n["eugene"][0]="Eugene|United States|us|North America";
n["eugene"][1]="Eugene is a processing and shipping center in a farming area. It is known as the Emerald City and it has lumbering and food-processing, as well as microchip and other electronics industries. Its booming tourist industry is based on its attractive environment. Nearby you will find river recreation areas and Willamette National Forest. Eugene is also an intellectual center. The city is the seat of the University of Oregon, with its noted Northwest Pacific art museum and of Northwest Christian College.|Accommodation and restaurants are available in town. Eugene is on the Willamette River in the west of Oregon and lies 100 km south of Salem and about 3850 km west of Washington D.C.";
n["europapoint"][0]="Europa Point|Gibraltar|gi|United Kingdom";
n["europapoint"][1]="Europa Point is Gibraltar's southernmost tip. There are a lighthouse, the Christian Shrine of Our Lady of Europe and a modern mosque. Free guided tours of the mosque are available.|Europa Point is a short walk from Trafalgar Cemetery.";
n["europascentras"][0]="Europas Centras (Geographical center of Europe)|Lithuania|lh|Europe";
n["europascentras"][1]="The French National Geographical Institute calculated in 1989 that the spot, 25 km north of Vilnius, on the road to Moletai, is the center of Europe. On the spot a sculpture, laid out on the ground, marks Europe's center. The spot is signposted as 'Europas Centras' if you follow the road from Vilnius to Moletai.";
n["europe"][0]="Europe|Europe|europe|Europe";
n["europe"][1]="Europe is conventionally one of the seven continents of the world. Although referred to as a continent, Europe is actually just the western fifth of the Eurasian land mass, which is made up primarily of Asia. Modern geographers generally describe the Ural Mountains, the Ural River, part of the Caspian Sea and the Caucasus Mountains as forming the main boundary between Europe and Asia.|The name Europe is perhaps derived from that of Europa, a consort of Zeus in Greek mythology, or possibly from Ereb, a Phoenician word for 'sunset'.";