Word: danae
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1940-1949
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
Powers will probably swim in the 100 and the 440, while Bosworth and Stowell are slated for century work too. The former will forego backstroke competition. The sixth Crimson entrant is George Dana, who will compete in both the high and low board dives...
Also, Jim Curwen is to swim the 220. 100. and relay; Lennie Stowell the 100 and relay; Frannie Powers the 440, 100, or relay; Art Bosworth the 100 and relay, and George Dana the high and low-board dives. In addition to the H.A.A. authorized squad of six men, Tom Godfrey and Dave "Barrel-body" Stearns will travel to the Penn pool on their own; they will enter the 220 and 50 respectively...
...Cook and Don Munding, Yale's brilliant Sophomore divers, ought to sweep first and second against Harvard's George Dana and Chet Sagenkahan, although Dana may conceivably take a second if one of the Elis has an off-day. Both Crimson divers are ending their springboard careers this evening...
...Elis can produce stars two or three deep. Harvard's breastrokers have not, up to now, been able to surpass 2:32 even in practice, yet Yale has Meyer, Gesner, and Metcalfe who are below that mark. Her divers, Cook and Munding, are consistently scoring well above George Dana's all-time best point total...
...sprinters who together broke the world's record for the 400 relay, to a pair of 50 men better than our best, to two backstrokers as good as and better than Art Bosworth. Still, on Saturday Rick Cutler swam his best 220, Bosworth his best dorsal 150, and George Dana chalked up his best total this year. And Jim Curwen showed that he is back to his Sophomore year All-American team form, in spite of one unlucky turn...