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| | <b>Chancellorb> <b>ofb> Germany - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia |
 | | This was the case with <b>Chancellorb> Gerhard Schröder from 1999 until he resigned the chairmanship <b>ofb> the SPD in 2004. |  | | <b>Chancellorb> Ludwig Erhard had the largest cabinet, with twenty-two ministers in the mid-1960s. |  | | The <b>chancellorb>'s authority emanates from the provisions <b>ofb> the Basic Law and from his or her status as leader <b>ofb> the party (or coalition <b>ofb> parties) holding a majority <b>ofb> seats in the Bundestag (federal parliament). |
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chancellor_of_Germany
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| | <b>Chancellorb> - Open Encyclopedia |
 | | Formerly, the Lord <b>Chancellorb> was the sole judge in the Court <b>ofb> Chancery. |  | | The original chancellors were the Cancellarii <b>ofb> Roman courts <b>ofb> justice- ushers who sat at the cancelli or lattice work screens <b>ofb> a basilica or law court, which separated the judge and counsel from the audience. |  | | <b>Chancellorb> <b>ofb> the Exchequer, the Minister with overall responsibility for the Exchequer or Treasury. |
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http://open-encyclopedia.com/Chancellor
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| | Holocaust Timeline: The Rise <b>ofb> the Nazi Party |
 | | Hindenburg created a new government, made up <b>ofb> a <b>chancellorb> and cabinet ministers, to rule by emergency decrees instead <b>ofb> by laws passed by the Reichstag. |  | | Germany's government remained on the brink <b>ofb> collapse. |  | | The German population swallowed the bitter pill <b>ofb> defeat as the victorious Allies punished Germany severely. |
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http://fcit.coedu.usf.edu/holocaust/timeline/nazirise.htm
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| | Germany |
 | | Konrad Adenauer became <b>chancellorb>, and Theodor Heuss <b>ofb> the Free Democrats was elected the first president. |  | | Rulers <b>ofb> Germany and Prussia- Name Born Ruled1 Kings <b>ofb> Prussia Frederick I2 1657 1701–1713 Frederick William I 1688... |  | | His chaotic foreign policy culminated in the diplomatic isolation <b>ofb> Germany and the disastrous defeat in World War I (1914–1918). |
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http://www.infoplease.com/ipa/A0107568.html
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| | Germany Info: Information Services: Publications: The Week in Germany |
 | | Yet in Germany, where voters elect a party instead <b>ofb> their leader, Schroeder's call for early elections is still being seen as a risky move and in some corners as political suicide. |  | | <b>Chancellorb> calls for early elections in surprise announcement (from Germany Info) |  | | The impending campaign will be about both policy issues and the question <b>ofb> "who should lead this country," Schroeder told the weekly Die Zeit only days after his call to hold elections this September a year earlier than planned stunned political observers across Europe. |
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http://www.germany-info.org/relaunch/info/publications/week/2005/050527/politics1.html
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| | NewsFromRussia.Com Angela Merkel - Germany's first female <b>chancellorb> |
 | | Outgoing <b>Chancellorb> Gerhard Schroeder told his party Monday that Germany's new government will safeguard the legacy <b>ofb> his "seven good years" in office, delivering a passionate appeal for support that was greeted by a lengthy standing ovation. |  | | Lawmakers voted 397 to 202 with 12 abstentions to make Merkel Germany's eighth leader since World War II, succeeding Gerhard Schroeder, whose seven-year government <b>ofb> Social Democrats and Greens was ousted by voters Sept. 18. |  | | Lawmakers voted 397 to 202 with 12 abstentions to make Merkel Germany's eighth leader since World War II, succeeding Gerhard Schroeder, whose seven-year government <b>ofb> Social Democrats and Greens was ousted by voters Sept. 18 More details... |
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http://newsfromrussia.com/politics/2005/11/22/68235.html
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| | Merkel to be Germany’s first woman <b>chancellorb> - Europe - MSNBC.com |
