Word: shrout
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...with a 3:15.7 performance. Adams hung up his fastest 100-yard split, 48.5 seconds. Jim Seubold led off in 50.4 seconds, a time he should lower in the finals against Yale and Navy. Phil Chase followed in 48.4 seconds, finally reaching the stardom long predicted for him Bill Shrout anchored the quarter--which avenged losses to Army and Princeton--in 48.4 seconds...
Crimson sophomore Bill Shrout will probably swim in the 100-yard freestyle, where his best time is 0:48.7, although he could land in the 50 or 200 also. Against Eli captain Joe Hill, Schollander, Army's Warren Trainor, and a couple of fine Princeton sprinters, he will have his work cut out for him to earn a place...
Yale's Mike Ahern took the 50-yard sprint in 22.2 seconds just touching out Bill Shrout, who was credited with the same time. Barry Wemple won the Corris-less individual medley in 2:04.6, leading Harvard's Henry Frey all the way. Yale's erratic divers had a good day and swept the dive...
...final event, the 400-yard freestyle relay, could result in another Crimson victory if Yale has the meet sewed up and Moriarty is feeling benevolent. Yale's first-string lineup may be the best in the country, but if the Elis use scrubs, and Harvard's quartet -- Bill Shrout, Phil Chase, Steve Coy, and Jim Seubold -- can break 3:15, the last seven points may go to the Crimson...
Sophomores Schollander and Shrout will revive the inevitably record-smashing rivalry they began last year as freshmen. They're likely to meet head-on in the 200-yard freestyle, and Schollander will probably win with a time in the vicinity of 1:43. On the basis of this season's performance, Shrout will have to push to hit 1:47, which could put him third if Eli captain Joe Hill swims the 1:46 expected...