Table of contents | Summer 2011
Photo Courtesy: John maciel (top); brown sports information (middle); kelly fitzsimmons (bottom)
departments 2 A Letter From The Chair of the Athletics Review Committee 3 A Letter From the Athletic Director 4 Spring in Photos 6 Since Our Last Issue 7 Bear Bites 8 Baseball 9 Softball 10 Men’s Crew 11 Women’s Crew 12 Equestrian 14 Men’s Golf 15 Women’s Golf 22 Men’s Lacrosse 23 Women’s Lacrosse 24 Men’s Rugby 25 Women’s Rugby 28 Men’s Tennis 29 Women’s Tennis 30 Spring Results 33 BUSF Endowment 34 Loyal Bears 40 Bear Tracks On the Cover WHO NEEDS WATER? Not Brown Women’s Water Polo! The team got a sneak peek inside their unfinished home for the 2012 season.
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Boldly Brown Impact on Athletics A look at how the Boldy Brown Campaign positively affected Athletics.
13 | Track & Field
Striding Forward The path to an NCAA Championship.
26 | Sailing
Rounding The Marks To Rebuilding Edgewood
The Brown Bear Magazine is published quarterly by the Brown University Sports Foundation, Box 1925, Providence, RI 02912. Send address changes to P.O. Box 1908, Providence, RI 02912, call (401) 863-2307, or e-mail alumni_records@brown.edu. Send editorial correspondence to Box 1925, Providence, RI 02912, call (401) 863-1900, or e-mail Sports_Foundation@brown.edu. For more information on the Brown University Sports Foundation, visit www.sportsfoundation.brown.edu.
Brown Bear Magazine
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from the Chair of the Athletics Review Committee
In response to the charge of President Ruth J. Simmons and the Brown Corporation calling for a vision and plan for intercollegiate athletics. The report is being issued to the Brown community for discussion, deliberation and input at a series of campus meetings and forums planned in the coming weeks, including the Brown University Community Council on Tuesday, April 26 and the Undergraduate Council of Students on Wednesday, April 27. Those recommendations and issues raised during the forums will be presented in a final report to the President in May for discussion with the Corporation at its regular May meeting. The report includes a package of recommendations aimed at strengthening and balancing the varsity program and ensuring it is aligned with the academic mission of the University. As a whole, the proposal seeks to strengthen the Department of Athletics and provide better, more sustainable support for varsity teams. The comprehensive and interconnected set of actions includes increasing the overall athletics budget, strengthening facilities, improving financial aid for all students, and providing more competitive salaries for coaches and staff. It also calls for some difficult actions, including eliminating four varsity teams and elevating at least one women’s club sport to varsity status, reducing the number of recruited student-athletes, and a better alignment of schedules to avoid conflicts between academic and athletic programs among student-athletes. As you may imagine, these recommendations represent a complicated and sometimes difficult set of decisions. Proposing to eliminate teams was difficult for the committee, and is something with which every member struggled. In the end, to fulfill the committee’s charge, and given the current position of Brown in the context of the Ivy League in terms of program size and budget, it was essential to propose that the University bring the program into balance while simultaneously calling for the additional allocation of resources. Please read the report and recommendations in detail, keeping in mind that the goal of this plan is for Brown to achieve a well-supported varsity sport program that matches the investment in excellence that the University makes in all of the educational opportunities offered. The Athletics Review Committee is seeking your input, either through email at athleticsreview@brown.edu or by attending one of the meetings with stakeholder groups. The committee is collecting community feedback and will reflect this feedback in its final report to President Simmons. We look forward to hearing from you and hope you will help us carry forward a comprehensive plan for Brown’s varsity program. Richard Spies, For the Committee
The preceding appears on the Athletics Review Committee’s official website: http://brown.edu/web/athletics-review/ Brown University Sports Foundation
From the Athletic Director
As everyone who follows Brown athletics knows, this past year has been a very difficult one. As a result of the February 2011 Corporation meetings, the administration was directed to develop a plan that ensured our varsity teams offer a high quality experience for our students while being appropriately aligned with the academic mission of the University. Selected as one of nine members of the Athletic Review Committee (ARC), I attended numerous meetings between February and April during which we discussed the most effective way to maintain the high standard of academic and athletic excellence we have all come to expect from Brown University. However, during those discussions the entire committee realized that Brown’s competitiveness in the Ivy League has been slipping for very obvious reasons: our budget is the smallest in the League by a considerable margin, our administration is the smallest in the League, our coaches and our administrators are the poorest paid in the League, our facilities are in desperate need of repair, and our financial aid packages are the least competitive. We had to address this slippage; we could not simply hide our heads in the sand. How, then, could we offer our students a high quality experience under these conditions? That was our challenge. The package of recommendations that we offered for the Corporation and President’s consideration were not easy ones – our recommendations offered reductions in the scope of our athletic program that will be very hurtful to many men and women who have done nothing but given their very best for their University. To compete at the Division I level, to compete at the very highest academic level, takes a tremendous amount of hard work and I am very grateful to our student-athletes, past and present, for doing this and for representing Brown so well. Our student-athletes have made contributions to this university that few, if any, can match. We all want a program that offers a high quality experience and the opportunity for success for our student-athletes. While we know that almost everyone who reads these recommendations will take issue with one or more, we hope that all will consider them carefully and share their thoughts with us about them.
Michael Goldberger Director of Athletics
Craig Schroeder
SPRING 2011 IN PHOTOS
Marcia Hooper ’77 P’09 ’11 christens the crew shell bearing her name. She became the first alumna to have a boat named after her. Nicole Peters
Kelly Fitzsimmons
Members of the Young Athletic Alumni Council and Brown Sports Foundation Board of Directors, David Healy ’07, Heather McCrea M.D., Ph.D. ’02, Jayne Finst’04, Jessie Cooper ’03 AM’04 and Earl Hunt ’03 take a tour of the new Fitness and Aquatics Center on April 30th.
Hambleton Lord ’83 P’14 and Helen Lord ’14 on the Narragansett Bay during the Annual Brown Sailing Alumni/Parent Regatta & BBQ on May 14th.
A group of track & field alums gather with head coach Michelle Eisenreich during the Track & Field Alumni Reception on December 4th.
Laura Almeida ’06
2011 Brown Athletic Hall of Fame Inductees: (L to R) Igor Boraska ’95 (Men’s Crew), Brendan Finneran ’97 (Football), Katherine Cowan ’00 (Swimming & Diving), Michael Traggio ’95 (Ice Hockey), John Dunham ’64 (Special), Tara Mounsey ’00 (Field Hockey/Ice Hockey)and Trinity Gray ’00 (Track & Field). Brown University Sports Foundation
Ashley Daubenmire Craig Schroeder
Craig Schroeder
Current student-athletes and alumnae gather for Women’s Lacrosse Alumnae Day on April 23rd. Mike Cohea Brown University
Mike Cohea/ Brown University
Matt Jarret
Fans, Friends and Alumni packed the BUSF tent following the Brown & White Football Spring Game on April 30th. Craig Schroeder
The topping off ceremony for the Nelson Fitness Center, Katherine Moran Coleman Aquatics Center and David J. Zucconi ’55 Varsity Strength and Conditioning Center on April 6th.
Brown’s Baseball and Softball teams held their Second Annual Family Day and BBQ on April 30th.
2011 Brown Women’s Rugby Team after winning the Ivy League Championship.
Since Our Last Issue ... Winter Sports Update gymnastics • Chelsey Binkley ’11 was named the ECAC Scholar-Athlete of the Year. A USAG All-American on the vault, Binkley was also one of 13 Bears named to the ECAC All-Academic Team. • Emily Lutfey ’13 and Michelle Shnayder ’14 were named USAG First Team All-Americans. Competing at the USA Gymnastics Collegiate Championships, Lutfey placed second on the floor with a score of 9.825 while Shnayder placed ninth with a score of 9.700. Men’s Ice Hockey • Forward Jack Maclellan ’12 was named Second Team All-ECAC while defenseman Dennis Robertson ’14 was named to the All-Rookie Team. Maclellan was tied for the team lead with 31 points and second in goals with 14. Robertson recorded 17 total points and was second on the team with 24 penalties. • Harry Zolnierczyk ’11 signed a one-year contract with the Philadelphia Flyers on March 7th. The 2011 Ivy League Player of the Year, Zolnierczyk led the Bears with 16 goals this year and shared the team lead with 31 points. He played 16 games with the Flyers AHL affiliate Adirondack Phantoms this spring, recording three goals, two assists and 37 penalty minutes. fencing • Brown Fencing finished in a tie for 13th overall at the 2011 NCAA Fencing Championship. 30 teams competed at the Championship with Bruno totaling 39 points. Individually, Teddy Weller ’13 placed 19th in the saber, Caitlin Taylor ’13 placed 18th in the saber, Kathryn Hawrot ’14 took 16th in the foil and Avery Nackman ’13 finished 22nd in the foil. Swimming & Diving • Jonathan Feldman ’12 placed 29th at the NCAA Zone A Diving Championships in March. Competing in this meet for the first time in his career, he tallied a score of 243.30 in the one-meter championship, which included six different dives.
Winter All-Ivy Honorees Men’s Basketball Tucker Halpern ’13 Sean McGonagill ’14
Honorable Mention Rookie of the Year
Women’s Basketball Sheila Dixon ’13 Lauren Clarke ’14
Second Team Rookie Team
Women’s Fencing Kathryn Hawrot ’14
First Team
Men’s Ice Hockey Harry Zolnierczyk ’11 Dennis Robertson ’14
First Team/Player of the Year Second Team
Men’s Swimming & Diving Tommy Glenn ’14
Second Team
Women’s Swimming & Diving Briana Borgolini ’14
Second Team
Men’s Indoor Track & Field Samuel Howard ’14 Nathan Elder ’13 Ajani Brown ’14 John Spooney ’11
Second Team Second Team Second Team Second Team
Women’s Indoor Track & Field Brynn Smith ’11 Rachel Biblo ’11 Wrestling Grant Overcashier ’11
First Team First Team
Honorable Mention
Winter Academic All-Ivy Chelsey Binkley ’11 Krista Consiglio ’11 Ryan Kikuchi ’11 Adrian Leanza ’11 Jack Maclellan ’12 Natascha Mangan ’11 Hannah Passafuime ’12 Brynn Smith ’11 Peter Sullivan ’11 Harry Zolnierczyk ’11
Gymnastics Skiing Men’s Swimming & Diving Men’s Squash Men’s Ice Hockey Women’s Swimming & Diving Women’s Basketball Women’s Track & Field Men’s Basketball Men’s Ice Hockey
BEAR BITES BY THE NUMBERS 0: Number of points allowed by Brown’s Women’s Rugby team during the 2011 Ivy League Championship. The Bears rolled through their four opponents, keeping them all scoreless while racking up 219 points themselves. Captain Izzy McKinnon ’11 was named the tournament’s MVP.
19-10: The final score of the First Ivy League 7’s Tournament, which the Brown Men’s Rugby team won on April 10th. Bruno won the inaugural tournament by defeating Penn (19-5), Columbia “B” (43-0) and Dartmouth (28-26) in pool play before taking the title game against Columbia “A”.
Photos courtesy: David Silverman and the ivy league
9.725:
Emily Lutfey’s ’13
score on the floor excercise at the NCAA Women’s Gymnastics Regional Championship on April 4th. She also received a 9.650 on the vault and finished the day with a combined score of 36.675.
4: Number of Sports Emmys won by Ross Greenburg ’77 P’10 at the 32nd Annual Sports Emmy® Awards in New York City on May 2nd. Greenburg earned the honor in the categories of: Outstanding Sports Documentary (Lombardi), Outstanding Edited Sports Special (24/7 Penguins/ Capitals: Road to the NHL Winter Classic), Outstanding Edited Sports Series/Anthology (Hard Knocks: Training Camp With the New York Jets) and Outstanding Sports Journalism (Real Sports With Bryant Gumbel - The Missing Link). Greenburg worked as an executive producer on all four productions.
11: Members of the Brown Football team named to the 2011 National Football Foundation Hampshire Honor Society. For the secondstraight year Brown led all Division I schools in number of honorees. A student-athlete must maintain a 3.2 GPA or better and be competing in their last year of eligibility to be selected to the Hampshire Honor Society.
SHINING MOMENTS Women’s Track & Field Brynn Smith ’11 earned a share of the 2011 Ivy League Heptagonal Championship’s Most Outstanding Performer award this spring. Smith won the Ivy Title in the shot put (51’1”) and hammer throw (202’11”). She became the first female in the Ivy League to throw the hammer more than 200 feet.
Brown Athletics Brown University Athletics had 22 sports earn NCAA Academic Progress Public Recognition Awards, the second most among all NCAA Division I schools. The awards are given each year to teams scoring in the top 10 percent in each sport with their Academic Progress Rate.
Men’s Water Polo For the second-consecutive year, the Brown Men’s Water Polo team was honored by the Association of Collegiate Water Polo Coaches (ACWPC) for having the highest cumulative team GPA in the country, coming in at 3.52. 13 individual Bears were also honored as members of the 2010 ACWPC All-Academic Team.