 | | Herbert Knosowski / AP Angela Merkel is set to become Germany's first woman <b>chancellorb> after a power-sharing agreement was hammered out between her Christian Democrats and the rival Social Democrats. |  | | Merkel forced Schroeder to drop his demand to be <b>chancellorb>, saying that as head <b>ofb> the party with the largest number <b>ofb> seats, the job belonged to her. |  | | Power-sharing deal gives incumbent Schroeder’s party more Cabinet seats |
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http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/9648900
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| | Merkel Sworn In As Germany's First Woman <b>Chancellorb> - Forbes.com |
 | | Two months have passed since Germany's inconclusive election, so you'd think there's something <b>ofb> die antiklimax concerning the swearing-in <b>ofb> Angela Merkel as the country's eighth postwar <b>chancellorb>. |  | | A couple <b>ofb> notable milestones amid the pomp and circumstance: The down-to-earth Merkel becomes Germany's first woman <b>chancellorb> and the first to hail from the former communist east. |  | | Merkel, you are the first democratically elected female head <b>ofb> government in Germany," Norbert Lammert, the president <b>ofb> the parliament, said. |
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http://www.forbes.com/2005/11/22/merkel-chancellor-germany-cx_cn_1122autofacescan05.html
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| | Vice-<b>Chancellorb> - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia |
 | | Strictly speaking, he or she is only the deputy to the <b>Chancellorb> <b>ofb> the university, but the <b>Chancellorb> is usually a prominent public figure who acts as a ceremonial figurehead only (e.g., the <b>Chancellorb> <b>ofb> Cambridge University is HRH The Duke <b>ofb> Edinburgh), while the Vice-<b>Chancellorb> acts as the day-to-day chief executive. |  | | The head <b>ofb> the entire university is the University President (the equivalent <b>ofb> a Commonwealth Vice-<b>Chancellorb>), the <b>Chancellorb> is in charge <b>ofb> one campus, and a Vice-<b>Chancellorb> is one <b>ofb> the chief assistants. |  | | In the United States, a Vice-<b>Chancellorb> is an assistant to a <b>Chancellorb>, who is generally the (actual, not merely ceremonial) head <b>ofb> one campus <b>ofb> a large university which has several campuses. |
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http://www.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vice_Chancellor
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| | Guardian Unlimited Special reports Merkel becomes Germany's first woman <b>chancellorb> |
 | | Three weeks <b>ofb> wrangling over last month's indecisive election ended yesterday when the <b>chancellorb>, Gerhard Schröder, announced he was resigning. |  | | Germany was on the brink <b>ofb> a new and volatile political era last night, after a deal was agreed that will see the conservative leader Angela Merkel become the country's first ever woman <b>chancellorb>. |  | | Born in Hamburg, Mrs Merkel, 51, is the first <b>chancellorb> <b>ofb> Germany to have grown up in the communist east, after her pastor father moved in the 1950s to rural Brandenburg. |
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http://www.guardian.co.uk/germany/article/0,2763,1589291,00.html
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| | Deputy <b>Chancellorb> The Crown [Definition] |
 | | The original chancellors were the Cancellarii <b>ofb> Roman courts <b>ofb> justice- ushers who sat at the cancelli or lattice work screens <b>ofb> a basilica or law court, which separated the judge and c... |  | | The Deputy <b>Chancellorb> was however not a subordinate <b>ofb> the <b>Chancellorb> and his independence was specifically confirmed by the laws passed during the reign <b>ofb> the king Alexander the Jagiellonian. |  | | Chancellors, as most <b>ofb> the other offices in Poland and later, the Commonwealth, were nominated to the office for life by the King during the Sejm (Parliament) session. |
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http://www.wikimirror.com/Deputy_Chancellor_the_Crown
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| | Germany. The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. 2001 |
