Word: mellower
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...celebrates his 39th birthday this week, Edward M. Kennedy enjoys a unique political vista: theoretically at least, he could be running for President in the elections of 1992, when he will be merely a mellow...
...rock shows, many of the new troubadours are not new at all. The decompression of rock can be traced back to 1968 and Bob Dylan's search for a simple way of saying simple things in John Wesley Harding. Among the groups, the gentling process was carried to mellow new highs and lows by The Band. The rise of rock's new solo poets is a natural extension. Often they are talented offshoots from famous groups, the most notable examples being all four Beatles. Characteristically, they make the new sound but leave explanations to musicologists and sociologists. Occasionally, however...
Agnew flew to California last week for just such a conference of state and local officials. He listened thoughtfully, then delivered a mellow speech on local fiscal problems. To be sure, his older style briefly asserted itself when he flailed away at Ralph Nader and other "pontificators and pundits." But the Vice President has obviously learned some valuable lessons. "All I'm saying," he remarked at one point, "is that life is a very complex matter. There are two sides to every argument...
...that of all-American striver to one of cuff-linked corruptor. Last week, four years after his conviction for income tax evasion, conspiracy to defraud the Government and theft, he began a one-to three-year prison term. Hugh Sidey, TIME'S Washington bureau chief, found Baker remarkably mellow before parting with his freedom. Sidey's report...
...only fair, since Love and Fame is an autobiography. In it, Berryman traces his life from Columbia and Cambridge through an asylum to riches, reputation and religion. The book is in sections, each a stage of his life, and the poetry corresponds, starting brash and young, ending old and mellow...