary McLeod Bethune
Educator and community leader

Bethune taught in several southern mission schools before settling in Florida and founding the Daytona Normal and Industrial Institute for Negro Girls in 1904. The school later (1923) merged with Cookman Institute and became Bethune-Cookman College. She founded the National Council of Negro Women in 1935 and served as special adviser on minority affairs to President Franklin Roosevelt.

50. Honoring Immigrants
Immigration. Web Link INS. Anna Howard Shaw (18471919) arrived from England,and was a physician and president of the National Woman Suffrage Association.
http://www.prairielaw.com/articles/article.asp?channelId=21&articleId=1403

51. Women's Christian Temperance Union (WCTU)
Under the leadership of Frances E. Willard (18791898) and Anna Howard Shaw (1847-1919),the organisation succeeded in bringing about temperance education in
http://www.spartacus.schoolnet.co.uk/USAwctu.htm
WCTU
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The Women's Christian Temperance Union (WCTU) was founded in Cleveland, Ohio in 1874. The main objective of the WCTU was to persuade all states to prohibit the sale of alcoholic beverages. Early campaigners for prohibition included William Lloyd Garrison Frances E. Willard Anna Howard Shaw Carry Nation and Ida Wise Smith Under the leadership of Frances E. Willard (1879-1898) and Anna Howard Shaw (1847-1919), the organisation succeeded in bringing about temperance education in schools. The WCTU also supported the prison reform, women's suffrage and the abolition of prostitution

52. Anna Howard Shaw (in VSCCAT)
Uniform title Story of a pioneer. Author Shaw, Anna Howard, 18471919.Published Cleveland, Ohio Pilgrim Press, 1994. Subject
http://scolar.vsc.edu:8004/VSCCAT/ACY-5203
Anna Howard Shaw
Title:
  • Anna Howard Shaw : the story of a pioneer / Anna Howard Shaw ; foreword by Leontine T.C. Kelly.
Uniform title:
  • Story of a pioneer
Author:
Published:
  • Cleveland, Ohio : Pilgrim Press, 1994.
Subject:
Series:
  • The William Bradford collection from the Pilgrim Press
  • William Bradford collection from the Pilgrim Press.
Material:
  • xiii, 337 p. : ill. ; 20 cm.
Note:
  • "First published in 1915 by Harper and Brothers as The story of a pioneer"T.p. verso.
LC Card no:
  • ISBN:
    • 0829810188 (alk. paper)
    System ID no:
    • ACY-5203
    Holdings:
    Vermont Technical College
    • CALL NUMBER: 324.623 Sh26s Book Available
  • Click on one the above headings to search automatically for that entry in the catalog
  • Use your web "Back" key/command for previous screen
  • Back up to VSC Library Catalog Search Options
  • 53. Free Biography E-Books
    Biography Story of a Pioneer, The. Shaw, Anna Howard, 18471919 Women Suffrage Story of Burnt Njal the great. Biography
    http://www.usmchq.com/ebookcategories/biography.htm
    Marines, USMC Families, and Marine Corps Organizations Online Free Biography e-Books Community Features: Marine Corps Chat USMC Book Club Free Marine Web Sites Directory Search USMChq Books Search USMChq Books: U.S. Marine Reading List By Series Commandant's Favorites Heritage Series Small Wars Sinews of War ... Create An Ebook FREE e-Books Over 2,500 Free e-Books! Download eBook Reader Biography Children's Classics Classics ... All Books We've partnered with the leading eBook software provider, E-Book Systems, to allow you a way to easily create, share and publish your own eBooks on your Free Websites! FlipBrowser™ incorporates E-Book Systems' patented Digital Flip technology to display regular web pages formatted in HTML and Open Electronic Book (OEB) format. FlipBrowser™ requires Windows 95/98/2000/NT 4.0 and

    54. LSU Libraries -- New Political Science Books-December 2003
    Subject 1. Blackwell, Antoinette Louisa Brown, 18251921. 2. Brown, Olympia, 1835-1926.3. Shaw, Anna Howard, 1847-1919. 4. WomenSuffrageUnited States.
    http://www.lib.lsu.edu/soc/polisci/Dec2003.html
    Home / Online Catalog A to Z Help New Political Science Books
    December 2003
    Cultures at war : moral conflicts in western democracies / T. Alexander Smith and Raymond Tatalovich.

    Publication info: Peterborough, Ont. ; Orchard Park, New York : Broadview Press, 2003.
    Subject: 1. Social valuesPolitical aspects. 2. Social policy.
    Call Number: JA79 .S57 2003
    Niklas Luhmann's theory of politics and law / by Michael King and Chris Thornhill.
    Publication info: New York : Palgrave Macmillan, 2003.
    Subject: 1. Luhmann, NiklasContributions in political science. 2. Luhmann, NiklasContributions in law.
    Call Number: JC263 .L83 K56 2003
    Publication info: New Haven : Yale University Press, 2003. Subject: 1. Schmitt, Carl, 1888- Political and social views. 2. Liberalism. Call Number: JC263 .S358 2003 Leadership in context / edited by Erwin C. Hargrove and John E. Owens. Subject: Political leadership. Call Number: JC330.3 .L444 2003 The new development politics : the age of empire building and new social movements / James Petras. Publication info: Aldershot, England ; Burlington, VT : Ashgate, 2003.

