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  • was often compared with Uncle·. Tom_' s Cabin for its effec.t oh popular attitudes. His -works also advocated national seif-determina;tion "'from Moldavia to Finland". and point:s east. _Shevchenko was also noted for hiS defense Of the Civil rightS Of JeWS 1
  • ,~- ~' 1:lud!ng V!!e!YGisC$."rl d'&nalng, ~for­ mer French pteside&rt. have deep iidsgtv... tngs· about alloWing Alistri~ Finland;: iwe-. den and Norway to join the union next year before such a revamp has been discussed. Speaking to the French Parliame.nt
  • another's borders. · · . , 'I must tell you that I was surprised that 21 nations, including sweden and Finland -~ two formerly neutral countries-- asked to be ~pat~ of it. so it is taking on a life of vitality of its own, which .should not be underestimated
  • of the Atlantic Council; former State Assistant Secretary for.European Affairs; Ambassador to Finland and the then-GDR Randall Robinson: groups on Africa head of TransAfrica, one of leading advocacy Eugene Rostow: Yale Law School professor and former dean
  • cascades off !.6th-century walls; Tallinn's young, both ethnic Estonian and Russian, look like Finland's. There are problems enough, including poverty and crime, but Estonia, at least, has moved smartly from the "near abroad," as the Russians call
  • , Finland, and Sweden joined the trade bloc this year. EU exports to the rest of the world rose lOo/c, while imports expanded . 9.3o/c. Members with the biggest surpluses .were Germany, $32:9 billion; Italy, S16.3 billion; and France, 513.9 billion. Those
  • rally I said Moldavian People's Front spol.;esman 'I uri Rozhgo. In the port city of Tallirtn on the Gulf of Finland, the human chain began at a wind-whipped medieval tower where Estonian Premier Indrik. Toome and other leaders headed the line of unit""f
  • effect on popular attitudes. His works also advocated national self-determination "from Moldavia to Finland" and points east. Shevchenko was also noted for advocating civil rights for Jews and other minorities whom he considered equally oppressed to serfs
  • £ Fiji, Suva. Dear Mr. Min.ister: Finland His Excellency Martti Ahtisaari, President of·Finland, Helsinki. · Dear Mr. Pre'sident: His Excellency' Paavo Lipponen, Prime Minister of. Finland, Helsinki.· Dear· Mr. Prime Minister': Her Excellency Tarja
  • , Kyrgyzstan, Bulgaria, Albania, Slovenia, Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, Ukraine, Moldova, Georgia, Azerbaijan, Kazakhstan, Turkmenistan, Sweden and Finland. Central Organs of the Partnership o • A Steering Committee at NATO Headquarters manages day-to-day PFP
  • are frequently Jumped together, but their histories, personalities and prospects are vastly different. While Estonia has strong cultural and historical links to Finland and Scandinavia,.and Latvia still retains strong German influences, Lithuania is the Baltic
  • 6f.ancient : 33 ·other governments of Eu.tope and . · :history. The'argull}~nt ~hat the ~SCE · ·, Nortl{ Amerisa ·gathered· in Helsinki; Finland, .sigried the document e11titled . . "Final Act of the .Conference .oh Se- · Richard' Schiftei' ha~· sei'Ved
  • testimony. Over 20,000 copies of this book have been sold. And her speech before an international symposium in Finland is a chapter in Women and the Militarv System. Marion Anderson ·has appeared as an expen witness before the House Budget Committee
  • , Ethiopia, Finland, India, Indonesia, Iran, Ireland, Jordan, Kenya, Malaysia, Mexico, Nepal, New Zealand, Norway, Pak1stan, Peru, the Philippines, Romania, Saudi Arabia, Senegal, Singapore, Spain, Sr+--l...ank~. Sweden, Tanzania, Thailand, the United Kingdom
  • and eastern Europe, including Russia, and the traditional neutrals. As of March 1995, 25 states -- including all seven former Warsaw Pact States of Central and Eastern Europe, the three Baltic Republics, Sweden, Austria, Finland, Slovenia, and all but one
  • adjusting to the addition of Austria, Finland and Sweden in January. And the cost remainS a aitical unlalown: A recent study by the Friedrich Ebert Founda. A Tough Choice 'tion in Bonn estimated that eastward EU ex1 The widening of Western Europe's core
  • . The purpose of the Fund is to promote private-sector development in Lithuania, Latvia and Estonia. The Fund's Board will be chaired by Rozanne Ridgway, former Assistant Secretary of State for Europe and Ambassador to East Germany and Finland. The Fund
  • Bulgaria 2 Croatia 1 Czech Republic · 7 0@nmark 3 Finland 26 France 163 Germany 29 Greece 14. Hungary 3 Iceland 10 Ireland 16 Italy 5 L.atvia 2. Lithuania 14 Netherlands ·s Norway 11 Poland 21. ~ortugal 4 Romania 56 Russia 30 · 18 8 1Z6 Spain
  • , the country's capital (population: 9 million), St. Petersburg (formerly Leningrad; population: 4.5 million), and Nizhny Novgorod (formerly Gorky; population: 1.4 million). Built by Peter the Great on the Gulf of Finland as Russia's "window on the West," St
  • , and other Western organizations. It also seeks more active participation in United Nations peace-keeping efforts worldwide. Latvia maintains embassies in the United States, Belarus, Belgium, Denmark, Estonia, Finland, France, Germany, Lithuania, Sweden
  • ' S~eden ·.and. Finland,'· · fast and courageous leadership that President. . two. formerly neut~al countries, asked. t() be _, . . Walesa has displayed for so manyyears. . I' a part .of it. So·it is ta,king on a ljfe of, vitality. I thank him for·that