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Word: friendship (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1990-1999
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Usage:

...sections, works for a professor and is learning to play the guitar. Others edit student publications, teach sections for computer science courses, play in orchestras and jet-set around the world--all at the same time. And lest you hope that they have at least sacrificed fun and friendship for all that achievement, each student's description ends with a firm quote to the contrary: "I make sure I go out a couple times a week." "I'm adamant that I have a social life while I'm here." "When I'm having fun, I have fun intensively." One mentions...

Author: By Dara Horn, | Title: Staring at the Ceiling | 3/17/1998 | See Source »

...other things on his mind, mainly his approaching wedding. In the brief 90 minutes that French author Yasmina Reza's play takes to unfold, the three will debate modern art, lash out at each other with insults they will later regret, and generally explore the nature of their shaky friendship...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Theater: Three-Finger Exercise | 3/16/1998 | See Source »

...ambition. The characters are all too easy to parse: Serge is a modernist but really a dilettante; Marc, a classicist who's a snob underneath; Yvan, an art-naif who goes whichever way the wind blows. The audience has little investment in the clash between them because their friendship seems implausible from the get-go: there's no explanation of how or why they became friends, no real sense of closeness. This might be tolerable if Art worked as a Shavian battle of wit and ideas, but mostly it's just three guys needling each other about everything from Serge...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Theater: Three-Finger Exercise | 3/16/1998 | See Source »

...link between art and friendship could actually be a fruitful subject for a play. How many of us have felt a pang of betrayal when a close friend or loved one has failed to share our enthusiasm for a favorite movie or novel? But the issue is blunted here by the fact that the painting is treated as a joke from the start--and a dated one at that. It's the old wheeze about how abstract art appeals only to pretentious critics (and suckers like Serge), while ordinary folks see the emperor's new clothes...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Theater: Three-Finger Exercise | 3/16/1998 | See Source »

...answer?' She always had the answer," remembers her 11th-grade English teacher, Sue Ann Allen. Gayl came to the attention of the Lexington-born poet Elizabeth Hardwick, who became an early mentor and arranged for a college scholarship. But as an adult Gayl resisted most offers of friendship. In Ann Arbor, she lived like a nun, alone in a threadbare apartment behind a grocery store...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Saddest Story | 3/9/1998 | See Source »

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