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Word: protested (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 2000-2000
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Usage:

Some questions presented by the chairs: Is one supposed to sit in them? If so, does one sit to be close to the dead, to be in their place and assume their perspective? Does one sit in judgment, vigilance, serenity, longing? Does one sit in protest, as at a sit-in, against acts of terrorism and anarchy? Does one sit with America? And if one does not sit--and no one here, not a single visitor to the Oklahoma City National Memorial, makes a move to do so--then is it the chairs that do the sitting? Is theirs...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: How We Remember | 5/29/2000 | See Source »

...level, burial places--"a communal site of memory," says Linenthal. The chairs at the Oklahoma City Memorial contain what is often called the presence of absence. To Linenthal, the new memorials are "places of civic transformation" as well; one should come away changed. And they are sites of public protest, "where one cries out in anguish against the event, to keep it in living memory...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: How We Remember | 5/29/2000 | See Source »

...nature of protest itself is complicated. In Oklahoma City, people have said the memorial is a protest against a godless education; thus it stands as an argument for prayer in public schools. They have said it protests a permissive society, that it stands against violence in the movies and on TV. "How do you measure what people take away from these things?" Linenthal asks...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: How We Remember | 5/29/2000 | See Source »

...success allows them to be known by one name (Picasso, Yanni). But a musician from Minneapolis, Minn., did those titans one better, insisting that he be referred to only as an unpronounceable hieroglyphic. Since 1993, the man born PRINCE Rogers Nelson has refused to use his given name to protest the terms of his recording contract. Last week, however, the singer who has simply been referred to as The Artist announced that his contract has expired and his name has been emancipated. "I will now go back to using my name instead of the symbol I adopted to free myself...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: People: May 29, 2000 | 5/29/2000 | See Source »

...Buckley Jr., on the other hand, though capable from time to time of the polysyllabic Dirksen purr, has used public speech for the most serious of intellectual purposes, as a sharply civilized weapon, an instrument of instruction and correction. This, when one is talking politics, is unusual. A protest without a program is mere sentimentality, as a political theorist wrote. Buckley's opinions have always proceeded not from emotion but from a structure of thought - agree with it or not. He appeals to the standard of "right reason." "However caught up you are in the romanticisms which sweep the world...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: We Lose a Great Speaker, We Gain a Great Book | 5/24/2000 | See Source »

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