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Word: spitz (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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1.DeLone (Harvard) def. Monica Catrina (Brown), 6-1, 6-1; 2.Elmuts (H) def. Ryu (B), 6-3, 6-4; 3.Cooper (H) def. Thomas (B), 6-2, 6-2; 4.Parker (H) def Kranzberg (B), 6-2, 6-4; 5.Passent (H) def. Spitz (B), 6-2, 6-2; 6.Harris (H) def. Howard...

Author: By Ted G. Rose, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Netwomen Outclass Ivy Champs | 4/25/1992 | See Source »

Christopher Columbus, hero of 1492, came under attack as a ruthless invader. A bad year, all in all, for dead white males . . . And some live ones: Mark Spitz and Bjorn Borg hoped to relive their heydays but found it takes more than high self-esteem to be a world-class athlete . . . The 1970s were the years that taste forgot. Why celebrate platform shoes and Partridge Family LPs? Keep them in the attic where they belong...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Winners of 1991 | 1/6/1992 | See Source »

...everyone is. Mark Spitz, 41, now a businessman in Beverly Hills, is the marvelous sprint swimmer who at the '72 Olympics in Munich won seven gold medals in world-record time. Spitz had a world-class mustache and was smashingly handsome. The only knock against him was that he projected the personality of a 22-year-old who had spent a lot of time in swimming pools...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: It's Coming Back to Me Now! | 4/22/1991 | See Source »

...Spitz retired, posed for a poster and got on with his life. He seldom swam the length of a pool. Then a couple of years ago, he began to toy with a goofy idea: that he could make the U.S. Olympic team next year and win a medal in his best event, the 100-m butterfly. It is the one men's event in which times haven't dropped dramatically. Pablo Morales, now retired, holds the record of 52.84 sec., and Spitz's '72 time of 54.27 sec. would have put him seventh at the Seoul Olympics. To make...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: It's Coming Back to Me Now! | 4/22/1991 | See Source »

...could it be that Palmer, Spitz and the others aren't being unrealistic? "We've always had this dogma that the human body peaks at age 26 to 28 and then goes into a slow decline," says Rick Sharp, a professor of exercise physiology at Iowa State University. "But in fact, what we were seeing was not the effects of aging per se, but of increasingly sedentary life-styles." When 50-year-old men and women began running marathons in times that once would have been records, experts began to rethink old ideas about middle...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: It's Coming Back to Me Now! | 4/22/1991 | See Source »

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