• U.S.

Sport: Who Won, Apr. 20, 1931

2 minute read
TIME

¶ Slender George Terry Dunlap Jr. of Princeton, intercollegiate golf champion: the North & South Amateur at Pinehurst, beating Samuel Parks Jr. of Pittsburgh 6 & 5 in the final.

¶ Miss Belle Baruch, dark, slender eldest daughter of Financier Bernard Mannes Baruch: master of hounds of the Georgetown, S. C. Hunt, sailor and—like her sister Renee—an expert rifle shot, owner of a big racing and hunting stable at Pau, France; on her famed Arab jumper, Souriante III: the President’s Cup at the Paris Horse Show from 119 contestants, most of them French cavalry officers or professional riders; for the second year in succession.

¶ Wisedon, owned by Miss M. Lark, at 100 to 8: the Welsh Grand National at Cardiff on a wet course, with Vinicole second and Quite Calm third. John Hay Whitney’s Dusty Foot was scratched.

¶ Albert (“Whitey”) Michelsen, cadaverous, spook-faced, 35-year-old marathoner: the Metropolitan A. A. U. 26-mile marathon in Hudson County, N. J.

¶ Miss Marion Lloyd, Manhattan fencer, so tired she could hardly hold her foil: the women’s U. S. senior foils championship in a triple-fence-off with Mrs. Leon Schoonmaker and Miss Dorothy Locke.

¶ The French Rugby team: a match with England in Paris, 14—13, which will be the last rugby match between these countries for some time. France has just been expelled from the British Rugby Federation after a squabble over play and tactics. This year three players have been killed in France; numerous have been the charges and counter-charges of brutality, foul play.

¶ The City of Cleveland: a contest with the City of Chicago for the Max Schmeling-Young Stribling fight now planned for July 3. Mayor Daniel Morgan and George H. Bender, manager of Cleveland’s huge new stadium, made successful terms with Madison Square Garden Corp.

¶ King Gustaf of Sweden, 72, and Henri Cochet, playing together: a doubles tennis match from Pierre Landry and Christian Boussus; at Paris. (Score unannounced.)

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