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Word: archness (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1980-1989
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Usage:

Before the Eastern Championships, however, the Crimson must journey to New Haven, Conn. to take on arch-rival Yale next Saturday. And after last week's road mishap at Cornell, it is especially important for Harvard to have a good meet on enemy turf...

Author: By Joseph Kaufman, | Title: Quakers Go 'Glug-Glug-Glug' in Blodgett | 2/24/1986 | See Source »

Moore has developed a subspecialty in this sort of high-camp Gulf ephemeron: for New Orleans he designed the Piazza d'Italia and the snazziest part of the 1984 World's Fair. His Galveston arch, a pair of towers connected by wire mesh, is more of the same, a flibbertigibbet accretion of painted waves, plywood sea creatures, banners, arches, gables, windows, lights, action. Aubry's rigid canopy of pleated gold fiber glass, topped by a big wooden fish, is baffling but unequivocally vulgar--like kitsch from another planet, or a collaboration between Claes Oldenburg and Cher. Powell's arch, with...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Design: Form Follows Fantasy | 2/17/1986 | See Source »

Tigerman's four-sided Roman arch is the most literally classical of the lot, although its instant statuary (stucco-sprayed mannequins) does madcap violence to any deeper notion of classicism. Graves' handsome copper-roofed arch is better behaved and more civic than the rest; it wants to be a real building. As for Pelli, the neomodernist turns out to be a cryptoprimitivist. His open-faced sandwich of long two-by-fours forms a kind of aboriginal latticework gate and seems Southwestern in the best sense: simple, staunch, serene...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Design: Form Follows Fantasy | 2/17/1986 | See Source »

...called an "arch-artist" by George Bernard Shaw and "that sovereign of insufferables" by Ambrose Bierce. In The God of Mirrors, Oscar Wilde qualifies for both titles, reducing every crisis to an epigram. Some of them are prophetic. In Dorian Gray, "the bad will suffer. The good will be rewarded. That . . . is what fiction means." Some are merely contrary: "It is always an advantage not to have received a good education." As Wilde arcs over London, he decides that the difference between true love and caprice is that caprice lasts a little longer, and that is his undoing. His infatuation...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: New Pleasures and Promises | 2/17/1986 | See Source »

Only last week, in his State of the Union Address, President Reagan cited Franklin D. Roosevelt '04 as the arch enemy of welfare. The selective right-wing memory seems to forget who created the American welfare state in the first place...

Author: By David J. Barron, | Title: No Way To Treat A Hero | 2/12/1986 | See Source »

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