Geometry.Net - the online learning center
Home  - Basic_P - Poland Government
e99.com Bookstore
  
Images 
Newsgroups
Page 6     101-120 of 132    Back | 1  | 2  | 3  | 4  | 5  | 6  | 7  | Next 20
A  B  C  D  E  F  G  H  I  J  K  L  M  N  O  P  Q  R  S  T  U  V  W  X  Y  Z  

         Poland Government:     more books (100)
  1. Electronic Government: 5th International Conference, EGOV 2006, Krakow, Poland, September 4-8, 2006, Proceedings (Lecture Notes in Computer Science)
  2. The Private Poland by Janine Wedel, 1986-06
  3. United States security interests in Eastern Europe: The case of Poland (National security affairs monograph) by Daniel M Duffield, 1977
  4. Poland Under Jaruzelski: A Comprehensive Sourcebook on Poland During and After Martial Law
  5. The World of Provincial Bureaucracy in Late 19th andEarly 20th Century Russian Poland (Studies in Russian History, V. 10) by Katya Vladimirov, 2004-11
  6. Poland: Politics, Economics and Society (Marxist Regimes Series) by George Kolankiewicz, 1988-09
  7. For Our Freedom and Yours: The Jewish Labour Bund in Poland 1939-1949 (Parkes-Wiener Series on Jewish Studies) by Daniel Blatman, 2003-05
  8. The truth about Poland: Toward better understanding of recent developments by Abraham Penzik, 1945
  9. Professionals, Power and Solidarity in Poland: A Critical Sociology of Soviet-Type Society (Cambridge Russian, Soviet and Post-Soviet Studies) by Michael D. Kennedy, 1991-02-22
  10. Ideals Face Reality: Jewish Law and Life in Poland, 1550-1655 (Monographs of the Hebrew Union College) by Edward Fram, 1998-02
  11. The struggle for Poland by H. Peter Stern, 1953
  12. National Survival in Dependent Societies: Social Change in Canada and Poland (Carleton Library)
  13. Transborder Data Flows and Poland: Polish Case Study : A Technical Paper (Transnational Corporations and Transborder Data Flows, Vol 5) by Foreign Trade Data Centre, 1985-05
  14. Poland's rights to justice by Andrzej J Krzesiński, 1946

101. GeographyIQ - World Atlas - Europe - Poland - Government And Political Condition
poland government and Political Conditions. The current government structureconsists of a council of ministers led by a Prime Minister,
http://www.geographyiq.com/countries/pl/Poland_government_summary.htm
Home World Map Rankings
Countries
from A to Z
A
B C D ... Z
Source: www.exchange-rates.org
World
Europe Poland (Notes) Poland - Government and Political Conditions (Notes)
GOVERNMENT AND POLITICAL CONDITIONS
The current government structure consists of a council of ministers led by a Prime Minister, typically chosen from a majority coalition in the bicameral legislature's lower house. The president elected every 5 years is head of state. The judicial branch plays a minor role in decision-making.
Former SLD leader Aleksander Kwasniewski was re-elected President in October 2000. Kwasniewski received in the first round 53.9% of the popular vote. In second place was Andrzej Olechowski 17.3%. President Kwasniewski has supported Polish membership in NATO and the EU and backed the SLD's legislative agenda on issues such as redrafting the constitution and abortion liberalization.
The parliament, consisting of 460 members of the Sejm and 100 members of the Senate, was elected in September 2001 in free and fair elections in which 15 political parties participated. The new Constitution and the reformed administrative division (as of 1999) required a revision of the election ordinance (passed in April 2001). The most important changes were liquidation of a national list (all deputies were elected by voters in constituencies) and introduction of a new method of calculating seats (the modified St. Lague method replaced the d'Hondt method, thus eliminating the premium for the top parties). The law stipulated that with the exception of guaranteed seats for small ethnic parties, only parties receiving at least 5% of the total vote could enter parliament.

