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Word: mellowered (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...young board members often start out with ambitious ideas-that is one advantage of their arrival on the boards-but time and experience inevitably mellow even the most aggressive of the newcomers. Even Larry Hamm. When Board Member Cervase obtained a temporary court injunction last December restraining Newark schools from flying Black Power flags, Hamm took it calmly. Said he: "If the courts don't take care of it, the legislature will." Either way, Hamm says he will obey...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Education: New Faces for Old | 2/14/1972 | See Source »

...better make the next number mellow, 'cause I'm about to pass...

Author: By Robert A. Rosenberg and Roger L. Smith, S | Title: Booked to Cook | 1/19/1972 | See Source »

...bumps comically along, but the players keep breaking character to bicker with each other. In an explosion of petty grievances they disband, only to regroup for a second act. This time the company attempts Man's rites of passage, and as the actors become engrossed in their story, they mellow into cooperation and exit smiling...

Author: By Alan Heppel, | Title: A Company of Wayward Saints | 12/11/1971 | See Source »

Sometimes after nightfall when Johnson gets mellow, he can remember every sight and sound of that day in 1941 when Sam Rayburn got the draft extended by a single vote, how the Speaker gaveled the House adjourned and jumped out of his chair when he saw a couple of opposing Congressmen coming up the aisle to vote...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Nation: The Book L.B.J. Should Write | 11/8/1971 | See Source »

...seventy-one, his poetic voice is strong and his speaking voice mellow, as if he just sipped a special elixir--tea and honey, perhaps. Sitting in Robert Fitzgerald's office before his afternoon reading at Boylston auditorium. Tate looks every bit the Southern gentleman--debonair, impeccably dressed, a hint of Basil Ransom, years after The Bostonians, but with the high forehead and thin, tapered fingers reserved for artists and poets...

Author: By Elizabeth R. Fishel, | Title: Afternoon with Allen Tate | 10/19/1971 | See Source »

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