Word: bothers
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Dates: during 1940-1949
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...often find that what I wrote the third time is exactly what I wrote the first." His column done, Walker goes home, undresses, rests. In midevening he goes out to dine. He eats at various cafes and nightclubs, in many of them cuffo. The ethics of this does not bother him, since he feels he is much like the sportswriter who gets passes to ball games. Besides Walker gets only $50 a week expense money...
...bother with pretty women who may be present...
...Joneses." Heaviness in the Air. On the other hand Graebner noted that the "[Soviet] Government is not entirely for the people." Hundreds stand in food queues, regardless of whether or not there is food at the end of the line for them, simply because the Government does not bother to inform them. "Too efficient, too ruthless, too heartless," in most respects, "Government instead of being for the people is for Russia as a State and for1 the bureaucracy which controls it." Along with the high popular courage and "simple, kindhearted, fun-loving" behavior, Graebner was conscious of "an unmistakable heaviness...
...York Times, a well-known metropolitan daily, does not consider crusading its forte. Yet in two pages of evidence spread proudly in last Sunday's issue, it warns that there exists "a striking ignorance of United States history" among American college freshmen. It does not bother to elaborate on what constitutes United States history...
...chief ornaments of the Met's conductorially brilliant season on its home grounds. Between times he has galvanized the young, awkward Brooklyn Symphony into an ensemble which shamed the venerable New York Philharmonic-Symphony across the river. Sir Thomas is too independent, both financially and personally, to bother with the politics that are usually required to get and keep the outstanding symphony conductorships...