102. The Industrial Development Of Poland: Chpt. 1
In addition to craftsmen, the government of Russian poland called in prominent Russian poland s government did not content itself with the granting of
http://www.marxists.org/archive/luxemburg/1898/industrial-poland/ch01.htm
Rosa Luxemburg
The Industrial Development of Poland
Part I:
The History and Present State of Polish Industry
1.1 The Manufacturing Period, 1820-1850
Political events moved Poland into a completely new situation at the beginning of the nineteenth century. The partition brought it out of the peculiar natural-economic, feudal-anarchic conditions of the republic of the nobles which we find in the Poland of the eighteenth century, and placed it under the rule of enlightened absolutism and under the centralized bureaucratic administration of Prussia. Austria, and Russia. The Russian section of Poland, which interests us here, admittedly maintained its own corporative constitution while still the Duchy of Warsaw and later after the Vienna Congress. But it was as different from the old Poland as heaven from earth, and the whole administrative, financial, military, legal government apparatus was tailored to a modern centralized state. The latter found itself in the harshest contradiction with the economic relations on which it had been grafted. The result was that landed property soon fell into the clutches of usury. While old Poland possessed no urban capitalist class as a result of the decay of urban production and trade, such a class surfaced right after the partition of Poland. In part it consisted of immigrating officials and usurers, in part of Polish parvenus who owed their material existence to the country's great political and economic crisis. This new layer of the population now supplied the needy nobility with capital. To a large extent, however, the beginning of the nobility's indebtedness dated from the ten years of Prussian rule (1796-1806), during which an organized agricultural credit was widely offered to the Polish nobility for the first time.

103. Poland - Government & Governmental Organisations
government governmental Organisations. government. governmental Organisations.President of poland Polish government
http://www.ceehr.euv-frankfurt-o.de/hr/states/poland/01.htm
Government Governmental Organisations President of Poland Polish Government:

104. Polish Government Sites
W. Cimoszewicz, Foreign Minister of the Republic of poland government Ministries Agencies. Chancellery of the President of RP
http://polcon.tripod.com/dirgov.html
setAdGroup('67.18.104.18'); var cm_role = "live" var cm_host = "tripod.lycos.com" var cm_taxid = "/memberembedded" Search: Lycos Tripod Free Games Share This Page Report Abuse Edit your Site ... Next
Polish Government Sites
President Aleksander Kwasniewski THE PRESIDENT OF THE REPUBLIC OF POLAND
Home Page of President Alexander Kwasniewski
WHY WE MUST REMEMBER THE HOLOCAUST

PRESIDENT ALEXANDER KWASNIEWSKI
(Stockholm International Forum on the Holocaust, January 2000)
L. Miller, Prime Minister of the Republic of Poland
Information Service of the Chancellery of the Prime Minister
W. Cimoszewicz, Foreign Minister of the Republic of Poland The Foreign Ministry of the Republic of Poland: wide range of information in English and Polish. The Polish Embassy in London: for all official information and sources

105. BBC NEWS | Europe | Poland Confirms Iraq Withdrawal
poland s leftleaning government is trailing in the opinion polls, with parliamentaryelections due by October, and the Iraq mission is unpopular,
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/europe/4436165.stm
News
Sport

Weather

World Service
... Newswatch LANGUAGES Last Updated: Tuesday, 12 April, 2005, 10:54 GMT 11:54 UK E-mail this to a friend Printable version Poland confirms Iraq withdrawal Poland commands a multinational force of about 4,700 Poland has said it will pull its troops out of Iraq when the UN mandate for the stabilisation mission expires at the end of this year.
Poland has 1,700 soldiers in Iraq, and leads a multinational security force south of Baghdad. Polish Defence Minister Jerzy Szmajdzinski said the troops' mission would end "at the time of the expiry of the Security Council's mandate". Several other US allies have also set dates for their troops to pull out. Europeans pull out Italy, with just over 3,000 troops in Iraq, has said it wants to pull its contingent out as soon as possible. The Netherlands (about 800 troops) and Ukraine (1,600 troops) have begun phased withdrawals of their contingents. The last Ukrainian troops are due to leave by mid-October. Bulgaria (about 500 troops) also wants to pull its troops out this year.

106. JetPhotos.Net Photo » 101 (CN: 90A-837) Poland - Government Tupolev Tu-154M By
Photograph of 101 (CN 90A837) poland - government Tupolev Tu-154M,Screnner sChoice,Warsaw-Okecie - EPWA,Piotr Obleg.High quality aviation photos of at
http://www.jetphotos.net/viewphoto.php?id=511545

107. JetPhotos.Net Aviation Photos: Poland - Government
High quality photos of poland government at the internet aviation leader,JetPhotos.Net!
http://www.jetphotos.net/showphotos.php?airline=Poland - Government

108. Poland (08/05)
The government s inability to forestall poland s economic decline led to waves For the first time in more than 40 years, poland had a government led by
http://www.state.gov/r/pa/ei/bgn/2875.htm
Bureau of Public Affairs Electronic Information and Publications Office Background Notes
Bureau of European and Eurasian Affairs
August 2005
Background Note: Poland