    55. Letters And Documents Collection - S | Special Collections | Bryn Mawr College L
    Gift of JoAnna Semel Rose 52, 1995 Shaw, Anna Howard Shaw, 18471919 TLS, 1917 December20, to M.Carey Thomas Criticizes inaction of Pennsylvania citizens in
    http://www.brynmawr.edu/library/speccoll/guides/letterboxs.shtml
    Bryn Mawr College Library Special Collections
    Guide to the Letters and Documents Collection
    Part II: Box and Folder List, S
    Special Collections Department, Bryn Mawr College Library
    February 2000
    Last Updated: March 25, 2004
    A
    B C D ... Z
    Sabin, Florence Rena, 1871-1953
    ANS, 1941 Feb. 18, to Emily Cross
    Sabine, Lorenzo, 1803-1877
    2 ALsS, 1854 Oct. 14, 30, to Henry Penington
    Sackville-West, V. (Victoria), 1892-1962
    TLS, 1956 Sept. 27, to David Bonnell Green Gift of David B. Green, 1956
    Saint-Gaudens, Augustus, 1848-1907
    ALS, 1903 Oct. 12, to M. Bacon (photocopies in file) Discussing proportions of a proposed Parnell monument. Includes sketch. Tipped in The Reminiscenses of August Saint-Gaudens
    Saintsbury, George, 1845-1933
    2 ALsS, 1921 Oct. 14, 17, to Samuel Chew Gift of Samuel Claggett Chew
    Salvemini, Gaetano, 1873-1957
    ALS, 1928 Dec. 8, to Marion Edwards Park From the Papers of Marion E. Park
    Sanborn, Kate, 1839-1917
    ANS, n.d., to Dr. Morgan Library Purchase, 1989
    Sand, George
    ALS, n.d., to Albert Grzymala The Wing Collection
    Santayana, George, 1863-1952

    56. "Michigan Stained Glass Census Featured Window Of The Month For June, 1998"
    Anna Howard Shaw (18471919), who grew up in Michigan near Big Rapids,was a Methodist minister, physician, and prominent Suffrage leader.
    http://www.museum.msu.edu/museum/msgc/jun98.htm
    Michigan Stained Glass Census
    Window of the Month for June, 1998
    Christ Church Cranbrook, Bloomfield Hills, MI
    Detail views of the "Women's Window," showing the two lower tiers and portraits of Woman Suffrage leaders.
    The great West Window or "Women's Window" at Christ Church Cranbrook depicts sixty women from biblical times to the 1920s, symbolizing women's contributions to church missions, social and humanitarian service, education, and the arts. The full-length figures are shown in sixteen panels arranged in four tiers, with each panel representing one area of women's contributions. Inscribed at the base of the window is a biblical quotation: "Her children rise up and call her blessed, and her works praise her in the gates" (Proverbs 31:28,31). Among the twenty American women pictured are Mary S. Francis, Julia C. Emery, Bertha Sabine and Anne C. Farthing, church missionaries; Maria Mitchell, astronomer and Vassar professor; Alice Freeman Palmer, President of Wellesley College; Mary Lyon, founder of Mount Holyoke College; Dr. Mary E. Glenton, missionary nurse to Alaska, China and North Carolina; Clara Barton, founder of the American Red Cross; Mary Cassatt, painter; Amy Lowell and Emily Dickinson, poets; Louisa May Alcott, novelist; Lucretia Coffin Mott, abolitionist and advocate of women's rights; Harriet Beecher Stowe, abolitionist writer; Dolly Madison, women's rights advocate; Susan B. Anthony, Anna Howard Shaw and Elizabeth Cady Stanton, Woman Suffrage leaders; and Mary Anderson, actress.

    57. English Literature Ó¢ÓïÎÄѧ¾­µä
    Turtle The Sonnets Anna Howard Shaw (18471919) The Story of A PioneerMary W. Shelly (1797-1851) Frankenstein Samuel Smiles (1812
    http://come.6to23.com/fayu/english/english_literature/s/s.html
    S English Literature

    58. The Christian Science Monitor | Csmonitor.com
    The Rev. Dr. Anna Howard Shaw (18471919) Women s suffrage leader; first womanordained by the Protestant Methodist Church. Ida Tarbell (1857-1944).
    http://search.csmonitor.com/durable/2000/10/03/p14s1.htm
    WORLD USA COMMENTARY LEARNING ... Text Edition Search:
    Archive Packages

