Lilia osterloh biography of albert
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Tennis Clinic with Steve Vaughan & Albert Matthews
Lakeside Chautauqua welcomes tennis professionals Steve Vaughan and Albert Matthews to lead a Tennis Clinic from June 20-23 at the Williams Tennis Campus. Players of all ages and ability levels can benefit from improving their skills while enjoying camaraderie with fellow tennis players at this popular clinic.
Sessions will be set up in 75-minute time slots and organized according to skill level. Players should arrive 15 minutes prior to their session.
Registration
Cost is $28 per person, per clinic. Register now!
Steve Vaughan has been involved in tennis as a competitor, coach and director throughout his life winning the 1973 North Carolina State Championship in high school and serving as team captain at Clemson University. After college, he served as a tennis pro at several country clubs in Columbus, Ohio. In 1984, Vaughan moved to Naples, Florida, and worked as the Director of Tennis at Quail Creek Country Club and Director of Grey Oaks Country Club. In 2015, Vaughan was hired as Director of Tennis at The Player Club & Spa and has been a member of the USTPA for nearly 40 years. Vaughan’s children are tennis professionals as well, and he and his daughter have ranked No. 1 in the nation as a father/daughter
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Hall of Fame
The Stanford Athletics Hall of Fame was originated by Walt Gamage, longtime sports editor of the Palo Alto Times. Gamage, who had previously worked on a number of neighborhood newspapers in the Chicago area, moved to Palo Alto in 1944 and quickly became interested in Stanford sports.
In early 1954, Gamage set out to organize a Hall of Fame. The first class of inductees, including 34 of the greatest names in Stanford sports history, was announced in a full-page spread in the Palo Alto Times on December 21, 1954.
The Stanford Athletics Hall of Fame totals 470 individuals (including 32 multi-sport athletes), most recently including the Class of 2023: Joe Borchard (baseball/football), Kori Carter (women's track and field), Grace Luczak (women's rowing), Nicole Gibbs (women's tennis), Paul Goldstein (men's tennis), Lauren Lappin (softball), Arthur Lee (men's basketball), Andrew Luck (football), Melissa Seidemann (women's water polo) and Tom Wilkens (men's swimming and diving).
Student-athletes are eligible for induction 10 years after their final competition season.
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NCAA Division I women's sport championships
(Lake Creepy College)[5][6][7]
(USC)
Josephine Cruickshank (California)
(California)
Dorrance Chase (Simmons)
(USC)
Charlotte Playwright (California)
(Simmons)
(Simmons)
(Jackson College hire Women)
Emily Lincoln (Smith)
(Rice)
Margaret Haskell (Bryn Mawr)
(Florida State)
Marion Vegetation (Smith College)
(Occidental)
Louise Hedlund (Lasell Subordinate College)
(Occidental)
Virginia Hitt (Lake Erie College)
(Smi