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...Herbert Orrin Crisler, first non-graduate coach in Princeton history, was hired this year from Minnesota for $8,000 a year. So far he has earned it by building up, from the remnants of a team that won only one game last season, to one that last fortnight held Michigan 14-to-7 and last week smothered Lehigh, 53 to 0. Affable and optimistic. Coach Crisler does not object to his nickname "Fritz." He learned his football at Chicago where he was a crack end in 1920 and 1921. Pleased by the success of Coach Crisler, Princetonians were recently grieved...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Sport: Football: Mid-season | 11/14/1932 | See Source »

...Warner's new Stanford team used a bewildering collection of reverses, double-reverses, spinners, laterals and forwards to muddle Oregon State in one of the longest games on Pacific Coast Conference record. 27 to o. It was too early to guess what Princeton's new coach, Herbert Orrin Crisler, can do with the remnants of the team whose record last season was the sorriest in Princeton history, but his start?22 to 0 against slow but stubborn Amherst? was a good day for two seasoned backs. Jack James and Millard Draudt, and one new one. Tom Johnston, who intercepted...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Football | 10/10/1932 | See Source »

...Granville Roland Fortescue, for second-degree murder. On the same charge they would also try her son-in-law, Lieut. Thomas Hedges Massie, U. S. Navy, who sat beside her staring at the floor and biting his lips. Likewise they would try Seamen Edward J. Lord and Albert Orrin Jones of the Navy who lolled nearby at ease, unconcerned...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: TERRITORIES: Mottled Jury | 4/18/1932 | See Source »

...prison home all last week of a nervous and overwrought woman and three calm and comforting men, all held for murder. The prisoners: Mrs. Granville Roland Fortescue, middle-aged Washington socialite; Lieut. Thomas Hedges Massie, U. S. N., her young son-in-law, and E. J. Lord and Albert Orrin Jones, naval enlisted men. The charge: they had kidnapped and murdered a Hawaiian named Joe Kahahawai, accused, with four others of mixed blood, of raping young Mrs. Thalia Fortescue Massie (TIME, Jan. 18). Arrested fortnight ago by the Honolulu police as they were speeding the Kahahawai corpse to Koko Head...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: RACES: Murder in Paradise, Cont'd | 1/25/1932 | See Source »

...wealthy socialite of New York and Washington; her son-in-law, Lieut. Thomas Hedges Massie, U. S. N., 26; and an enlisted man named E. J. Lord. Mrs. Fortescue, composed and smiling, sat on the roadside until more police arrived as an escort back to Honolulu where Albert Orrin Jones, a second enlisted man, was also taken into custody. The great siren atop Aloha Tower shrieked a general alarm to the National Guard...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: RACES: Murder in Paradise | 1/18/1932 | See Source »

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