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Word: botherer (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1980-1989
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Usage:

...pregnancy continued uneventfully. "The mother looked forward to the birth as a delightful event, and the other aspect didn't bother her," Kerenyi said. Fortnightly ultrasound scans showed the aborted fetus withering away while the live twin grew. Twenty weeks after the abortion, the woman went into labor. She delivered the dead fetus, by this time a paper-thin collection of cells, and a healthy...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Medicine: Saving One, Dooming Another | 6/29/1981 | See Source »

...only one in the theater who would even bother to try. Here is a show that puts meaning back into the phrase "all singing, all dancing." The show's 30 members are almost always in view and forever on the move: prowling through the junk, licking themselves and leapfrogging one another, prancing down the aisles. Compared with these athletic toms and tabbies, the companies of most Broadway musicals seem positively inert...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Theater: Going to London to See the Queen? | 6/22/1981 | See Source »

...knows every stitch on a baseball, as his 9-4 record attests. At the White House, where he helped welcome visiting Mexican President José López Portillo, the beer-fueled screwballer seemed to wish he were high and outside. Said Valenzuela: "All this attention doesn't bother me. I have four days of rest between games, so I don't have much...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: People: Jun. 22, 1981 | 6/22/1981 | See Source »

Hamlin made contacts of a much less serious nature during a one-year stint in Quincy House and he retains several fond memories. He says his advanced age did not bother him that much, though he was disturbed by what he terms "some immaturity...

Author: By Laurence S. Grafstein, | Title: Making It With Pride | 6/4/1981 | See Source »

That committee published its findings, presumably drafted in ball-point, in the now out-of-print "Red Book" which quickly became a model for educational reform. The fact that the University of Chicago and Columbia had already been using an almost identical program for years didn't seem to bother the press and the public, who quickly saw in the "Red Book" a "breakthrough" in undergraduate teaching. "Columbia and Chicago had gotten into Gen Ed years before," Wilcox says, "but we copied it--and we got all the credit...

Author: By Thomas Hines, | Title: While Venerable Gen Ed Withers | 6/4/1981 | See Source »

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