Word: kitchened
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...says he. Charlie had just put up his watch when the blast came. The props in my place were twisted and blown down. We ran out into the slope and saw several men sprawled around . . . [and] helped them to the foot of the shaft. . . . Boulders as big as kitchen tables had been blown around. . . . Mine cars made of hardwood were blown into splinters. Tracks were twisted. . . . Seven...
...hung like a shadow around her home neighborhood. One day he poked a gun in her ribs, drove her to a mountain resort where he kept her stripped for three days. He pleaded to let him come back. She refused. One day, a shot ripped through the kitchen window of his wife's home and hit her in the thigh...
...legs. They were designed by California's solemn, earnest Charles Eames, 39, onetime pupil of famed Finnish modernist Eliel Saarinen. Eames, who designed molded plywood splints for the Navy during the war, is a man who believes that utility is beauty's only garment. He finds the kitchen and bathroom the most beautiful rooms in most U.S. homes. By the same token, Designer Eames explains, "when a chair is comfortable it becomes beautiful...
...after-Christmas lull, department stores slashed prices as much as 75% on hundreds of items. Examples: in Seattle, Sears, Roebuck sold $9.95 kitchen tables for $1.98; in Philadelphia, Snellenburg's cut prices on men's, suits from $27.50 to $18.71. In many cases even drastic cuts failed to lure buyers. Sellers hoped that the lull was temporary. Buyers hoped that their turn had finally come...
...great-grandmother pounded rusks in it," a woman says of a kitchen mortar, "it's something sacred to me. How can I leave it behind?" A soldier is asked: "What are you fighting for?" and replies: "So that after the war I can have a house of my own, a family-kids ... a pretty house, with shrubs and flowers...