    Collections of articles on specific topics.
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    Via eavesdropping, terror suspects nabbed

    FEATURES, LEARNING from the October 03, 2000 edition Editor's note The Christian Science Monitor archive includes stories dating back to 1980. Some early articles lack sufficient formatting, and will appear as one long column without paragraph breaks. We apologize for the aesthetics and hope that the information will still be of value to you. Great women get thxeir due - The National Women's Hall of Fame, in Seneca Falls, N.Y., will induct 19 American women into the Hall on Saturday. Four of these women were active in education and research: Faye Glenn Abdellah (1919- ) Nurse researcher; her work has altered modern nursing theory and practice. Sylvia Earle (1935- ) Marine scientist, undersea explorer, and founder of Deep Ocean Engineering. Frances Kathleen Oldham Kelsey (1914- ) Medical researcher.

    59. Immigrants Hall Of Fame
    Anna Howard Shaw (18471919) Reformer, physician, and preacher. Aspresident of the National Woman Suffrage Association (1904-1915
    http://members.tripod.com/slalli/s.htm
    var cm_role = "live" var cm_host = "tripod.lycos.com" var cm_taxid = "/memberembedded" Check out the NEW Hotbot Tell me when this page is updated
    Immigrants Hall of Fame Home Name Field Country ... Email Hallway S Sidebar Eero Saarinen
    Architect who gained fame for his imaginative, varied designs. Born in Finland. His works ranged from rectangular steel and glass (General Motors Technical Center near Detroit) to flowing masses of reinforced concrete (TWA Terminal at Kennedy Airport in New York City). He and his father, Eliel, himself a distinguished architect, settled in the U.S. in 1923. Saarinen gained recognition in 1948 when his design of the Gateway Arch for St. Louis won first prize in a national competition. Among his other works are the MIT Auditorium, Dulles International Airport, and the CBS Building in New York City. Albert B. Sabin
    Physician and medical researcher who developed the first oral live-virus polio vaccine. He spent nearly 25 years studying poliomyelitis. Born in Bialystok, Russia (now Poland). Sabin came to the U.S. in 1921. Became a citizen in 1930. He did research at the Rockefeller Institute of Medical Research in New York City, among other places. Sabin also discovered B virus and developed vaccines against the viruses that cause dengue fever and Japanese encephalitis. Augustus Saint-Gaudens
    Considered the greatest American sculptor of the 19th century. Saint-Gaudens combined idealism with a realistic portrayal of his subjects. One of his most famous works is his statue of Abraham Lincoln in Lincoln Park, Chicago. Born in Dublin, Ireland, and brought to the U.S. as an infant. He began working at 13 when he took a job for a cameo cutter. Among his major public monuments are "Admiral Farragut" in Madison Square Garden, New York City; and the "Puritan" in Springfield, Massachusetts.

    60. Milholland, Inez, 1886-1916. Papers, 1906-1916: A Finding Aid
    Eastman, Max, 18831969; Shaw, Anna Howard, 1847-1919; Sinclair, UptonBeall, 1878-1968; Capital punishment; Citizenship; European War
    http://oasis.harvard.edu/html/sch00193.html
    MC 308/M-80
    Milholland, Inez, 1886-1916. Papers, 1906-1916: A Finding Aid
    Arthur and Elizabeth Schlesinger Library on the History of Women in America
    Radcliffe College
    November 1980
    REQUEST AS:
    Call No.: MC 308/M-80
    Note: CLOSED. USE MICROFILM M-80.
    Repository: Schlesinger Library, Radcliffe Institute
    Creator: INEZ MILHOLLAND, 1886-1916
    Title: Papers, 1906-1916
    Quantity: 2 1/2 file boxes, 1 oversize folder, 3 reels microfilm (M-80)
    Abstract: Correspondence, speeches, etc., of Inez Milholland, suffragist, reformer, and lawyer.
    Administrative Information
    Processing Information: Processed: November 1980
    By: Sharon M. Vardamis
    Acquisition Information: Accession number: 79-M92 The papers of Inez Milholland were purchased by the Schlesinger Library from Norma Millay in April 1979. Access. Unrestricted. Originals are closed; use microfilm M-80.
    BIOGRAPHY
    Inez Milholland was a lawyer specializing in criminal and divorce practice; she zealously advocated a variety of reform causes, including women's suffrage, abolition of the death penalty, and the rights of working people. Born in Brooklyn, New York, she graduated from Vassar College in 1909, and received an LL.B. degree from New York University in 1912. In July 1913, she married Eugen Jan Boissevain, a New York importer, of Dutch citizenship. The resulting change in her citizenship status threatened to exclude IM from law practice, and she quickly became involved in attempts to repeal the offending legislation. Proclaiming herself a Socialist, IM joined the Women's Trade Union League, the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, and the Fabian Society of England. In 1915, as a war correspondent in Italy, she wrote a series of pacifist articles and as a result was expelled by the Italian government late that summer.

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