Women’s Water Polo Kate Woods ’14 was named the Collegiate Water Polo Association Southern Division Rookie of the Year and a First Team All-South member. Woods had an outstanding rookie season, scoring 100 goals - the most by any Brown freshman in a single season. Teammate Joanna Wohlmuth ’11 earned Second Team AllSouth honors.
Baseball
Captain’s Log
by Mike Gambardella Two-time captain Matt Colantonio ’11 learned to lead at an early age.
Brown University Sports Foundation
over, he knows his role as a captain is not over and neither is his baseball career. Colantonio has received calls from MLB teams and will continue to work out all summer in preparation for the Major League Draft. If his name is not called during the draft, however, he still will have a chance to sign with any team as a free agent. The double concentrator in economics and history also knows that there is life beyond baseball. Colantonio says he is flirting with law school and has experience working in finance, spending time at a bank in Warwick, R.I. If he does return to school he would focus on finance or law and possibly take the LSAT’s. In whatever endeavor Colantonio decides to take on, he knows his time playing baseball, serving as a captain and studying at Brown University has prepared him for the next step in his life. Mike Gambardella covered baseball at Brown as the Sports Information Coordinator in 2011.
Photos Courtesy: David Silverman
In high school, senior catcher Matt Colantonio was invited to Florida to play for the USA Junior Olympic team, which served as a showcase for top flight high school athletes to display their skills in front of numerous college scouts. He was one of only a few New England players to be selected to the squad that played in front of Team USA Baseball scouts and took on teams from across the country as well as Puerto Rico. The coach of the team knew Colantonio from previous tournaments and knew he was a true leader that would keep the squad focused. It did not take long for Colantonio to be named team captain. “I was honored that he respected me enough to give me that responsibility,” said Colantonio. It was not the first time that he had been handed the “C” on his jersey. In high school he was named captain during his senior season, an impressive accomplishment considering nine players from that team have played collegiate baseball at schools such as Fordham, Holy Cross and Columbia. In his time with Brown, Colantonio has always been “the guy.” Even though he was not the official captain in his first two seasons, he still carried himself as a leader, knowing the importance of having strong character guys in the dugout. “College coaches really look for that type of guy…someone who has great character and can really be an offshoot of the coach. It’s not a role that I need, but it is one that I have enjoyed. It definitely builds confidence.” Despite his prestigious pedigree, the two-year Brown baseball captain had a tough start to his college career as he battled through the often challenging transition from high school to college. Eventually, Colantonio found his groove and set numerous marks in the all-time top-10 record books, while never missing a game at Brown. Matt Colantonio ’11 led the Bears this Even though his season with a time in a Brown .301 average. uniform is now
Matt Colantonio ’11
softball
Home Runs for the Homeless How the softball and baseball teams used their athletic talents to help those less fortunate.
Photos Courtesy: Craig Schroeder
Professor David Mandelbaum M.D., Ph.D. ADE’04 hon. joined the Brown University faculty in 2003 as a professor of Neurology and Pediatrics and Director of the Division of Child Neurology. A year later he made a donation to help start a soup kitchen in Providence and was granted the naming rights. He chose Judy’s Kindness Kitchen in memory of his mother. Since its inception, numerous Brown student-athletes have volunteered at Judy’s, but this fall a group of softball players decided to take it a step further. “We have had quite a few student-athletes volunteer throughout the years,” said Mandelbaum, “and the next thing I know I received a notice about a home run derby to support the kitchen.” The notice Mandelbaum received was drafted by three members of the Brown softball team, Kristie Chin ’11, Sandra Mastrangelo ’12 and Trish Melvin ’12. “We’d been volunteering at Judy’s Kindness Kitchen throughout the fall,” said Melvin, “but we decided we wanted to help more and raise money for the Kitchen as well.” “Our team has always done community service,” added Mastrangelo, “but we wanted to figure out a way to integrate softball into it, so the three of us sat in a room until we came up with an idea.” What the trio came up with was Home Runs for the Home-
less – a pledge driven fundraising effort in which the softball and baseball teams would receive pledges from friends, family and community members for each home run the teams hit during the 2011 season. With the help of Andrew Bakowski ’11, Matt Colantonio ’11 and Graham Tyler ’12 of the baseball team, they decided to also include a one-day home run derby for members of the community to compete in. “That they came to volunteer at the soup kitchen in the first place…and then to have the initiative to take it further and financially support it as well as physically do the work. It’s wonderful,” said Mandelbaum. Along with the Home Runs for the Homeless fundraiser, the softball and baseball teams continued to volunteer at Judy’s Kitchen, working from 8 a.m. to 11 a.m. on Sundays, preparing and serving meals at Crossroads of Rhode Island. At the end of the season, the two teams combined to hit 41 home runs with the softball team slugging 28 and the baseball team adding 13. In total, they raised $1,075 for Judy’s Kitchen which covers 10% of the Kitchen’s annual cost for food and supplies. “We think of adolescence and young adults as a fairly selfish period in life and to see people coming out to help the homeless, it’s fantastic,” said Mandelbaum. “I’m the volunteer coordinator for the soup kitchen and it’s a lot of work and can get very frustrating. When somebody does something like this, it’s just the most gratifying experience.” (L to R) Sandra Mastrangelo ’12, Kristie Chin ’11, - C.S. Professor David Mandelbaum M.D., Ph.D. ADE’04 hon. and Trish Melvin ’12. Brown Bear Magazine
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men’s crew
Staying Afloat by Igor Boraska ’95
Balancing a hectic work schedule with Olympic aspirations, Igor Boraska ’95 drew upon the lessons learned at Brown University to keep his head above water. When I decided to apply to Brown in the early 1990s, I only had some basic (general) information about the University and Providence. Most of what I had learned came from a Croatian National Rowing teammate who began his studies at Northeastern University in Boston a year before. It was a time when the internet and mobile technology seemed to be more like a distant future than something just around the corner, so it took me more than a month to write an application, send it by regular mail and get any response back to Croatia. The whole application process, the campus visit and the people I met during my visit in 1991 made a huge impression on me. After being admitted and starting my student life on College Hill it seemed to me that I was leading two very different, parallel lives – one at Brown, the other back home in Split, Croatia where I spent most of the summer and Christmas vacations. It was inconceivable to me during that period how important of a role my academic, athletic and social experience at Brown would play in preparing me for my future endeavors in my business and sporting careers in my homeland. One of the most important things that double majoring in Mechanical Engineering and Economics while rowing on the elite level for the Brown Varsity Eight (as well as working part-time in Sci-Li) taught me was the vital skill of time-management. I’m quite sure that most people are aware that Mechanical Engineering is one of the most demanding majors, while rowing, being one of the toughest Olympic sports, is also the ultimate team sport. It required careful planning, unrelenting character and a lot of motivation to keep up with the course load from
Brown University Sports Foundation
Igor Boraska ’95 was inducted into the Brown Athletic Hall of Fame this past April.
Photo Courtesy: Igor Boraska ’95
Igor Boraska ’95 with his daughter Klara and wife Matea outside Marston Boathouse, April 2011.
my engineering classes and to show up every day at the Marston boathouse for rowing sessions. I was lucky though, as my teammates down at the boathouse were not only extraordinary athletes but were (and still are) great friends that helped in many ways to make Brown a welcoming and warm place for me - no matter how cold we felt during our rigorous training sessions in late afternoons on the unpredictable Seekonk river. Apart from time-management, I learned a lot about the importance of teamwork and using my ability to work toward a common goal. Living and studying at Brown also helped me become more tolerant and broader minded, as I was able to meet and get to know people from all around the globe, as well as take excellent classes outside the engineering department. After returning back to Split in 1995, I continued a familiar way of life – doing multiple tasks simultaneously. Working full-time for the insurance company and rowing full-time for my club and country, along with trying to lead a normal family life with my wife Matea and daughter Klara, was a challenging mission. When you add the time I spent on organizing logistics and competing in Croatia’s first ever bobsled team that qualified for the Winter Olympics in Salt Lake in 2002, it sounds like mission impossible! Reflecting upon that time, I think that my versatility and openness to new challenges which I adopted at Brown played a crucial role in my willingness to persist on many fronts. I won my and Croatia’s first gold medal at the World Championships in Indianapolis in 1994, while still studying at Brown. Nevertheless, for a tiny country like Croatia, with a bit more than 4 million inhabitants and a small rowing base, winning a bronze medal at the Olympic Games in Sydney 2000 in the eight – an event “reserved” only for big nations - was perhaps even more exhilarating. After finishing my international rowing career in 2004, I was chosen as a Split City Council and City Corporation member in charge of sports and education. I’m sure that, alongside my athletic accomplishments, my Brown alumni pedigree played a significant role in that decision being made by the local ruling party and coincidentally enough I was informed about this appointment while celebrating my 10th reunion on College Hill in late May 2005!
women’s crew
The Wall
by Anne Hooper ’11
Photo Courtesy: craig schroeder; Dave Longo
Driving the Women’s Crew’s will to win. Brown Women’s Crew is unique amongst athletic teams at Brown and elsewhere. We are not at the OMAC on a regular basis. Instead, we train at Marston Boathouse on the complete opposite side of campus. We differ from other crews in that we train lifting weights made from cement-filled coffee cans, and have a one-eyed snaggletooth cat instead of a boathouse dog. However, one of the most unique things about Brown Women’s Crew is The Wall in our coaches’ office. When you first enter Coach John P’11 and Phoebe Murphy’s ’82 P’11 office, pictures of smiling rowers dominate your vision. These rowers, past and present, have all won Gold at Eastern Sprints, our regional competition, or Nationals. Some photos are of action shots with winning boats rowing across the finish line. Other photos display rowers smiling with gold medals around their necks and a trophy in their hands. When I entered the office and saw these pictures for the first time I was overwhelmed by the sheer number of images. These framed pictures pack the walls of the office, almost as though they are the wallpaper itself. They stand with two inches of margin apart from each other and go all the way up to the ceiling. When I first stepped into John and Phoebe’s office these photos displayed nameless faces and I did not quite grasp the full gravity of their presence. But regardless of my ignorance that first day, I knew that somehow I needed to be on that wall. Now, four years later, I understand and have taken to heart the meaning of these pictures. I have sat in the weekly team meetings as John points out different images and tells the victor stories of my predecessors as a motivator in hard times. These women have won in all conditions in every boat. Their boats have won in a range of fashions from unprecedented amounts of open water to by barely a bowball, from the Varsity Eight to the Third Varsity “C” Four and every boat in between. These women set the example for us
Anne Hooper ’11 (R) with her brother Philip ’09 and mother Marcia ’77 P’09 ’11 next to the boat named after Marcia.
to follow. When we are in the office we are literally surrounded by our predecessors’ legacy, and it made us hungry to match and surpass their accomplishments. Every championship race we strive to put more photographs on the wall and to win more titles, despite the lack of apparent space. We strive to maintain the high example set by rowers before our time so that one day we will also be a story told at group meetings. The Wall in this office makes tangible the legacy of Brown Women’s Crew; it bonds Brown oarswomen together, spatially and emotionally. It has become a daily reminder of what we hope to accomplish with each workout, each practice, and each race. Any boat that races at a championship race has the opportunity to make their mark on The Wall. The Wall celebrates all of our victories and drives our will to win. Anne Hooper ’11 is a senior on the Women’s Crew. One section of The Wall in Coach Murphy’s office.
Brown Bear Magazine
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equestrian
Riding Together It took a team effort for Elise Fishelson ’11 to capture the 2011 Cacchione Cup. Transitioning from high school to college can be challenging for many equestrians. The inconsistency of horses, the different emphases in judging and the time constraints on practice can prove trying for even the most accomplished of riders. Amidst all of those changes, the benefit of having teammates – which does not exist at the junior level – can be a valuable resource. As Elise Fishelson ’11 experienced this year, teammates can also make or break an opportunity to compete at Nationals. Throughout her senior season Fishelson was at or near the top of the Zone 1, Region 1 Cacchione Cup standings. Entering the final show of the year she was in second place by one point. Fishelson quickly evened the score by placing a spot ahead of her closest competition in the Open Fences. She then went on to pin first in her class of the Open Flat, guaranteeing herself at least a tie in the final Cacchione Cup standings and potentially forcing a ride off at Regionals. “I felt good because I did the best I could have done and it wasn’t going to be easy for her to beat me,” said Fishelson. Now relegated to the role of spectator, Fishelson tried to calm her nerves by focusing on her two teammates who would be riding defense in the same class as her competition. The crucial role of defense in intercollegiate equestrian is not generally understood. By placing high in a class, a rider blocks other team’s riders from earning critical points. One of the teammates hoping to place high was Rebecca McGoldrick ’12. “I’m generally never nervous before a ride, but knowing my results could send Elise to Nationals, I was nervous all day,” said McGoldrick. “Elise is the most positive person I know and Elise Fishelson ’11
- C.S.
