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

...parade of valuables in Washington might suggest, to the uninitiated, that the British can easily afford to maintain them. Some mildew and burst upholstery would lend poignancy to the subliminal cry for help. In any case, a collection is not a house, and the catchpenny title "Treasure Houses"-- suggesting Palladian Fort Knoxes inhabited by Volpones from Debrett's--does not convey the agreeably worn mixture of the grand and the scruffy that often defines their charm. The show embraces conventions of glamour (mainly about Georgian England) that few social historians would accept today. It rehearses the conventional picture of enlightened...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Art: Brideshead Redecorated | 11/11/1985 | See Source »

...part of the largest fall-clean up crew in recent years, Stearns, Stone and nearly 150 other students last week tackled the summer's mildew, dust and grime to get undergraduate living quarters ready for students' return...

Author: By Diane M. Cardwell, | Title: Freshmen Scrub, Sweat and Socialize | 9/12/1983 | See Source »

...Manhattan wheatfield has created its own environment. Says Denes: "We have praying mantises, spiders that change color to resemble the wheat-Day-Glo yellow and brown-fireflies and a sweet country smell." They also have a harvest of problems. The wheat contracted a blight called wheat smut, plus mildew from the early summer rains. John Ameroso, a Cornell University agronomist who is Denes' horticultural adviser, says the crop is "distressed" and must be harvested early...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Environment: Amber Waves of Grime | 8/23/1982 | See Source »

Like artists of every stripe, the best historians make their work look easy.Their research may have been long and arduous, but they filter the odor of archival dust and mildew out of the finished product. Also gone are the blind alleys and dead ends, all the large and petty frustrations of scholarship. Few readers mind being spared such details. Yet the tracks that historians cover are sometimes as fascinating as the past they recapture...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: The Past Recaptured | 2/15/1982 | See Source »

...laced with enough mawkish prose and gratuitous personal detail to make Harold Robbins blush. As the scandal mounted, for instance, Sheehy reported: "Mary Cunningham sat in her hotel room at the Waldorf. She could not eat. Every so often, she stepped into the bathroom to vomit." Also: "The mildew of envy is a living, corroding organism in the corridors of power." Chairman Agee, Sheehy discloses, is currently taking Catholic instruction from Monsignor William Nolan, Cunningham's guardian since she was five. (Agee heatedly denies this.) For her part, Sheehy says that her story was based on 30 interviews, including...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Press: The Mary and Bill Story | 10/27/1980 | See Source »

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