 | | Executive authority lies with the federal government, whose leader, the federal <b>chancellorb>, is elected by an absolute majority <b>ofb> the Bundestag for a four-year term. |  | | The chief theater <b>ofb> the war, Germany was reduced to misery and starvation, lost a large part <b>ofb> its population, and became, as a result <b>ofb> the Peace <b>ofb> Westphalia (1648; see Westphalia, Peace <b>ofb>), a loose confederation <b>ofb> petty principalities under the nominal suzerainty <b>ofb> the emperor. |  | | Germany is a federal republic whose 16 states have their own constitutions, legislatures, and governments, which can pass laws on all matters except those that are the exclusive right <b>ofb> the federal government such as defense, foreign affairs, and finance. |
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http://www.bartleby.com/65/ge/Germany.html
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| | CNN.com - Profile: Joschka Fischer - August 29, 2002 |
 | | In 1998, the conservative-liberal government <b>ofb> <b>Chancellorb> Helmut Kohl was voted out <b>ofb> office after 16 years, and the new federal government was formed by the SPD and Greens. |  | | In the cabinet <b>ofb> <b>Chancellorb> Gerhard Schroeder, Fischer became foreign minister and vice <b>chancellorb>. |  | | Joseph Martin Fischer, leader <b>ofb> Germany's Green Party, was born the son <b>ofb> a butcher in Gerabronn, about 45 miles northeast <b>ofb> Stuttgart, on April 12, 1948 -- two years after his Hungarian-German parents were forced to leave Budapest. |
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http://archives.cnn.com/2002/WORLD/europe/08/29/fischer.profile.de
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| | Politics <b>ofb> Germany |
 | | The latest state elections in the eastern region <b>ofb> Germany showed that not only the governing Social Democrats were losing the support <b>ofb> the voters, but even the conservatives: in the fall <b>ofb> 2004 the voters in the state <b>ofb> North Rhine-Westphalia (NRW) chose their local parliaments and mayors. |  | | Liberals, Greens, conservatives and the far left were the winners <b>ofb> the European election in Germany, because voters were disillusioned by high unemployment and cuts in social security, while the governing SPD party seems to be concerned with quarrels between the party wings and unable to give any clear direction. |  | | This Constructive Vote <b>ofb> No Confidence is intended to avoid the situation <b>ofb> the Weimar Republic in which the executive did not have enough support in the legislature to govern effectively, but the legislature was too divided to name a successor. |
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http://www.mywiseowl.com/articles/Politics_of_Germany
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| | Scholastic News: Germany's First Female <b>Chancellorb> |
 | | "You are the first ever elected female head <b>ofb> government in Germany," said Parliament President Norbert Lammert when he announced her victory. |  | | Since then, she has held the posts <b>ofb> Minister for Women and Youth, Minister for the Environment, and Secretary-General <b>ofb> her party. |  | | The daughter <b>ofb> a pastor, she was born in a rural town and studied to become a scientist. |
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http://teacher.scholastic.com/scholasticnews/news/archive.asp?archive=112305
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| | The 'peace <b>chancellorb>' - Editorials/Op-Ed - The Washington Times, America's Newspaper |
 | | Germany, together with France and Great Britain, took America's side on this issue and pursued a policy which aimed to discourage Iran from its nuclear ambitions. |  | | His image as the "peace <b>chancellorb>," defying American plans for war and leading the "axis <b>ofb> good," brought him the few percentage points needed to secure his narrow re-election as German <b>chancellorb>. |  | | Lastly, there is still the danger <b>ofb> a major terrorist attack in Germany influencing the domestic, political situation. |
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http://www.washtimes.com/op-ed/20050828-100445-9297r.htm
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| | <b>Chancellorb> <b>ofb> Germany - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia |
 | | This was the case with <b>Chancellorb> Gerhard Schröder from 1999 until he resigned the chairmanship <b>ofb> the SPD in 2004. |  | | <b>Chancellorb> Ludwig Erhard had the largest cabinet, with twenty-two ministers in the mid-1960s. |  | | The new constitution <b>ofb> the 1919 Weimar Republic said that the <b>Chancellorb> was appointed by the German President, but that the parliament had the right to dismiss a <b>chancellorb> or any <b>ofb> the ministers. |
