(here showing US soldiers landing on 6 June 1944) In 1924, fresh out of college, Crawford joined the
United Press news wire service in Chicago, St. Louis, Cleveland, Lansing, Indianapolis, and Washington, DC. He moved to the
Buffalo Times and then in 1933 returned to Washington with the
New York Post. He also contributed to the
Saturday Evening Post,
The Nation, and
The New Republic. In 1939, Crawford joined
PM, a left-liberal newspaper. When
Heywood Broun, founder of the
American Newspaper Guild, died that year, he succeeded him as the guild's second president. In 1943, Crawford joined
Newsweek and returned to Washington. On D-Day in 1944, he was the first journalist to land at Normandy on
Utah Beach with the US 4th Infantry Division. In 1949, he became national affairs editor for the magazine. In 1954, he became Washington bureau chief. In 1961, he became Washington columnist after
Philip L. Graham bought
Newsweek for the Washington Post-Newsweek group. He retired from
Newsweek in 1970. He continued to contribute signed pieces as late as 1976. ==Personal life and death==