Brown University Sports Foundation
Photos Courtesy: Elise Fishelson ’11
before my ride she was telling me I was going to win.” Competing in her first open flat class ever, on one of the least experienced horses at the show, McGoldrick pinned first, clinching the 2011 Cacchione Cup for Fishelson. With the victory now in hand, the teammates shared a hug to Elise Fishelson ’11 (red) celebrate an individual celebrates with her teammates. award, secured through a team effort. “All of my individual successes this year are thanks to everyone on the team and the support I’ve received,” said Fishelson. Her individual successes in turn benefitted the team which won its Region for the fifth consecutive year. Fishelson was awarded the team MVP award for the 2010-11 season and went on to compete at Nationals where she pinned fifth, a result she knows would not have been possible without the support of her teammates. “The equestrian team has always been a big family. From the day I arrived, I had 30 great people to give me advice and provide a great support system. I met some of my best friends by being a part of this team and I’m going to miss going out with them and riding for a few hours then coming back and talking about it for a few hours more.” While Fishelson will leave College Hill this spring for a job in New York City, she has already experienced the strong connection Brown Equestrian alumnae have with their University. “When I was a freshmen there was a senior captain named Whitney Keefe ’08 and the day before Nationals she came back to ride with me and practice. She was on a break from Tufts medical school and she came back to give me a pep-talk. “I can’t count how many hours I’ve spent with the riding team so you’re obviously very close,” she added. “Seeing them is like seeing an old friend and you want to stay connected and relive those moments of competition. It’s a constant bond you’ll always have no matter how many years out of college you are.”
Track & Field
Striding Forward
Photo Courtesy: Brown Sports Information
The path to an NCAA Championship. Seven left steps. Before Craig Kinsley ’11 can release a 250-plus foot javelin throw, he must first run seven left steps down the runway. Perfecting those seven steps – and the complex feet, hip, shoulder and arm movements that accompany them – has been Kinsley’s obsession since his arrival on College Hill. Last spring, his seven steps were perfect enough to earn him the 2010 NCAA Outdoor Track & Field Championship – the first National Championship in the javelin in Brown history. And while Kinsley had the opportunity to defend his title on June 8th (results were not available prior to the printing of this article) his path to becoming one of Brown Track & Field’s elite has required numerous and challenging figurative steps along the way. Step 1: Prior to his junior year of high school, Kinsley had never thrown a javelin before. The closest he ever came was throwing a makeshift caber in his backyard with his father – a two-time caber toss champion at the Norwalk Scottish Games in Connecticut. A high jumper for his school’s indoor track team in the winter, he always left the track for the baseball diamond come spring. After breaking his pinkie finger prior to the start of his junior season, however, his coach told him he could not hold his spot on varsity, and Kinsley joined the outdoor track team. Step 2: Despite taking his first few throws with a cast on his hand, Kinsley was a quick learner and relished the challenge of trying to beat his previous throw. He did well enough to gain the attention of schools like Brown, Duke and Dartmouth and after taking his official visits, one school stood out above the rest. “I was blown away by how hard the guys at Brown were working out,” remembers Kinsley. “I went to a Sunday morning lift and they were just kicking butt in the weight room. I knew this was definitely the place for me.” Step 3: During his first year at Brown, Kinsley admits to making many “dodo freshman mistakes” like practicing through pain which led to a stress fracture and ended his high jumping career. It may have been a fortuitous injury, however, as he was able to concentrate on improving his upper body strength and packed on 20 pounds in the weight room. Kinsley won the Ivy Title that year and place 17th at the NCAA East Regionals. Step 4: Injury struck again in his sophomore season as a shoulder problem forced Kinsley to throw left handed for eight weeks. Similar to his freshman year, however, he managed to turn the negative into a positive. “Throwing lefty helped me a lot,” said Kinsley. “I was able to start from scratch with technique I knew I should be using without any previous bad habits. I learned how to throw properly on my left side and when I
Craig Kinsley ’11 at the 2010 NCAA Track & Field Championship
went back to the right side it was a lot better.” 42 feet better to be exact. Returning to Regionals with a comfort level he previously lacked, Kinsley set a new school record and qualified for Nationals. Step 5: Entering his junior year, Kinsley’s confidence was sky high. “I was feeling fantastic, my training was going so well. I went to every meet expecting to set a new P.R.” Of all the personal records he set, none was timelier than the one at Nationals (250’3”) which won him the NCAA Division I Championship and qualified him to compete at the USA Championships. Step 6: After a summer of intense training and working on his technique, Kinsley entered his final year at Brown feeling more confident than ever. Regardless of the result at the 2011 NCAA Championship, Kinsley said he hopes to once again take another stride forward in his throwing career by improving upon his performance at the USA Championships and qualify for the World Championships this summer. Step 7: Kinsley has committed to sticking around Providence next year to train for the Olympics. “My goal is to be as prepared and healthy as possible for the Olympic trials and hopefully make the top three and make the Olympic team. It takes a lot of time and effort, but there is nothing I’d rather do right now.” Release: Kinsley has already compiled a list of athletic accomplishments he’d like to achieve for when he decides to release the javelin for good. He hopes to land a tryout with a minor league baseball team, try to qualify for the Olympics in the bobsled and try to reach the highest point in each of the 50 United States – he has already scaled to the top of seven of them. His first task, however, has already been laid out for him by his father. “He has always told me that when I’m done with the javelin I have to go back to the Norwalk Scottish Games and bring the caber toss title back to the Kinsley family.” - C.S. Brown Bear Magazine
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Men’s golf
A Wild Golf Dream Come True by John Giannuzzi ’10
Before entering the working world, John Giannuzzi ’10 experienced the golf trip he had dreamed about. The summer before I enrolled at Brown, my dad and I went on a two-week golf trip to Scotland, enjoying the best that the Home of Golf has to offer. During the spring of my senior year, with a demanding job and the prospect of being forced to set aside my clubs looming, I began to plan a “last hurrah” road trip down the West Coast in the spirit of the one that I had taken four years earlier. I would start at Chambers and finish at Torrey, making sure to hit Bandon and Pebble along the way, knowing that any privates I could get on would be a bonus. After sharing my plans with friends and family, I was amazed how many people offered help and
support: recommending courses, offering places to stay, making referrals, even arranging rounds directly. The network available to me through Brown Golf – and in turn the connections they had – opened doors that I had never imagined, and elevated the trip from a memorable two weeks to a truly defining experience. Attempting to thoroughly review the trip in this space would not be fair to those who helped make it possible or to the experience itself, so below is the calendar of courses that I played. Also highlighted are ones I was able to play due to the generosity of Brown alums, to who I am forever grateful.
s June 27: Valley Club of
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June 24: Cypress Point Coach Hughes put me in touch with Harvey Hinman ’62 P’87 ’90 who arranged my round at this special place. Although my expectations were high, Cypress blew them all away – I did not even realize that land this pristine existed. I was the only person on the course during my morning round, and I do not know how it can get any better than the mix of dunes, forest, and ocean that Cypress has to offer.
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June 28: Bel-Air I played Bel-Air, a pure Hollywood course, with Randall Sunshine ’77 P’11 and Scott Diehl ’83. From the perfectly manicured trees and shrubs, to the fake river that flows through the back, and the tunnels and elevator, Bel-Air was truly unlike anywhere I had ever been. A deceptively difficult course with great variety, Bel-Air really exceeded my expectations, and was my favorite course in L.A.
June 29 - Riviera Randall Sunshine helped me onto Riviera as well, a course I had watched on TV for years. On the first tee, I overheard the pro say “Another day at ‘The Riv’ – doesn’t get any better” - a challenging course with amazing history.
sJune 18: Chambers Bay - University Place, Washington sJune 19: Pacific Dunes - Bandon, Oregon sJune 20: Bandon Trails - Bandon, Oregon sJune 20: Old Macdonald - Bandon, Oregon sJune 21: Bandon Dunes - Bandon, Oregon sJune 22: Olympic Club (Lake) - Daly City, California sJune 23: San Francisco Golf Club - San Francisco, California sJune 24: Cypress Point - Pebble Beach, California Brown University Sports Foundation
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Montecito Bud Ardell P’13 – the father of current Brown golfer J.D. Ardell – organized my round at the Valley Club. Hidden in a sleepy town, the “VC” has as much intimate charm as any course I have seen, and while not overly challenging, it is one of those rare places where the air is always warm.
s
June 30: Wilshire Brown Golf came through once again as J.D. Ardell’s uncle got me on this underrated course just south of Hollywood. Not knowing what to expect, I was pleasantly surprised with the tremendous mix of holes, and pleasant atmosphere.
sJune 25: Pebble Beach - Pebble Beach, California sJune 26: Spyglass - Pebble Beach, California sJune 27: Valley Club of Montecito - Montecito, California sJune 28: Bel-Air Country Club - Los Angeles, California sJune 29: Riviera - Pacific Palisades, California sJune 30: Wilshire - Los Angeles, California sJuly 1: Torrey Pines (South) - San Diego, California
women’s golf
A Vocation in Vision by Sarah Guarascio ’11
Photos Courtesy: David Silverman (L); Sarah Guarascio ’11 (R)
Sarah Guarascio ’11 has her sight set on improving eye care for those most in need. As my senior year at Brown comes to a close, I reflect back on the four years I’ve spent at this wonderful place. My experience as a Brown University student-athlete has taught me many invaluable lessons and has provided me with a great number of opportunities. I was able to represent my University by competing in a sport that I love while also discovering my future career path. I have always known I wanted to pursue a health career in some way after completing my studies at Brown. With this in mind, as an incoming freshman I took many of the premedical core science courses. “The Brain: An Introduction to Neuroscience”- or “Neuro 1” to most- became my favorite and most influential course I have taken (not to mention the basis for my Neuroscience concentration choice.) Co-taught by Professor John Stein Ph.D.’95, P’13 and Professor Michael Paradiso SCM’81 Ph.D.’84, “Neuro 1” is one of the largest and among the most popular courses here. I recall about three or four lectures being entirely devoted to the visual system, providing an in-depth analysis on how our brain processes all of the information our eyes perceive. From the first few opening minutes of that beginning lecture, I was completely hooked and the idea of pursuing an optometry career consequently shaped the rest of my college experience. In hopes of learning more about optometry and becoming more active in the Providence community, I joined the Brown Vision Initiative (BVI) my sophomore year. The BVI is a group of medical and undergraduate students that are concerned with eye care for those in Sarah Guarascio ’11 need. With this Brown student group, I have volunteered at the Rhode Island Free Clinic (RIFC) over the past three years helping provide free medical care to uninsured Rhode Islanders. About twice each month, our group brings the necessary instruments and equipment to perform visual screenings on the clinic’s patients. We perform visual field tests for early detection of glaucoma and use a refraction machine to
Sarah Guarascio ’11 volunteering in Accra, Ghana.
test a patient’s current prescription. After we complete our preliminary examination, we refer them to an ophthalmologist, if necessary, for further aid. Since joining the BVI, I have become an undergraduate officer and more involved in the group’s activities, including running eyeglass drives and performing screenings at health and wellness fairs. Interacting with these patients from the community has always been the best part of the volunteer work. Most patients will tell me how they haven’t had their eyes checked in years and how they have a difficult time reading the newspaper or driving their cars at nighttime. How wonderful it feels to see delight in a new friend’s face as soon as they realize they will be receiving help soon to improve their struggling eyesight. The BVI experience has unquestionably helped me in solidifying my aspirations to become an optometrist. The knowledge I gained from working with the BVI encouraged me to work alongside and shadow optometrists over my summers at home, and I even spent August of 2010 in Accra, Ghana volunteering with Unite for Sight’s Global Impact Fellows Program. After graduation, I will be attending SUNY College of Optometry in Manhattan, New York to begin a four-year O.D. program. I know my time here at Brown has made a huge impact on my ability to accomplish this goal. From the unconditional support of my teammates and coach, to the professors and courses I’ve learned from, to the special interactions with these patients, I will take the memories and experiences I’ve had as a Brown University student-athlete into this next chapter of my life, willing and ready to share all that I have learned. Sarah Guarascio ’11 is a senior on the Brown Women’s Golf team. Brown Bear Magazine
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On December 31, 2010, the Boldly Brown: Campaign for Academic Enrichment came to a successful close. Since July 2003, more than 69,000 alumni, friends, parents, faculty, staff and students gave a record $1.61 billion - $200 million past the goal. While Boldly Brown was a campus wide initiative, its affects have and will continue to be felt strongly within Brown’s athletic community. The $311 million raised for financial aid is allowing Brown to recruit the most qualified student-athletes while reducing the debt burden to them and their families. The $272 million raised for facilities improved many existing facilities and will provide our student-athletes with a new state-of-the-art Aquatics, Fitness and Strength and Conditioning Center. The $129 million raised for endowed positions has helped Brown attract elite coaches. And the $573 million raised in current-use funds significantly contributed to the University’s annual budgetary resources. Over the next few pages, we will delve further into the benefits Boldly Brown has had on Brown Athletics and the platform it has created to help Bruno take the next stride forward.
