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Word: timbuktu (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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Nevertheless, Perkins observes, "Some Houses you go into, you wouldn't know whether the Masters are here or in Timbuktu. A Master if he is enthusiastic about the House, is infectious." Such enthusiasm, he says will remain crucial "if the Houses and the House system continue to be the elements essential to the preservation and strengthening of Harvard College...

Author: By Lavea Brachman, | Title: A Hard Task to Master | 4/29/1982 | See Source »

Salt routes crisscrossed the globe. One of the most traveled led from Morocco south across the Sahara to Timbuktu. Ships bearing salt from Egypt to Greece traversed the Mediterranean and the Aegean. Herodotus describes a caravan route that united the salt oases of the Libyan desert. Venice's glittering wealth was attributable not so much to exotic spices as to commonplace salt, which Venetians exchanged in Constantinople for the spices of Asia. In 1295, when he first returned from Cathay, Marco Polo delighted the Doge with tales of the prodigious value of salt coins bearing the seal...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Medicine: History According to Salt | 3/15/1982 | See Source »

Newley and Bricusse's songs, though lively, rarely advance the plot or reveal anything about the characters. In the first act, there's song every four or five munutes, and with lyrics like "It's not in Timbuktu or Timbukthree" their frequency becomes irritating and exhausting. Newley and Bricusse are at their painful worst when they depart from typical song-and-dance numbers like "A Wonderful Day Like Today" or "Where Would You be Without Me?" and attempt flashy theatricality. "The Joker" and "Who Can I Turn To?" seem to have been written more for Newley's nightclub act than...

Author: By Jacob V. Lamar, | Title: Working-Class Pleasantries | 11/11/1980 | See Source »

...prices inspired the money-poor but materials-rich nations of the Southern Hemisphere to pump up prices for commodities as disparate as copper, tin, rubber, jute, cotton, bauxite, coffee, cocoa, tea, sugar. Instant communications-TV and transistor radios-spread the message of the good life. People in Timbuktu no less than in Toledo demanded more-more than society could reasonably produce. Communication, education and sophistication enabled the world in the 1970s to virtually defeat smallpox-and helped make just about every country fall victim to inflation...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Time Essay: What Might Have Been | 11/6/1978 | See Source »

...some news and even more trivia, and the four new typographically wretched strike papers are throbbing with wire-service copy that the regular dailies would have spurned. But for New Yorkers used to the Daily News's outrageously witty headlines, the Times's impeccably orotund dispatches from Ouagadougou and Timbuktu and the Post's wonderfully inaccurate gossip, there is an aching void. "They're like children," says Political Consultant David Garth of the three struck dailies. "You don't know how much you love them until they leave home...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Living: A City Without Newspapers.. | 10/2/1978 | See Source »

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