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...true that I shall marry and American man, not even a college man", exclaimed Suzanne Lenglen vivaciously, with an arch glance at the CRIMSON reporter in an interview last Saturday evening. "I am so busy, I can't breathe. I have no time to think of marriage...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: SUZANNE DOESN'T WANT AN AMERICAN HUSBAND | 10/18/1926 | See Source »

Mademoiselle Lenglen spoke English fluently in a low voice with just a trace of Parisian accent. Her manner was quite charming. The reporter forgot in his admiration to ask just how she got that straight back-hand drive and gabbled instead a trite question about professional tennis...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: SUZANNE DOESN'T WANT AN AMERICAN HUSBAND | 10/18/1926 | See Source »

...enjoy playing professionally more than I can say," replied Mlle. Lenglen, "I feel that professionalism will help tennis to become more popular. It will not be a game just for college men, but for all people. That is, good players will be able to make their living at tennis just as much as in golf. It will be possible to play without having to be rich. At present all our good players come from the wealthy, educated class. That will not continue when one can make money in tennis. More people will learn to play...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: SUZANNE DOESN'T WANT AN AMERICAN HUSBAND | 10/18/1926 | See Source »

When Harold ("Red") Grange first began to romp under the managerial eye of C. C. ("Cold-cash") Pyle, and U. S. suspected that. Mr. Pyle was a sucker. Later, when professional football showed signs of success they realized that Mr. Pyle was a businessman. Then Suzanne Lenglen, French tennis ace, turned professional, along with other tennis notables. People thought that Mr. Pyle showed acumen. Until last week, however, few knew that Mr. Pyle was likewise a dramatist. The scene was the great dining hall of the steamship Paris, ablaze with lights, aglow with chatter of sporting bigwigs. William Hanford...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Sport: Announcement | 10/11/1926 | See Source »

...venture of Mr. C. C. Pyle and his partners in this crime against the untainted amateur spirit will not, it is predicted, meet with the success that had been predicted. There was no scrambling for the balls, players were not besieged for autographs. Mademoiselle Lenglen and Mr. Richards missed a trick by not sending tennis balls to the sick boy whose convalescence has recently been so materially aided by the receipt of a baseball from Mr. Ruth and a football from Mr. Grange. The Madison Square Garden audience showed no World Series fever and Mademoiselle Lenglen showed no temperament. Which...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: TAINTED TENNIS | 10/11/1926 | See Source »

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