Word: cortland
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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...YARD BUTTERFLY: 1. Jecko (Yale), 2. Clinton (Yale), 3. Chapman (Army), 4. Jones (Amherst), 5. Wortman (Cortland), 6. Hammond (Harvard)--2:11.8 (Meet Record). 50-YARD FREESTYLE: 1. Keiter (Amherst), 2. Dyer (Harvard), 3. Bronston (Yale), 4. Gideonse (Amherst), 5. Myers (Colgate), 6. Hibbard (Yale)--22.2 (Meet Record). 200-YARD BACKSTROKE: 1. Plourbe (Bowdoin), 2. Dolbey (Yale), 3. Earley (Yale), 4. Kirk (Army), 5. Harris (Cornell), 6. Wolf (Cornell)--2:11.1. 220-YARD FREESTYLE: 1. Anderson (Yale), 2. Cornwell (Yale), 3. Goodman (Army), 4. Ellison (Yale), 5. Bahrenburg (Dartmouth), 6. Bronston (Yale)--2:07.0. 100-YARD BREASTSTROKE: 1. Buzzard (Syracuse...
...slower first heat, John Welsh of Springfield took first place with a 21:17.5, followed by Connecticut's Doug Fingels in 21:26.5, and Murray Kohlman (21:44.3) of M.I.T., and Kenneth Lee (21:46.4) of Cortland Teachers...
...schools as small as State University Teachers College at Cortland, N.Y. (enrollment 1,800), coaches of any sport are happy to settle for so-so teams. They may dream of training champions, but they make do with what they have. Cortland's Swimming Coach Dr. James E. Counsilman was even willing to work with a sandy-haired freshman named George E. Breen, whose best effort for the 440-yd. freestyle was a dismally slow 7:30. "He looked as though he might drown," says Counsilman, remembering that sad performance in the fall of 1952. Breen thought the coach...
...first year of competitive swimming Counsilman's counsel was paying off. Breen could churn the 440 in 4:56. Last year he was fast enough to win the Eastern Intercollegiate and A.A.U. 1,500-meter championship. In June Coach Counsilman took off on a leave from Cortland to be physical fitness director of Philadelphia's Broadwood Health Institute, but he kept control of Breen's training by telephone and letter, nursed and egged him on to this year's Eastern Intercollegiate 1,500-meter title. Then he went to New Haven to watch his protege perform...
Running on a muddy Van Cortland Park course in New York yesterday, the favored Big Red captured first, second, fourth, eighth, and twenty-first places as two sophomores, Dave Eckel and Mike Midler led the field. Pete Reider, who finished fifth, was the first Crimson runner in the five mile race...