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Roxane Stern

11053 Strathmore Dr
Los Angeles CA 90024

310-443-1106
To: The Heritage Foundation
ATTN: Program Coordinator, Admission Committee
214 Massachusetts Avenue, NE
Washington, DC 20002-4999

004 0264 357 197 cedrechi mihaela.

Carmen Prinz
2602B CARMEL AVENUE
BREWSTER, NY 10509
USA.

Tel. 845 278 4296.

Zeikány László
1084 Budapest ,
Nagyfuvaros utca 2/b foldszt 2
Magyarorszag, HUNGARY
Estela Suárez Aquilar Vergara esav@servidor.unam.mx
(52 1 55) 54-18-10-90.
agregar un 1 entre el 52 y 55.
Tu numero de telefono: 52 pais, 55 mex. D.F. 54 181090? es corecto?
DIACONESCU LUCIA LIVIA DOINA
STR. PINTEA VITEAZU, Nr. 13,
Loc. SIGHETU MARMATIEI,
Jud. MARAMURES, Cod poştal: 435500

1
ROMANIA

0262311665

Doina Van Deun – Manu


Kuiltjesstraat 9
2360 Oud-Turnhout
Belgia

Dr. Bodnar Vasile


Strada 1 Mai nr.6/10,
Sighetu Marmatiei, 4925, judetul Maramures
ROMANIA
Cell. 74 48 53 770 ori 315230

Laszlo & Ilona ZEKANY, Pety.


NAGYFUVAROS 2/B foldszint 2ajto
BUDAPEST 1084
Hungary

Mobil pety 0036 20 522 6904. Eredeti termelo.


LACI 0036209747535.
Ica 36 20 6614443. mobil
House 36 1 303-43-91 gheatza locala, ceata la mal. Spirt sanitar, ametit
Tel. 36 20 974 7535
Melissa Bersofsky mbersofsky@support.ucla.edu 310-794-2355

Costel moise;berlin

Andana Shoes and Accessories

1045 Swarthmore Ave.

Pacific Palisades, CA, 90272

ph.#:310-454-6515

fax :310-454-6519

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Andreea Beniciu si Daniela TASU
andanashoes@verizon.net
Shoes and Accessories
1045 Swarthmore Ave.
Pacific Palisades, CA, 90272
ph.#:310-454-6515
fax :310-454-6519

Lo que se hace para complacer a los jefes... Gracias


Olga , que estes bien!, un abrazo, Cecilia Imaz

Cecilia Imaz B.
Coordinadora del Seminario
Migración y Política
F.C.P.y S.UNAM
tel. y fax: 5622-9418 y 28

celimaz@yahoo.com.mx>

Prem Peterné
Hajduszoboszlo 4200
Kigyo ut 7
Hungary

Haza tel. 36 5 236 5003.


Cse tel. 52 27 1045

D-nei Zacharansky Ibolya


Str. Stefan cel Mare Nr. 121
SIGHETU-MARMATIEI Cod 4925
Jud. MARAMURES
ROMANIA

3
Anthony Garavante 1540 S. Saltair Ave Ap #4
Los Angeles, CA 90025.

Sasha 720 7786


Home 399 5086
Housing DPT LA 866 557 7368.

9am to 4pm.

To register (low-income families.)


: 213 252 6199.

To report a violation/fraud
Investigator:
1213 251 2500
Talked to Housing Authority, section 8 (low-income families.)
Howard: 243 3451

Section 8 program

Kerry, liberman?
PROFMEX
15237 Sunset Blvd. #55
Pacific Palisades, CA 90272

Tel acasa: 262 317 166

Dr. Olga M. Lazin


UCLA Latin American Center
10353 Bunche Hall
405 Hilgard Ave,
Los Angeles, CA 90095 USA
OC 30

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D-nei Iosefciuc Ileana & Daniela Maris
Str. Szilagy Istvan nr. 25
SIGHETU MARMATIEI Cod 4925
Jud. Maramures
ROMANIA

PROFMEX PROFMEX, A.C.