Brown University Sports Foundation
Photo by: John Maciel Written by: Craig Schroeder
“After completing my first Brown Water Polo season without any home games, I can only imagine what my sister, Lauren Presant ’10, and other aquatic student-athletes sacrificed when they traveled daily – more than forty miles each way – just to practice between 2007-2008 before the Bubble. This year, our team traveled almost every weekend during the season, which made balancing academics and athletics difficult. The new Katherine Moran Coleman Aquatics Center will not only diminish travel time, but also enable aquatic studentathletes to achieve scholastic and athletic success more easily. With pool construction well underway, I am excited to share the sport I love with the Brown Community in the spring of 2012. I look forward to seeing friends and family cheering us on in the stands of our new home pool.” - Sarah Presant ’14
Brown Bear Magazine
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“I can say with certainty that financial aid was the deciding factor in my decision to go to Brown. Obviously, I wanted to be at Brown and be a part of the whole Brown experience, but I would not have given it the green light if I did not have the financial aid package that I received. I would have reluctantly chosen to go to state schools, such as Texas A&M or ASU, or even go to the Air Force Academy.” - Bianca Aboubakare ’11
Financial Aid Bianca ’11 and Carissa ’12 Aboubakare are standout student-athletes on the Brown Women’s Tennis team and Sidney E. Frank Scholars.
“Growing up, I was always taught that money can’t buy you happiness. Fortunately for me, I am an example of an exception to that statement, because thanks to the financial aid I receive, I am able to come to Brown, both as a tennis player and as a student, experiencing every sense of happiness and an opportunity to chase after two personal dreams - a world class education and competitive D1 level tennis. I couldn’t ask for anything more.” - Carissa Aboubakare ’12
Ollie Patrell ’50
Endowment The Ollie ’50 and Kay Patrell Men’s Swimming and Diving Coaching Chair is one of the seven head coaching and two assistant coaching positions endowed during the Campaign.
Brown University Sports Foundation
Photos Courtesy: Craig Schroeder
“Swimming was an important part of my life at Brown and my swimming coach at the time, Joe Watmough ’54, was an important mentor to me. As Head Coach, Joe kept me focused and provided me with the opportunity and guidance to excel despite balancing a heavy workload of academics and athletics and several jobs. The lessons I learned and the education I received at Brown provided me with the discipline and work ethic to achieve success beyond College Hill. Now it’s payback time and I wanted to do something special to honor my experience and the impact my coach had on my personal development. My wife Kay and I are honored that we are able to endow a Head Coaching Chair for the Men’s Swimming and Diving program at Brown. ” - Ollie Patrell ’50
“The Berylson Family Fields have made a huge impact in how our football team prepares for Championship seasons. They have changed the way we practice and prepare for games. Case in point, the Harvard game. Before, we couldn’t practice at night and prepare for a night game and now we can. Being able to use the Berylson Family Fields 24/7, 365 has created virtually unlimited opportunities for all of our teams from football to lacrosse and soccer and even our intramural teams to practice and play their games.” - Phil Estes, The Howard D. Williams ’17/ Joseph V. Paterno ’50 Football Coaching Chair Berylson Family Fields
(L to R) Director of Athletics Michael Goldberger, Stephen Meister ’76, Dervilla McCann, Richard Meister ’75 P’03 ’06 and Julie Liddicoet Meister ’75 P’03 ’06.
“Lacrosse was an important part of life at Brown for me, and for my three brothers who are Brown grads. The lessons I learned and the education I received at Brown provided me with the discipline and work ethic to achieve success beyond College Hill. My brothers and I wanted to do something special to honor our experience and the impact that athletics had on our personal development. Along with Bill Kavan ’72, we were honored to be able to create the MeisterKavan Turf Field behind OMAC, as an enhancement to Brown’s playing fields and for the terrific student-athletes of today.” - Richard Meister ’75 P ’03 ’06
Facilities
Photos Courtesy:
“I love the new floor at the Pizzitola. It has made such a difference for me and my teammates and was a huge upgrade for many reasons. It looks great to the fans, it feels great as a player and it has much more bounce and give than the old floor which helps keep our legs from taking a pounding at every practice and game. I think the new floor will even help with attracting new student-athletes to Brown. Recruiting is so competitive in the Ivy League, things like a new floor can make a huge difference.” - Matt Sullivan ’13
Of the $272 million raised for facility improvements across campus, the athletic community raised more than $56 million.
(L to R) Dockery Walker ’14 of men’s basketball, Lindsay Nickel ’13 of women’s basketball, Danielle Vaughan ’11 of volleyball and Matt Sullivan’13 of men’s basketball.
“I come from a long line of sports fans, particularly when it comes to baseball. My father is a fanatical Boston Red Sox fan, and with our family connections to Brown and Harvard, we always followed Ivy League baseball and were thrilled at the opportunity to help renovate the baseball stadium for Brown. Having top-notch facilities is important to the overall morale, welfare and success of any team and I am so glad that this gift from our family has enhanced a historic Brown sporting venue where our student-athletes can perform at their highest abilities. ” - Paula Murray McNamara ’84 Vice President, Brown Sports Foundation Brown Bear Magazine
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The Warren Alpert Medical School Embracing the true spirit of the term student-athlete, Brown Athletics has numerous athletes balance the time requirements of being a Division I athlete along with the demanding workload that accompanies studies in medicine. “Having recently completed my first year of medical school, I cannot wait for the completion of the new Warren Alpert Medical School building. Currently we share our space with the undergraduate campus, but by this fall we will have a new home, an identifiable space for Brown medicine. I am excited about the lecture halls, clinical skills suite, library, and anatomy lab, which will facilitate our academic advancement. With state of the art technology, easy access to faculty, and new study areas the school will provide a place where students can study and learn as well as socialize and collaborate with peers. Also, the medical school’s new location allows for quicker access to surrounding hospitals, making my 40-minute commute to the clinic only 15 minutes! To balance the hectic lifestyle of a medical student while being a student-athlete, one must possess good time management skills. The new Alpert Medical School will allow me to be more efficient, as I will have immediate access to a unified space to study, eat, and exercise. This means less time running around, and more time experiencing the well-rounded educational experience Brown University intends to provide.” - Jacquelyn Silva ’10 MD ’14 (L to R) Jara Crear ’12 MD’16 of women’s track & field, Andrew Katz ’13 MD’17 of men’s swimming & diving and Jessica Gandy ’12 of volleyball on the 4th floor terrace of the Warren Alpert Medical School which overlooks downtown Providence and is named in honor of a gift from the University Emergency Medicine Foundation.
Jacquelyn Silva ’10 MD ’14 of the women’s rugby team inside the new anatomy lab.
TIME IS RUNNING OUT... Support your Brown Bears by June 30! Three easy ways to support Brown Athletics: Call the Brown University Sports Foundation: 401-863-1900 Visit www.Gifts.Brown.edu Use the enclosed envelope to mail a check 20th Annual Brown Football Association Golf Classic and Season Kickoff Dinner
Brown 29, Harvard 14 Historic Light Up The Night John Anderson ’11
Monday, August 1, 2011 Rhode Island Country Club Barrington, R.I. 2011 Andrew J. Joslin Award Recipient: Daniel S. O’Connell ’76 P’05 ’13 To RSVP or to learn more about sponsoring this great event to support Coach Estes and his team, please call the Sports Foundation at 401-863-1900.
Keep the feedback coming! Send correspondence to us by e-mail at Sports_Foundation@brown.edu, or by mail to: Brown Bear Magazine, Brown Sports Foundation,Box 1925, Providence, RI 02912.
Brown Bear Magazine
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men’s lacrosse
Proving the Possible by Michael Cummins ’08
Working with Teach For America, Michael Cummins ’08 is helping students from ‘the Delta’ persevere in their journey to graduate from the college of their dreams, including some as far off as Brown.
Brown University Sports Foundation
most often be boiled down to wins and losses, with all the hard labors of a season swept beneath the simple veneer of a W-L record. As a teacher at KIPP Delta, I have come to adopt a different kind of W-L record. At KIPP Delta, our scoreboard is all about college. Effort forms the foundation, but ultimately it is the outcomes that matter. The current America reality is that only 8% of students in the bottom quartile of household income will graduate with a bachelor’s degree by the age of 24. In nearly all of the Delta communities in southeastern Arkansas and northwestern Mississippi, this number is even lower. These numbers, long weighed down by the low expectations of even the best intentioned, cannot represent the life outcome for kids from the Delta any longer. Our students are changing the prevailing reality for themselves and the generation of students behind them by proving the possible. A collegiate education can and should be the expectation for every child, regardless of the socioeconomic status that he or she is raised in. It will take effort, from teachers, students, parents, and communities. But it is possible, and our students are proving it now. Chance is proving it at Brown. Richard and Dominique are proving it at Vanderbilt. Jamarcus and Chris will prove it at Arkansas Tech, just as David will prove it at Johnson & Wales. If you ever run into a teacher in the Delta, there is no need to offer thanks. We get far more praise then we are worth. Ask instead where you can find our students. If you have a moment, watch them prove the possible, praise their efforts, and offer them encouragement on their journey to and through college. Michael Cummins ’08 was a member of the Brown Men’s Lacrosse team from 2004-2008. “Signing Day” for the KIPP Delta Class of 2011.
Photos Courtesy: Jennifer Stocklin (L) and Luke Van De walle (R)
We stick out pretty good down here, I guess. Us teachers, that is. When I arrived in Helena, Arkansas three summers ago, fresh from an Ivy Championship spring, it seemed that everyone and anyone knew I was a teacher. Some will tell you it is the fuel efficient sedans that tip them off, others will reference our penchant for attempting to buy things with credit cards at stores where the option has never been available. Whatever the distinction, I have always known the people of Phillips County to Michael Cummins ’08 have no trouble spotting a “TFA”. Before I became just another familiar face around town, just about every visit to every store triggered the same presumptive question, “You must be a teacher for America?” as prelude for the same ebullient praise. I have always accepted the praise and thanks as graciously as I know how, careful to never forget my “yes ma’ams” and “yes sirs”. Sometimes being a teacher in the Delta makes me feel like I am a Yankee living in the Bronx. In my classroom, like all the others at my school, students begin each assignment by writing a heading that includes our core values, “Work hard. Be nice!” As a faculty, we plan on how to instill an effort-based mindset, to help our students truly believe that the single greatest determinant to their success in any endeavor will be the effort and tenacity with which they seek to accomplish their goals. I am proud to work in an environment that holds up “working hard” as its most revered value. It reminds me of being on Meister-Kavan in early February, with freezing rain frostbiting my teammates and a madman for a coach reminding us that “Harvard isn’t out practicing in this!” As an athlete, it never seemed hard to find an appropriate measure for success. I learned early on that success would
women’s lacrosse
Coming Together in California by Tori Conway ’11
Photos Courtesy: tori conway ’11 (R), David Silverman (L)
How a trip to the West Coast helped the Women’s Lacrosse team grow closer on and off the field. This spring - thanks to the generosity of an anonymous donor - the Brown Women’s Lacrosse team had the opportunity to travel out to California to play a game against Stanford. The ability to play a ranked, out-of-region, non-conference team gave our program the opportunity to compete against one of the best teams in the country. The level of competition we faced in California inspired us to raise our level of play and take another step toward becoming one of the top programs in the country. Not only were we able to compete against one of the nation’s top teams, but the trip gave us the opportunity to grow as a team and learn more about each other off of the field so we could become better on the field. During our three-day trip, our team spent part of one day at Fisherman’s Wharf. Unbeknownst to us, our coaches had something up their sleeves: a friendly scavenger hunt competition around the pier with our PAW (Perceive, Action, Win) teams. Our lacrosse team has four PAW teams composed of girls in each class and different field positions. Throughout the season our PAW teams have on-the-field competitions and eventually, at the end of the season, there is an overall champion. The scavenger hunt consisted of taking a picture with Alcatraz in the background acting like prisoners in the picture, taking a picture at Ghirardelli Square with a piece of chocolate in the picture and a plethora of other picture-taking tasks, tied to iconic San Francisco sites, all of which had to be completed in a given amount of time. This team activity was an essential part of our trip because it allowed everyone on the team to get to know each other on a different level. This competition reinforced the point that when you understand your Tori Conway ’11 teammate off the field, it makes it easier to understand them on the field. Our team chemistry was an essential component of our successes on the field this year, and we can attribute a lot of our growth as a program to this trip. Finally, while not specific to the CA trip, a tradition that is perhaps
(L to R) Bryn Coughlan ’14, Bre Hudgins ’14, Sidney Jacobs ’13, Marissa Dale ’14, Kaela McGilloway ’12 and Tori Conway ’11.
unique to our team is the way we are assigned roommates on road trips. Even when we stumbled into the CA hotel at 12:15 a.m. west coast time, 3:15 a.m. East Coast time, the anticipation was high because this is when our coaches announce who our roommates will be for that trip. Just as the scavenger hunt allowed us to learn more about each other off of the field, our coaches recognize that random assignments of roommates is a great way to get to know someone you wouldn’t necessarily think to spend time trying to get to know. Seniors and freshmen can be together, goalies and attackers can be together, etc. The result is that quirky friendships and random bonds are created by spending a night, and in this case a couple of nights together in a hotel room. You don’t necessarily “know” someone until you hear them talk in their sleep, or watch their different bed time/morning routines. It brings our team together in a way that most would probably miss out on. Team chemistry is key to success on the field, and once you have found it, it is something you never want to give up. I cannot stress how important team chemistry is to the success of a program, and the chemistry our team had this year was unparalleled in my four years with Brown Lacrosse. Our trip to California was crucial to the development of our team this year: it can be seen as a transitional moment in our level of play and competition as a program. We could not be more appreciative of the opportunity we had to travel out to California to play such a high ranked non-conference team (not to mention to play in such a beautiful, sunny and warm location!) and play some of the best lacrosse Brown Women’s Lacrosse has seen. Thank you for the opportunity and experience! Tori Conway ’11 was a captain on this year’s Brown Women’s Lacrosse Team.
