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Word: apartheid (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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Lead plaintiff Julie N.W. Goodridge met her partner Hillary F. Goodridge at a 1985 Harvard lecture on divestment from apartheid South Africa...

Author: By Joshua D. Gottlieb, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Mass. Court Finds Ban on Gay Marriage Unconstitutional | 11/19/2003 | See Source »

...final stretch of negotiations before the target completion date of Jan. 1, 2005. Things got fierce before the meeting began. The U.S. used its carrots and sticks to successfully pressure nations like Peru and Colombia to defect from Brazil's alliance. Lula, meanwhile, accused Washington of creating a "commercial apartheid." He sent diplomats throughout Latin America to shore up support for what he and Argentine President Néstor Kirchner call the Buenos Aires Consensus, a left-leaning design for trade that emphasizes job creation and access to markets. Now Lula faces a delicate diplomatic moment. If things melt down...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Lula's Next Big Fight | 11/16/2003 | See Source »

...dismissed the claim by the fence’s opponents that it is “an apartheid wall—it is neither a wall nor apartheid...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Israeli Journalist: Arafat Doesn't Want Peace | 11/13/2003 | See Source »

...When all the literary games are done and his last sentence deconstructed, Coetzee will be remembered for something quite simple: here was a writer who described, more truly than any other, what it was to be white and conscious in the face of apartheid's stupidities and cruelties. This may perplex people from outside South Africa, because the word apartheid is never uttered in his novels, and the settings are not necessarily South African. In 1980, when Coetzee's masterpiece Waiting for the Barbarians was published, I was in the U.S., living among people who took it as a surreal...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Only the Big Questions | 10/13/2003 | See Source »

...reality. And yet, and yet. When all the literary games are done and his last sentence deconstructed, Coetzee will be remembered for something quite simple: here was a writer who described, more truly than any other, what it was to be white and conscious in the face of apartheid's stupidities and cruelties. This may perplex people from outside South Africa, because the word apartheid is never uttered in his novels, and the settings are not necessarily South African. In 1980, when Coetzee's masterpiece Waiting for the Barbarians was published, I was in the U.S., living among people...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: A Veiled Genius | 10/5/2003 | See Source »

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