5478 Wilshire Blvd. Suite 300 Insurgentes Sur 1023-208
Los Angeles Colonia Nochebuena
California 90036 USA 03720 México, D.F., Mexico

Tel: (323) 938-6968 Tel: (55) 5611-5186


Fax (323) 965-4844 Fax (55) 5615- 9241
e-mail: profmex@yahoo.com e-mail: profmex1@aol.com

Elizabeth Brooks, Marianne Thomas & Pr. Schonbein


Humanities and Social Sciences
UCLA Extension
10995 Le Conte Ave., Ste. 711
Los Angeles, CA 90024

Dr. Orza Grigore & Mariana


Str. V. ALECSANDRI Nr. 10
SIGHETU-MARMATIEI COD 4925
JUD. MARAMURES
ROMANIA

Carolyn Ramirez
UCLA Latin American Studies
ADMISSIONS
Bunche Hall
405 Hilgard Ave
Los Angeles, CA 90095

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Mrs. Susan Nealis, U.S. Partnerships Coordinator
World Learning
NGO Partnership Umbrella Grant Activity
1015 15th St., N.W., Suite 750
Washington, D.C. 20005

Phone: (202) 408-5420; Fax: (202) 408-5397


partnership.coordinator@worldlearning.org

D-nei Ana Blandiana


Alianta Civica
Consiliul National Director-Academia Civica
Filiala Municipiului Bucuresti
Piata Amzei nr. 13, Etaj 2, Sector 1,
Bucuresti
ROMANIA

D-lui Mircea Moldovan


STR. TINERETULUI Nr. 6A Ap. 6 Et. 4
BAIA MARE 4800
Jud. Maramures
ROMANIA
200 W. Kawili Street
Hilo, HI 96720

Tel/Fax: (401) 659.59.09/312.58.54


acivica@acivica.sfos.ro

To: Claire Shigeoka, Personnel Officer


Hawaii Community College
200 W. Kawili St. , Hilo, HI 96720

Dear Ms. Claire Shigeoka,

I am a UCLA Ph.D., and I am applying for the lecturship position


in History.

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Enclosed please find my CV and a transcript, plus a certificate of
completion (Ph.D.) in History of Globalization.

Most sincerely yours,

Olga M. Lazin
Fax: (310) 208 7914
Tel: (310) 208 7914

Dr. Olga Magdalena Lazin


445 Landfair Ave #403
Los Angeles, CA 90024
USA

Dr. Lisa Sousa


Occidental College
History department
1600 Campus Road,
Los Angeles, CA 90041

D-nei Iosefciuc Ileana & Daniela


Str. Szilagy Istvan nr. 25
SIGHETU MARMATIEI Cod 4925
Jud. Maramures
ROMANIA

Mr. Bill Blackburn


10100, Ap. 2159 Century Hill St.
Los Angeles, CA 90067

LA, Lily Ciocan 453 8884 Air France ori KLM, 500 dolari to TO,Back
TONY, tel 330 5642 ori 330 56 7078
Cel. 094 5322 6814

Jewel and the Lotus, Sunyata Saraswati

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Dr. Margaret & Paul Carroll-Boardman
1736 Seagull Court #404
Reston, VA 20194

Richard Riordan, Los Angeles mayor

D-lui Adrian Gavrilescu


Str. Mamulari nr.4, Bl.C2, Sc.1, Et.1, Ap.4
Sector 3 - Bucuresti
Romania

Richard Riordan, Los Angeles mayor

Father Philip Carroll & Dominic


St. Bede's Catholic Church, New Road,
Coach Road Estate
Washington
Tyne and Wear
NE37 3BZ
England
D-lui Adrian Gavrilescu
Str. Mamulari nr.4, Bl.C2, Sc.1, Et.1, Ap.4
Sector 3 - Bucuresti
Romania

