portal: Libraries and the Academy 2.1 (2002) 99-123 In November 2000, the Digital Library Federation (DLF) and the Council on Library and Information Resources (CLIR) commissioned a white paper to initiate discussion of how and why libraries are changing. Eight academic library directors met with representatives from the DLF and CLIR in March 2001 to discuss the issues.
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The D-Day military invasion that helped to end World War II was one the most ambitious and consequential military campaigns in human history. In its strategy and scope—and its enormous stakes for the future of the free world—historians regard it among the greatest military achievements ever.
D-Day, code-named Operation Overlord, launched on June 6, 1944, after the commanding Allied general, Dwight D. Eisenhower, ordered the largest invasion force in history—hundreds of thousands of American, British, Canadian and other troops—to ship across across the English Channel and come ashore on the beaches of Normandy, on France’s northern coast. After almost five years of war, nearly all of Western Europe was occupied by German troops or held by fascist governments, like those of Spain and Italy. The Western Allies’ goal: to put an end to the Germany army and, by extension, to topple Adolf Hitler’s barbarous Nazi regime.
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They are all culpable in the guilt of Hitler and other few who devised the final solution.
Explanation:
Final solution refers to widely accepted terms used by Nazi and Europe to annihilate the Jews. Some of the programs were drived by doctors who apart from saving lives also were taken Jews lives. They used certain drug administration to exterminate the Jews. The same program was carried out by those who killed Jews in chimney.
Though the concept was coined by German Nazi but every part of Europe participated in the removal of " gangerous appendix in the human bodies" a term used by doctors in Europe to justy the killing of European jews.