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Word: milo (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1960-1969
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Usage:

...Juster, however, has created with an appeal to everyone fuses to take for granted words, sounds, numbers, and all the simple glories. He puts a little Milo into a car run by and fuelled by Jules illustrations, and through realms of human...

Author: By Frederick H. Gardner, | Title: Juster Takes Us Through a New Looking Glass | 4/27/1962 | See Source »

...Milo meets a Watchdog job is to prevent people from time (Long ago, the general was: "if there's so much of it, be very valuable," and the thus fell into disrepute.), a Bee (b-e-e-), a Humbug whom loves, and a flock of who bring cliches to life. Juster real respect for the hackneyed he likes to dust it off and you of the time when it shone and really enriched...

Author: By Frederick H. Gardner, | Title: Juster Takes Us Through a New Looking Glass | 4/27/1962 | See Source »

Digitopolis Milo eats a meal that him hungrier, and later meets who looks like he's split down...

Author: By Frederick H. Gardner, | Title: Juster Takes Us Through a New Looking Glass | 4/27/1962 | See Source »

...VILLA MILO, by Xavier Domingo (192 pp.; Braziller; $4). Paco, the hero of this flavorsome but uneven novella, is a foundling growing up in a brothel. The madam, the preposterous Doña Fili, is his presumptive mother. Blanca, one of the prostitutes, is his mistress-business and her moods permitting. Acting as a combination waiter and pimp, Paco has for spiritual adviser the fat priest Don Teodulo Vena, a sensualist given to topsy-turvy metaphysics, who may be Pace's father. Don Vena explains that he is a habitué of the villa because his body, which...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Also Current: Mar. 2, 1962 | 3/2/1962 | See Source »

Into this sham-fest the playwright throws a rich young Yaleman, full of boola, moola and ideals, trying to pursue an honest artistic career. Along the way, he is buffeted by a whipcracking female magazine publisher (Lahr), a Hollywood producer named Harry Hubris (Lahr), and his own father, Milo Leotard Allardyce DuPlessis Weatherwax (also Lahr), a wild Park Avenue lecher. When his son admits a literary interest in the exotic sins suggested by Lolita and the works of Oscar Wilde, Weatherwax bellows encouragingly: "That's the stuff to cut your eyeteeth on. You have to learn to crawl before...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Broadway: Lay Off the Muses | 10/13/1961 | See Source »

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