Search Details

Word: mccalls (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1950-1959
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Usage:

Coach Bill Dole's right end will be a more experienced performer, Dan McCall, a 6-foot 2-inch senior who was shifted from quarterback at the beginning of the season, and is beginning to find himself...

Author: By Jack Rosenthal, | Title: Winless Davidson Is 4-Touchdown Underdog | 10/31/1953 | See Source »

Colors: Dark Red and Blue Checker Checked Shirts; Red and Blue Diagonally Striped Oars. Varsity; Bow, Daniel Piccone; 2, Robert Dempsey; 3, Irving Miller; 4, Stere Littauer; 5, William Mushake; 6, Thomas McDonough; 7, Paul McNamara; stroke John McCall; cov, William Chapman. Race Times: Freshmen...

Author: By James M. Storey, | Title: Underdog Crimson Races Penn, Navy In Adams Cup Crew Regatta Today | 5/10/1952 | See Source »

...would die a natural death when she left Washington. But "My Day," the chatty daily diary of her travels, opinions and dinner conversations, is currently running in 75 newspapers (at its peak it averaged 90) in the U.S. and abroad. Mrs. Roosevelt writes a monthly question & answer page for McCall's magazine. Before this year's U.N. session, she was doing five radio interviews and a half-hour television show every week...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: People: The Way Things Are | 4/7/1952 | See Source »

...could only have construed as dangerous and inflammatory. His voice was one of the loudest raised in protest against the handling of the controversial Groveland rape case in which four Negroes were accused of attacking a 17-year-old housewife, back in 1949. When Lake County. Sheriff Willis McCall killed one of the defendants and badly wounded another while transporting them, handcuffed, along a lonely road last November (TIME, Nov. 19), Moore went further: he campaigned openly for the prosecution of the sheriff. His family worried endlessly about his safety, but he was never harmed...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: FLORIDA: The Uninvited Guest | 1/7/1952 | See Source »

...Attorney General Howard Mc-Grath sent FBI men to make an on-the-spot investigation to find out whether McCall's version or Irvin's was true. At week's end, a coroner's jury upheld Sheriff McCall, finding that he had fired in self-defense, and a state investigator displayed powder burns on McCall's coat sleeve which showed, he said, that McCall's arm was doubled up, indicating that there had been a struggle. But the FBI continued its own investigation...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: National Affairs: The Sheriff Shoots | 11/19/1951 | See Source »

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