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| For other uses, see Archive (disambiguation).For the Wikipedia coordination point on archived pages, see Wikipedia:Historical archive.An archive refers to a collection of historical records, and also refers to the location in which these records are kept.Archives are made up of records (AKA primary source documents) which have been accumulated over the course of an individual or organization's lifetime.The archives of an organization (such as a corporation or government), on the other hand, tend to contain different types of records, such as administrative files, business records, memos, official correspondence, meeting minutes, and so on.This means that archives (the places) are quite distinct from libraries with regard to their functions and organization, although archival collections can often be found within library buildings.The study and practice of organizing, preserving, and providing access to information and materials in archives is called archival science.Archivists tend to prefer the term 'archives' (with an S) as the correct terminology to serve as both the singular and plural, since 'archive,' as a noun or a verb, has meanings related to computer science.Archive Users and Institutions
1.Business (For Profit) Archives
1.Archive Users and Institutions
Historians, genealogists, lawyers, demographers, and others conduct research at archives.The research process at each archive is unique, and depends upon the institution in which the archive is housed.While there are many different kinds of archives, the most recent census of archivists in the United States identified five major types: academic, for profit (business), government, non profit, and other.Academic Archives
Archives existing in colleges, universities, or other educational facilities are usually grouped as academic archives.Academic archives typically exist within a library, and duties may be carried out by an archivist or a librarian.Occasionally, history professors may run a smaller academic archive.Academic archives exist to celebrate and preserve the history of their school and academic community.It is always a good idea to contact an academic archive before visiting, as the majority of these institutions are available by appointment only.Users of academic archives are often graduate students and those wishing to view rare or historical documents for research purposes.Many academic archives work closely with alumni relations to help raise funds for their library or school.Because of their library setting, a degree certified by the American Library Association is preferred for employment in an academic archive.These corporate archives maintain historic documents and items related to the history of their companies.Business archives serve the purpose of helping their corporations maintain control over their brand by retaining memories of the company's past.Especially in business archives, records management is separate from the historic aspect of archives.Workers in these types of archives may have any combination of training and degrees, from either a history or library background.These archives are typically not open to the public and only used by workers of the owner company, although some will allow approved visitors by appointment.Business archives are concerned with maintaining the integrity of their parent company, and therefore selective of how their materials may be used.Government Archives
The category of government archives includes those institutions run on a local and state level as well as those run by the national (federal) government.Anyone may use a government archive, and frequent users include reporters, genealogists, writers, historians, students, and anyone wanting more information on the history of their home or region.While it is a good idea to make an appointment before visiting government archives, at many government archives no appointment is required, as they are open to the public.In the United States, NARA archives exist not only in the District of Columbia, but regionally as well.State or Province archives typically require at least a bachelor's degree in history for employment, although some ask for certification by test (government or association) as well.Public Record Office, is the government archive for England and Wales.Belfast is the government archive for Northern Ireland.England, Wales and Scotland and holds many important collections, including local government, landed estates, church and business records.In France, the Directorate of the Archives of France (Direction des Archives de France) in the Ministry of Culture manages the National Archives (Archives nationales) which possess 364 km.Put together, the total volume of archives under the supervision of the Directorate of the Archives of France is the largest in the world, a testimony to the very ancient nature of the French state which has been in existence for more than eleven centuries already.Users of this type of archive may vary as much as the institutions that hold them.Special (other) Archives
Some archives defy categorization.There are tribal archives within the Native American nations in North America, and there are archives that exist within the papers of private individuals.Many museums keep archives in order to prove the provenance of their pieces.Any institution or persons wishing to keep their significant papers in an organized fashion that employs the most basic principles of archival science may have an archive.In the 2004 census of archivists taken in the United States, 2.Look up archive in
Wiktionary, the free dictionary.Archon, in which important official state documents were filed and interpreted under the authority of the Archon.This article does not cite any references or sources.June 2007)
Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources.Unverifiable material may be challenged and removed.The word "archives" can refer to any organised body of records fixed on media.Archives were well developed by the ancient Chinese, the ancient Greeks, and ancient Romans.Modern archival thinking has many roots in the French Revolution.The French National Archives, who possess perhaps the largest archival collection in the world, with records going as far back as A.French Revolution from various government, religious, and private archives seized by the revolutionaries.University of South Dakota Library.Walch, Victoria Irons (2006)."Archival Census and Education Needs Survey in the United States: Part 1: Introduction".The Management of College and University Archives..The Scarecrow Press, Inc..Welcome to University Archives and Records Management.Kennesaw State University Archives.Guidelines for College and University Archives.Society of American Archivists.Directory of Corporate Archives.Libraries and Archives Canada.United States National Archives and Records Administration.Cyndi's List of Genealogy Sites on the Internet.French) Les archives en France.Creigh, by Dorothy Weyer (1995).Whitehill, Walter Muir (1962)."Introduction", Independent Historical Societies: An Enquiry into Their Research and Publication Functions and Their Financial Future.Boston, Massachusetts: The Boston Athenaeum, 311.Walch, Victoria Irons (2006)."A*Census: A Closer Look".Motorola History at your fingertips!All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License.See Copyrights for details.Articles are free back to 1987.Photos, charts or graphics are not included.PDF) If you are looking for a New York Times article published from Sept.Across America, Deadly Echoes of Foreign Battles
The Moral Instinct
A Combative Thompson Sways Voters
So We Thought.No gimmicks: eat less and exercise more
What is your BMI?All the news that's fit to personalize.Ray Stars in the Orion Nebula
2005 May 18: Three Kilometers Above Titan
2005 May 17: A Panorama of Mars from Larry's Lookout
2005 May 16: Deep Impact Spacecraft Hurtles Toward Comet
2005 May 15: On the Origin of Gold
2005 May 14: NGC 3370: A Sharper View
2005 May 13: When the Moon Was Young
2005 May 12: Stars, Galaxies, and Comet Tempel 1
2005 May 11: The Sombrero Galaxy in Infrared
2005 May 10: The First Image of an Extra Solar Planet
2005 May 09: Stars, Dust and Nebula in NGC 6559
2005 May 08: CMBR Dipole: Speeding Through the Universe
2005 May 07: NGC 3314: When Galaxies Overlap
2005 May 06: Hybrid Solar Eclipse
2005 May 05: Mira: The Wonderful Star
2005 May 04: Cassini Spacecraft Crosses Saturns Ring Plane
