Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://wikidata.dbpedia.org/resource/Q3104469> ?p ?o }
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- Q3104469 subject Q21177414.
- Q3104469 subject Q6508841.
- Q3104469 subject Q6647384.
- Q3104469 subject Q7116952.
- Q3104469 subject Q8230059.
- Q3104469 subject Q8843101.
- Q3104469 abstract "Roberta Alison Baumgardner (born December 13, 1943, Alexander City, Alabama – died March 20, 2009, Alexander City, Alabama) was a noted American female tennis player.She helped pave the way for women's varsity athletics when she joined the men's tennis team at the University of Alabama in 1963, aged 19. Jason Morton, tennis coach at Alabama at the time, found Alison training on grass courts in Tuscaloosa in preparation for the U.S. National Championship (now known as the U.S. Open). He convinced her to attend Alabama and play on the men's tennis team. This was the first official move toward allowing women to participate in varsity athletics in the Southeastern Conference of the NCAA.She played on the men's team for three years. She was in the No. 4 position her first year but played in either the No. 1 or No. 2 position in her second and third years. Some of the competing schools men's varsity teams would default to her rather than risk playing against a woman and losing.Alison won the women's collegiate singles title in 1962 and 1963, and paired with Justina Bricka of Missouri for the 1963 NCAA doubles title. Alison also was a four-time Blue Gray champion, and a three-time Southern tournament champion.She was a member of the Southern Lawn Tennis Hall of Fame, the Southern Tennis Hall of Fame, the Women's Intercollegiate Tennis Hall of Fame, and was in the first class enshrined into the University of Alabama’s Tennis Hall of Fame. The Roberta Alison Tennis Classic is held each year at the University of Alabama.She also played the American tennis circuit. At the event in Cincinnati, she was a singles finalist in 1962 and 1965, and won doubles titles in 1962 (with Mary Habicht of Brazil), 1963 (with Linda Lou Crosby) and 1965 (with Stephanie DeFina).Roberta won the Southern Tennis Championship numerous times both as a junior and also in the Women's Division. She was also a member of the USA's Junior Wightman Cup TeamAfter her tennis career, Roberta spent her life in Alexander City, AL. As a lover of animals she helped start the Lake Martin Humane Society and was active in LMHS activities for many years.On April 28, 2012 the University of Alabama dedicated a new indoor tennis facility naming it the Roberta Alison Baumgardner tennis facility.".
- Q3104469 wikiPageWikiLink Q123577.
- Q3104469 wikiPageWikiLink Q1388797.
- Q3104469 wikiPageWikiLink Q21177414.
- Q3104469 wikiPageWikiLink Q271805.
- Q3104469 wikiPageWikiLink Q30.
- Q3104469 wikiPageWikiLink Q461834.
- Q3104469 wikiPageWikiLink Q492318.
- Q3104469 wikiPageWikiLink Q6508841.
- Q3104469 wikiPageWikiLink Q6647384.
- Q3104469 wikiPageWikiLink Q7116952.
- Q3104469 wikiPageWikiLink Q7608262.
- Q3104469 wikiPageWikiLink Q79580.
- Q3104469 wikiPageWikiLink Q79663.
- Q3104469 wikiPageWikiLink Q8230059.
- Q3104469 wikiPageWikiLink Q8843101.
- Q3104469 wikiPageWikiLink Q963227.
- Q3104469 comment "Roberta Alison Baumgardner (born December 13, 1943, Alexander City, Alabama – died March 20, 2009, Alexander City, Alabama) was a noted American female tennis player.She helped pave the way for women's varsity athletics when she joined the men's tennis team at the University of Alabama in 1963, aged 19. Jason Morton, tennis coach at Alabama at the time, found Alison training on grass courts in Tuscaloosa in preparation for the U.S. National Championship (now known as the U.S. Open).".
- Q3104469 label "Roberta Alison".