Word: denmark
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Dates: during 1980-1989
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...said he had to cut short a women's soccer trip to Denmark this summer for a court appointment, only to find that the court-date had been postponed. He also missed several days of work this summer at a summer camp, he added...
...Humulin represents only a small advance for an American industry that has produced scant profits for its backers and worldwide sales of just $25 million. Another form of human insulin, made conventionally through chemical processes by Denmark's Novo Industri, has been on the market in Great Britain since June. Though Humulin's cost will decline as production runs increase, it will initially be twice as expensive as animal-based insulin and its eventual market is limited, no more than $20 million...
...Thurman, was that the final word as to what you are really worth "lies with the opposite sex." That value was assayed in a series of lifelong flirtations, romantic failures and a doomed marriage to her cousin Bror Blixen. The couple quixotically exchanged Bror's family farm in Denmark for acreage in Kenya. Coffee growing, the young groom announced, was the only thing that had any future. He had wholly discounted his wife's genius...
...Spain's moderate Socialist leader, was not seen in European capitals as evidence of any continent-wide drift to the left. In the past five years, socialist governments have lost power in Great Britain, Luxembourg, Belgium and Norway, and this year alone, in West Germany, The Netherlands and Denmark. Rather, the election of the first Socialist Prime Minister in Spain since 1936 appeared to be part of a trend confined to Southern Europe, where voters have grown disillusioned with decades of ineffective center-right governments. France's President François Mitterrand and Greece's Prime Minister...
...environmentalists and others opposed to nuclear power and the deployment in Europe of U.S. medium-range nuclear weapons have drifted leftward. A greater number have moved to the right in protest against the ever increasing tax burden needed to maintain extensive welfare programs in stagnant economies. In September, Denmark got its first conservative Prime Minister in 81 years, Poul Schlüter, who immediately pushed through an austerity program. Belgium's Christian Democratic Prime Minister Wilfried Martens took office a year ago with the avowed aim of cutting back government spending. In a welter of political confusion, the Dutch...