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- LithuaniaRN1.3.pdf accessdate "2007-06-18".
- LithuaniaRN1.3.pdf accessdate "2008-06-02".
- LithuaniaRN1.3.pdf author2 "Laitin, David D.".
- LithuaniaRN1.3.pdf first "James D.".
- LithuaniaRN1.3.pdf format "PDF".
- LithuaniaRN1.3.pdf format "pdf".
- LithuaniaRN1.3.pdf isCitedBy Lithuanian_minority_in_Poland.
- LithuaniaRN1.3.pdf isCitedBy Lithuania–Poland_relations.
- LithuaniaRN1.3.pdf isCitedBy Poles_in_Lithuania.
- LithuaniaRN1.3.pdf isCitedBy Polonization.
- LithuaniaRN1.3.pdf last "Fearon".
- LithuaniaRN1.3.pdf page "4".
- LithuaniaRN1.3.pdf pages "4".
- LithuaniaRN1.3.pdf publisher "Stanford University".
- LithuaniaRN1.3.pdf quote "For example, in Vilnius where in the Soviet years education in Polish was offered by some 13–14 schools, only 25 percent of the children born to monoethnic Polish families attended Polish schools. Fifty percent of them chose Russian schools, and only 10 per cent Lithuanian schools.".
- LithuaniaRN1.3.pdf quote "From 1936 till 1939, 266 Lithuanian schools were closed in the entire territory of the former Vilnius Territory. Activities of almost all Lithuanian cultural organizations were banned there. In the areas controlled by Poland, resentments grew as a new settlement of Polish army veterans with economic ties to Poland brought greater Polonization.".
- LithuaniaRN1.3.pdf quote "From 1936 till 1939, 266 Lithuanian schools were closed in the whole territory of the former Vilnius Territory. Activities of almost all Lithuanian cultural organizations were banned there. In the areas controlled by Poland, resentments grew as a new settlement of Polish army veterans with economic ties to Poland brought greater Polonization.".
- LithuaniaRN1.3.pdf quote "Lithuanian nationalists resented demands by Poles for greater cultural autonomy , holding that most of Lithuania's Poles were really deracinated Lithuanians who merely needed to be re-Lithuanianized. Resentments were exacerbated when Lithuanian Poles expressed a desire to "re-unite" the country with Poland. As a result, the nationalizing Lithuanian state took measures to confiscate Polish owned land. It also restricted Polish religious services, schools, Polish publications, Polish voting rights. Poles were often referred to in the press in this period as the "lice of the nation"".
- LithuaniaRN1.3.pdf quote "Lithuanian nationalists resented demands by Poles for greater cultural autonomy , holding that most of Lithuania's Poles were really deracinated Lithuanians who merely needed to be re-Lithuanianized. Resentments were exacerbated when Lithuanian Poles expressed a desire to "re-unite" the country with Poland. As a result, the nationalizing Lithuanian state took measures to confiscate Polish-owned land. It also restricted Polish religious services, schools, Polish publications, Polish voting rights. Poles were often referred to in the press in this period as the "lice of the nation"".
- LithuaniaRN1.3.pdf quote "The nationalizing Lithuanian state took measures to confiscate Polish owned land. It also restricted Polish religious services, schools, Polish publications, Polish voting rights. Poles were often referred to in the press in this period as the "lice of the nation".".
- LithuaniaRN1.3.pdf title "Lithuania".
- LithuaniaRN1.3.pdf url LithuaniaRN1.3.pdf.
- LithuaniaRN1.3.pdf year "2006".