PROFILE OFFICIAL NAME:
Republic of Poland
Geography
Area: 312,683 sq. km. (120,725 sq. mi.); about the size of New Mexico.
Cities (2004): Capital Warsaw (pop. 1,690,821). Other cities Lodz (776,297), Krakow (757,957), Wroclaw (636,854), Poznan (573,003), Gdansk (460,524).
Terrain: Flat plain, except mountains along southern border.
Climate: Temperate continental. People
Nationality: Noun Pole(s). Adjective Polish. Population (December 2004): 38.6 million. Annual growth rate: Unchanging. Ethnic groups: Polish 98%, German, Ukrainian, Belorussian, Lithuanian. Religions: Roman Catholic 90%, Eastern Orthodox, Uniate, Protestant, Judaism. Language: Polish. Education: Literacy Health (2004): Infant mortality rate Life expectancy males 70 yrs., females 79 yrs. Work force: 17.0 million. Industry and construction agriculture trade and business government and other Government Type: Republic.

109. OneWorld.ca / In Depth / Europe / Eastern Europe / Poland - Full Coverage: Polan
poland s government is set to give the goahead for the construction of a poland s government is being urged by conservationists to suspend plans to
http://www.oneworld.ca/article/country/616/
OneWorld.ca In Depth Europe Eastern Europe ... Poland Search for OneWorld.ca Unseulmonde.ca rabble.ca International Africa South Asia SouthEast Europe United Kingdom United States América Latina en Catalunya España maailma.net Nederland Österreich Unimondo.org AIDSChannel Digital Opportunity Itrainonline.org Kids Channel LearningChannel OneWorld Radio OneWorld TV NEWS IN DEPTH PARTNERS GET INVOLVED ... EDITIONS Eastern Europe Belarus Czech Republic Hungary Poland ... Francais
Full Coverage: Poland
To dig deeper into a topic, fill out the search criteria below or select from the menu on the left. Keyword Topic Select Development Capacity Building Children Cities Agriculture Aid Education Emergency Relief Energy Fisheries Food Intermediate Technology International Cooperation Labour MDGs Land Migration Population Poverty Refugees Social Exclusion Tourism Transport Volunteering Water/Sanitation Youth Economy Consumption Corporations Credit and Investment Debt Finance Microcredit Business Trade Environment Climate Change Conservation Environmental Activism Forests Genetics Animals Nuclear Issues Atmosphere Oceans Pollution Biodiverisity Renewable Energy Rivers Soils Health Disease/treatment AIDS Infant Mortality Malaria Narcotics Nutrition/Malnutrition Human Rights Civil Rights Disability Gender Indigenous Rights Race Politics Religion Sexuality Social Exclusion Communication Culture Freedom of Expression ICT Internet Knowledge Media Science Politics Activism Civil Society

110. Polish Society & Government
Polish Society and government. polandLithuania 1617 also made it extraordinarilydifficult for that government to protect poland from foreign enemies.
http://history.wisc.edu/sommerville/351/351-103.htm
Polish Society and Government.
Poland-Lithuania 1617
Society
Poland-Lithuania was the largest country in Europe at the beginning of the seventeenth century. (Much of Russia was in Asia). Yet its population was about half that of France. Polish landowners wanted to sell grain to Western Europe (where prices were much higher) and, because labor was so scarce, the landlords enserfed peasants in order to force them to work the land. The process has been described as "Export-led Serfdom". Serfdom was not wholly bad for Polish peasants - it did guarantee secure possession of land that might otherwise have had to be sold when the harvest failed.
[Wheat was the luxury grain exported especially to the wealthy Dutch and French - the Polish peasant himself ate bread made from rye and drank beer brewed from barley]. The ten per cent of the population with noble status ( szlachta ) were all free and theoretically equal in political status. In fact, there were great variations in wealth from vastly rich noblemen to minor gentry who had to work their own estates. The nobles jealously guarded their status, and from 1601 the

