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

...story may be muddled, the characters sketchy, some performances shallow and the music often slushily derivative. So what. For those who seek an equivalent to a ride through the Haunted Mansion at Walt Disney World -- seemingly a vast proportion of today's Broadway audience -- Phantom is a brilliantly manipulated journey, scary yet ultimately unthreatening. A prime example is the show's most celebrated effect, the gasp-evoking plummet from the ceiling almost to the floor of a 1,500-lb. chandelier. Many spectators arrive knowing it will drop, and the staging gives plenty of clues to the rest. Equally, however...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Theater: Music Of The Night THE PHANTOM OF THE OPERA | 2/8/1988 | See Source »

...other relief supplies each month, mainly by road and rail. The routes, however, are often tortuously long. The straight-line distance from the northern town of Tete, a distribution center for relief shipments, to the famine-stricken Zumbo area on the western border is only 200 miles, yet the journey requires a 500-mile detour through Zimbabwe and Zambia. Round trips take at least ten days. Rail shipments from Zimbabwe to Maputo can take a month to arrive...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Mozambique Agony on the African Coast | 2/1/1988 | See Source »

...Miller's controversial reputation would suggest, they will probably be classics with a twist. He has reset an Italian opera in gangster territory, for example, and reimagined O'Neill's Long Day's Journey into Night as caustic tragicomedy rather than lugubrious apocalypse. Andromache is the first offering of a seven-play season, of which Miller will direct five. With characteristic confidence in his polymathic perversity, he has assigned himself an absurdist British comedy, N.F. Simpson's One Way Pendulum; a Jacobean tragedy, Bussy D'Ambois; a Leonard Bernstein musical, Candide, which Miller says "will have more flavor...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Theater: New Life at London's Old Vic | 2/1/1988 | See Source »

...easy for the artists' families, who had to endure the discomforts of the journey and then, somehow, acclimatize themselves to the utter unfamiliarity of French life. One senses a feeling of doom beneath the stoic words written by Yoneko, the wife of Saeki Yuzo, who spent two sojourns there: "After returning to Japan, my husband, it seems to me, was constantly thinking he could only accomplish the task remaining to him during his life by going back to Paris in order to paint the soiled walls and loosely-fixed posters he found on the back streets." Saeki today...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Art: Japanese with A French Accent | 1/25/1988 | See Source »

...today? Were stars created before galaxies or vice versa? And perhaps most intriguing, are these galaxies poised at the edge of the observable universe? Astronomers believe most galaxies formed at the same time, shortly after the big bang. If these galaxies come from that epoch, their light began its journey to earth 17 billion years ago, and they are likely to be the most distant objects in the cosmos. There is a chance, of course, that the objects are something other than what Elston suspects, and astronomers are racking their brains for a convincing alternative explanation. So far, they...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Science: Light At The End of the Cosmos | 1/25/1988 | See Source »

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