2005 May 03: Solar System Rising Over Fire Island
2005 May 02: Methuselah Outcrop on Mars
2005 May 01: Planetary Nebula Mz3: The Ant Nebula
2005 April 30: The Moons of Earth
2005 April 29: Small Moon Epimetheus
2005 April 28: M51: Cosmic Whirlpool
2005 April 27: The Hercules Cluster of Galaxies
2005 April 26: A Martian Dust Devil Passes
2005 April 25: The Fairy of Eagle Nebula
2005 April 24: M16: Stars from Eagle's EGGs
2005 April 23: Eclipsed Moon in Infrared
2005 April 22: Albert Einstein's Miraculous Year
2005 April 21: G21.Can Black Holes Form in the Dark?Portrait
2003 March 14: DEM L71: When Small Stars Explode
2003 March 13: WIRO at Jupiter
2003 March 12: Lunar Farside from Apollo 11
2003 March 11: Iridescent clouds
2003 March 10: M101: The Pinwheel Galaxy
2003 March 09: Farewell Jupiter
2003 March 08: Solar Sail
2003 March 07: The Star Trails of Kilimanjaro
2003 March 06: Comet NEAT in Southern Skies
2003 March 05: Where People Live on Planet Earth
2003 March 04: In the Centre of the Lagoon Nebula
2003 March 03: Will the Universe End in a Big Rip?Rays from the Galactic Core
2003 January 07: Open Star Cluster M38
2003 January 06: Shadow Cone of a Total Solar Eclipse
2003 January 05: Atlantis to Orbit
2003 January 04: A Magellanic Starfield
2003 January 03: POX 186: Not So Long Ago
2003 January 02: Mt.Rays and the Circinus Pulsar
2001 September 12: Zodiacal Light and the False Dawn
2001 September 11: Spiral Galaxy NGC 3310 Across the Visible
2001 September 10: Galactic Centre Flicker Indicates Black Hole
2001 September 09: NGC 3293: A Bright Young Open Cluster
2001 September 08: Moon Occults Saturn
2001 September 07: Moon AND Sun
2001 September 06: Moon AND Stars
2001 September 05: 3C175: Quasar Cannon
2001 September 04: 2dF Sees Waves of Galaxies
2001 September 03: The Making of the Rotten Egg Nebula
2001 September 02: Deimos: A Small Martian Moon
2001 September 01: Magnetars In The Sky
2001 August 31: The Flight of Helios
2001 August 30: How Big Is 2001 KX76?From The Cat's Eye
2001 January 10: Watch the Sky Rotate
2001 January 09: A Cosmic Call to Nearby Stars
2001 January 08: Help NASA Classify Martian Craters
2001 January 07: Tycho Brahe Measures the Sky
2001 January 06: Apollo 17's Moonship
2001 January 05: Second Millennium, Last Eclipse
2001 January 04: Third Millennium, First Eclipse
2001 January 03: M8: In the Centre of the Lagoon Nebula
2001 January 02: Jupiter, Europa, and Callisto
2001 January 01: The Millennium that Defines Universe
2000 December 31: The Millennium that Defined Earth
2000 December 30: A Year of Resolving Backgrounds
2000 December 29: The Dark Horsehead Nebula
2000 December 28: Moon Mare and Montes
2000 December 27: The Dust and Ion Tails of Comet Hale Bopp
2000 December 26: Jupiter, Io, and Shadow
2000 December 25: The Eclipse Tree
2000 December 24: NGC 1850: Gas Clouds and Star Clusters
2000 December 23: Summer at the South Pole
2000 December 22: Simulated Supergiant Star
2000 December 21: Solstice And Season's Eclipse
2000 December 20: Sgr A: Fast Stars Near the Galactic Centre
2000 December 19: A Close Up of Aurora on Jupiter
2000 December 18: Oceans Under Jupiter's Ganymede
2000 December 17: M2 9: Wings of a Butterfly Nebula
2000 December 16: Degas Ray Crater on Mercury
2000 December 15: IC443's Neutron Star
2000 December 14: International Space Station Trail
2000 December 13: Manicouagan Impact Crater on Earth
2000 December 12: Jupiter Eyes Ganymede
2000 December 11: Composing the Omega Nebula
2000 December 10: Too Close to a Black Hole
2000 December 09: Apollo 17 Lunarscape: A Magnificent Desolation
2000 December 08: Abell 1795: A Galaxy Cluster's Cooling Flow
2000 December 07: Earth's San Andreas Fault
2000 December 06: Reflecting Merope
2000 December 05: Layered Mars: An Ancient Water World?Ray Telescope
July 26 1999: Noctilucent Clouds
July 25 1999: The Cygnus Loop
July 24 1999: Infrared Saturn
July 23 1999: A Martian Valley
July 22 1999: Cosmic Collisions in a Galaxy Cluster
July 21 1999: Galactic Supernova Remnant IC 443
July 20 1999: Moon Rocket
July 19 1999: NGC 3372: The Great Nebula in Carina
July 18 1999: Jupiter from Voyager
July 17 1999: Rockets and Robert Goddard
July 16 1999: Solar Surfin'
