muscular efficiency and endurance are concerned, the performance of the shorter, slighter, "weaker" female as a cross-Channel swimmer, for example, suggests that the best women can do as well as the best men, and often even better. Ever since Gertrude Ederle of the United States, on August 6, 1926, swam the English Channel in fourteen hours, thirty-one minutes-two hours faster than any man or woman had ever done before-there have been striking performances by women that testify to their remarkable physical skill and staying power. On October 12, 1955, Florence Chadwick of the United States crossed the Channel from England to France, the more difficult route, in thirteen hours, thirtythree minutes. Abla Adel Khairi of Egypt, aged thirteen years and ten months, on August 17, 1974, made the same crossing in twelve hours, twenty-two minutes. The race from France to England in August 1957, in which both men and women competed, was won by a woman swimmer, Greta Anderson of Denmark, in thirteen hours and fifty-three minutes. In September 1967, Linda McGill, a twenty-one-year-old Australian, broke the women's record by swimming the Channel in nine hours, thirty-nine minutes, missing the men's mark by only twenty-four minutes. In September 1971, Connie Ebbelaar, a twenty-two-year-old Dutch swimming instructor, swam the Channel from England to France in ten hours, forty minutes, which was just twenty minutes away from equaling the men's record for the twenty-one-mile swim. Wendy Brook of the United States, in September 1976, swam the Channel from France to England in eight hours and fifty-six minutes, the fastest time by anyone, male or female. Even more astonishing is the performance of Peggy Lee Dean of the United States who, in July 1978, set a record for the fastest Channel crossing from France to England in seven hours and forty minutes. Finally, without adding any of the other Channel records achieved by women, there stand the unique accomplishments of Diana Nyad of the United States who, in 1975, became the first person to swim nonstop the thirty-two miles across Lake Ontario; this she did in twenty hours. That same year she broke the 1927 record for a swim around Manhattan Island, completing the circuit in seven hours, fifty-seven minutes. A dedicated marathon swimmer Nyad has swum in shark cages on all the challenging waterways of the world, and in August 1979 was the first person to make the
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