Word: allene
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1940-1949
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...Allen, Samuel Marston '51, Barrett, Theodore Boutelle '51, Bordman, John '51, Clark, David Crawford '49, (Captain), Grosvenor, Richard '51, Menslage, Robert Pearce '51. Osbors, Charles William Shores '51, Potter, Williams Suittes, Smith, John Haleay, Jr. '50, Perry, Heary Bradlee '50 (Manager...
...Allen, William Augusts '50, Birdsall Paul Crew '50, Bezasuson, Richard Buel '50, Clark, Sydney Proctor, Jr. '51, Coburn, Frederick Rhodes '51, Davidson. Paul Lane '50, Davis. Wilbur Micheal '50, Estin, Hans Howard '49, Forsyth, Robert Bruce '49 (Captain), Graham. William George Brown '51. Gregg, Charles Nelson, Jr. '48. Hansen, Richard Brydon '51. Hudner, Richard Reilly '51, Kegg. William Boyd, Jr. '49, Lange, Robert Brookings '49, Mauran, Duncan Hunter '50, Page, Donald Smith '46 ocC, Plissner, William Alan '51, Pest, Richard St. Francis '51, Soule, Lewis Franklin '49. Warning, Bayard David '51, Watera, William Dennis '49 (Manager...
...Knee near the Cheyenne River, where in 1890 the Sioux made their last stand. McCloy went to France as Preston's operations officer in the 160th Field Artillery Brigade. Years later, Preston told another officer why he had chosen McCloy as staff aide. "One day at Fort Ethan Allen, I walked behind him after he had been riding. I could see blood all over his pants. I said to myself, any man who could keep riding with that much pain must be a damn good officer...
...industry-wide jitters stemmed from the fear that the public, expecting color TV in the near future, might stop buying black & white sets. According to Du-Mont's Dr. Allen B. DuMont, the present color converters are expensive, and so complicated that, if color telecasts began tomorrow, every set now in use would have to go to a factory for proper installation. All in all, the industry wished the subject had not come...
Lettered across the front window of the Flora, Ill. Sentinel (circ. 2,500) is a proud slogan: "A free press, a free nation." Like many another country editor, stocky, aggressive Charles Allen Crowder writes almost all the stories in his twice-weekly Sentinel himself; his wife Dorothy and their 15-year-old son Charles Jr. (whose column is called "Crowder's Chowder") do the rest. In reporting the news of Flora (pop. 6,000) and Republican Clay County, Republican Editor Crowder says he sometimes "plays up what the business interests want played down...