Dr. Sorin Matei - Metamorphosis


Annenberg School for Communication,
University of Southern California
3502 Watt Way, Los Angeles, CA 90089

Tel: 213 720 1260 Fax: 603 737 6859

in RO 40-1-312 39 56

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Websites: <http://matei.org/>http://matei.org;
<http://www.metamorph.org/>http://www.metamorph.org

Dr. Margaret Boardman-Carroll


1736 Seagull Ct. # 404
Reston, VA 20194

D-nelor Eva si Olga Kosztinszky


Str. Reudlinger nr. 20
Sighetu Marmatiei 4925
Jud. Maramures
ROMANIA

D-nei Zacharansky Ibolya


Str. Stefan cel Mare Nr. 121
SIGHETU-MARMATIEI Cod 4925
Jud. MARAMURES
ROMANIA

D-nei VIORICA GABOREAN


Str. POPA LUPU Nr. 10/15
SIGHETU-MARMATIEI Cod 4925
Jud. MARAMURES
ROMANIA

Laszlo zekany

MS. Jully Jenkins


POWEL LIBRARY, UCLA
DISSERTATIONS Room # 330
LOS ANGELES, CA 90095

Sra
PINA OROZCO y CHAVE & Familia
CALLE PORFIRIO GARCIA DE LEON, No. 117
Colonia Nuevo Chapultepec, C.P. 58280
MORELIA, MICHOACAN
MEXICO

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Mr. Bill Blackburn
10100, Ap. 2159 Century Hill St.
Los Angeles, CA 90067

LA, Lily Ciocan 453 8884 Air France ori KLM, 500 dolari to TO,Back
TONY, firma Cross Linetel 330 5642 ori 330 56 7078
Cel. 094 5322 6814

Karen frid tel. 310 301 9760


Tel Alex 44 191418 7697

Sr. ROMULUS ROMAN & ELENA


Ambajada de Romania
Calle Sofócles, No. 311
C.P. 11560
México D.F.
Mexico

BIROU NOTARIAL BLEDEA STELUTA, D-nei BLEDEA STELUTA


P-TA LIBERTATII, NR. 4
SIGHETU-MARMATIEI COD 4925
MARAMURES
ROMANIA

Stimata Viorica, am trimis aceasta scrisoare Lenutei, a primit-O, poti te rog s-o
intrebi? Multumim de scrisoare!
Stimata Lenuta, 24 februarie, 2001

SOTII LAZIN SUNT LA SCOALA DE BUSINESS WASHINGTON COLLEG (LA


NIVEL UNIVERSITAR, DEJA DIN IANUARIE, CIND I-AM VIZITAT PENTRU
TREI SAPTAMINI). COPII SUNT SI EI LA CEA MAI BUNA SCOALA
CATOLICA, ST. BEDE.
ABIA ASTEPT LENUTA CA SA NEREVEDEM, PINA ATUNCI, Eu va doresc din
suflet un PASTI FERICIT, SANATATE SI IUBIRE. DANA A PRIMIT
SCRISOAREA DE LA D-NA GABOREAN.

SANDU ESTE BINE CIT SI COPII, VA TRANSMIT SALUTARI SI EI. TEL.


ALEX 44 (ANGLIA) 77 66 9 277 64.

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DRAGA STELUTA EU VOI VENI IN ROMANIA PRIN MARTIE, CA
ANUL TRECUT; DECI AM O RUGAMINTE LA TINE: PRIN MARTIE IAR
ESTE DE PLATIT LA SECTIA FINACIARA, CRED, LAFINANTE, CAMERA
NR.16, DEPOZIT PENTRU CASA, ADRESA ESTE:
ALEXANDRU LAZIN
STR. V. ALECSANDRI NR. 9 AP. 8, ET. 1 SC. II
SIGHET
NU STIU, CRED CA ESTE CAM 280, DE MII LEI, CAM IN JUR DE 300 DE MII.
Te rog pastreaza-mi recipisele.
EU ITI VOI DA BANII INAPOI, DOAR O CHITANTA ESTE NECESARA.
EUGEN LAZIN, adica tata) va plati el apa, si lumina.
CU MULTA DRAGOSTE SI MII DE MULTUMIRI, VESNIC INDATORATA
TIE. AICI ESTE ADRESA LUI DANIELA