Brown Bear Magazine
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men’s rugby
Alumni Ruck
by Tom Huntington ’91 Helping secure the future of Brown Men’s Rugby. Let’s assume for the moment that I scored my share of tries for Brown Rugby. Some of them occurred at the bottoms of piles in Tom Huntington ’91 (back row, ninth from the left) with his faraway places, so they are not teammates after winning the 1990 New England Invitational. widely known to say the least. But like certain lectures, papers and alumnus from the class of ’55. I met folks who racked up Ivy friendships from Brown, they are visceral memories. I left colLeague titles through the 70’s and 80’s. The Ivy Tournament lege thinking I could do anything. It turns out that it was only was the initiative of a handful of alumni to raise competition half the story. in the sport. I also shared a beer with recent grads who played To begin, it’s a minor miracle that we fielded a team at all. on Marvel Field. This permanent pitch is University property, Very few freshmen entered Brown with rugby skills. Our only but the plan for it was hatched by rugby alumni more than adult supervision was our volunteer coach Jay Fluck ’65 who a decade earlier. There were alumni both older and younger split his afternoons with a real job downtown. Upperclassmen than I who made the field possible through hard work and lead us in warm-ups and sorted us into positions. We learned generous donations. from the handful who had played before, and the hard way. Scoring tries is only part of what it takes to play rugby. The We didn’t have a rugby pitch, so we migrated like gypsies from harder part, conceiving of the idea, organizing, mustering reAldrich-Dexter to Pembroke to Hope High and Gano. On Satsources, and making it happen, has been done by people who urday mornings, we nailed our own crossbars and put up our have already graduated. And I don’t think the alumni do it to own goal posts, as long as someone hadn’t lost the post hole relive their glory days, myself notwithstanding. I think they do digger. The opportunity to play, score and win was cobbled toit because, if you think you can do anything, then you know gether again each week by those who showed up. what you must do. The opportunities we’ve had were made posWhen I attended the club’s 50th anniversary last year, the othsible by those who came before us, and now we are those people. er half of the story came into focus. Over 200 alumni rucked into Providence, producing a living history of the club. Iain Tom Huntington ’91 and his classmates have joined forces in raisTulloch ’65 spoke about the first Brown Rugby team. The team ing money for the 50th Anniversary of Brown Rugby Fundraising was not a Brown idea per se, but the initiative of Dave Zucconi, Initiative. To date, the class of ’91 has raised almost $30,000.
50th Anniversary of Brown Rugby Fundraising Initiative (July 1, 2010-June 30, 2015)
OVERALL GOAL: $3.0 million INCLUDES: $2 million - To endow both the Men’s and Women’s Head Coaching Positions. $1 million - To provide significant current use and/or endowment support for both programs. For more information on the Brown Rugby Fundraising Initiative or to learn how your class can work together to make a joint gift, contact the Brown Sports Foundation: 401-863-1900. Brown University Sports Foundation
Photo Courtesy: Tom Huntington ’91
Objective: Provide both the men’s and women’s Brown rugby programs with more financial resources available to run each program at a highly competitive level
women’s rugby
Friends of Brown Women’s Rugby
Photos Courtesy: Kerrissa Heffernan (L) and adria orr ’09 (R)
Young alums try to reinvigorate the alumnae base. In the fall of 2006, Adria Orr ’09 traveled 3,100 miles to enroll in a school where she knew no one in a city that she had only visited once. Five months later, she embarked upon a trip more than twice as long as the Brown University Women’s Rugby team flew to Uganda, Africa. “I’d only been playing rugby for five months,” remembers Orr, “and I was thinking ‘Oh my God, what am I doing traveling to Africa to play rugby?” What Orr – and her teammates – realized during that unforgettable 13-day trip was they shared an undeniable passion for the game of rugby. By making this trek they were committing themselves to the sport and each other. Playing against international competition in front of thousands of fans was a turning point in the history of Brown Women’s Rugby, says Orr. “My freshman year was the last year that [Brown] experienced a lack of success. We didn’t win the Ivy Championship or go to Nationals. It was a very different culture. That trip to Uganda had a lot to do with invigorating our team. We played rugby on an international level. We traveled around the world to play against women who really loved the sport. We started realizing this could be something special.” That realization quickly came to fruition as Bruno made its first trip to Nationals in 2007 and has been a regular at the tournament every year since. Orr, who remembers showing up to games with her equipment in garbage bags as a freshman, swells with pride over the progress the team has made. “They’ve been transformed into this team that is so professional about rugby. They are playing at such a high level, taking it seriously and committing themselves as athletes.”
Brown Women’s Rugby against Uganda, 2007.
A Brown Women’s Rugby Alumnae gathering in February 2011.
Now relegated to the sidelines, Orr is trying to match the teams commitment as an alum by working with Jennifer Hustwitt ’07 and Emily Rodriguez ’09 to create a Friend’s of Brown Women’s Rugby group. “There are so many great women who have been through Brown Rugby and these friendships we formed are so wonderful and it seems like a waste to not bring it into something bigger,” said Orr. “Hopefully we can draw on the talents of many class years from across the country and form the leadership to take us forward over the next couple years.” While Orr, Hustwitt and Rodriguez have helped organize some informal gatherings among Brown Women’s Rugby alumnae, they hope the formation of a more formal group structure will help further the group’s reach. Coupled with the 50th Anniversary of Brown Rugby Fundraising Initiative – which aims to raise $3 million for both the men’s and women’s rugby programs to endow the coaching positions and provide further financial support – the Friends of Brown Women’s Rugby group will engage even more former players and enhance the relationship and connection the alumnae have with the current team. “We’ve never really done much for our alums. We’re always asking for money but aren’t really providing them with anything. Hopefully by creating this alumnae group we can create more avenues for people to become more invested and involved with the team.” - C.S. Brown Bear Magazine
25
sailing
Rounding the Marks Towards Rebuilding Edgewood
On January 12, 2011 the home of the Brown University Sailing Team since 1999 - the Edgewood Yacht Club - was destroyed by a fire. Within weeks, the Brown Sailing community rallied to help raise the funds needed to rebuild Edgewood. “We cannot thank enough our great alumni, parents, and friends who have helped us get through these difficult times,” said head coach John Mollicone. “Over $40,000 was raised in less than a month to help the team get back on the water and replace much of what was lost. The team had another terrific season winning numerous events including the Georgetown Team Race Intersectional, Boston Dinghy Cup, Dellenbaugh Women’s Trophy, and Thompson and Priddy Trophies. The women’s and coed teams are headed to the Nationals once again and the women were ranked #1 in college sailing for part of the spring season. The support that we get from all great alumni, parents, friends, and the University is what makes this program so successful!” The following is a collection of notes sent by donors to the Sailing Rebuild Fund.
Brown University Sports Foundation
Photos Courtesy: GTSphotos.com; kelly fitzsimmons
sailing
Brown Bear Magazine
27
men’s tennis
Serving Others A two-time captain, Kendrick Au ’11 is turning his knack for helping others into a profession.
Brown University Sports Foundation
tain that most impressed Kendrick Au ’11 teammates and coaches. “Kendrick was just about the best leader I have ever been around,” said head coach Dave Schwarz. “For a first year coach, his leadership was invaluable in enabling the program to get positive momentum after they endured a tough year last year.” “Off the court, Kendrick is probably the most considerate, responsible and all-around friendly person that I know,” said co-captain Charlie Posner ’11. “Whether it is a little favor or a big issue, Kendrick is completely dependable and understanding; he easily relates to all the guys on the team and is always willing to talk about problems. I and everybody else on the team would also go to him with any medical or health question we had – the guy’s knowledge when it comes to biology and medicine is nuts.” Further proving the points of his coach and teammate, Au was recently awarded the 2011 ITA Arthur Ashe Leadership & Sportsmanship Award for the Northeast Region. He is now one of only eight players in all of Division I eligible for the national award which is presented in August. Not long after that, he will enroll at Memorial University back in Newfoundland and try to decide which area of medicine to pursue. “My brother is an orthopedic surgeon and my sister is a general physician, so I’ve seen two different sides of medicine so far. I’m interested in orthopedics because of the sports connection and I like the idea of being hands on. I have an idea of the type of life I want and hopefully I can find an interest that appeals to that idea.” Regardless of the path he takes, Au says his decision to attend Brown and the opportunity to be part of the men’s tennis team helped bring him to where he is today. “I got away from home, got away from my comfortable spot where all my siblings were, my girlfriend was and it was scary, but from that I’ve become a better person. To come here to Brown, play a sport, be a student and be part of all these things, I can’t think of a better way to spend four years.” - C.S.
Photos Courtesy: David Silverman
Brown University is known for its open curriculum – among many other things – which allows students to explore all of their academic interests before deciding on a concentration. Kendrick Au ’11, however, never needed the open curriculum or the extra time it provides; he has had his eyes on medical school since high school. Au lost his mother to breast cancer when he was just six years old. While his memories of that time are a little fuzzy, he says he does remember the consistent and often comforting presence of his mother’s doctors. “Over time I go back to those moments and you start to see things fit together. There was always a doctor in the room making sure my mom was feeling OK and making sure our family was feeling OK. There is no particular moment that resonates with me, but they were always there. That’s the type of person I’ve always tried to be. It’s relatable for me, trying to be there for someone when they need help.” The fact that Au’s three older siblings – Keegan, Jana and Kelly – all studied medicine did not exactly hurt his odds of pursuing a career in the field as well. However, while they all might end up in similar professions, Kendrick has certainly taken his own path on the way there. He is the first in the family to have studied outside of their hometown of St. John’s, Newfoundland, and the only one to also compete as a studentathlete on the collegiate level. A relative late arrival to tennis, Au first picked up a racquet at age 13. A natural athlete, he quickly learned the finer points of the game and within three years Kendrick Au ’11 gained a top-five ranking in Canada. He made an instant impact in his freshman year at Brown, leading the team in singles wins with 24. While his success on the court continued – including a 17-2 record in duals matches this season – it was Au’s leadership both on and off the court as a two-time cap-
women’s tennis
Q&A With Head Coach Paul Wardlaw P’13 Brown’s head Women’s Tennis coach recaps the 2010-11 season and looks forward to next year. Brown Bear Magazine: The team lost its first four matches of the spring season, before winning 15 of the next 17. What changed?
BBM: You opened Ivy League play 4-0 before dropping the last three of the season, all by a score of 4-3. What did the team learn from the way things ended this year that will help next season?
Paul Wardlaw: We opened the season playing four of the top teams in the country - #11 Virginia, #3 Duke, #22 Tulsa and #33 Maryland. We played great Jessica Harrow ’14 matches against Virginia and Tulsa and were in positions to win those two but their experience and doubles pulled them through. Our early schedule prepared us for the rest of the season as we weren’t going to play better teams. This was especially true of our first year players who were immediately thrown into the competitive caldron of college tennis. The simple answer is that we played weaker teams the rest of the season but we also made significant strides individually and collectively. Our doubles teams finally began to gel and our confidence increased with each successive win. As a young team with two first year players in the lineup and Casey Herzberg ’12 missing the fall after studying in Italy, we needed a month’s experience to be ready for the rest of the season.
PW: The immediate lesson learned is that sport can be cruel, especially when you are on the losing side and have high expectations. We were so close in those last three matches with two team match points against Harvard and three team match points against Yale. The long-term lesson is that we have to be better at closing out matches and at our level you must finish matches and not wait for opponents to beat themselves. The test will be how we respond to our heartbreaking ending. All our returning players feel they played less than their best at some point in the last three matches whether it be in singles or doubles. Next year we’ll be a team on a mission with a sense of unfinished business. Motivation won’t be a problem for this group in 2012.
Photos Courtesy: David Silverman
BBM: Your ranking rose as high as #37 this season – the team’s best ranking in years – were you expecting this type of success? PW: I wasn’t surprised with our #37 ranking based on our last four recruiting classes. We finished the year ranked #52 and my sense was we would have been a top-25 team if we remained healthy and everyone had returned after winter break. Obviously you have to win matches to improve your ranking and we did that with a dramatic 4-3 win against Boston College in Boston and two more important wins against Dartmouth and Harvard at the ECAC Tournament. Given all the hurdles we dealt with this season I’m pleased with where we positioned ourselves in the rankings. We were six spots from being selected to the NCAA tournament so we were right there most of the year – just needed to finish our matches against Harvard and Yale. The best part of our ranking is that we’re expecting much more next season.
