Word: chums
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Only number one player Corky Graham looked sharp for the Midshipmen; he tripped Frank Ripley, 6-4, 6-3, and then teamed with John Owens to beat Ripley and Bob Inman, 6-4, 6-2, at first doubles. But Dave Benjamin, Clive Kileff, Chum Steele, and Dean Peckham won straight-set singles matches, and the teams of Steele-Peckham and Benjamin-Kileff won the last two doubles to clinch the match...
Behind him, Chum Steele is a top-calibre doubles player who works with fanatical energy and hopes to become one of the country's best. On a good day, Steele can beat anyone in the Eastern League; his problem is erratic play, but even a bad day probably wouldn't cost him the match against Navy...
...Chum Steele, Harvard's number three man, came up with an injured foot before the match and decided to take it easy, playing in the unofficial number eight position. Clive Kileff, Bob Inman, and Dean Peckham all moved up a notch and captain Sandy Walker filled in at the number six spot...
...Fitzgibbon and his erratic partner, Speed Howell, to preserve the lead and Princeton's unbeaten season against Chum Steele and Dean Peckham. Steele had beaten Howell in singles, 7-5, 4-6, 6-3, rallying from a 5-1 deficit in the first set and upsetting Howell with needle-sharp passing shots...
Howell, at number three, is as weak a point as you get on this Princeton team. He's big, strong, and experienced--but erratic. He lost at Miami, 6-1, 6-0, lost a challenge match to Jennings, 6-1, 6-2, and could lose to Harvard's Chum Steele today if Steele is on top of his own on again-off again game...