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

People Express is one of a new breed of discount airlines spawned by Congress's deregulation of the industry in 1978. Others include New York Air, Midway Airlines in Chicago and Muse Air in Dallas. These newcomers have sparked a string of fare wars that along with the recession have crippled the entire industry. People is one of the few carriers that has been able to keep costs low enough to turn a profit. The airline earned $2.1 million in the first quarter, while the eleven largest carriers suffered a combined operating loss of $619 million...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: London Express | 6/6/1983 | See Source »

Burton's melancholy mien and burnt-out stance would scare any comic muse off into the wings. His has too long been the gravity of a potentially heroic tragic actor waylaid en route to his destiny. His voice is still a casque of gold, but like that ardent Burton fan, Churchill, he seems always to be addressing a constituency, never a person. Of course, the audience for this Taylor-Burton fandango is undeniably a constituency...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Theater: King Midas Calls the Tune | 5/23/1983 | See Source »

...tenth muse," Critic Andrew Lang called the spirit of forgery. She may be busier and more inventive than any of her nine sisters. Under her sway, the 19th century Frenchman Denis Vrain-Lucas fabricated more than 27,000 documents purportedly from the hands of Archimedes, Sappho, Judas Iscariot, Caesar, Charlemagne and others, overplaying his own hand only when he forged a letter in which Pascal took credit for discovering the law of gravity, rather than Newton. Joseph Cosey, the most prolific of American forgers, displayed meticulous attention to detail while adding to the extant records of U.S. history from Aaron...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Fakes That Have Skewed History | 5/16/1983 | See Source »

That description could serve the author of these tales as well. After blastoff, the fictional narrator who has combined the "televisualized" Freud, the tin-pan Trotsky and the Shakespearean Star Trek starts to muse. In the future, as in the past, he decides, only one question has real pertinence: What aspects of civilization are worth carrying on? One implicit answer: the ability to wring harmony from dissonance, to create a work of the imagination from disparate and unpromising materials. Example: The End of the World News, a trio made from the detritus of history and scifi...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Dividing Gall into Three Parts | 3/21/1983 | See Source »

...Tennessee always called "Miss Edwina," nourished the myth with illusory memories of a grand and gracious heritage. His father was a gruff and aggressive traveling shoe salesman, who, on rare home stays, taunted his son as a sissy and called him "Miss Nancy." His older sister Rose, an imaginative muse to Williams, tragically retreated into schizophrenia until a prefrontal lobotomy in 1937 immured her in a perpetual mental twilight...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Theater: The Laureate of the Outcast | 3/7/1983 | See Source »

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