OLGA LAZIN, DANIELA, ALEX, CAROLINA SI OCTAVIAN,


LOVE INTREAGA FAMILI. DACA I SE INTIMPLA CEVA LUI TATA, TE ROG
TRIMITE-MI UN FAX LA 1 (PREFIX USA) (310) 208 4918. TEL 310 208 7914.
EL ESTE IN GRIJA DR. ORZA GRIGORE,TEL. 311 753. Cu multa gratitudine,
Olga

MR. ALEXANDRU & DANIELA LAZIN

Chechen Rebels Must Stop Targeting Civilians

(New York, December 27, 2002) ˜ Today‚s bombing of the headquarters of


the pro-Moscow government of Chechnya in Grozny is an egregious
violation of basic principles of humanitarian law, Human Rights Watch
said today.

According to press reports, at around 2:30 p.m. (local time) today, two
powerful explosions ripped through the government building, killing at
least forty-six people and wounding another seventy-six, completely
destroying its upper floors and bringing down its roof. No final number
of casualties is known at this time. On a regular day, between 150 and

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200 people work in the building. Media reports cited the Chechen
minister of internal affairs as saying that suicide bombers detonated
two explosives-packed vehicles after driving through security cordons
surrounding the building.

„The vast majority of the casualties of this despicable bombing were


civilians,‰ said Elizabeth Andersen, executive director of the Europe
and Central Asia division of Human Rights Watch. „They enjoy special
protection under the laws of war. Chechen rebel forces must stop
targeting them.‰

In recent months, Chechen rebel forces have increasingly targeted


civilians in their guerilla war against Russian troops. In October,
armed rebels took about 800 people hostage at a theater in Moscow and
threatened to kill them all. Rebels have also pursued a vicious
assassination campaign against Chechen civil servants, policemen and
religious clergymen cooperating with the Russian authorities, killing
dozens each year.

These attacks on civilians are violations of article 3 common to the


four Geneva Conventions of 1949, which applies during internal armed
conflicts.

To read Human Rights Watch‚s recent reports and releases on Chechnya,


please see:

http://www.hrw.org/europe/russia.php.
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To: olazin@ucla.edu
From: Human Rights Watch <hrw-news-europe@topica.email-publisher.com>
Subject: Russia: Clock Running Out for Displaced Chechens in Ingushetia
Date: Thu, 26 Dec 2002 07:15:14 -0700
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Russia: Clock Running Out for Displaced Chechens in Ingushetia

(Moscow, December 26, 2002) ˜ Russian authorities must not close tent
camps housing tens of thousands of displaced Chechens because there is
still nowhere safe for them to relocate, Human Rights Watch said today.

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For the past month, Russian officials have been intensifying their
campaign to pressure displaced Chechens in Ingushetia to abandon their
tent camps and return to Chechnya. With the closure earlier this month
of the "Iman" tent camp in Aki Yurt, housing about 1,700 people, five
camps remain in Ingushetia, housing more than 20,000 people displaced by
the Chechnya conflict.

Russian officials claim to the international community that all returns


to Chechnya are voluntary, and that they may provide some alternative
housing in Ingushetia to tent dwellers. But Human Rights Watch
researchers on a recent field trip to Ingushetia found that migration
officials have placed enormous pressure on displaced persons to leave
the camps, and that most relocation alternatives in Ingushetia were
nonexistent. The 11-day mission also documented escalating abuses inside
Chechnya, which most displaced persons cited as the main reason they
chose to remain in Ingushetia.

