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Word: objects (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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Convinced as I am that the true aesthetic event is always human anguish transfigured (resolved) into an aesthetic act or object, I see the Bill T. Jones work as a possible incarnation of this belief. Is it? Does Jones' use of videotaped portraiture of anguish and suffering find aesthetic transfiguration in the dancers' action? Or is the work ``just'' a morality play...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Letters, Feb. 27, 1995 | 2/27/1995 | See Source »

...disks, videotapes and other "intellectual property" averted a U.S. threat of punitive tariffs. The agreement brought China a step closer to joining the World Trade Organization, especially if it strictly enforces the new agreement. Chinese membership in the WTO has been blocked by Europe and the Clinton Administration, which object to trade barriers restricting sales of western goods and services there. While the trade pact could boost U.S. trade with China by $1 billion, the U.S. trade gap with China soared to nearly $30 billion last year. "These other issues will be very contentious," says TIME New York correspondent Barbara...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: CHINA TRADE TUSSLE CONTINUES | 2/27/1995 | See Source »

...object to] the means they have adopted torecruit members on campus," Epps said. "This lastyear, two specific complaints were made," he said."What those complaints show is conduct that stepsover the line and is harassment...

Author: By Curtis R. Chong, | Title: Jewett Will Decide Fate of Bible Study | 2/24/1995 | See Source »

When Gay W. Seidman '78 was elected the first female president of The Harvard Crimson in 1977, she didn't expect hundreds of reporters to descend onto 14 Plympton Street. Yet within days of the announcement, she found herself the object of national media attention, with featured stories in the New York Times, Boston Globe and on most national TV networks...

Author: By Hallie Z. Levine, | Title: WOMEN ON TOP | 2/23/1995 | See Source »

President Clinton abandoned his proposed border crossing fee today, in a move to quiet the growing clamor from Congress and several border states, which object to the idea of charging $1.50 to pedestrians and $3.00 to cars coming into the U.S. from Mexico or Canada...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: AMERICAN DREAM . . . ADMISSION FREE | 2/22/1995 | See Source »

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