Word: sweetland
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...knife at a man, severed his jugular vein, been sentenced to 20 years in prison.) Oleander ordered Lily around, kept house for her, encouraged her love affairs, helped her marry, scandalized the neighbors, dwarfed her surroundings with her tawdry queenliness -in brief, a "burning pillar of a woman." Grant Sweetland, the ne'er-do-well son of a rich St. Louis family, a drunkard who in his childhood had tortured small ani mals, was "loosely groomed, indifferently tailored," with "a soft, rather overheated look ... a cowlick which dipped damp-looking across his brow," soft, womanish hands and a silhouette...
Captain Heineman was introduced by Lt. Comdr. M. E. Paradise, Officer-in-Charge. Other members of the official party included Lt. Comdr. E. W. Sweetland, Executive Officer; Lieut, Carl Knudsen, Chaplain for Harvard Naval Training Schools; and Aldrich Durant, business manager of the University...
...Admiral Cluverius to the stage were Captain George N. Barker, U.S.N., Commanding Officer of the Harvard Naval Training Schools; William H. Claflin, Jr., treasurer of the University; Lt. Commander M.E. Paradise, U.S.N.R., Officer-in-Charge of the Communications School; Aldrich Durant, Business Manager of the University; Lt. Commander E.W. Sweetland, U.S.N.R., Executive Officer of the school; and Lt. Commander Morgan, U.S.N.R., aide to the admiral...
...were inspected by the following staff members accompanying Lieut Commander Paradise: Lieut. Commander E.W. Sweetland, Executive Officer; Lieut. Commander B.L. Stewart; Lieut Commander P.F. Hilton; Lieut. G.F. Welker; Lieut. (j.g.) H.M. Hansen; and Lieut. (j.g.) A.X. O'Connor...
Lieut. Comdr. E. Hannah and Lieut. Comdr. E. W. Sweetland, now Executive Officer, were the first two Naval officers to report to Harvard to make preparations for setting up the school. They were followed here that same month, June, 1942, by Lieut. C. F. Brengartner, Lieut. G. F. Welker, and ten Communications Reserve graduates from the Naval Training School (Communications), Noroton, Connecticut. On July 1, 1942, twelve Annapolis graduates were assigned here temporarily to teach in- doctrination...