Word: zinderstein
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...Providence perceived a flash of the nervous stamina that has made Mrs. Mallory six times champion of the U. S. With the loss oi only three points, she won the next three games, the match, the Rhode Island championship. Miss Mary K. Browne and Miss Goss defeated Mrs. Marion Zinderstein Jessup and Miss Edith Sigourney for the doubles titles, 4-6, 6-2, 6-1. Mrs. Jessup and W. W. Ingraham took the mixed doubles...
Experts thought that the greatest obstacle confronting Helen was not Molla Bjurstedt Mallory, from whom she won her title last year; nor Mrs. George Wightman, her Olympic doubles partner; nor Eleanor Goss nor Mrs. Marion Zinderstein Jessup, other members of the American women's team that went to Wimbledon and Colombes; nor Mayme MacDonald, national clay court champion. Experts scrutinized a lithe figure that appeared from secluded practice courts in upper New York State, recognized Miss Mary K. Browne of California, national champion...
Women. Captain, Mrs. George Wightman of Brookline, Mass,; Helen Wills of Berkeley, Calif., national champion; Eleanor Goss of Manhattan, third ranking player; Mrs. Marion Zinderstein Jessup of Wilmington, Del. Alternates: Lilian Scharman of Brooklyn; Leslie Bancroft and Edith Sigourney of Boston...
...veterans of the courts won tennis championships. Mrs. Marion Zinderstein Jessup, of Wilmington, became national singles champion when she defeated the agile Lilian Scharman, of Brooklyn, 6-2, 6-3, in the indoor tournament at Brookline, Mass. Mrs. Jessup teamed with Mrs. George Wightman, of Brookline, had previously won the doubles. For Mrs. Wightman it was the 21st championship...
Miss Wills. Born Oct 6, 1905, in California, she won the Bay Counties (Cal.) tournament, 1920; state championship, 1921; national girls' championship, 1921; national doubles championship (with Mrs. Marion Zinderstein Jessup), 1922; national singles championship...