BBM: How do you replace the program’s record holder in career combined wins, singles wins and doubles wins? PW: Bianca Aboubakare ’11 and our three other seniors will be sorely missed but the Bears have reloaded in style with a top class of first-year players arriving this fall. Tennisrecruiting.net ranked our class as the 11th best in the nation and the top class in the Ivy League. It’s also important to remember we return three All-Ivy players in Misia Krasowski ’13 (First Team All-Ivy Singles), Herzberg (Second Team All-Ivy Singles) and Jessica Harrow ’14 (Second Team All-Ivy Doubles) along with Ariel Caldwell ’14, this year’s team leader in singles wins (25). I think our doubles will be much improved as we’ll have the fall to set teams and develop chemistry. The key to our success will be the returning players as we tap into their experience and hunger. One thing assured - we will be a hungry team in 2012.
Cassandra Herzberg ’12 (L) and Ariel Caldwell ’14 (R) Brown Bear Magazine
29
spring results Men’s Crew
Baseball Date Opponent Mar. 4 @ Vanderbilt Mar. 6 @ Vanderbilt Mar. 6 @ Vanderbilt Mar. 11 @ Texas Mar. 12 @ Texas Mar. 12 @ Texas Mar. 13 @ Texas Mar. 15 @ Northeastern Mar. 26 @ Santa Clara Mar. 27 @ Santa Clara Mar. 27 @ Santa Clara Mar. 28 @ Santa Clara Mar. 29 @ San Jose St. Mar. 30 @ San Jose St. Apr. 2 @ Princeton* Apr. 2 @ Princeton* Apr. 3 @ Cornell* Apr. 3 @ Cornell* Apr. 6 @ Siena Apr. 6 @ Siena Apr. 9 Columbia* Apr. 9 Columbia* Apr. 10 Penn* Apr. 10 Penn* Apr. 14 @ Connecticut Apr. 16 Harvard* Apr. 16 Harvard* Apr. 17 Harvard* Apr. 17 Harvard* Apr. 21 @ Holy Cross Apr. 24 @ Dartmouth* Apr. 24 @ Dartmouth* Apr. 25 @ Dartmouth* Apr. 25 @ Dartmouth* Apr. 26 Rhode Island Apr. 27 Bryant Apr. 29 @ Yale* Apr. 29 @ Yale* Apr. 30 Yale* Apr. 30 Yale* May 3 Marist may 3 marist
Score L, 3-1 L, 6-5 L, 6-3 (7) L, 8-0 L, 4-3 W, 7-3 L, 11-1 (7) W, 6-4 L, 8-3 L, 5-1 L, 18-3 L, 17-3 L, 9-4 L, 11-4 L, 7-4 L, 12-2 W, 5-2 (7) L, 13-8 L, 6-3 (7) L, 4-3 (7) W, 2-1 (7) W, 6-5 (11) L, 14-5 (7) W, 4-2 L, 6-2 W, 2-0 W, 4-3 L, 6-3 L, 12-7 L, 10-7 L, 7-3 (7) L, 11-3 L, 2-1 L, 11-4 W, 7-6 L, 5-4 W, 6-3 W, 4-0 W, 6-1 L, 18-8 W, 3-1 (7) L, 4-3 (8)
Date Opponent Mar. 26 Yale Varsity eight JV eight Freshmen eight third varsity eight fourth varsity eight Apr. 2 @ Boston University Varsity Eight JV Eight Third Varsity Freshmen Eight Apr. 9 @ Harvard Varsity Eight Second Varsity Eight Third Varsity Eight Freshmen Eight Second Freshmen Eight Apr. 16 Northeastern varsity eight jv eight freshmen Eight Apr. 23 @ Dartmouth Varsity Eight JV Eight Third Varsity Freshmen Eight Apr. 30 @ Princeton Varsity Eight Second Varsity Eight Third/Fourth Varsity Eight Freshmen Eight May 15 EARC Sprints Varsity Eight Second Varsity Eight Third Varsity Eight Fourth Varsity Eight Freshmen Eight June 2-4 IRA Regatta @ Camden, N.J.
Result 1st/2 2nd/2 1st/2 2nd/2 2nd/2 2nd/2 1st/3 3rd/3 2nd/3 2nd/2 2nd/2 2nd/2 2nd/2 2nd/2 1st/2 1st/2 2nd/2 1st/2 1st/2 1st/2 1st/2 2nd/2 2nd/2 1st & 3rd/3 2nd/2 4th Overall 4th/6 5th/6 4th/6 3rd/3 1st/6
Varsity Four “B”/“C” EAWRC Sprints Varsity Eight Second Varsity Eight Varsity Four “A” Third Varsity Eight Varsity Four “B” NCAA Championships Varsity Eight Second Varsity Eight Varsity Four Petite
1st & 3rd/3 2nd Overall 2nd/6 3rd/6 2nd/6 2nd/6 1st/6 1st Overall 2nd/6 2nd/6 1st/6
Equestrian Date Feb. 20 Mar. 12 Mar. 19 Mar. 26 Apr. 9 May 5-8
Event/Opponents (Location) Place/Points @ Mystic Valley Hunt Club 8th/22 @ Johnson & Wales 1st/42 @ Holy Cross 1st/42 Regional Championship No Team Score Zone Championship 3rd IHSA Nationals No Team Score
Men’s Golf Date Mar. 29 Apr. 2 Apr. 9-10 Apr. 16-17 Apr. 22-24
Opponent (Location) Result @ UCSB Ogio Invitational 16th/16 @ University of Arizona L, 311 -281 @ New England Division I Champ. 10th/13 @ Yale Invitational 6th/7 @ Ivy League Championship 7th/8
Women’s Crew
Women’s Golf Date Mar. 20-21 Mar. 28-29 Apr. 10-11 Apr. 22-24
Opponent (Location) @ Low Country Intercollegiate @ Cal State Monterey Bay Brown Invitational @ Ivy League Championship
Result 11th/14 8th/22 7th/13 6th/7
Photos Courtesy: David Silverman
Date Opponent Result Mar. 26 Princeton/Michigan (Princeton) Varsity Eight 2nd/3 Second Varsity Eight 2nd/3 Varsity Four “A” 2nd/4 Varsity Four “B” 4th/4 Third Varsity Eight 1st/2 Apr. 2 @ Radcliffe Varsity Eight 1st/2 Second Varsity Eight 1st/2 Varsity Four A 1st/3 Varsity Four B 2nd/3 Third Varsity Eight 1st/2 Apr. 16-17 Lake Natoma Invitational 3rd/9 (Sacramento, Calif.) Apr. 22 Boston University/URI Varsity Eight 1st/3 Second Varsity Eight 1st/3 Varsity Four 1st/3 Third Varsity Eight 1st/3 varsity four “B”/“C” 1st & 4th/4 Apr. 23 Cornell/Columbia Varsity eight 1st/3 second varsity eight 1st/3 varsity four 1st/3 third varsity eight 1st/3 Apr. 30 @ Yale Varsity Eight 1st/2 Second Varsity Eight 1st/2 Varsity Four 1st/2 Third Varsity Eight 1st/2
Brown University Sports Foundation
May 15 May 26-28
spring results Men’s Lacrosse Date Feb. 26 Mar. 5 Mar. 9 Mar. 12 Mar. 19 Mar. 26 Mar. 29 Apr. 2 Apr. 5 Apr. 9 Apr. 16 Apr. 19 Apr. 23 Apr. 30
Opponent QUINNIPIAC @ UMass @ Hartford ST. JOSEPH’S HARVARD VERMONT @ Duke @ Princeton* @ Bryant PENN* @ Yale* @ Providence CORNELL* @ Dartmouth*
Score W, 13-4 L, 9-6 L, 8-6 W, 11-4 L, 11-7 W, 12-10 L, 12-7 L, 5-4 (4OT) L, 8-7 W, 13-12 L, 10-6 W, 6-4 L, 18-5 W, 13-12 (OT)
Women’s Lacrosse Date Feb. 26 Mar. 1 Mar. 5 Mar. 8 Mar. 12 Mar. 16 Mar. 20 Mar. 29 Apr. 2 Apr. 8 Apr. 10 Apr. 15 Apr. 19 Apr. 23 Apr. 27
Opponent Score @ Sacred Heart W, 21-8 Boston University L, 15-8 Columbia* W, 14-6 @ Quinnipiac W, 16-11 @ Princeton* L, 17-5 Holy Cross W, 13-6 Bryant W, 14-4 @ Stanford L, 12-8 @ Dartmouth* L, 17-5 Harvard* L, 12-9 Duke L, 13-12 (2OT) @ Cornell* L, 14-7 St. Mary’s W, 26-6 Penn* l, 12-5 Yale* W, 11-4
Men’s Rugby Date Opponent Feb. 26 Yale Providence Mar. 5 Mar. 12 Roger Williams Providence Rugby Mar. 19 Mar. 27 Combined Clubs* Mar. 29 Scorpions Rugby* Barbados Select XV* Apr. 1 Apr. 9 Bentley Penn^ Apr. 10 Apr. 10 Columbia “B”^ Apr. 10 Dartmouth^ Apr. 10 Columbia “A”^ Apr. 24 University of Rhode Island Commencement Match May 28 *Brown Tour of Barbados ^ Ivy League 7’s Tournament
Score W, 25-10 T, 25-25 W, 77-0 L, 41-19 L, 31-27 L, 29-24 L, 27-20 L, 29-10 W, 19-5 W, 43-0 W, 28-26 W, 19-10 W, 44-20 2:00 p.m.
Photo Courtesy: David Silverman
Women’s Rugby Date Opponent Score Mar. 12 Beantown W, 21-15 Mar. 19 village lions club w, 31-0 Mar. 26 Western New York W, 51-00 Mar. 26 Village Lions W, 24-10 Mar. 26 New York L, 7-21 Mar. 29 @ Virginia L, 17-27 Mar. 30 @ George Mason W, 7-0 Mar. 30 @ Villanova W, 21-5 Apr. 10 vs. Yale^ W, 42-0 vs. Columbia^ W, 52-0 vs. Penn^ W, 69-0 vs. Princeton^ W, 56-0
Apr. 30 vs. Michigan W, 32-29 National Playoffs: 16 May 1 vs. University of Virginia L, 25-24 National Playoffs: 8 May 27 Sorensen 7s Tournament ^ Ivy League Championship
Sailing Date Opponent/Event (Location) Finish Mar. 5-6 Graham Hall Team Racing Intersectional (Navy/FJs/420s) 7th/16 Mar. 5-6 Sharpe Trophy Team Race (MIT/FJs) 4th/6 Mar. 12-13 Women’s Intersectional (Navy/420s/FJs) 2nd/18 Mar. 12-13 John Jackson Team Race (Georgetown/FJs) 1st/8 Mar. 12-13 Wood Trophy (Salve Regina/420s) 2nd/12 Mar. 19-20 Women’s Intersectional (St. Mary’s/420/FJs) 5th/18 Mar. 19-20 Veitor Trophy (420s/FJs) 8th and 9th/18 Mar. 26-27 Admiral Moore Team Race (NY Maritime/420s) 7th/10 Mar. 26-27 32nd Women’s Duplin Trophy Team Race (Tufts/Larks) 3rd/7 Mar. 26-27 Boston Dinghy Club Cup (MIT/Harvard/3 divisions of FJs) 1st/19 Mar. 26-27 Southern Series Two (Salve Regina/420s) 3rd/18 Mar. 27 Team Racing Series Three (Providence College/FJs) 1st/4 Apr. 2-3 Women’s Brad Dellenbaugh Trophy (420s) 3rd/16 Apr. 2-3 Southern NE Team Race Intersectional (Connecticut/FJs) 5th/16 Apr. 2 Southern Series Three (Salve Regina/420s) 1st/17 Apr. 9-10 Greater New York Open (Fordham/Columbia/420s) 5th/20 Apr. 9-10 Women’s President’s Trophy Intersectional (Boston University/FJs) 3rd/16 Apr. 9-10 Marchiando & Friis Trophies Team Race (MIT/Tufts/FJs/Larks) 4th/15 Apr. 9-10 Admiral Alymers Trophy (Mass. Maritime/420s) 3rd/14 Apr 10 Southern Series Four (Providence College/FJs) 1st/9 Apr. 16-17 NEISA Dinghy Champs/CG Alumni Bowl (URI/FJs) 2nd/18 Apr. 16-17 Women’s Emily Wick & Sloop Shrew Trophies (Coast Guard/FJs) 2nd/18 Apr. 16-17 Oberg Trophy (Gr. Boston) (Boston University/by NU/FJs) 1st/14 Apr. 23-24 Women’s NEISA Champs/Reed Trophy (Bowdoin/FJs) 3rd/14 Apr. 23-24 NEISA Frosh Single Division Champs/Priddy Trophy (UNH/FJs) 1st/7 Apr. 23-24 Thompson Trophy (Connecticut College/FJs) 1st/18 Apr. 23 O’Toole Trophy (Salve Regina/420s) 2nd/8 Apr. 30-May 1 ICSA Eastern Semi-Final Dinghy Championship (Long Beach/FJs) 6th/18 Apr 30-May 1 George Morris Trophy (Boston University/FJs) 3rd/16 Apr 30-May 1 Southern Series Seven (Salve Regina/420s) 3rd/12 May 8-9 NEISA Team Racing Champs/Fowle Trophy (Dartmouth/FJs) 5th/12 May 23-26 ICSA National Women’s Champs (Cascade Locks, Ore./FJs) 4th/10 May 30-June 1 ICSA/Gill National Dinghy Champs (Cascade Locks, Ore./FJs) 9:00 a.m.