111. Poland : Country Studies - Federal Research Division, Library Of Congress
polandLithuania as a European Power The government of poland-Lithuania poland-Lithuania in the Reformation Era The Polish Renaissance
http://lcweb2.loc.gov/frd/cs/pltoc.html
The Library of Congress Especially for Researchers Research Centers Home ... Country Studies Poland Find in Federal Research Division Pages Researchers Web Pages All Library of Congress Pages
A Country Study: Poland
Library of Congress Call Number
  • Poland
  • Foreword
  • Acknowledgements
  • Preface ... Search Database Choose a Country Study Afghanistan Albania Algeria Angola Armenia Austria Azerbaijan Bahrain Bangladesh Belarus Belize Bhutan Bolivia Brazil Bulgaria Cambodia Chad Chile China Colombia Caribbean Islands Comoros Cyprus Czechoslovakia (Former) Dominican Republic Ecuador Egypt El Salvador Estonia Ethiopia Finland Georgia Germany Germany (East) Ghana Guyana Haiti Honduras Hungary India Indonesia Iran Iraq Israel Ivory Coast (Cote d'Ivoire Japan Jordan Kazakhstan Kuwait Kyrgyzstan Latvia Laos Lebanon Libya Lithuania Macau Madagascar Maldives Mauritania Mauritius Mexico Moldova Mongolia Nepal Nicaragua Nigeria North Korea Oman Pakistan Panama Paraguay Peru Philippines Poland Portugal Qatar Romania Russia Saudi Arabia Seychelles Singapore Somalia South Africa South Korea Soviet Union (Former) Spain Sri Lanka Sudan Syria Tajikistan Thailand Turkmenistan Turkey Uganda United Arab Emirates Uruguay Uzbekistan Venezuela Vietnam Yugoslavia (Former)

112. Poland - Atlapedia Online
OFFICIAL NAME Republic of poland CAPITAL Warsaw SYSTEM OF government UnitaryMultiparty Republic AREA 312612 Sq Km (120700 Sq Mi)
http://www.atlapedia.com/online/countries/poland.htm
OFFICIAL NAME: Republic of Poland
CAPITAL: Warsaw
SYSTEM OF GOVERNMENT: Unitary Multiparty Republic
AREA: 312,612 Sq Km (120,700 Sq Mi)
ESTIMATED 2000 POPULATION: Poland is located in Central Europe. It is bound by the Baltic Sea to the north, Germany to the west, Lithuania to the northeast, Belarus and the Ukraine to the east as well as the Czech Republic and Slovakia to the south. The country is mostly part of the Great European Plain while north of the Polish Plateau there are lowlands of clay and sand as well as the Baltic Sea coast which is flat and contains numerous lagoons. To the south, the plateau rises to the Carpathian and Sudetes Mountains. Around 30% of the land area is covered by Pine, Beech and Birch forests while patches of tundra are found along the Baltic Sea coast and steppe covers the Polish Plateau. The principal rivers are the Wisla or Vistula and Oder or Odra. Major Cities (pop. est.); Warsaw 1,642,700, Lodz 833,700, Krakow 745,100 (1994). Land Use; forested 28%, pastures 13%, agricultural-cultivated 47%, other 12% (1993). CLIMATE: Poland has a continental climate with severe winters and mild summers. Rainfall mostly occurs during the summer months and the average annual precipitation varies from 500 mm (20 inches) to 1,220 mm (48 inches) depending on the region. Average temperature ranges in Warsaw are from -5 to degrees Celsius (23 to 32 degrees Fahrenheit) in January to 15 to 24 degrees Celsius (59 to 75 degrees Fahrenheit) in July.

113. Rousseau: Government Of Poland
COUNT WIELHORSKI S1 description of the government of poland, and the comments That of reforming the government of poland that is to say, of giving the
http://www.constitution.org/jjr/poland.htm
CONSIDERATIONS ON THE GOVERNMENT OF POLAND AND ON ITS PROPOSED REFORMATION Jean-Jacques Rousseau Completed but not published April 1772 CHAPTER I THE NATURE OF THE PROBLEM C OUNT WIELHORSKI'S You love liberty; you are worthy of it; you have defended it against a powerful and crafty aggressor who, under the pretence of offering you the bonds of friendship, was loading you down with the chains of servitude. Now, wearied by the troubles of your fatherland, you are sighing for tranquillity. That can, I think, be very easily won; but to preserve it along with liberty, that is what I find difficult It is in the bosom of the very anarchy you hate that were formed those patriotic souls who have saved you from the yoke of slavery. They were falling into lethargic sleep; the tempest has reawakened them. Having broken the chains that were being prepared for them, they feel the heaviness of fatigue. They would like to combine the peace of despotism with the sweets of liberty. I fear that they may be seeking contradictory things. Repose and liberty seem to me to be incompatible; it is necessary to choose between them. I do not say that things must be left in their present state; but I do say that they must be touched only with extreme circumspection. For the time being you are struck rather by their defects than by their advantages. The day will come, I fear, when you will have a better appreciation of those advantages; and that, unfortunately, will be when they are already lost.