"Forcing internally displaced persons to return to the conflict zone,


where human rights abuses are the daily routine, violates international
standards," said Elizabeth Andersen, executive director of Human Rights
Watch's Europe and Central Asia division. "The fact that the Russian
authorities chose the midst of winter for evicting these people, many of
whom have no alternative housing, is barbaric."

Pressure in the camps


Every day, about 30 officials, representing the Federal Migration
Service, Ingush migration authorities, the Chechen administration, and
the Federal Security Service, make rounds in camps, going from tent to
tent pressing people to apply for relocation and explaining the
advantages of moving to Chechnya and the disadvantages of remaining in
Ingushetia. They promise returnees space in new temporary accommodation
centers that are allegedly being built in Chechnya, offer 20 rubles per
person per day to those who plan to relocate in Chechnya's private
sector, and free transportation back to Chechnya. They threaten those
reluctant to leave with arrest on false drug and weapons possession
charges, and warn them that vital gas and electricity supplies will be
cut off to the camps.

Human Rights Watch received from the Federal Migration Service a list of
eighteen temporary resettlement alternatives in Ingushetia with the
alleged capacity to accommodate 224 families. None of the tent camp
dwellers interviewed by Human Rights Watch was aware of the list, or of
the possibility of relocating to a facility in Ingushetia.

Human Rights Watch researchers visited twelve temporary resettlement

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facilities in the Karabulak and Sunzha districts that appeared on the
Federal Migration Service's list. With two exceptions all of them were
either already occupied, uninhabitable, or simply did not exist.
Returnees to Chechnya face similar problems. Human Rights Watch
interviewed several returnees who had to go back to Ingushetia because
the promised accommodation was either uninhabitable or already occupied.
Denied any state assistance, they are now living off the kindness of
neighbors.

Migration officials emphasize to displaced people that the camps' days


are numbered, and that tent dwellers would be better off leaving now
rather than awaiting a forced closure of the camps. In late October,
Russian troops were deployed near the camps, their presence understood
by displaced persons as a threat of force should they choose not to
leave "voluntarily."

Some families have left the camps amid subzero temperatures. They told
Human Rights Watch that they were unable to withstand the pressure from
migration authorities and that they feared the consequences of staying:
uncertain security and miserable living conditions. Some families
expressed fear that their young children might not survive the freezing
temperatures once the gas and electricity were cut off.

The U.S. government, the European Union and the United Nations have all
strongly protested the pressure on tent dwellers and the closure of the
„Iman‰ camp. Yet, the Russian government has disregarded the concerns of
the international community.

Continuing violations in Chechnya


Most families, however, remain in the camps, preferring to tolerate the
deprivations of tent camps rather than face endangering their own lives
and lives of their children in Chechnya. Migration officials dismiss the
security threats that people continue to face in Chechnya. A Federal
Migration Service official told Human Rights Watch that "people also
disappear and are being killed in Moscow," and that the situation in
Chechnya is returning to normal.

But Human Rights Watch continues to document extrajudical executions,


forced disappearances, and torture of noncombatants in Chechnya by
federal soldiers, and has found no evidence that officials are seriously
investigating or attempting to stop such crimes. Brief summaries of
several of these cases are listed below. Human Rights Watch also
continued to receive numerous reports of assassinations of Chechens
working with the Russian authorities by rebel fighters.

"The safety and welfare of the displaced seem to rank last among the

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Federal Migration Service's priorities," said Andersen. "It seems to
want to get rid of the camps as proof that that the situation in
Chechnya is returning to normal, whatever consequences that may have for
the people."

The fate of Aki-Yurt residents


While the deadline for the closure of tent camps is unclear, the closure
earlier this month of the Aki-Yurt camp leaves no doubt that Russian
authorities are serious about dismantling them. The fate of the camps'
1700 former residents provides a good indication of what dwellers in
other camps may soon expect.

