Material "should always be within an educational context" and any credits should not use pupils' surnames.
But surnames aren't reliable either, given the number of inter-marriages that occurred under Ba'ath Party rule.
They searched publicly accessible genealogy databases that contain both Y chromosome information and men's surnames.
He also chose to call the players by their surnames rather than their first names, let alone their nicknames.
It actually has been an eventful few days for players with long surnames.
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And you won't find any Germans named Merkel, Schroeder or Kohl, either, because surnames are banned as first names.
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Greece's players, on average, have the longest surnames of any team competing in the Euro, at 8.77 letters per man.
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They are assuming Hispanic surnames so that they can assimilate into our society and do goodness, God only knows what.
The general rule is that knighthoods go with first names and that peerages (Lords, Barons, Dukes etc) go with surnames.
According to a new study, people whose surnames start with letters late in the alphabet may be the fastest to buy.
The wealth and social status of people with rare surnames in 1800 is strongly correlated with that of their descendants today.
However, no surnames were recorded and the names could have been false.
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Police infiltrated Muslim student groups, put informants in mosques, monitored sermons and catalogued every Muslim in New York who adopted new, Americanized surnames.
Mr Aznar's ministers are younger than their Socialist shadows, though they tend to be young fogeys in pin-striped suits with surnames from Franco's time.
Claudia Altman-Siegel, the first non-Spanish child in Massachusetts to be given a hyphenated combination of her mother's and father's surnames, phoned me from San Francisco.
Gregory Clark at the University of California, Davis, and Neil Cummins of City University of New York, for instance, have tracked families with rare surnames.
During the 1970s surnames were abolished to attempt to disguise this - ID cards and birth certificates recorded only the individuals first name and father's name.
Petra Gelbart, a Czech-born Romani musicologist, says a common experience among job applicants is that those speaking accentless Czech and with unremarkable surnames easily get interviews.
Someone, somewhere had a list of Hispanic surnames, and if you had one you got counted toward the quota and received additional unspecified consideration toward raises and promotions.
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Many surnames, after all, evolved through being used the other way around, and a person's family profession determined their name - hence all those Butchers, Bakers, Smiths and Taylors.
Some genealogy sites group such genetic information with surnames.
Some false claims of multiple entries on the register at the same address were found by the police to relate to people "who had identical first names and surnames but different middle names", it suggested.
Based on the surnames - which usually give away caste affiliation - of the members of these company boards, the intrepid researchers classified them into Forward Castes, Other Backward Classes (OBCs), Scheduled Castes and Tribes and foreign directors.
They all sent us good luck messages for the competition before we left Wales on Monday and have now given their surnames to our groups for the in-house activities we hope will provide some relief from the rigours of training and playing.
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