George Trebizond, a Cretan emigre in the curia, produced a new translation and commentary. |
|
Ethnic and nationalistic turmoil has a spill-over effect on Canadian emigre communities. |
|
Whether or not he really skied across the border, as he claimed, he slowly worked his way across wartorn Germany and ended up in London in the hands of the small Czech emigre community. |
|
They had dinner with Alexander Shadrin, a Russian emigre. |
|
Blavatsky was a Russian emigre, uneducated but with enormous chutzpah who, between 1873, when she arrived in New York, and her death in 1891, dominated the fin de siecle New Age scene. |
|
Among these is Cesare Pagahi, 35, an Italian emigre who describes the Netherlands as home, but spends much of his time working as a marine contractor for the oil and gas industries off the Angolan coast. |
|
Unlike fellow emigre Richard Neutra, Schindler never knew how to translate brilliance into sweet talk and guru-like pontification. |
|
Possibly because of his anticlericalism, he was able, despite his emigre status, to publish some of his poetry in communist Poland. |
|
Beginning in 1609, the Waterlander Mennonite church in Amsterdam entered into a long relationship with an emigre congregation founded by the English Separatist, John Smyth. |
|