Word: botherer
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1980-1989
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...down to Princeton, "Boyum remembers, "their coach Peter Thompson spent two full days with me. We went out to eat at nice restaurants. I met the team, and must have played 20 hours of squash with them. Technically it's a violation to do that, but it didn't bother them...
...only have this name; it exudes machismo-is a studly looking fellow complete with suede jacket and baby blues, and he tries to get the police to give Jamie some protection. But their cop friend, Captain Maxwell (Vince Edwards), whom they call Max, of course, has no time to bother with such trivial things as potential psychopathic sex murderers. He delivers to Brandon's face a terribly ridiculous speech explaining that crime has become a way of life in America. Oh. really? Brandon asks what he should do then, if the police aren't going to help...
...their policies by civil disobedience or a more widely encouraged effort to sabotage policies by leaks of classified information in the middle of a war. As National Security Adviser I thought it my duty to help stanch these leaks. " Having said that, he notes: "I did not realize, or bother to inform myself, that a unit existed to investigate leaks and that its members essentially had no other duties. But even had I known this, I would not have found it improper that the White House sought to protect its classified information so long as it operated within...
...across the country. After all, she says, "all you have to do is take your clothes off and lie down." That Suzy is beautiful, and looks more like a Smith graduate than a footloose wanderer who left home at the age of 10 doesn't seem to bother anybody, but never mind. This, it turns out, will be the least of the movie's problems...
...claim that the intervening decade has shown her in flattering light. This time ten years ago, the streets of Dacca resounded with exultant chants of Joi Bangla (Victory to Bengal) and the nation welcomed back its imprisoned leader, Sheik Mujib. Today, even in Dacca, it is unlikely that people bother to remember the hope that was in the air as refugees returned and the world cast its attention on the fledgling nation. Instead the country struggles as a population of 92 million, likely to double by the turn of the century, labors under what is said to be the second...