Softball Date Opponent/Event Score Mar. 4 @ Hampton^ W, 3-2 Mar. 4 Marist^ L, 9-2 (5) Mar. 5 Rutgers^ L, 15-3 Mar. 5 Central Connecticut State^ T, 2-2 Mar. 12 Canisius! L, 4-1 Mar. 12 @UMBC! W, 2-1 Mar. 13 Niagara! W, 4-1 Mar. 13 Coppin State! W, 9-3 Mar. 19 St. Francis# W, 4-3 (9) Mar. 19 Niagara# L, 8-4 Mar. 20 Morgan State# L, 5-4 Mar. 20 @ UMBC# L, 9-8 (10) Mar. 24 @ Providence L, 10-2 (5) Mar. 24 @ Providence L, 10-3 Apr. 2 @ Princeton* L, 5-4 (8) Apr. 2 @ Princeton* W, 8-4 Apr. 3 @ Cornell* L, 2-1 Apr. 3 @ Cornell* W, 9-3 Apr. 7 Bryant L, 2-1 Apr. 8 Columbia* W, 1-0 Apr. 8 Columbia* L, 16-1 (6) Apr. 9 Penn* W, 9-4 Apr. 9 Penn* W, 9-7 Apr. 16 Harvard* L, 8-0 (6) Apr. 16 Harvard* L, 9-0 (6) Apr. 17 Harvard* L, 7-3 Apr. 17 Harvard* L, 11-1 apr. 21 rhode island w, 8-4 apr. 21 rhode island l, 18-9 (5) Apr. 24 @ Dartmouth* W, 13-0 Apr. 24 @ Dartmouth* L, 6-3 @ Dartmouth* L, 8-0 (6) Apr. 25 Apr. 25 @ Dartmouth* L, 20-3 (5) @ Yale* L, 4-2 Apr. 29 Apr. 29 @ Yale* L, 7-5 Apr. 30 Yale* W, 2-0 Yale* W, 5-4 Apr. 30 ^ Lady Pirates Classic ! UMBC Dawg Pound Invitational # UMBC Spring Classic
Men’s Tennis Date Jan. 22 Jan. 22 Feb. 5
Opponent/Event (Location) Buffalo Boston University Colgate
Brown Bear Magazine
Result W, 5-2 W, 7-0 W, 6-1
31
spring Results Feb. 11 Feb. 12 Feb. 19 Feb. 20 Feb. 26 Feb. 27 Mar. 2 Mar. 8 Mar. 19 Mar. 20 Mar. 20 Mar. 27 Apr. 1 Apr. 2 Apr. 9 Apr. 10 Apr. 15 Apr. 17 Apr. 23
Middle Tennessee Davidson @ Harvard ECAC Team Championships Columbia ECAC Team Championships vs. Longwood @ Virginia Tech Boston College Quinnipiac Binghamton Bryant UConn @ Florida Gulf Coast Princeton* Penn* @ Cornell* @ Columbia* Dartmouth* @ Harvard* @ Yale*
W, 6-1 W, 6-1 L, 4-3 W, 5-2 W, 7-0 L, 4-3 W, 4-3 W, 7-0 W, 5-2 W, 7-0 W, 7-0 W, 6-1 L, 4-3 L, 4-3 L, 4-3 W, 4-3 L, 4-3 W, 4-3 W, 6-1
Women’s Tennis Date Opponent/Event (Location) Jan. 22 @ Virginia Jan. 30 @ Duke Jan. 31 Tulsa Feb. 5 Maryland Feb. 10 @ Boston College Feb. 12 Davidson Feb. 18 Dartmouth^ Feb. 19 @ Princeton^ Feb. 20 Harvard^ Feb. 26 Akron Feb. 27 Stony Brook Providence Mar. 5 Boston University Mar. 9 UMASS Rhode Island Mar. 27 @ William & Mary Mar. 29 @ Old Dominion Apr. 1 @ Princeton* Apr. 2 @ Penn* Apr. 9 Cornell* Apr. 10 Columbia* Apr. 15 @ Dartmouth* Apr. 17 Harvard* Apr. 23 Yale* ^ ECAC Team Tournament
Result L, 7-0 L, 6-1 L, 5-2 L, 6-1 W, 4-3 W, 6-1 W, 4-3 L, 5-2 W, 4-1 W, 6-1 W, 6-1 W, 5-0 W, 7-0 W, 7-0 W, 5-0 L, 4-3 W, 4-3 W, 6-1 W, 6-1 W, 5-2 W, 6-1 L, 4-3 L, 4-3 W, 4-3
Women’s Water Polo Date Feb. 12 Feb. 12 Feb. 13 Feb. 13 Feb. 23 Feb. 26 Feb. 26
Opponent/Event (Location) University of Pacific @ Princeton Invite @ Princeton Villanova @ Princeton Invite Colorado State @ Princeton Invite @ Harvard Harvard @ ECAC Championship Bucknell
Score L, 10-5 L, 12-1 W, 10-3
@ ECAC Championship Feb. 27 Wagner L, 14-10 @ ECAC Championship Mar. 12 Utica College W, 12-7 (@ Hartwick) Mar. 12 @ Hartwick L, 17-11 Mar. 25 Cal Baptist L, 14-7 Mar. 26 Fresno Pacific W, 11-10 Mar. 26 Cal State San Bernardino W, 13-7 Mar. 27 Redlands W, 13-11 Mar. 27 Pomona Pitzer W, 17-15 Mar. 29 @ UC Santa Barbara L, 12-5 Mar. 30 @ Cal Lutheran University W, 12-11 (OT) Apr. 1 @ San Diego State L, 17-6 Apr. 1 @ UC San Diego L, 11-9 Apr. 2 Fresno Pacific W, 8-7 Apr. 2 Arizona State L, 15-5 Apr. 16 vs. George Washington W, 12-10 (@ University of Maryland) Apr. 16 vs. Indiana L, 11-6 (@ University of Maryland) Apr. 17 @ Maryland L, 13-10 Apr. 17 Princeton L, 6-5 (@ University of Maryland) Apr. 20 Harvard L, 16-12 (@ Wheaton College/Senior Night) Apr. 23 @ Connecticut College W, 12-3 vs. Utica W, 14-6 Apr. 23 vs. Bucknell^ L, 16-11 Apr. 29 vs. Gannon^ W, 11-8 Apr. 30 vs. Mercyhurst^ W, 15-8 May 1 ^ CWPA Eastern Championship
L, 11-8
Home games in RED CAPS * League game/match
L, 15-5 L, 9-5 W, 10-6
NCAA Compliance Corner Frequently Asked Questions Regarding Prospects Q. May a booster play a “pick-up” game (i.e., basketball, softball, etc.) with prospects? A. Yes, PROVIDED there is no attempt to recruit the prospect and the game is not prearranged by a member of the Athletic Department staff.
Outdoor Track & Field Opponent/Event (Location) Result @ Husky Spring Open @ Bryant Invite @ UConn Alumni Invite Brown Invitational @ Larry Ellis Invitational (Princeton) @ Penn Relays Brown Springtime Open Ivy League Heptagonal Champ. (Yale) Men 3rd/8 Women 3rd/8 IC4A Championships (Princeton) NCAA Regionals (Indiana University) NCAA Outdoor Champ. (Drake University)
Q. May a prospect call a booster? A. Yes. A booster may have a telephone conversation with a prospect only if the prospect initiates the call. The telephone call may not be prearranged by an institutional staff member, and the booster is not permitted to have a recruiting conversation with the prospect but may exhibit normal civility. The booster must refer any questions about the institution’s athletics program to the athletics department staff. Q. What if a booster hears that a junior college athlete or an athlete enrolled in another four-year institution is unhappy and would like to transfer? A. A booster may not contact an enrolled student-athlete at another institution for the purpose of encouraging transfer to Brown University and participation in our athletic program. The booster may give this information to the appropriate Brown coaching staff members. If you have any questions, please contact the Brown Compliance office at (401) 863-7584 or:
Brown Athletic Compliance Pizzitola Center Box 1932 Providence, RI 02912 Brown University Sports Foundation
Photos Courtesy: David Silverman
Date Mar. 19 Apr. 2 Apr. 9 Apr. 16 Apr. 22-23 Apr. 28-30 May 1 May 7-8 May 13 May 26-28 June 8
busf endowment
As of December 31, 2010 the Brown Sports Foundation had an overall endowment totaling more than $71.1 million. The overall athletic endowment is made up of separate endowed funds that support each individual team, as well as numerous special purpose/named funds.
80
71.1 60.9
60 45.2
40 18.9
20 5.2 0
1990 1995
2000
2005
2010
Spendable Income in Millions ($)
The Sports Foundation was founded with the ultimate goal of endowing Brown’s sports program. Today, endowment funding remains an ongoing focus of the Sports Foundation’s efforts to provide a sustainable and increasing funding base for Brown athletics.
BUSF Endowment Historical Market Value | 12/31/10
Market Value in Millions ($)
Ensuring the Future
2.75 2.43
2.50 2.25 2.00 1.75
1.97
2.10
2006 2007
2008
2009
2010
Fiscal year (July 1 - June 30)
Named/Special Purpose Endowments (Purpose) as of 12/31/2010* - Total $42,655,418 * Market values are not listed for individual named funds in order to respect donor confidentiality.
