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...Chouteau Dyer lowered the Harvard record in the 100 by a tenth of a second, but his 50.6 effort was only good for fourth behind Rex Aubrey of Yale (49.5), Dave McIntyre of State (50.2), and Sandy Gideonse of Yale (50.4). Dyer had done a 49.7 in the Yale meet, but only winning times in a dual meet can be recognized as records...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Varsity Swimmers Lose Ground On Eastern Tourney's Last Day | 3/19/1956 | See Source »

...Chouteau Dyer opened the evening by gaining partial revenge against the Eli's in the 50. Rex Aubrey won the event in 22.3, but Dyer turned in a 22.4 to beat out Yale's Sandy Gideonse (22.6) for second. In a trial heat, Dyer did 22.3 to set a new Harvard record. Both he and Aubrey also tied the ECIL record...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Varsity Outswims Yale, N.C. State On First Day of Eastern Tourney | 3/17/1956 | See Source »

...Fred Cooley, Dick Seaton, and Hunter swam its fastest time of the season--a 3:28.0, to finish a close second to Yale. In the final leg, Hunter did a 49.5, with some watches clocking him at 49.3. At any rate, his official time was only .5 seconds off Chouteau Dyer's varsity record, indicating that by his senior year, Hunter may be headed for greater heights...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Stanley Downs Koletsky to Lead Crimson Swimmers at Easterns | 3/16/1956 | See Source »

...today, Chouteau Dyer will seek revenge against the Elis' Aubrey and Gideonse, but Keiter of Amherst (22.7) or Maxwell of UConn (22.8) might pull an upset. The same men will come back in the 100 tomorrow, with Armstrong and Cornwall of Yale, both of whom have broken 50 seconds on relay legs, complicating the picture...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Swimmers Seek Unofficial Second In EISL Races | 3/16/1956 | See Source »

Because Danzig doesn't know swimming, or knew only what Loftus fed him, he wrote with a sneer, as if Harvard had been upset. He panned Pete Macky, Dave Hawkins, and Chouteau Dyer, barely recognized Jim Jorgensen's wide-margin records which prove his Eastern leadership and rank him among the top four in the country, and left out Gus Johnson completely. He may have been limited in space, but his greater limitation in knowledge proved more severe as he harshly and unfairly stated the Crimson...

Author: By L. THOMAS Linden, | Title: Publicity, Ignorance & Sports Reporting | 3/14/1956 | See Source »

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