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chancellor_of_Germany
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| | Vice-<b>Chancellorb> - Enpsychlopedia |
 | | The Lord <b>Chancellorb> 's deputy in the Chancery Division <b>ofb> the High Court <b>ofb> Justice is also known as the Vice-<b>Chancellorb>. |  | | The head <b>ofb> the entire university is the University President (the equivalent <b>ofb> a Commonwealth Vice-<b>Chancellorb>), the <b>Chancellorb> is in charge <b>ofb> one campus, and a Vice-<b>Chancellorb> is one <b>ofb> his chief assistants. |  | | Strictly speaking, he is only the deputy to the <b>Chancellorb> <b>ofb> the university, but the <b>Chancellorb> is usually a prominent public figure who acts as a ceremonial figurehead only (e.g. |
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http://www.grohol.com/wiki/Vice_Chancellor
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| | Cabinet <b>ofb> Germany - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia |
 | | It consists <b>ofb> the <b>Chancellorb> and the cabinet ministers. |  | | Section 64 paragraph 2 <b>ofb> this law says that the <b>Chancellorb> and the ministers have to be |  | | The details <b>ofb> the cabinet 's organisation are set down in sections 62 to 69 <b>ofb> the Basic Law. |
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cabinet_of_Germany
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| | Adolf_Hitler hitler htm germany german adolf was <b>chancellorb> party his government - KnoliX.com |
 | | In that capacity he was <b>Chancellorb> <b>ofb> Germany, head <b>ofb> government, and head <b>ofb> state, an absolute dictator. |  | | As Soviet forces battled their way toward his Reich Chancellory in the center <b>ofb> the city, Hitler is generally believed to have committed suicide in his Führerbunker on April 30, 1945, in Berlin, Germany by means <b>ofb> a self-delivered shot to the head while biting into a cyanide tablet. |  | | Rather than have new presidential elections, Hitler's cabinet passed a law combining the offices <b>ofb> President and <b>Chancellorb>, with Hitler holding the powers <b>ofb> both offices (including the President's decree powers) as "Leader and National <b>Chancellorb>." This consolidation was approved by the electorate in mid-August 1934. |
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http://www.knolix.com/a/Adolf_Hitler.htm
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| | Pakistan Times Top Story: Germany, India back each other for UNSG Permanent Seat |
 | | Fischer, who is also vice-<b>chancellorb> <b>ofb> Germany, was due to leave for China later in the afternoon. |  | | Germany currently holds one <b>ofb> 10 rotating seats but like India and Japan is lobbying for a place with the five permanent members in reforms being demanded by some states which would expand the council to 24 or 26 nations and regional bodies. |  | | NEW DELHI (India): India and Germany reached a deal on Wednesday to support each other's bids for permanent seats on the United Nations Security Council, ministers from the two countries said. |
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http://pakistantimes.net/2004/07/15/top9.htm
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| | <b>chancellorb> -- Encyclopædia Britannica |
 | | As <b>chancellorb> <b>ofb> West Germany from 1974 to 1982, Helmut Schmidt led a coalition government. |  | | He served as West Germany's <b>chancellorb> from 1982, then became the head <b>ofb> the reunited country. |  | | Helmut Kohl <b>ofb> the Christian Democratic party was chosen as <b>chancellorb>, and in March 1983 he was given a clear mandate when his party was returned to power. |
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http://www.britannica.com/eb/article-9022375?tocId=9022375
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| | New <b>chancellorb> will give Germany, U.S. a chance for a new dialogue The San Diego Union-Tribune |
 | | But no <b>chancellorb> or foreign minister not <b>ofb> the '68 generation would have based his policy on overt and systematic opposition to the United States and conducted two election campaigns on a theme <b>ofb> profound distrust <b>ofb> America's ultimate motives. |  | | Merkel is the first female <b>chancellorb> in Germany's history; the first leader who spent most <b>ofb> her life under Communist rule; and the first head <b>ofb> a coalition between the two major German parties since 1969. |  | | She takes over in a country that has been, in effect, without a government since May, when the outgoing <b>chancellorb>, Gerhard Schroeder, announced his intention to bring about new elections. |
