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Turning the tables on their opponents, the Yardlings outplayed the Terrior pups from the opening bell of the second session. Dan Roosevelt and Vin Francis, dependable defense pair, distributed effective body checks at opportune moments while Ervin scored two goals assisted by Winslow and Eaton. Turning on the heat still more proved to be of little aid as Richardson, B.U. center, caught the defence down the ice and beat Freedley to put the score...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: 1940 SEXTET LOSES TO B.U. TEAM AT ARENA, 5-4 | 2/16/1937 | See Source »

...Exeter Bassett, Cortland A. 18 143 5.8 Athol High Boulger, Thomas A. 18 138 5.9 Bexley High Curtis, Charles W. 3d 18 150 5.8 Choate Davisson, Richard L. 18 173 5.10 St. Paul's Ditrinco, Vincent 18 142 5.11 Madison High Downes, Philip G. 18 155 5.9 Country Day Ervin, Henry N. 17 158 5.9 St. Mark's Estabrook, Frederick R. Jr. 17 180 6.2 Aven Old Farms Francis, Victor 19 170 5.11 Mitlon Academy Freedley, Vinton 18 145 5.9 St. Paul's Fulton, Robert 19 155 5.9 New Prep Grace, Michael 19 145 5.7 St. Mark's Hall, Roderick...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Statistics Given of Candidates Out for 1940 Football Squad | 9/29/1936 | See Source »

...Dunkel, 42, plain, heavy-jawed washwoman, a four-time widow. The other was her washwoman friend, Mrs. Evelyn Smith, 46, onetime burlesque dancer, prostitute and wife of a Chinese laundryman. Somehow, between them, they had murdered Mrs. Dunkel's son-in-law, a grocer's clerk named Ervin Lang, who after his wife's death last December was planning to remarry. Mrs. Dunkel promptly confessed that she had offered Mrs. Smith $500 for the job, paid $100 on account...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Press: Midwest Murders | 8/12/1935 | See Source »

...Ervin Lang's torso, wrapped in a blanket, was found in a swamp across the Indiana line. Headlines: TORSO MURDER; SWAMP MURDER. The legs, neatly sawed with the trousers, socks and shoes still on, were presently found seven miles away in a trunk. Evelyn Smith and her Chinese husband, Harry Jung, had vanished. For a week yellow men traveling with white women were detained all through the Midwest. The Press billed the crime as an endpoint of miscegenation. Fears were expressed that the "sinister Oriental," Harry Jung, had killed his white wife to make his getaway. This billing...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Press: Midwest Murders | 8/12/1935 | See Source »

...plane in Chicago, stubbornly stuck to her story of innocence, finally declared, "Oh well, I might as well get it over with. Sure, I killed him. . . . Blanche didn't pay me a cent of the $500. ... I tried to get Harry Jung to help me cut up Ervin but he got sick at the sight of the blood. He was sitting in an automobile outside, scared half to death...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Press: Midwest Murders | 8/12/1935 | See Source »

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