The wire service reported that "it was Tangora, a square-chinned six-footer, who turned the tide" in the Notre Dame game.
[2] Aside from stopping the Notre Dame offense from his spot in the middle of the line, Tangora recovered a fumble in the fourth quarter that set up Northwestern's winning touchdown.
[3] Tangora gained extensive press coverage in December 1935 when he announced his intention to change his major from art to criminology.
Finally I discovered I could draw and for awhile decided to make that my life work Then about a year ago I got interested in the department of justice and I knew then that I had found myself.
[6] He gained notoriety in 1955 for padlocking a transient hotel that he characterized as a "flop house" in which men were living in filth.