Word: fairman
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...caught another pass from Kadlic a moment later he should again run toward his own goal. Nonetheless, McPartland did it, for a few steps, till he was tackled on Yale's 20-yd. line. This time, his mistake was not important: the next play was another pass, Kadlic to Fairman, which made a touchdown. Peter Fortune kicked the goal. With five minutes left, there was just time for the blunder or the brilliant play that usually decides Princeton-Yale games. Neither one occurred and the score was still tied, 7 to 7, when the game ended...
Princeton proved what people had begun to suspect-that it has finally found a football team-with a 0 to 0 tie against Cornell. It might have been a Princeton victory if Left End Ken Fairman, with a clear field and head start, had not juggled and dropped a forward pass from Kadlic in the last quarter...
Selby Clive (Mr. Conroy), a Canadian mining magnate, has a wife (chirrupy Fay Bainter). whose life has been made so pleasant for her by an adoring husband that boredom has driven her to the brink of indiscretion with a young sop named O' Ryan (Derek Fairman). By chance they learn that Clive changed his name from Selby 20 years before in Canada. By chance they also learn that a man named Selby, 20 years before in Canada, ingeniously did away with his philandering mate and her lover in a series of accidents arising out of circumstances which...
...Princeton defeated Columbia 38-35 in the play-off for the Eastern Intercollegiate League basketball title here tonight. Princeton led 19-16 at the half and was headed only once thereafter. The game was fast and rough throughout with frequent fouls. Seibert scored 14 points for Princeton and Fairman 13; McDowell was high scorer for Columbia with 13 points to his credit. This is Princeton's first League championship since...
With their case on trial before the Interstate Commerce Commission, the railroads themselves were not unwilling to have things look as black as receivership. Fairman R. Dick, partner of Roosevelt & Son. secretary of a bondholders committee on the railroad emergency, added to the dismal tale last week when he testified before the Commission that: Railroads could no longer dispose of their bonds; their securities were no longer regarded as secondary reserve by the banks; only the bonds of three railroads in the country could be regarded as high grade (Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe; Union Pacific; Norfolk & Western...