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Tallying for the first time in over two years on a long pass from Fullerton to Doyle, the Brooks House eleven eked out a tie with Winthrop yesterday afternoon, just as dusk was falling over Soldiers Field. An attempt to convert the extra point by a line buck was stopped by inches. After the kickoff there were three play before the game ended, all passes, and all intercepted in the gathering gloom...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Anglers Tie Winthrop With First Points in Years, 6 to 6 | 10/31/1934 | See Source »

...making a clean sweep of the quartet of races that closed the Intercollegiate Yacht Racing Association championship last week. Harvard won a second leg on the MacMillan Cup. Dwight Fullerton, of the Beverly Yacht Club and Dedham, Mass., took two of the races; F. Stanton Deland '36 of Marblehead and Boston, and Michael Cudahy of Beverly and Chicago, captured one each...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Harvard Yachtsmen Win | 6/20/1934 | See Source »

...paint. Author Rollins' picture of a U. S. mill town under a strike is no sermon but a text. Aimed obliquely from the "left." The Shadow Before should hit many a "right"-minded reader squarely in the middle. Until the strike started, the New England mill town of Fullerton seemed a fairly pleasant little place. To young Harry Baumann it was just the site of his father's factory, which gave him enough money to be a Harvardman, raise delightful hell in New York. To Mill-Superintendent Thayer it was the whole U. S. To his silly wife...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Coming Event? | 3/19/1934 | See Source »

...years in jail. Harry Baumann, caught trying to set fire to his father's mill, sought a final sensation by shooting himself. Silly Mrs. Thayer died of overexerting her alcoholic heart. Her husband was proud the strike was broken, wanted to clean all the foreigners out of Fullerton. Marjorie at last was leaving for her Manhattan dramatic school. Micky was going to have a baby. The Author, in company with many a left-wing litterateur, has taken a modern highroad to Parnassus. He comes honestly by his industrial subject. After serving in the War with an ambulance corps, later...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Coming Event? | 3/19/1934 | See Source »

Students flocked to Hanover's telegraph office, read the list of the dead. They recognized most names. William F. Fullerton, 20, had been an editor of the Daily Dartmouth. Americo De Masi, 20, had been college fencing champion. Edward N. Wentworth Jr., 21, had been on the soccer squad. Harold D. Watson, 21, had sung in the glee club. So it went down the list: Edward and Alfred Moldenke, 21 and 20, only sons of a Manhattan pastor; William M. Smith Jr., 21; Wilmot H. Schooley, 20; John J. Griffin...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Education: Dartmouth's Saddest | 3/5/1934 | See Source »

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