Monday, Jan. 04, 1932

Who Won

P:Centre Fielder John Leonard ("Pepper") Martin of the St. Louis Cardinals; for his performance in the 1931 World Series against the Philadelphia Athletics: an Associated Press poll of experts on "the outstanding individual achievement in sports." Second was U. S. Tennis Champion Ellsworth Vines. P:Primo Camera, gargantuan Italian pugilist: a judgment for $63,017 against his midget Anglo-French manager, Leon See; for moneys which Camera had earned in what most U. S. experts considered fraudulent boxing exhibitions and which, according to Camera, See had invested, without his permission, in fraudulent gold mine stock.

P:The St. Paul's School hockey team: a game against Princeton Freshmen in Manhattan: 5 to 0.

P:The Princeton chess team: the Belden-Stephens Trophy in the seventh tournament of the H. Y. P. D. College Chess League; with 7 1/2 points to 6 for Harvard, 5 1/2 for Dartmouth, 5 for Yale. P:Roger F. Turner of Boston and Maribel Y. Vinson, 19, Radcliffe junior: respectively the national ice skating championship and the women's championship, each for the fifth successive year, at Manhattan's Ice Club. Following a flawless execution of the "school figures" (loop-change-loop, counter, bracket-change-bracket) Miss Vinson clinched her victory with a brilliant display of free-skating.

This file is automatically generated by a robot program, so reader's discretion is required.