Results 261 to 270 of about 191,434 (290)
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Siberia, Siberia

Culture & Agriculture, 1999
Siberia, Siberia. Valentin Rasputin. Evanston, IL: Northwestern University Press, 1996.
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Siberia

Experiment, 2018
Abstract A growing dissatisfaction with second-rate status, i.e. with the ideological stigma of being Jewish, brought many personal changes. For my husband and me, for example, the decision to move to Siberia, where, thanks to geographical remoteness, the rules were less stringent, granted us a respite and a chance to overcome the boundaries of ...
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Neurosurgery in Siberia

World Neurosurgery, 2012
There is archaeological evidence that the first neurosurgical procedure in what is now known as Siberia was performed in 8005 ± 100 B.C. According to signs of bone growth, perhaps more than half of the individuals who received the ancient trepanations survived.
Alexey L, Krivoshapkin   +1 more
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Siberia's shrouded legacy

The Lancet Oncology, 2004
Victoria Dvornichenko is director of Irkutsk Regional Oncology Centre and an oncologist for the Irkutsk region in eastern Siberia, Russian Federation. She has worked as an oncologist for 32 years and was a senior consultant during the break-up of the Soviet Union and the transition from central planning to a market economy.
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Siberia.

Pacific Affairs, 1943
A. J. Grajdanzev, Emil Lengyel
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Siberia, Siberia

Choice Reviews Online, 1997
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FROM "SIBERIA" TO SIBERIA

The Yale Review, 2007
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Siberia

The Missouri Review, 2012
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Siberia

The Journal of Asian Studies, 1960
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