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Word: bothers (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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Georgia's Governor Carl Sanders, on the other hand, did not bother to wait, called on his legislature to act, almost within the hour-and the midnight riot ensued...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Supreme Court,The Congress: Redrawing the Lines | 2/28/1964 | See Source »

...about Panama and Cuba, but no treaties were signed, no formal decisions taken. Now that the Chamizal dispute on the Rio Grande has been settled, Mexico and the U.S. have few major outstanding disagreements. There is one issue - a minor one as international flaps go - that continues to bother the Mexicans, and Lopez Mateos gently prodded Johnson to devise a speedy solution. It concerns the Colorado River, which rolls through the arid U.S. Southwest and down across the line into Mexico...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Mexico: A Pinch of Salt | 2/28/1964 | See Source »

...from several states competed for parking spaces. Husky, plastic-helmeted men searched for scarce furnished rooms. The night sky glowed orange, and the air was filled with an acrid stench. "That smell used to make me deathly sick," says one Morrow County resident, "but now it doesn't bother me at all." And why should it? It has become the smell of wealth, the sweet odor of Ohio's first oil boom since the turn of the century...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Oil: Boom in Ohio | 2/21/1964 | See Source »

Although Northeastern picked up two points on the Crimson during Saturday's eight running events, coach Bill McCurdy never seemed to doubt the outcome. Harvard didn't even bother to enter the 45-yard low hurdles, won by Northeastern's Steve Patterson...

Author: By Robert J. Samuelson, | Title: Harvard Sweeps GBIs; Hewlett, Meehan Star | 2/17/1964 | See Source »

...Irish performed less brilliantly in other areas of American life. A practicing Catholic, Shannon nevertheless blames the Irish Catholic clergy for most Irish shortcomings in the U.S. The clergy were too busy building the church to bother about intellectual pursuits, and warned their congregations not to mix with the Protestant population. "The conservatives of the church," writes Shannon, "struggled to ensnare and pinion the live corpus of the faithful in their own petty vision, a vision of a claustral parish world: tidy, thick-curtained, breathing of dust, every antimacassar firmly in place...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: The Oddities of Isolation | 2/7/1964 | See Source »

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