In early December, all of the tents in Aki-Yurt were dismantled, gas and
electricity were cut off and all assistance to tent dwellers stopped.
Several reliable sources told Human Rights Watch fewer than one third of
the camp's 1700 residents moved to Chechnya. Witnesses told Human Rights
Watch that former Aki-Yurt dwellers are still looking for housing in
Chechnya, squatting near temporary accommodation centers that were
already full or searching for space with Chechen villagers. Some of
these people had returned to Ingushetia when they failed to find
accommodation in Chechnya. The majority of Aki-Yurt families, however,
remained in Ingushetia, trying to find accommodation in the private
sector.

Seventeen Aki-Yurt families continue to live in fourteen mud huts on the


land where the camp once stood. They use the wooden floors from the
removed tents as firewood, as the authorities have cut all gas and
electricity. They receive daily threats from the authorities that the
mud huts are illegal and will be bulldozed in the near future. The
authorities are offering no alternative accommodation.

Human Rights Watch calls on the Russian government to stop pressuring


internally displaced persons into returning to Chechnya and to ensure
that they continue to enjoy protection and humanitarian assistance in
accordance with international law. It also urges the relevant
international agencies involved in the region to protest any measures
that may endanger the lives and well-being of thousands of internally
displaced people residing in Ingushetia. Human Rights Watch calls on the
international community to send observers to Ingushetia to monitor and
report on the situation of the internally displaced persons.

Some recent cases of human rights violations in Chechnya


(documented by Human Rights Watch in late 2002):

· At 2:00 a.m. on December 11, a group of armed Russian soldiers who


arrived on an armored personnel carrier (APC) entered the Grozny home

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(Staropromyslovski district) of Isa Abumuslim, a fifty-one-year-old
engineer who was bedridden with a broken leg, and took him away.
Russian authorities in Grozny told his wife the next day that they knew
nothing about the case.

· On the evening of December 2, masked and armed men speaking unaccented


Russian took fifty-two-year-old Ramzan Gizikaev, an official with
property department of the pro-Moscow administration in Chechnya. They
took him from his home in Grozny's Lenin district, in the presence of
his wife and children. His relatives have made inquiries, but to no
avail.

· On the night of November 14, armed men in camouflage speaking


unaccented Russian and armed with silencer guns, entered the Grozny
(Staropromyslovski district) home of fifty-two year old Haj-Mohammed
Zainubdinov, a construction official in the pro-Moscow office of the
Mayor of Grozny. The soldiers took Hoj-Mohammed away, and his dead body,
bearing marks of execution, was found in a nearby vegetable garden the
next morning.

· On the morning of November 5, 2002, several Russian APCs entered the


village of Novye Atagi. Masked Russian forces detained five men: Hamzan
Debizov, 28; Ahmad Kasumov, 23; Mohammed Kasumov, 26; Bislan Taisumov,
19; and a fifth male, 20. Russian officials have provided the families
with no information about the fate of the men.

· On October 27, armed men in camouflage came to Grozny (Zavodskoi


district) home of fifty-two-year-old Baiant Imaeva. When Imaeva opened
the door for the men, they hit her repeatedly on the head with the butt
of a machine gun, knocking her unconscious. When she woke up, she found
they had taken away her twenty-three-year-old son, Rasul Imaev, who had
lost his right leg in an earlier shelling incident. When a female
relative inquired with the Russian Federal Security Service about
Rasul‚s fate, officials told her that they could „make her disappear,
just as her brother.‰ The family has received no information about
Rasul‚s fate.

· On November 12, another group of armed men, evidently Russian


soldiers, came to Imaeva's house, ordered her and two female relatives
into a backyard shed, and blew up the main house with explosives. No
explanation was offered for the destruction of her home.

· At 4:30 a.m. on October 23, Russian forces on APCs arrested five men
in the village of Chechen-Aul: Ali Magomadov, 36; Umalt Abaiev, 21;
Ismail Umarov, 27; Saipudin Shageriev, about 23; Rustam Zubkhajiev,
about 24. The bodies of the five men, shot to death, were discovered on

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November 9 at a garbage dump in the Vinograd settlement of Grozny.

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