Word: bothered
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Dates: during 1980-1989
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...Colby and the highlight is not Harvard's ice hockey team "rolling in" or whatever it does. A scanning of a calendar of events at Colby would indicate that Mr. Zucker either was not here to cover the game, which Colby won. 4-1, or he did not bother to venture outside of the hockey rink. For example, recent events at Colby were a panel discussion on the humanities and scientific implications of genetic engineering: a visit by Garry Wills as writer-in-residence a student production of "The Trojan Women," by Euripides; a lecture on grass-roots organizing...
...pained when it flashed onto the television screen, and his comments were haltingly slow. But it was not the mechanical heart that troubled Barney Clark as he gave his first public interview since his historic operation on Dec. 1. "The heart has pumped right along. It doesn't bother me at all," he told his surgeon, Dr. William DeVries, who conducted the session on videotape at the University of Utah Medical Center. Instead, it was his lungs, permanently damaged by years of poor circulation, that kept Clark rasping throughout the 2½-minute conversation. The obvious strain...
Most of the faces a shuttle driver comes to recognize belong to Harvard students. University policy stipulates that only Harvard affiliates may use the service. But drivers rarely bother to check I D cards "God, you get so many flakes on this bus," Says Freeman. "I think it's because it's Cambridge." One regular is an elderly woman who sometimes engages the drivers in lengthy conversations. "She's really nice. She stays for an hour an hour and a half sometimes. But when you go four blocks out of your way to take her home, you feel like...
...Times Beach Mayor Charles Yarbro. But many insist they will go permanently only if they get what they consider a fair price for their property. And some, no matter how attractive the federal buyout money, still want to stay, the health dangers notwithstanding. "The damn dioxin doesn't bother me as much as the river," insists Michael Keeler, 42, a lifetime resident who owns a four-bedroom ranch house. Says Gerald Johnson, 51: "If we are forced out, then we're forced out. But we will not volunteer to leave our home." Wayde Dake, 54, who owns...
Students is American University in Washington, D.C. may to longer have to bother taking notes in class, or even going to lectures at all. For a $20 fee they can subscribe to Noteworthy Notes, Inc., the first business of its type on the East Coast, and get well-written notes for an entire semester's worth of lectures...