Word: europeanize
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Dates: during 1990-1999
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...There was a sense that we worked to a degree in the shadow of great texts," says Charles S. Maier '60 Krupp Foundation professor of European studies...
...horizons of educated people haveincreasingly expanded during the twentieth centuryso that it has become harder and harder to equatethe European tradition with a knowledgeableperson," says Dean for Undergraduate EducationLawrence Buell...
...arms embargo against the Muslim-led government. The directive won by a wide margin and follows a similar measure passed by the Senate. The measure has no legal force in itself, but poses political problems for the President. The present White House stance is to reluctantly support the European-backed embargo and to carve up Bosnia into Serb, Muslim and Croat domains. This position is a reversal of Clinton's longstanding wish to provide arms to the underdog Bosnians. Until recently, the Administration "had thrown its body in front of the European train to protect the Bosnians," explains TIME State...
...gaps were filled with European refugees,retired professors, humanities teachers given aquick cram refresher and even "threeundergraduates and a woman," according to anAlumni Bulletin of the time...
President Clinton, still in Europe following D-day celebrations, took to the podium in the French parliament to reassure Europeans that he hadn't forgotten about them. "America remains engaged in Europe," he said, attempting to refute those who say his Administration is preoccupied with Asia and the Pacific Rim. The first U.S. head of state to address the French parliament since Woodrow Wilson, Clinton sounded almost Wilsonian when he called for cooperation among America's European allies to settle the current war -- this one in Bosnia...