- •1 | No Kidding, Peace
- •2 | The French Countryside
- •3 | Easier Travel
- •4 | Ireland's Revival
- •5 | That Burgundy Passport
- •7 | Work Where You Want
- •8 | Good News for Galicia
- •9 | Cern
- •10 | The Euro
- •11 | Airbus
- •12 | Better Football
- •13 | Erasmus
- •14 | Tabloid Heaven
- •15 | The Fourth Movement of Beethoven's Ninth
- •16 | Clean Beaches
- •17 | Safer Food
- •18 | Taking Climate Change Seriously
- •19 | A Reason to Go to Brussels
- •20 | Eastward Look, the Land is Bright
8 | Good News for Galicia
And Wales, Sardinia and Mecklenburg-Vorpommern. For regions on the periphery of their nations, with proud cultures and traditions of their own, the E.U. has been a godsend. The Committee of the Regions provides a political voice while the E.U.'s regional policy has channeled funds for projects aimed to tackle economic and social disparities within member countries. The consequence? Not a Europe homogeneously harmonized, but one that is more diverse than ever before.
9 | Cern
Since 1954 the European Organization for Nuclear Research on the outskirts of Geneva has been in the forefront of advanced particle physics, figuring out what stuff we're made of. Bonus: Tim Berners-Lee was on the staff there when he developed a new way for scientists to share information over the Internet - the World Wide Web.
10 | The Euro
The single currency - introduced on Jan. 1, 2002, and now used by 315 million people in 13 countries - did more than eliminate those tiresome collections of small coins that we used to bring back from vacation. By making prices transparent, the euro made the single European market a reality.
11 | Airbus
Sure, we know, the jewel of European industrial collaboration looks pretty scratched these days as the aerospace company's management weaknesses are exposed. And yes, "launch aid" for new planes is a taxpayer subsidy by any other name. But the weirdly cobbled together planes - wings made in Britain, tail fins in Germany - have at least ensured that there's some competition in the global commercial aviation market, and forced Boeing of the U.S. to raise its own game.
12 | Better Football
Started as the European Cup in 1955, dominated by Real Madrid in the early years, the Champions League now gets audiences from Minsk to Munster watching the same images, and the final each year has become Europe's Super Bowl. Plus: the Bosman case in 1995 - where the European Court ruled that players at the end of their contracts could move freely between clubs - enabled top teams to become the collection of international talents they are now.
13 | Erasmus
Since 1987, over 1.5 million university students have benefited from the Erasmus European exchange program and taken comparative knowledge of local beers to unimagined heights. The E.U.'s Lifelong Learning Programme has a $9 billion budget for the next seven years to develop areas such as cooperation in education policy, student exchanges and adult learning.
14 | Tabloid Heaven
British Euro-skepticism may irritate others, but let's be fair - it has much contributed to the gaiety of nations. What would the London red tops do without the constant supply of stories - most of them urban myths - about European standardization of everything from cucumbers to condoms? Our favorite: the widely reported claim that E.U. safety rules required circus tightrope walkers and jugglers to wear hard hats.