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Word: botherations (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1930-1939
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Usage:

...Authoress Millay played the Princess, took many a curtain call. Next year, as a real grown-up actress, she played the same part in Manhattan's arty Provincetown Playhouse. Life began to go fast for Authoress Millay. She lost the manuscript of her play, was too busy to bother about it. Thirteen years later she found it again, among some old papers. Easily most popular poetess of the U. S., Edna St. Vincent Millay could afford now to foist off on her sympathetic public almost any callow piece of juvenilia. But The Princess Marries the Page is surprisingly, delightfully...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Sleeping Beauty | 10/24/1932 | See Source »

...Bowdoin. Most U. S. colleges protect themselves by having their financial officers bonded, just as business houses do. Some colleges do not bother. Last week Bowdoin College at Brunswick, Maine was glad it had bothered. For the past six years Bowdoin's bursar has been John Coolidge Thalheimer, quiet and popular, a member of Delta Upsilon, who after graduation from Bowdoin became clerk under the college treasurer in 1923 and three years later bursar. Father of two, Mr. Thalheimer was divorced last year for "cruel and abusive treatment." was ordered to pay $150 a month alimony for three years...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Education: Bad Bursars | 10/3/1932 | See Source »

...Latin American countries, college students start political revolutions. In continental Europe they riot politically, go to jail. In England they debate intelligently at the Oxford Union, stand for Parliament, take government seriously. In the U. S., many a college student does not even bother to vote...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Education: Play the Reality | 10/3/1932 | See Source »

...felt over "Copey's" change of residence, there seemed in it a larger significance. It marked the passing of a style. A newer generation of pedagogs, at Harvard as elsewhere, has eschewed picturesqueness for briskness, practicality and scholarship. Younger savants have degrees aplenty. Charles Townsend Copeland did not bother; the A. B. he earned in 1882 was enough for him. It was fun to be cantankerous and crotchety, teaching Harvard men to write good prose, scaring them when they were late or noisy. The scaring sometimes stuck, too. Shambling Heywood Broun once went. up to Cambridge to report...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Education: Copey Moves Out | 9/12/1932 | See Source »

...lubricity of the cinema that to expect them to control the lubricity of anything else would seem too much. Yet the Hays organization sometimes attempts it. Last year, regulations against salacious cinemadvertising were added to the industry's code. Last week came another incident to heat and bother the upright Presbyterian soul of Tsar Hays. In Motion Picture Magazine appeared an interview with decadent-looking Tallulah Bankhead (daughter of Alabama's onetime Representative William Brockman Bankhead). written by one Gladys Hall. Reported Miss Hall: "I am told that Tallul' is never decently hypocritical. . . . She reveals...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Cinema: Verbal Turpitude | 8/22/1932 | See Source »

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