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Word: europeanization (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1970-1979
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Usage:

...Haya were centuries ahead of European metallurgists

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Science: Africa's Ancient Steelmakers | 9/25/1978 | See Source »

Schmidt was led to his discovery by Haya elders, who showed him a "shrine tree" that they said marked the site of ancient iron smelters long worked by their people. Because the Haya can now buy inexpensive, European-made steel tools and make more money raising coffee and other crops, they stopped producing their own steel some 50 years ago. Thus the only Haya who could recall details of the steelmaking process were very old, and as Schmidt and Avery write, this knowledge was "threatened every day by the passage of time, by death and by age-related infirmities occurring...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Science: Africa's Ancient Steelmakers | 9/25/1978 | See Source »

...during World War II; after surgery; in Munich. Awarded a glider pilot's license at the age of 15, Messerschmitt first gained fame building light sports planes. The young, soft-spoken engineer specialized in increasing aircraft speed and soon received military assignments. During the war, German factories filled European and African skies with 40,000 of his ME-109 fighters and ME-110 twin-engine bombers, aircraft so effective that Allied pilots who displayed bad nerves were said to have "the Messerschmitt twitch." In 1941 he developed the world's first combat jet, but Hitler stalled its production...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Milestones, Sep. 25, 1978 | 9/25/1978 | See Source »

Guido G. Goldman '59, executive director of the Center for European Studies and senior lecturer on Government, received the Commander's Cross of the Order of Merit of the Federal Republic of Germany at a dinner given in his honor at the German Consulate General in Boston on September...

Author: By Raymond Bertolino, | Title: Goldman Wins Award | 9/20/1978 | See Source »

...Whether they could inspire tragedy remained in doubt until Julia Markus addressed herself to the theme of growing up Jewish in Jersey City. Tragedy requires the decline of a hero, and Markus has invented one-however low key-in this somber, eloquent novel: Irving Bender, the son of East European Jews for whom the immigrant dream of success had come to nothing. "Irv's father drank and gambled and died," she writes in her terse idiom. "The mother got along; she got along. Education was life to his mother...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Irving's World | 9/18/1978 | See Source »

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