Word: braved
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1930-1939
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...botanical gardens. When he and his companions are observed, Nemecsek has to hide in the conservatory pool. Next day he wakes up with a bad cold, disobeys orders to stay at home, goes on an expedition of his own to retrieve the Paul Street flag. His foray is brave but unsuccessful: the Red Shirts catch and duck...
...wages $1,000 per. The other $500 will come later. I understand that Senator Borah offered an amendment to cut out all salaries over $6,000 but did not get to first base.Now it is possible and probable that some veterans are in want, but it would be a brave man who would claim that any political jobholder is actually suffering for necessities...
...From one end of the Yard to the other his eyes can feast upon the expanse of grass. From Holworthy to Wigglesworth, from Thayer unto Strauss he can take pride in both those plots of grass that still survive. He can erect a bronze tablet in honor of those brave young blades that pushed through the morass in front of Sever. He can rejoice, too, in the saving that the Maintenance Department effected for the Budget when it failed to order grass seed...
...Radcliffe actors who had been retained Monday were assigned to the different roles. All the parts are now filled with the exception of a few minor bits. The cast follows: John, Allan L. Steinberg '35;--Drunk Swell, John Cromwell '36; Leonard the Learned, Arthur Szathmary '37; Bernard the Brave, Richard C. Sullivan '35; Percy the Prosperous, Robert L. McKee '37; Egbert the Eccentric, Paul Killiam, Jr. '37; Lewis the Loving, James W. Tower '35; Albert the Acquisitive, John Michael '35; Herold the Helpful, Whitney M. Cook '36; Inebriated Philosophers. Stephen Greene '37 and William M. Hunt, 2d '36; Draper, Hotel...
...British naval sloop Milford, Vice Admiral Edward Radcliffe Garth Russell Evans commanding, hove to in the bleak South Atlantic one day last week to ride out a 70 m.p.h. storm. Brave Admiral Evans could not have found a lonelier spot. Full 2,000 mi. northeast lay Bechuanaland where last September he did his duty as a Briton and an officer in banishing a South African chief who had punished a white man (TIME, Sept. 25 et seq.). Four thousand miles farther on was Britain. Three thousand miles to the south was the South Pole where he had been...