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...year ago when he spread-eagled the college field by nine strokes over the 36 hole route. His total Saturday was 149, one stroke back of Bob Bingham of Amherst, the winner. Graves carded 73-76 for his 149, while Bingham did 76-72 for his victory. Medalist Ace Cordingley slipped to an 82-74--156 total...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Golfers Win N.E. tournament But Graves Fails to Repeat | 5/20/1940 | See Source »

Prime golfing axiom is that a medalist rarely wins a tournament. Last year in the U. S. Women's Championship at Summit, N. J., Medalist Mrs. Estelle Lawson Page, according to everybody's expectations, did not survive the third round. This year at Memphis, again medalist in the women's national tournament. Mrs. Page refused to be flustered, stayed calm even through such matches as one in which her opponent after a lusty swing lost her skirt. So last week Mrs. Page met 19-year-old Patty Berg, runner-up to Mrs. Glenna Collett Vare...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Sport: Unflustered Victory | 10/18/1937 | See Source »

...German mathematician now chuckles, gestures, jokes, smokes in public with considerable self-assurance. Last May Dr. Einstein made the short journey from Princeton to Philadelphia to receive the Franklin Medal of the Franklin Institute. A throng of scientists and dignitaries was assembled to hear what the medalist had to say. Einstein genially informed the chairman that he had nothing to say, that inspiration which he had awaited until the last moment had failed him. The chairman, much more embarrassed than the medalist, conveyed this information to the audience...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Science: Eienstein's Reality | 3/16/1936 | See Source »

Same year Surveyor Hulbert sank his first shaft, last week's Saunders Medalist was born to a miner in Ontario. Brought to the Michigan Copper Country in infancy, James MacNaughton started work at 11, carrying water on the C. & H. coal docks, was later a coal-weigher, then a switchman. He attended University of Michigan, went back to C. & H. a white-collar engineer. For ten years he managed Michigan's richest iron mine, returned once more to C. & H. 33 years ago and has never left it since, rising by traditional stages to the presidency...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Science: Mines, Metals, Medals | 3/4/1935 | See Source »

Every year the Amateur Athletic Union awards the Sullivan Medal to the U. S. athlete "who . . . has done most during the year to advance the cause of sportsmanship." Last week the A. A. U. announced its 1933 medalist. He is Kansas University's crack middle-distance runner, Glenn Cunningham, who at the age of 8 was so badly burned in a schoolhouse fire that he was never expected to walk again. To develop his scarred legs he took up running, even learned to play football. But because he developed into such an expert trackman coaches forbade him to play...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Sport: Sportsmen of the Year | 1/8/1934 | See Source »

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