Marilyn Ramenofsky is an American former competition swimmer, Olympic medalist, and former world record-holder.
Education
International Swimming Hall of Fame national director Buck Dawson wrote: " was the first female to swim a perfect freestyle stroke." She attended Pomona College in Claremont, California, and trained with the Pomona College men"s swim team because the college had no women"s team
Career
She is currently a researcher at the University of California at Davis, studying the physiology and behavior of bird migration. She has previously done research at the University of Washington in Seattle. Ramenofsky was named to the Amateur Athletic Union (Amateur Athletic Union) All-America women"s swimming teams in 1962, 1963 and 1964.
Ramenofsky set new world-record times for the 400-meter freestyle three times in 1964, including once at the United States. Olympic Trials, reducing the record to 4:39.5.
She also set a new United States. record in the 220-yard freestyle in 1964, at 2:17.3. At the 1964 Summer Olympics in Tokyo, Japan, she represented the United States.
Ramenofsky, who is Jewish, was inducted into the International Jewish Sports Hall of Fame in 1988. Ramenofsky has published numerous peer reviewed articles on the physiology and behavior of migratory birds, most notably the white-crowned sparrow.
Much of her research has focused on how glucocorticoids may orchestrate the suite of life history changes associated with bird migration.
She now works at University of California Davis studying the migration of birds, and changes in their muscle physiology during stages of migration.