Word: crawfords
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1940-1949
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...last week strode smartly past Belvoir's commandant, wiry, fox-faced Colonel Roscoe C. Crawford, were more Engineers than anyone had seen together since World War I. Only two weeks before, Belvoir's garrison had been 3,000. Within a month it will be 10,000, and more will shortly be training at the Corps's second replacement training center at Fort Leonard Wood, near Rolla, Mo. By July 1, when the Army has hit a strength of 1,418,000, there will be 91,000 Engineers...
...encyclopedia of food by a diet expert who loves to eat was published last week by Dr. Asa Crawford Chandler of Rice Institute, Houston, Tex. Dr. Chandler seldom counts calories, is never finicky. He claims that the flesh of rattlesnakes is "delicious and nutritious," that "grasshoppers, caterpillars and termites . . . afford wholesome food if there is no acquired aversion." Besides these odd chips of information, Dr. Chandler's book (The Eater's Digest, Farrar & Rinehart; $2.75) is packed with practical discussions on such things as digestion, nutritional diseases, bellyaches, diet during pregnancy, ravenous children, vitamins...
...shortly, and the results will be announced during commencement week in June. Nominees for five places as overseers are: John W. Farley '99, Walter F. Dillingham '02, Monte M. Lemann '03, Arthur A. Ballantine '04, Walter S. Franklin '06, Winthrop W. Aldrich '07, Chester I. Barnard '10, Frederick C. Crawford '13, David P. Morgan '16, Robert E. Sherwood '18, Leonard Carmichael '22, Robert F. Bradford '22, and William I. Nichols...
...Flac; 8, R. Comey; 9, R. Wilson; 10, J. Notman; 11, Eric McFlare; 12, J. Powell; 13, T. Motley; 14, J. Page; 15, P. Sheeline; 16, F. Snyder; 17, S. Lacey; 18, W. Appel; 19, R. Eustis; 20, W. LaCroix; 21, A. Morrison; 22, A. Waite 23, J. Crawford; 24, G. L. Wilson; 25, R. Coe; 26; J. McAuliffe; 27, R. Lane; 28, R. Stone; 29, C. Purinton; 30, W. Apthrop; 31. G. Nichols...
Small Tom Sullivan and Sophomore Bill Crawford, the latter only swimming for his second year, were responsible for the Princeton relay triumph. Leadoff man Sullivan did about 54 flat and picked up a yard and a half on Tom Shrewsbury, and John Clark tacked on another yard to this margin against Lonnie Stowell. Frannie Powers wiped out all of the deficit against Ned Parke and gave Art Bosworth a lead of about one foot, but the tired Bosworth was unable to keep up with Crawford--he was close to 53 flat...