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Word: napoleon (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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Usage:

...friend President Nicolae Ceaucescu of Romania, for example, that he decided to embark Zaire on its now stalled "transition to democracy." After breakfast he accords audiences that can stretch into the afternoon; then he relaxes with % his family or studies biographies of men he admires, including Napoleon and De Gaulle. Mobutu is fascinated by Machiavelli, whose treatise The Prince he used to keep at his bedside...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Leaving Fire in His Wake: MOBUTU SESE SEKO | 2/22/1993 | See Source »

...shifts in trade or social disorder. Calah, Tikal and Angkor are among the fabled places that disappeared into the sands or jungles of time. Surviving cities have undergone wild swings of fortune. Alexandria, Egypt, may have housed several hundred thousand people at its peak in Roman times, but when Napoleon entered it in 1798, it had shrunk to 4,000 souls. Since then, it has again boomed to nearly 3 million and faces grave ecological threats. The gleaming city that Arab poet Ibn Dukmak compared to "a golden crown, set with pearls, perfumed with musk and camphor, and shining from...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Megacities | 1/11/1993 | See Source »

...NAPOLEON...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Season's Readings | 12/14/1992 | See Source »

...return of Bobby Fischer, the biggest comeback since Napoleon sailed a single-masted flat-bottom out of Elba (on his way, mind you, to Waterloo), has been widely noted but quite misunderstood. After 20 years of self-imposed seclusion, the greatest chess player of his time returns to life by way of a rematch with Boris Spassky (the man from whom he took the world championship in 1972) in, of all places, Yugoslavia. The picture flashed around the world is that of Fischer spitting on a U.S. government order charging him with violating the U.N. embargo on Yugoslavia. The papers...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Memo to The Gods: Never Come Back | 9/28/1992 | See Source »

...basis for doubts about Russia's long-term commitment to "Westernness" lies not in Yeltsin or his democratic supporters but in the ambivalence about the West that still seems endemic to many Russians. Admiration has historically been tinged with resentment of Western arrogance and conquest in the past (Napoleon and Hitler) and with misgivings about the West's spiritual values. Freedom, democracy and rampant market economics seem palpably Western; but so do political anarchy, street crime and the Mafia. Underlying doubts about the supposed social advantages of a Western-style way of life are shared by a wide audience...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Russia Could Go The Asiatic Way | 7/6/1992 | See Source »

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