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Showing posts with label Sailing Barnegat Bay. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sailing Barnegat Bay. Show all posts

Tuesday, July 12, 2011

National Junior Championship Sailing on Barnegat Bay

sailing Barnegat Bay

Mantoloking Yacht Club (Mantoloking) and Bay Head Yacht Club (Bay Head) are co-hosts for the 2011 U.S. Junior Women's Doublehanded Championship for the Ida Lewis Trophy, a US SAILING National Championship event. Forty teams will race in Club 420s this Tuesday through Thursday, July 12-14 on Barnegat Bay.

Among this year's contenders are Holly Tullo (Staten Island, N.Y.) and her crew Haley Fox (Fort Lauderdale, Fla.). Tullo and Fox attempt to improve on their third place finish in last year's championship. Another returning team is Allyson Donahue (Brigantine, N.J.) and her crew Maddie Widneier (Pipersville, Pa.), who finished tenth last year. Both Tullo and Donahue have already been accepted to compete as skippers in the C420 division at US SAILING's 2011 U.S. Youth Sailing Championships in August.

Two days of clinics for the competing sailors led by US SAILING's National Junior Coach Frank Ustach and a team of distinguished junior and college sailing coaches preceded competition on Sunday and Monday, July 10-11.

For more details on the U.S. Junior Women's Doublehanded Championship, including competitors list, results, standings, recaps, photos and a special race tracking feature from Kattack, please visit the event website at http://championships.ussailing.org/Youth/USJrWomensDoublehanded.htm. The championship is a Sailors for the Sea - Clean Regattas certification event.

Monday, December 6, 2010

Barnegat Bay Legend and Olympic Gold Medalist Dies at 97

Barnegat Bay Legend and Olympic Gold Medalist Dies at 97 Gold Medal

One would think that winning the Olympic gold medal at the age of 41 should be THE highlight moment in anyone's life, but not for Dr. Britton Chance.  Before and after winning that medal in the 1952 Helsinki Games, he was an extraordinary scientist with international credentials.

Chance was born in Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania and had a home in Waretown, NJ for decades, from which he sailed Barnegat Bay.  He received a B.A., M.A. and Ph.D. degree in Physical Chemistry from the University of Pennsylvania. He earned a second Ph.D. at Cambridge University in 1942 in Biology/Physiology. During World War II, Chance worked for the Radiation Laboratory at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology which was working on the development of radar. In 1952 he received his D.Sc. from Cambridge. His research interests were diverse. He was promoted as the Professor of Biophysics at University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine and appointed the second director of the Johnson Foundation, a position he held until 1983. He was then appointed E. R. Johnson Professor of Biophysics and Physical Biochemistry in 1964 and University Professor in 1977.

barnegat bay sailing Chance had the rare distinction of being the recipient of a National Medal of Science (1974), and a Gold Medal in the Olympics (1952, Sailing, Men's 5½ Meter Class), and a Certificate of Merit for his sensitive work during World War II. He also was rare in being elected not only to the U.S. National Academy of Science but also to foreign academies such as The Royal Society of London and the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences.

 Dr. Britton Chance, for more than 50 years one of the giants of biochemistry and biophysics and a world leader in transforming theoretical science into useful biomedical and clinical applications and Olympic Gold Medal winner and Barnegat Bay sailing legend, died on November 16, at age 97.

Karl Hess

 

 

 

 

Barnegat Bay Legend and Olympic Gold Medalist Dies at 97 One would think that winning the Olympic gold medal at the age of 41 should be THE highlight moment in anyone's life, but not for Dr. Britton Chance. Before and after winning that medal in the 1952 Helsinki Games, he was an extraordinary scientist with international credentials. Chance was born in Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania and had a home in Waretown, NJ for decades, from which he sailed Barnegat Bay. He received a B.A., M.A. and Ph.D. degree in Physical Chemistry from the University of Pennsylvania. He earned a second Ph.D. at Cambridge University in 1942 in Biology/Physiology. During World War II, Chance worked for the Radiation Laboratory at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology which was working on the development of radar. In 1952 he received his D.Sc. from Cambridge. His research interests were diverse. He was promoted as the Professor of Biophysics at University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine and appointed the second director of the Johnson Foundation, a position he held until 1983. He was then appointed E. R. Johnson Professor of Biophysics and Physical Biochemistry in 1964 and University Professor in 1977. Chance had the rare distinction of being the recipient of a National Medal of Science (1974), and a Gold Medal in the Olympics (1952, Sailing, Men's 5½ Meter Class), and a Certificate of Merit for his sensitive work during World War II. He also was rare in being elected not only to the U.S. National Academy of Science but also to foreign academies such as The Royal Society of London and the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences. Dr. Britton Chance, for more than 50 years one of the giants of biochemistry and biophysics and a world leader in transforming theoretical science into useful biomedical and clinical applications and Olympic Gold Medal winner and Barnegat Bay sailing legend, died on November 16, at age 97. Karl Hess