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Word: callower (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...leatherneck maker, Sergeant Jim Moore (Webb), chews callow boys and spits marines. He shouts fear into his boots, and they shout courage back at him. His undeviating training code: if I don't almost kill you in this process, an enemy will some day make you "dead, dead, dead!" The fragile axis of the plot, a moral weakling from a Corps-dedicated family, naturally turns eventually into the pride of his platoon. Sergeant Webb surprises in the end. Just when he might be expected, for the good of the Marines, to mow down his whole motley lot of boots...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Cinema: The New Pictures, Jun. 17, 1957 | 6/17/1957 | See Source »

...Russell Stanley Callow's friends back home in Washington State figured that at 66 old "Rusty," dean of U.S. rowing coaches, ought to be ready to retire. So they brought the white-thatched old woodsman back to the Olympic Peninsula where he grew up and made him "Honored Citizen" at the Mason County forest festival. Rusty had been gone from the woods for more than 40 years. His crews have won the world's top rowing honors-from collegiate championships at Poughkeepsie to Olympic laurels at Helsinki-but to everyone's surprise he insisted that...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Sport: Scoreboard, Jun. 3, 1957 | 6/3/1957 | See Source »

Cockroaches & Poltroons. In June 1940 Jean Dutourd was 20, and for all of two weeks a pseudo soldier in a pseudo army in a pseudo fight. He and his fellow soldiers had a shrugging attitude of callow "realism," which is "a polite translation of the word cowardice." He describes how after the German breakthrough he and five buddies wandered around Brittany like truant schoolboys, cadging six meals a day from the peasants, who treated them as heroes. Only one farmer told them off: "Get out! If you had fought, you'd be fed now instead of having...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: J'Accuse, 1957 | 6/3/1957 | See Source »

...fair protagonist is a callow youth who was raised in what is euphemistically called a "house of illfame." And apparently finding his mother in bed with another man when he was a child so destroyed his values and trust in the world that he finds it necessary to stab people for entertainment to kill an old woman who had been kind to him in childhood, and in what seems to be the central scene of the film, exposes a sweet and innocent girl whom he loves and who loves him, lying prostrate and expectant, to another man. After this follows...

Author: By Gerald E. Bunker, | Title: The Snow Was Black | 5/9/1957 | See Source »

Your making a composite picture of a motley crew of trigger-happy poets, callow youths, delinquent teenagers, gun molls and other Hungarian riffraff and trying to foist them off on us Americans as the "Man of the Year" is a piece of journalism that is not only unique but should stand out as the acme of effrontery...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Letters, Jan. 28, 1957 | 1/28/1957 | See Source »

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