July 15 1999: Charles P.Catalog: A Digital Sky
April 25 1999: Mimas: Small Moon with a Big Crater
April 24 1999: Barsoom
April 23 1999: Io Shadow
April 22 1999: Where is Upsilon Andromedae?Solar System
April 15 1999: Apollo 17's Moonship
April 14 1999: The Backyard Universe
April 13 1999: The Case of the Missing Supernova
April 12 1999: Nearby Spiral Galaxy NGC 4945
April 11 1999: Liftoff of Space Shuttle Columbia
April 10 1999: Canaries Sky
April 09 1999: WR 104: Pinwheel Star
April 08 1999: Apollo 12: Surveyor 3 and Intrepid
April 07 1999: Denizen of the Tarantula Nebula
April 06 1999: NGC 6334: The Bear Claw Nebula
April 05 1999: The Launch of STARDUST
April 04 1999: Hot Gas and Dark Matter
April 03 1999: The Radio Sky: Tuned to 408MHz
April 02 1999: Stars of NGC 206
April 01 1999: Ski Mars!November 03 1998: Sextans A: A Seemingly Square Galaxy
November 02 1998: PG 1115: A Ghost of Lensing Past
November 01 1998: The Cat's Eye Nebula
October 31 1998: Bats And The Barren Moon
October 30 1998: John Glenn: Discovery Launch
October 29 1998: John Glenn: Friendship 7 To Discovery
October 28 1998: NGC 6210: The Turtle in Space Planetary Nebula
October 27 1998: Henrietta Leavitt Calibrates the Stars
October 26 1998: An Ion Drive for Deep Space 1
October 25 1998: The Pleiades Star Cluster
October 24 1998: The Sun Also Rises
October 23 1998: Seyfert Galaxy NGC 7742
October 22 1998: Jupiter: When Storms Collide
October 21 1998: The Case of the Missing Aurora
October 20 1998: Infrared Uranus
October 19 1998: Olympus Mons From Orbit
October 18 1998: Saturns Rings Seen Sideways
October 17 1998: A Giant Globular Cluster in M31
October 16 1998: Io Aurora
October 15 1998: A Great Day For SOHO
October 14 1998: The World's Largest Ozone Hole
October 13 1998: In the Centre of the Dumbbell Nebula
October 12 1998: The Hubble Deep Field in Infrared
October 11 1998: Resolving Mira
October 10 1998: Maria Mitchell Inspires a Generation
October 09 1998: M27: Not A Comet
October 08 1998: Far Side of the Moon
October 07 1998: Ocean Planet Pole To Pole
October 06 1998: Comet Williams in 1998
October 05 1998: A Sunspot Up Close
October 04 1998: One Small Step
October 03 1998: Sputnik: Traveling Companion
October 02 1998: Magnetar In The Sky
October 01 1998: Happy 40th Birthday, NASA!Planetary Disks
September 24 1998: The North Pole Of Mars
September 23 1998: Autumn and the Active Sun
September 22 1998: M61: Virgo Spiral Galaxy
September 21 1998: NGC 281: Cluster, Clouds, and Globules
September 20 1998: Isaac Newton Explains the Solar System
September 19 1998: 18 Miles From Deimos
September 18 1998: Lunar Prospects
September 17 1998: Radio, The Big Ear, And The Wow!May 28 1998: Afterglow
May 27 1998: Magnetar
May 26 1998: A Seemingly Square Sun
May 25 1998: M83: A Barred Spiral Galaxy
May 24 1998: A High Energy Fleet
May 23 1998: 7,000 Stars And The Milky Way
May 22 1998: The Centre of Centaurus A
May 21 1998: Bright Comet SOHO
May 20 1998: Discovery Image: Comet SOHO (1998 J1)
May 19 1998: Apollo 11: Onto a New World
May 18 1998: NGC 6369: A Donut Shaped Nebula
May 17 1998: Our Solar System from Voyager
May 16 1998: Helios Helium
May 15 1998: TRACE and the Active Sun
May 14 1998: Comet Stonehouse
May 13 1998: Occultations and Rising Moons
May 12 1998: Callisto Enhanced
May 11 1998: Callisto in True Colour
May 10 1998: Skylab Over Earth
May 09 1998: The Water Vapor Channel
May 08 1998: A Gamma Ray Burst Supernova?Fast Pulsar
February 10 1998: All of Mars
February 09 1998: The Witch Head Nebula
February 08 1998: M1: Filaments of the Crab Nebula
February 07 1998: COBE Hotspots: The Oldest Structures Known
February 06 1998: Happy Birthday Jules Verne
February 05 1998: A Martian River Bed?Ray Halo
November 04 1997: Blue Stagglers in Globular Clusters
November 03 1997: Irregular Moons Discovered Around Uranus
November 02 1997: White Dwarf Stars Cool
November 01 1997: M31: The Andromeda Galaxy
October 31 1997: Haunting Mars
October 30 1997: 3D View Of Jupiter's Clouds
October 29 1997: Stereo Saturn
October 28 1997: Rafting for Solar Neutrinos
October 27 1997: Closeup of Antennae Galaxy Collision
October 26 1997: Welcome to Planet Earth
October 25 1997: Orion's Horsehead Nebula
October 24 1997: Moving Echoes Around SN 1987A
