Word: milde
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Atwood, however, has a history of surprising favorites. His mild personality on the court often puts him in the shadow of his opponent during pre-game warm-ups. But Atwood has one of the finest repertoire of shots in collegiate squash. In two intercollegiate tournaments, Atwood has upset the number one seed...
Shouldering Blame. The Epstein article stirred some self-examination that served to remind newsmen that they can never be too careful. In taking itself to task, the Post filed only a mild demurrer "concerning Mr. Epstein's presentation of his case and his manner of quoting." The Times dutifully mentioned Epstein's indictment, but in a story that was buried deep in a bulging Sunday edition. The Washington Star, which was not even among those accused by Epstein, ran an editorial that noted its own care not to use Garry's figure without attribution, complimented the Post...
...rigid pattern has been established: the Administration routinely makes use of the committee to press charges against radical students, and the Faculty always ratifies whatever the committee proposes-except the one time when CRR spokesmen suggested a mild statement of Administrative and Faculty responsibility...
...witnesses covered the whole stretch of time from 1964 to the present," Sachs said. "What happened at My Lai was really mild compared to most of the testimony at the hearings...
More likely. TIME'S experts said, 1971 will be a year of moderate recovery from the mild 1970 recession. Their G.N.P. forecasts showed only narrow differences: most clustered around $1,050 billion, with Joseph Pechman low man at $1,045 billion and Grove high at $1,057 billion. They predicted real growth of 3% to 4%, and inflation rates of 3.9% to 4½%. In their opinion, unemployment will probably not climb above the revised December figure of 6.2%, and will average 5.4% to 5.9% for the year...