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http://www.signonsandiego.com/uniontrib/20051127/news_mz1e27kissin.html
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| | USATODAY.com - Woman could be Germany's next <b>chancellorb> |
 | | Merkel, 51, is the first woman from any <b>ofb> Germany's five major parties to stand for <b>chancellorb>. |  | | In opinion polls, Merkel's CDU and its sister party in Bavaria have consistently enjoyed big leads over the <b>chancellorb>'s Social Democratic Party and its allies. |  | | If Merkel wins, she is likely to try to return Germany to its traditional role as a peacemaker between France and the United States, says Jan-Friedrich Kallmorgen, director <b>ofb> Atlantic Initiative, a think tank in Berlin. |
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http://www.usatoday.com/news/world/2005-09-12-merkel-germany_x.htm
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| | Germany - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia |
 | | The Federal Constitutional Court (Bundesverfassungsgericht), also located in Karlsruhe, is the German Supreme Court responsible for constitutional matters, with power <b>ofb> judicial review. |  | | Germany is a democratic federal parliamentary nation, made up <b>ofb> 16 federal states (Länder or, more commonly, Bundesländer), which in certain spheres act independently <b>ofb> the Federation. |  | | The territory <b>ofb> Germany stretches from the high mountains <b>ofb> the Alps (highest point: the Zugspitze at 2,962 m) in the south to the shores <b>ofb> the North Sea in the north-west and the Baltic Sea in the north-east. |
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Germany
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| | CNN.com - Schroeder aide is foreign minister - Oct 13, 2005 |
 | | The <b>chancellorb> and her chief <b>ofb> staff occupy two Cabinet posts. |  | | They have agreed Merkel will be <b>chancellorb> <b>ofb> a 16-member Cabinet divided equally between the two parties, with eight seats apiece. |  | | Frank Walter Steinmeier, Schroeder's chief <b>ofb> staff, was chosen by his party colleagues for the post, one <b>ofb> eight the party has in the new Cabinet under a power-sharing deal struck with Merkel. |
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http://edition.cnn.com/2005/WORLD/europe/10/13/germany.government.ap
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| | The History Place - Triumph <b>ofb> Hitler |
 | | Among those conservatives was Franz von Papen, Germany's Vice <b>Chancellorb>, who was a confidant <b>ofb> President Hindenburg. |  | | Although he was already called Führer by members <b>ofb> the Nazi Party and popularly by the German public, Hitler's actual government title at this time was simply Reich <b>Chancellorb> <b>ofb> Germany. |  | | The office <b>ofb> Reich President will be combined with that <b>ofb> Reich <b>Chancellorb>. |
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http://www.historyplace.com/worldwar2/triumph/tr-fuehrer.htm
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| | Articles - Nazi Germany |
 | | Weimar Republic (includes the events leading to Hitler's appointment as <b>Chancellorb> <b>ofb> Germany in 1933) |  | | June 5, 1945, the four Allied powers "assume[d] supreme authority with respect to Germany" (Declaration Regarding the Defeat <b>ofb> Germany, US Department <b>ofb> State, Treaties and Other International Acts Series, No. 1520). |  | | The act changed the highly decentralized federal Germany <b>ofb> the Weimar era into a centralized state. |
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http://www.free-biz.org/articles/Nazi_Germany
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| | Ludwig Erhard: Information From Answers.com |
 | | Ludwig Erhard ( February 4, 1897 – May 5, 1977) was a German politician ( CDU) and <b>Chancellorb> <b>ofb> the Federal Republic <b>ofb> Germany from 1963 until 1966. |  | | After the resignation <b>ofb> Adenauer in 1963, Erhard was elected <b>Chancellorb> with 279 against 180 votes on October 16. |  | | Born in Fürth, Germany, from 1913 to 1916 Erhard was a commercial apprentice. |
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http://www.answers.com/topic/ludwig-erhard
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