October 23 1997: Echoes of Supernova 1987A
October 22 1997: The Antennae Galaxies
October 21 1997: The Butterfly Planetary Nebula
October 20 1997: Spiral Eddies On Planet Earth
October 19 1997: The Heart Of NGC 4261
October 18 1997: The Pleiades Star Cluster
October 17 1997: Mars: A Mist In Mariner Valley
October 16 1997: Cassini To Venus
October 15 1997: Cold Wind From The Boomerang Nebula
October 14 1997: Venus On The Horizon
October 13 1997: Ice Clouds over Mars
October 12 1997: Impact!Bopp Outbound
September 09 1997: A Green Flash from the Sun
September 08 1997: A Map of Asteroid Vesta
September 07 1997: Luna 9: First Soft Lander
September 06 1997: Isaac Newton Explains the Solar System
September 05 1997: Apollo 17: Boulder on the Moon
September 04 1997: Rivers in the Sun
September 03 1997: A Partial Eclipse in Southern Skies
September 02 1997: Dark Sky, Bright Sun
September 01 1997: Infrared Helix
August 31 1997: Arp 230: Two Spirals in One?In Orbit
August 16 1997: Pictured: An Ancient Martian?Bopp Over New York City
April 07 1997: GRB970228: What's There?Bopp Returns
February 05 1997: Running Red Rings Around Jupiter
February 04 1997: Clyde W.Bopp Passes M14
November 11 1996: NGC 4755: A Jewel Box of Stars
November 10 1996: Columbia Launches
November 09 1996: Surveyor Hops
November 08 1996: A Solar Corona Ejection
November 07 1996: Fields of Minerals on Ganymede
November 06 1996: Elliptical Galaxy NGC 4881 in Coma
November 05 1996: The Coma Cluster of Galaxies
November 04 1996: The Martian Spring
November 03 1996: Surveyor Night Launch
November 02 1996: Spiral Galaxy NGC 253 Almost Sideways
November 01 1996: Spiral Galaxy NGC 3628 Edge On
October 31 1996: The Barren Moon
October 30 1996: Grand Design Spiral Galaxy NGC 2997
October 29 1996: Io Full Face
October 28 1996: The Weather on Neptune
October 27 1996: Io's Active Volcanoes
October 26 1996: Mir Over New Zealand
October 25 1996: A Flyby View of Ganymede
October 24 1996: Starbirth in the Lagoon Nebula
October 23 1996: The Large Cloud of Magellan (LMC)
October 22 1996: The Cracked Ice Plains of Europa
October 21 1996: Orionids Meteor Shower to Peak Tonight
October 20 1996: Surveyor Slides
October 19 1996: Lalande 21185: The Nearest Planetary System?October 18 1996: Jupiter's Auroras
October 17 1996: Proplyds: Infant Solar Systems?August 23 1996: NGC 3293: A Bright Young Open Cluster
August 22 1996: Arp 230: Two Spirals in One?Up of the Lagoon Nebula
August 19 1996: Welcome to Planet Earth
August 18 1996: A Milestone Quasar
August 17 1996: A Meteorite From Mars
August 16 1996: NGC 604: Giant Stellar Nursery in M33
August 15 1996: Galileo Views Io Eruption
August 14 1996: Galileo Explores Europa
August 13 1996: Europa's Surface
August 12 1996: Leo Triplet Spiral Galaxy M65
August 11 1996: The Snake Nebula in Ophiuchus
August 10 1996: Unusual Spiral Galaxy M66
August 09 1996: The Perseid Meteor Shower
August 08 1996: Pictured: An Ancient Martian?August 07 1996: Early Microscopic Life on Mars?June 11 1996: Doomed Star Eta Carinae
June 10 1996: Ultraviolet Earth
June 09 1996: Blasting Off From the Moon
June 08 1996: The First Lunar Observatory
June 07 1996: Apollo 16: Exploring Plum Crater
June 06 1996: The North America Nebula
June 05 1996: Sagittarius and the Central Milky Way
June 04 1996: Impact!Comet Hyakutake
April 10 1996: Comet Hyakutake and a Tree
April 09 1996: A Spiral Galaxy Gallery
April 08 1996: Uranus's Moon Oberon: Impact World
April 07 1996: Uranus's Moon Umbriel: A Mysterious Dark World
April 06 1996: Andromeda Nebula: Var!April 05 1996: The Perseus Cluster of Galaxies
April 04 1996: The Keyhole Nebula Near Eta Carinae
April 03 1996: A Lucky Lunar Eclipse
April 02 1996: Atlantis Approaches Mir
April 01 1996: Hyakutake, Big Dipper, and Observatory Dome
March 31 1996: Comet Hyakutake Finder Chart for Early April
March 30 1996: An Extreme UltraViolet View of the Comet
March 29 1996: The Colours of Comet Hyakutake
March 28 1996: Near the Nucleus of Hyakutake
March 27 1996: How Much is That Comet in the Window?March 26 1996: What are Comet Tails Made Of?Pierce Solar Observatory
March 14 1996: Comet Hyakutake's Orbit
March 13 1996: Here Comes Comet Hyakutake
March 12 1996: The Colourful Clouds of Rho Ophiuchi