114. June 3, 1999 NEWS & VIEWS: (jun3nv3.htm)
Meanwhile, in Warsaw poland s government on Tuesday announced that liquor saleswill banned in each of 11 provinces that Pope John Paul II will visit this
http://www.dailycatholic.org/issue/archives/1999Jun/107jun3,vol.10,no.107txt/jun
DAILY CATHOLIC THURSDAY June 3, 1999 vol. 10, no. 107
from a CATHOLIC perspective
To print out entire text of Today's issue,
go to SECTION ONE and SECTION TWO
POPE SPEAKS ON CHRISTIAN APPROACH TO DEATH, PREPARES FOR START OF POLISH PILGRIMAGE THIS WEEKEND
    VATICAN (CWNews.com) In his regular weekly public audience on Wednesday, June 2 a week after advising believers not to be preoccupied with thoughts about the end of the world Pope John Paul II turned his attention to the issue of death. It is difficult to speak about death in modern society, the Holy Father observed; society rejects such discussion, because "it casts a dark shadow, which is incompatible with a life of plenty." Nevertheless, he continued, in the context of Christian faith the prospect of death is transformed by hope in the Resurrection. At the close of his audience, the Pope told his audience of 13,000 people that "sad news is still coming to us from Colombia." Speaking in Spanish, he condemned the guerrilla attack on a parish in Cali, which resulted in the taking of over 200 hostages of whom about 90 remained captive as he spoke. He called for a peaceful end to the conflict in Colombia, and asked his audience to join him in prayer for that country. Before returning to his apartment in the Apostolic Palace, the Pope stopped in the Vatican gardens to bestow a blessing at the opening of an underground parking garage, built to relieve the shortage of parking spaces for Vatican workers.

115. Walesa, Lech
When new protests against poland s communist government erupted in 1976, Walesaemerged as an antigovernment union activist and lost his job as a result.
http://www.britannica.com/nobel/micro/629_24.html
Walesa, Lech
Lech Walesa speaking to striking shipyard workers in Gdansk, Poland, 1988 [Video] (b. Sept. 29, 1943, Popowo, near Wloclawek, Pol.), labour activist who helped form and led (1980-90) communist Poland's first independent trade union, Solidarity . The charismatic leader of millions of Polish workers, he went on to become the president of Poland (1990-95) and received the Nobel Prize for Peace in 1983. Mieczyslaw Jagielski, Poland's first deputy premier, signed an agreement conceding to the workers the right to organize freely and independently. As the leader of the now-underground Solidarity movement, Walesa was subjected to constant harassment until collapsing economic conditions and a new wave of labour unrest in 1988 forced Poland's government to negotiate with him and other Solidarity leaders. These negotiations led to an agreement that restored Solidarity to legal status and sanctioned free elections for a limited number of seats in the newly restored upper house of the Sejm (Parliament). Solidarity won an overwhelming majority of those seats in June 1989, and after Walesa refused to form a coalition government with the communists, the Parliament was forced to accept a Solidarity-led government, though Walesa himself refused to serve as premier. Walesa helped his Solidarity colleague Tadeusz Mazowiecki become premier of this government in 1989, but he ran against Mazowiecki for president in 1990 and won Poland's first direct presidential election by a landslide. As president, Walesa helped guide Poland through its first free parliamentary elections (1991) and watched as successive ministries converted Poland's state-run economy into a free-market system. Walesa had displayed remarkable political skills as the leader of Solidarity, but his plain speech, his confrontational style, and his refusal to approve a relaxation of Poland's strict new prohibitions on abortion eroded his popularity late in his term as president. In 1995 he sought reelection but was narrowly defeated by the former communist Aleksander Kwasniewski, head of the Democratic Left Alliance.

