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Word: dunne (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1990-1999
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Noticeably missing from the scoring line on Wednesday was Harvard's second line of freshman winger Kalen Ingram, junior center Kiirsten Suurkask, and junior winger Tara Dunn...

Author: By David R. De remer, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: W.Hockey Will Try to Forget Tie | 12/10/1999 | See Source »

...question is old but still stimulating and provocative, as historian Susan Dunn demonstrates anew in Sister Revolutions: French Lightning, American Light (Faber and Faber; 258 pages; $26). In presenting her lively analysis, Dunn, a history professor at Williams College, relies heavily on the words, both public utterances and private correspondence, of the participants in the two revolutions. They, of course, did not enjoy the hindsight afforded by history, and it is fascinating to watch them proceeding through trial and error along the unmapped paths toward democracy...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Power to The People | 12/6/1999 | See Source »

...French had handsomely supported the Americans in their struggle against the English. Dunn writes, "The American model was France's for the taking--after all, she had paid for it, and her officers and soldiers had fought and died for it." Said a French veteran of the American Revolutionary War: "They have given a great example to the new hemisphere. Let us give it to the universe!" But as their own revolutionary fervor increased during the 1780s, the French began to believe that the Americans had not gone far enough in shucking off the bad old ways...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Power to The People | 12/6/1999 | See Source »

...French, Dunn acknowledges, faced a broader revolutionary challenge than the Americans had a few years earlier. Wresting political autonomy from a power across an ocean was not the same as toppling a thousand-year-old home-grown feudal system. But, the author argues, the French could have learned one lesson from America and thereby avoided a bloody philosophical blunder. Instead of following the Founding Fathers' careful protections of individual liberties, the French made the unity of their people the highest goal. "Curiously," Dunn writes, "all the qualities that had traditionally been attributed to the quasi-divine king--oneness, indivisibility, infallibility...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Power to The People | 12/6/1999 | See Source »

...should surprise no one that, as Dunn notes, Lenin had a statue of Robespierre erected in Moscow in 1918. (Made of cheap stone, it soon crumbled, as the Soviet Union would some 70 years later.) Sister Revolutions shows not only how the French and American experiments developed, but also why their differing examples have continued to beguile ambitious leaders...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Power to The People | 12/6/1999 | See Source »

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