March 11 1996: Hubble Telescope Maps Pluto
March 10 1996: Mir is 10
March 09 1996: Arecibo: The Largest Telescope
March 08 1996: The 76 Meter Lovell Radio Telescope
March 07 1996: Rampaging Fronts of the Veil Nebula
March 06 1996: Jets From SS433
March 05 1996: A Black Hole in M87's Centre?Like Stars
January 30 1996: 70 Virginis b: A New Water Planet?December 18 1995: M51: The Whirlpool Galaxy
December 17 1995: The Space Shuttle Docks with Mir
December 16 1995: Hawaii
December 15 1995: M64: The Sleeping Beauty Galaxy
December 14 1995: An Atlas Centaur Rocket Launches
December 13 1995: A Delta Rocket Launches
December 12 1995: Shapley 1: An Annular Planetary Nebula
December 11 1995: NGC 5189: A Strange Planetary Nebula
December 10 1995: Apollo 14 Deploys ALSEP
December 09 1995: Apollo 14 on the Moon
December 08 1995: Descent To Jupiter
December 07 1995: Galileo's Jupiter Probe
December 06 1995: 24 Hours from Jupiter
December 05 1995: The Swirling Centre of NGC 4261
December 04 1995: GL 229B: An Elusive Brown Dwarf?Hot Supernova in M81
December 02 1995: Lightning Below
December 01 1995: 51 Pegasi: A New Planet Discovered
November 30 1995: NGC 2440 Nucleus: The Hottest Star?Jerry
Bonnell (USRA)
NASA Technical Rep.Access via a site license includes a minimum of four years; institutions can add additional archived content to their license at any time.Recommend site license access to your institution.For a taste of the Nature archive visit The History of the Journal Nature, with free highlights of the breakthrough research published in Nature in the form of timelines, videos, essays and a journal club.Nature New Biology and Nature Physical Sciences are currently being digitized and will be added in 2008.ITALY: Buy CD from liberto.NETHERLANDS: Buy CD from BOL.POLAND: Buy CD from merlin.SWITZERLAND: Buy CD from citydisc.More Excerpt from the Studio Last Month!!!Some photographs from the recording studio...In 1999, they delivered Take My Head, a collection of symphonic torch songs for the New Millennium.In 2003 they recorded a soundtrack and score for Luc Bessons Michel Vaillant film, and the anthemic sound of the 4th album Noise quickly followed.Talk Talks Spirit Of Eden, Portisheads Dummy, or My Bloody Valentines Loveless.Signed to Warner Music France, throughout Europe, Archive are going from strength to strength and are enjoying huge exposure through touring.Their live shows are a spectacle to behold; the energy the band exude is awe inspiring and there is no doubt that this band should be seen live.Archive bring a sound so unique; their raw and intense moments so emotional and beautiful, the beautiful ones so desperate and painful.Archive beat down the sound barriers that so many bands and artistes are hindered by.You are now marked on my profile visitor map!Seeing you on line is always a wonderful gift !Please, let me a comment on my space.Thx very much 4 your add!!!!Happy good year and I hope to listen a new album in 2009!See You again in France...Qu est ce que j ai pu triper sur Londinium et take my head!!!Sham and Hate are the wonderfulest songs in the world !!!Hello Archive,I wish you all my wishes of happiness and success for this New Year!!!Thanks for your music and hopefully see you soon in Zurich...Many thanks for the add, I really love your music.You a creative, happy and sunny New Year!You have already understood it : France loves you.Put in A bridge scene video from the live!!!Hope To See You Live again and Again in Greece!!Have A Happy And Creative Year For Us To Listen more From you!!!"Urgent Security Alert","Warning: You are submitting information to an outside site.This could be an attempt to steal your username and password.This is not a MySpace login page, please do not enter your MySpace login information (email address or password).Search The Forum's Archive online free.If commas are omitted, the expression is treated as a phrase.We've made some changes to our archive system.Let us know what you think of them.In reply, refer to position name and number; send lette...RIVERVIEW PLACE ACTIVITY PROFESSIONAL Energetic, team play...INTERNAL MEDICINE OR FAMILY PRACTICE PHYSICIAN Rural Midwes...LEVEL CONTENT CATEGORY
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