Word: cabined
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1930-1939
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...Oberlin* planned an institution designed for "the diffusion of useful science, sound morality, and pure religion." Oberlin College opened in December, 1833, received its charter in 1834, first U. S. college to grant degrees to women. Meantime, Pioneer Peter Pindar Pease had built the town's first cabin, on what is now the southeast corner of Oberlin's campus...
...Department has rebuilt the trimotored cabin plane which onetime Secretary of War Patrick Hurley and his air assistant, Trubee Davison, used to fly about in, announced that it will be held in readiness for Presidential...
Ambassador Luther lunged across the cabin, snatched the paper from his subordinate's hand. His face was red with rage. His eyes blazed. Cried he: "Here, give me that statement! It's mine and I can read it myself. 'Diplomatic etiquet preventing foreign diplomats from touching upon political questions...
...stay. Durham got so fond of Harry that when Dot, a "dudine" from the East, invaded the sanctity of the woods and took Harry's mind hopelessly off his work, Durham went crazy with jealousy. With a conveniently sprained ankle confining Dot to Harry's cabin they were just on the verge of a happy beginning when the forest fire broke. The end came like an old-fashioned melodrama, a bit more circumstantial but not a bit more convincing...
...hour and 25 minutes behind schedule. Pilot Noel B. Evans, Wartime flyer, of Yarney Speed Lines was bumping his way through a rain squall southeast of San Francisco one night last week. Behind him, in the Lockheed's darkened cabin, sat two nervous passengers taken aboard that afternoon in Los Angeles: a Mr. Herman Brown and a Mrs. Lavelle Lodwick of Hollywood. Driving rain beaded the cabin windows opaquely as the pilot nosed down over suburbs south of Oakland. He was presumably looking for an emergency landing field on which to bring his passengers to safety. Instead, he brought...