116. Government Of Poland: Useful Links
Official Web Sites of the Polish government. Publications Documents Information by Topic Home poland government of poland Useful links
http://www.oecd.org/document/19/0,2340,en_33873108_33873739_2347731_1_1_1_1,00.h
Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development Help/FAQ MyOECD Fran§ais Building Partnerships for Progress
Search
This sub-site Whole site More Search options
Back to Country List OECD Home Page Topic List Department List
Online Services Online Bookshop Online Library E-mail Alerts MyOECD
Opportunities Job Vacancies Human Resources Calls for Tender
Poland
... Information by Topic Government of Poland: Useful links
Government of Poland: Useful links Government Sites: Chancellery of the Prime Minister (www.kprm.gov.pl)
Government information center with news, documentation and press reviews, as well as an overview of Poland and its involvement in the EU.
(in Polish and English) Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development (www.minrol.gov.pl/glowna-eng.html)
This site contains profiles of the Ministry's top officials, descriptions of the departments and offices, market services, reports and publications.
(in Polish and English) Ministry of Economy (www.mg.gov.pl/) This site describes the management of the Polish Ministry of Economy, the statutory tasks of the Minister, economic programmes and studies and the current Polish customs duty tariff. (in Polish and English) Ministry of Environment (www.mos.gov.pl/index_main.shtml/)

117. Poland To Pull Troops From Iraq At End Of Year
WARSAW poland s government decided on Tuesday to withdraw its troops from Iraqat the end of 2005, making official an earlier proposal, Defense Minister
http://www.commondreams.org/headlines05/0412-05.htm
Home Newswire About Us Donate ... Archives Headlines
Printer Friendly Version
E-Mail This Article Published on Tuesday, April 12, 2005 by Reuters Poland to Pull Troops from Iraq at End of Year WARSAW Poland's government decided on Tuesday to withdraw its troops from Iraq at the end of 2005, making official an earlier proposal, Defense Minister Jerzy Szmajdzinski said. "At the time of the expiry of the Security Council's mandate meaning at the end of 2005 the operations of the Polish stabilization mission should be finished," Szmajdzinski told a news conference after a cabinet meeting. Poland, a close ally of Washington in Europe and one of the few supporters of its war to topple Saddam Hussein in 2003, has about 1,700 soldiers in south-central Iraq, where it runs a multi-national stabilization force. Szmajdzinski said Prime Minister Marek Belka's government, which opinion polls show losing power in elections due by October, would not commit Polish troops to any other missions. "Belka's government will surely not make any new military commitments. We are carrying out an exit strategy from Iraq." Despite popular opposition at home to Poland's military engagement in Iraq, where 17 Polish soldiers have been killed, all mainstream parties have remained committed to finishing the stabilization mission in the Gulf state.

118. Stamp Issues By The Polish Government In Exile
poland, Scouts in Exile Stamps. One of the best single stamp issues by thePolish government in Exile was an adhesive of one zloty denomination plus a
http://www.sossi.org/exile/poland.htm
//Top Navigational Bar III v3.4.1 (By BrotherCake @ cake@brothercake.net) //Permission granted/modified by Dynamicdrive.com to include script in archive //For this and 100's more DHTML scripts, visit http://www.dynamicdrive.com Scouts on Stamps
Society International
Serving Scout Stamp Collectors on the Internet since 1997
Site Map
II Join II Events II FAQ II II Sales Service
Search: Or And
Insensitive Sensitive
Stamp Issues by the Polish Government in Exile Edward Nowak, Sr.
In order that adhesives issued by Polish Emigree Government would retain its full monetary values and philatelic recognition, special postal agencies were created on Polish battleships and on the medias in Merchant Marine sailing the seas under the banner of Poland, thereby giving this philatelic venture a status of postal service operating on Polish soil.
In this manner 38 postal agencies were established; the centrum of this postal network being the "Postal Department" under the authority of the "Minsitry of Defense" of the Polish Emigree Government.
In compliance with the mandates of the World Postal Convention, the regular and registered correspondence was accepted exclusively on ships of the Merchant Marine at sea, or the regular Polish Naval Forces. The mail franked with the stamps of the Polish Government in Exile was accepted only for delivery in Great Britain and friendly or neutral nations. This mail-prepaid with Polish stamps-was delivered through the regular postal channels.

119. TRAVEL.com ® RegionalEuropePolandGovernment
TRAVEL.com local travel guides, low fares for airline tickets, hotels reservations,car rentals, travel deals, cruises and vacation packages, weather.
http://www.travel.com/Regional/Europe/Poland/Government/

120. Metal Producing & Processing : London-based LNM Group Agreed With Poland's Gover
Londonbased LNM Group agreed with poland s government on a reported +$1-billionpurchase of the Polskie Huty Staly organization.
http://static.highbeam.com/m/metalproducingampprocessing/september012003/londonb

A  B  C  D  E  F  G  H  I  J  K  L  M  N  O  P  Q  R  S  T  U  V  W  X  Y  Z  

Page 6     101-120 of 132    Back | 1  | 2  | 3  | 4  | 5  | 6  | 7  | Next 20

free hit counter