Word: sprint
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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During their trial runs Saturday the Yale third Varsity crew consistently heat the seconds in every sprint...
...line 30 yards behind him-he breezed through a mile in 4 min. 7.4 sec., breaking his own (recognized) indoor record by one second. Seventy minutes later he attempted something more difficult. He entered the 600-yard race, less than half his usual distance. The others made a sprinting start. He elected to start standing up, and was promptly left behind. Then his legs began to pump and he pulled up on the leaders. With a terrific sprint he crossed the line in 1 min., 11.3 sec., tying the world's record. It did him no good...
Harvard, which last year was undefeated at the sprint distances except for Navy, losing then by a third of a length, and which defeated Yale on the Thames River at New London in a record-breaking upstream race, has great prospects again this year...
...Weghe and Hough, the rest of the meet was all Harvard generally, and all Willy Kendall specifically. Kendall, after capturing the 220, pulled his way to a magnificent 4:50.5 quarter that sliced nine seconds from Charlie Hutter's last year's Harvard record. Captain Hutter, with two sprint wins to his credit, performed ably as usual, while Rusty Greenhood's 116., 57 point victory in the dive was a tribute to his ability to come through under competition...
...first dual meet defeat since 1930, 47 to 37, has showed that either the Buckeyes or the Crimson swimmers are tops in college ranks. . . . Although Penn is at the bottom of the League, Williams of the Quakers is on top in individual scoring. He usually competes in two sprint events and the relay. . . . On Sunday Ralph Flanagan did 1:23.6 for 150-yards free-style, eight-tenths of a second better than Bill Kendall's world record. But Flanagan was swimming in a 20-yard pool; hence the better time. . . . Yale, with or without Johnny Macionis (he's been sick...