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

John McCluskey's quarterbacking, the running of Dave Poe and Wally Grant, and a lot of breaks enabled the freshman football team to edge Yale yesterday and complete an undefeated season...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Unbeaten Yardling Gridders Beat Yalies | 11/24/1962 | See Source »

However, Taylor's exclusion of any first-rate author but Cooper perhaps overdoes a good thing. Precisely because the Southern Cavalier so closely resembled the Romantic hero--doomed, indecisive, in love with decay--it is a shame that Taylor does no more than mention Poe (in a casual reference to Roderick Usher) and the lesser-known Southern Gothics...

Author: By Michael W. Schwartz, | Title: The Myth of the Old South | 9/29/1962 | See Source »

Died. Marie, Princess Bonaparte, 80, wealthy widow of Greece's Prince George and great-granddaughter of Napoleon's eldest brother Lucien, who shook off her royal trappings and reputation as "the greatest heiress in France" to become a lay psychoanalyst (she wrote a book analyzing Edgar Allan Poe) and translator of her close friend, Dr. Sigmund Freud; in St.-Tropez, France...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Milestones: Sep. 28, 1962 | 9/28/1962 | See Source »

...Aeronaves de Mexico DC-8 crashed and burned after an aborted take-off from New York's Idlewild Airport on Jan. 19, 1961 (4 dead, 102 survivors), apparently primarily because Eastern Air Lines Pilot William B. Poe closed the throttles just after liftoff. Poe, on hand to check out the plane's Mexican crew, was misled by an evidently faulty airspeed indicator which made him think the aircraft was not picking up speed fast enough to sustain flight...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Aviation: Diversity in Death | 8/10/1962 | See Source »

...Golden Age. The coupling of the somewhat unreal and surrealistically horrifying present with an all too real past that can never completely die in the memory lies at the heart of Faulkner's artistic creation. This sense of time is both peculiarly Southern and universal: one thinks of Poe, of Proust, of Lanier, or even of Francois Villon...

Author: By Richmond Crinkley, | Title: WILLIAM FAULKNER: The Southern Mind Meets Harvard In the Era Before World War I | 7/12/1962 | See Source »

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