Article clipped from Kempsey Macleay Chronicle

A lending Louden sports writer instancing the success of girls ami boys in various sports. s;*vs:—llut it is not only in affairs requiring the attributes of grace and siipplcms with which youth is so richly endowed that the youngsters have this year been distinguishing themselves. On the contrary. th*y have shone also at a form of competition which demands physical immobility of quite a high order Chess. Take Elaine Saunders, a 12-vear-ohl damsel from Twickenham, for example.Meeting for the first time this charming little lady, with her bobbed hair, brown eyes and dimpled checks, you might not suspect that she could give Alexandre Alekhine the world’s chess champion, a rousing battle for five houis. Yet that is precisely what she diu. The match started at a quarter past seven in the evening and Elaine resigned at 12.15 a.m. In the meantime, she provided her renowned opponent with a great deal to think about. True, he was thinking about 29 other opponents at the same time (this being an exhibition of simultaneous play by Alkchinc at the Charing Cross Hotel here.)One by one, the champion rolled up the Kemish experts. lined up in formidable array again*! him. But Elaine, with furrowed brow, trotted out all the answers to all the moves. No wonder the great master said of her, “The child’s a genius.”Chess, however, is only one of Elaine's sporting interests. She delights in riding, skating, flying (in friends' airplanes) and in workouts” with boxing gloves and a punch hall. I n i st confess that I have not vcrv often come across chess players addicted to boxing. Though I know some heavyweight boxers who ought to I.. .. _____I .L_ I ____'I'I .
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Kempsey Macleay Chronicle

Kempsey, New South Wales, AU

Wed, Mar 23, 1938

Page 7

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Iredell C.

NC, USA 19 Oct 2020

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