Alden-Rothenberg Men’s and Women’s Cross Country/ Track & Field Coaching Chair Aquatics Special Purpose Endowment Athletics Awards Endowment Athletics Challenge Fund Athletics Hall of Fame Endowment Athletics Unrestricted Endowment Jay Barry ’50 P’78 Trophy Fund (Football Award) C. Joseph Bowdring ’52 Fund (Football) Avery Wolcott Broadbent ’04 Fund (Women’s Squash) Frederick S. Broomhead 1905 Memorial Trophy Fund (Football Award) Carolan Family Endowment (Women’s Swimming & Diving) Class of 1937 Trophy Fund (Men’s Soccer Award) Class of 1951 Men’s Capital Equipment Endowment Liz Cohen P’86 Shoe Fund (Football) Tobias S.D. Cohen Fencing Uniform Fund J. Ackerman Coles Athletics Trophy Fund (Intramural Award) Robert Rawson Dolt ’51 Fund (General Purpose) Wendell R. ’19 and Henry R.C. Erickson Endowment (Athletic Facilities) Football Film Fund James H. Fullerton ADE’68 Trophy Fund (Men’s Ice Hockey Award) Ivan Fuqua Overseas Fund (Men’s and Women’s Cross Country/Track & Field) Gilbane Family Fund (Athletic Marketing) William J. Gilbane ’33 Endowment (Football) Arlene E. Gorton ’52 Fund (Women’s Athletics) Gymnasium Endowment Patrick S. Jones Memorial Trophy Fund (Men’s Ice Hockey Award) Andrew Joslin ’65 P’94 Fund (Football)
Spendable Income for Athletics | 2006 - 2010 3.22 3.25 3.11 3.00
Mary Ann Lippitt Fund for Women’s Athletics Mary Ann Lippitt Head Coaching Chair in Women’s Swimming & Diving J. Douglas Lynn ’53 Football Fund Suzanne and Terrence Murray P’84 ’94 and Paula Murray McNamara ’84 Family Endowment (Field Hockey and Volleyball) Harold B. ’41 and Thomas V. Nash ’40 Fund (Baseball) Harold B. ’41 and Thomas V. Nash ’40 Fund (Football) Olney-Margolies Athletic Center Maintenance Endowment Ralph M. Palmer PhB 1910/Class of 1910 Trophy Fund (Football Award) Ollie ’50 and Kay Patrell Head Coaching Chair in Men’s Swimming & Diving Frank J. Pizzitola ’49 Endowment (Athletic Fundraising – BUSF) Winslow A. Robbins ’34 P’63 ’76 Athletic Endowment Henry Saphier P’88 MD’92 ’97 ’00 Challenge Fund (Women’s Athletics) Kate Silver ’86 Memorial Fund (Women’s Athletics Award) Paul Sloan ’97 Memorial Fund (Football/Strength and Conditioning) Smith Trophy Fund (Swimming & Diving Award) H. Stanton ’21 & Marjorie B. Smith Fund (Smith Swim Center) Walter Stein ’47 Rowing Fund (Men’s Crew) Eugene C. Swift ’42 P’67 ’69 Athletics Endowment (Football Award) Elizabeth F. Turner ’98 Women’s Basketball Coaching Chair Washington Weight Room Fund Prescott A. Whitman Memorial Fund (Athletics General Purpose) Howard D. Williams ’17/Joseph V. Paterno ’50 Football Coaching Chair Charles E. Young Jr. Award Fund (Football)
Team Endowments Total $22,581,772 Market Values as of 12/31/2010 Baseball | $410,693 Men’s Basketball | $1,147,105 Women’s Basketball | $1,213,381 Cheerleading | $1,141 Men’s Crew | $2,403,547 Women’s Crew | $754,708 Equestrian | $227,592 Men’s and Women’s Fencing | $134,882 Field Hockey | $241,914 Football | $3,824,187 Men’s and Women’s Golf | $609,085 Gymnastics | $82,193 Men’s Ice Hockey | $1,057,972 Women’s Ice Hockey | $266,021 Men’s Lacrosse | $2,196,618 Women’s Lacrosse | $589,600 Men’s Rugby | $842,066 Men’s and Women’s Sailing | $342,545 Men’s Skiing | $157,141 Women’s Skiing |$66,229 Men’s Soccer | $863,410 Women’s Soccer |$571,164 Softball | $129,200 Men’s Squash | $579,990 Women’s Squash | $228,699 Joseph Watmough Men’s Swimming & Diving Endowment | $495,191 Women’s Swimming & Diving |$333,500 Men’s Tennis | $169,116 Women’s Tennis | $561,655 Men’s and Women’s Cross Country/ Track & Field |$422,363/$252,178 Men’s Volleyball | $3,334 Women’s Volleyball | $80,537 Men’s Water Polo | $657,853 Women’s Water Polo | $15,124 Michael T. Wallace Sr. P’77 GP ’07 Wrestling Endowment |$649,838 Brown Bear Magazine
33
loyal bears Our Loyal Bears are “Ever True” to Brown Athletics, remaining firmly committed through victory and defeat by making a gift to the Sports Foundation in each of the last four fiscal years beginning July 1, 2006 and ending June 30, 2010 (Brown’s fiscal year runs from July 1 to June 30). These 1,720 donors are the epitome of Brown, as they strive for excellence through a changing environment and ensure that the experience for Brown’s student-athletes remains among the best in Division I athletics. The Sports Foundation is incredibly grateful to this group, the backbone of our fundraising efforts, for their long term, resolute commitment to Brown Athletics. 1936 The late Charles B. Kiesel ’36 H. Gerard Everall ’36 P’69 Richard M. Rieser ’36 P’65 GP’95 1938 Muriel Macpherson Abbott ’38 1939 J. Cheston Constable ’39 P’74 Charles J. Heims ’39 John M. Volkhardt ’39 1940 The late Albert H. Curtis II ’40 1941 John R. Mars ’41 C. Harrison Meyer ’41 William H. Parry Jr. ’41 Helen Tasman Tourigney ’41 1942 Henry L. Mann ’42 Stephen W. Pournaras ’42 John H. Stone ’42 1943 Robert C. Barningham ’43 Carol Taylor Carlisle ’43 and Robert Carlisle ’43 Stuart F. Crump ’43 P’67 William M. Kaiser Jr. ’43 Robert G. Leadbetter ’43 Walter J. Mc Lellan ’43 The late H. Robert Nissley ’43 1944 The late Robert G. Berry ’44 Hope Richards Brothers ’44 P’70 1945 Frank S. Arnold ’45 P’74 Daniel Fairchild ’45 ScM’48 and Joyce Wetherald Fairchild ’47 GP’02 ’05 Robert B. Hill ’45 Leonard S. Michelman ’45 P’80 A. Peter Quinn Jr. ’45 Richard N. Silverman ’45 and Sandra K. Silverman 1946 Herbert B. Barlow Jr. ’46 Edward N. Clarke ’46 PhD’51 and Vivian Bergquist Clarke ’49 Harold W. Demopulos ’46 P’90 ’94 Paul L. Ryan ’46 William H. Stone ’46 Woodbury C. Titcomb ’46 Esther Bouchard Tracy ’46 and Richard J. Tracy ’46 P’76 ’79 ’81 ’85 GP’14 1947 Joseph L. Dowling Jr. ’47 and Sarah T. Dowling Joyce Wetherald Fairchild ’47 and Daniel Fairchild ’45 ScM’48 GP’02 GP’05 Milton F. Wines ’47 1948 The late John Avery Jr. ’48
James F. Bartley ’48 Albert S. Feldman ’48 Paul A. Lucey ’48 P’73 ’79 R. Gordon McGovern ’48 Jeannette Jones Pollard ’48 and William A. Pollard ’50 P’77 ’81 ’85 GP’06 ’08 ’08 ’13 Lewis A. Shaw ’48 and Carol R. Shaw Stephen C. Stanley ’48 Austin B. Thompson Jr. ’48 P’75 GP’01 ’04
Edward J. Barry Jr. ’52 P’73 and Cynthia A. Barry Davies W. Bisset Jr. ’52 ’85 ’86 ’88 Glenn N. Bower ’52 and Suzanne Griffiths Bower ’53 P’77 ’79 ’83 ’87 Marybeth Keser Burbank ’52 P’79 GP’08 ’10 Arthur L. Collard ’52 Joan Hastings Crosby ’52 and Ralph R. Crosby Jr. ’52 Marion L. Crowley ’52 1949 Thomas P. Dimeo ’52 and Donald F. Alden ’49 Sandy Dimeo P’83 Samuel P. Beachen II ’49 Fredric S. Freund ’52 P’89 Lloyd S. Broomhead ’49 and Arlene E. Gorton ’52 Frances E. Broomhead John Grainger ’52 Vivian Bergquist Clarke ’49 and Paul J. Grimes Jr. ’52 P’80 Edward N. Clarke ’46 PhD’51 ScM’85 ’86 Anthony Davids ’49 Lawrence A. Kaufman ’52 P’87 Wendell G. Harris ’49 Frederic S. Kramer ’52 P’85 ’88 The late Edward J. Saillant ’49 Thomas J. Landry ’52 P’87 Frederick H. Wilson Jr. ’49 Robert S. MacConnell ’52 Robert J. Maley ’52 1950 John H. Norberg Jr. ’52 Richard B. Armstrong ’50 P’80 John F. Novatney Jr. ’52 P’84 ’82 GP’14 Russell A. Preble Jr. ’52 Richard E. Arnold ’50 P’74 Noel L. Silverman ’52 P’88 Joseph E. Baclawski ’50 Mary Ann Young Simpson ’52 John L. Butterworth ’50 and Alexander R. Simpson ’52 Robert W. Carangelo ’50 P’84 Robert L. Smart ’52 Anthony J. Combias ’50 and The late Thomas K. Spruth Marie J. Combias ’52 P’79 Harold C. Dahl Jr. ’50 Donald Stehle ’52 P’81 Philbin S. Flanagan ’50 Robert J. Wheeler ’52 Laurence N. Gross ’50 P’89 Lacy B. Herrmann ’50 and 1953 Elizabeth Herrmann P’82 John A. Andersen ’53 and VirRaymond M. Kako ’50 P’90 ginia C. Andersen P’79 ’82 Joseph Kenney Jr. ’50 Suzanne Griffiths Bower ’53 Carl R. Lalumia ’50 and Glenn N. Bower ’52 P’77 John B. Leeming ’50 P’81 ’86 ’79 ’83 ’87 Walter F. Paster ’50 Walter E. Cowan ’53 Oliver L. Patrell ’50 Kenneth G. Knowles ’53 and William A. Pollard ’50 and Sally Knowles Jeannette Jones Pollard ’48 P’77 Angus L. MacLean Jr. ’53 ’81 ’85 GP’06 ’08 ’08 ’13 John M. McIsaac Jr. ’53 P’86 Donald C. Shaffer ’50 Walter L. Molineux Jr. ’53 Philip C. Steiger Jr. ’50 William V. Polleys III ’53 P’85 Barry F. Schwartz ’50 P’87 Henry Stern ’53 Ralph G. Stoddard ’53 and 1951 Anne Dermer Stoddard ’54 Harlan A. Bartlett ’51 P’78 P’78 ’85 ’87 Alexander J. Cox ’51 Joseph L. Tauro ’53 LLD’98 P’84 David M. Curry ’51 David R. Traynor ’53 Aerielle Dewart and Gordon D. Yvonne Davies Tropp ’53 Dewart ’51 Patricia Estes Waterman ’53 The late Robert R. Dolt ’51 and Lewis A. Waterman Jr. ’51 Robert A. Fearon ’51 P’75 ’77 E. Howard Wenzel Jr. ’53 and Richard M. Gibney ’51 Anne Barr Wenzel ’54 P’76 Harold S. Gold ’51 P’81 ’82 ’86 Duncan C. Gray ’51 1954 Parker D. Handy ’51 Ronald J. Abdow ’54 P’81 ’83 Robert E. Lenker ’51 Jean Schupbach Bidwell ’54 Frank S. Most ’51 E. Aubrey Doyle ’54 P’79 ’81 ’81 Edward T. Richards Jr. ’51 Edward Giberti ’54 and JacqueMordecai K. Rosenfeld ’51 P’89 line F. Giberti James M. Sutherland Jr. ’51 James R. Gorham ’54 Donald F. Whiston ’51 Girard E. Haverty ’54 Lewis A. Waterman Jr. ’51 and Joan Rountree Hayes ’54 and Patricia Estes Waterman ’53 Charles E. Hayes Jr. ’54 The late Winthrop B. Wilson ’51 Sanford L. Hollander ’54 P’81 ’89 1952 Kenneth J. Kessaris ’54 Martin J. Badoian ’52 P’89 Kenneth M. Moffat ’54 and
Brown University Sports Foundation
Barbara A. Moffat Ludwig W. Murgo ’54 William F. Peace ’54 Thomas H. Simon ’54 Walter G. Stern ’54 P’91 Anne Dermer Stoddard ’54 and Ralph G. Stoddard ’53 P’78 ’85 ’87 Arthur W. Vietze Jr. ’54 Anne Barr Wenzel ’54 and E. Howard Wenzel Jr. ’53 P’76
Frank R. Yanni ’56
1957 Susan Lamscha Asselin ’57 and Charles A. Asselin ’55 Elizabeth Reiss Baecher ’57 Richard C. Barker ’57 LHD’09 ’03 ’05 Selena Winicour Barron ’57 and Robert A. Barron ’55 Fred D. Behringer ’57 Paul P. Brown ’57 1955 John R. Chandler Jr. ’57 P’89 Charles A. Asselin ’55 and John F. Conner ’57 Susan Lamscha Asselin ’57 Robert A. Cowan ’57 P’82 ’89 Robert A. Barron ’55 and ’92 GP’14 Selena Winicour Barron ’57 George B. Delaney Jr. ’57 Fred H. Barrows III ’55 P’80 P’87 ’87 Robert E. Borah ’55 P’88 ’92 Sandra Sundquist Durfee ’57 Francis A. Brooks Jr. ’55 and David R. Durfee ’56 MAT’65 P’83 Peter H. Fake ’57 P’89 Donald R. De Ciccio ’55 Richard A. Fusco ’57 Richard J. DePatie ’55 Elliot J. Ganz ’57 Nancy Tobin Dorer ’55 and Jack E. Giddings ’57 John Dorer ’55 P’81 ’84 James A. Goldsmith III ’57 Stuart P. Erwin Jr. ’55 P’87 Robert K. Hitt ’57 Morton Gilstein ’55 Lewis A. Kay ’57 P’82 ’85 David W. Halvorsen ’55 Mark K. Kessler ’57 MAT’66 John K. Lyden ’57 Socrates H. Mihalakos ’55 Matthew C. Maloney ’57 and Anne Murphy O’Brien ’55 and Ellen Eisha Maloney ’59 P’88 John D. O’Brien ’55 P’82 ’85 ’92 John F. McDaniels ’57 and LouEverett A. Pearson ’55 ise Cox McDaniels ’60 P’82 ’92 James F. Pendergast ’55 and Thaddeus S. Newell III ’57 Beverly A. Pendergast John F. Nickoll ’57 P’82 Gordon E. Perry ’55 P’88 ’92 George A. Pliakas ’57 GP’10 William A. Pond ’57 William T. Prifty ’55 Allen G. Powning ’57 P’84 ’88 Geoffrey H. Spranger ’55 George M. Rollinson ’57 MAT’67 Donald L. Saunders ’57 Irving M. Valkys ’55 Alan R. Shalita ’57 Joseph S. Shapiro ’57 P’87 1956 The late Robert L. Sweeney Michael K. Carney ’56 ’57 P’91 Raymond R. Cooke ’56 Marilyn Mapes Yeutter ’57 and Joel Davis ’56 P’82 ’85 ’89 GP’13 Bruce D. Yeutter ’57 P’83 ’94 David R. Durfee ’56 and Sandra Sundquist Durfee ’57 1958 George W. Easton ’56 and Anne James G. Alaimo ’58 Browne Easton ’58 Charles F. Batchelder ’58 Noel M. Field Jr. ’56 P’87 Sylvia Thorley Blakeley ’58 and Marjorie Jenckes Fleischmann Robert F. Blakeley ’58 MAT’59 ’56 P’84 ’85 ’86 Ronald E. Foster ’56 Richard F. Carolan ’58 P’84 ’90 Margaret Devoe Gidley ’56 ’95 GP’11 Robert M. Hetterly ’56 P’89 William F. Carroll ’58 MAT’65 Seymour G. Karnes ’56 P’80 James B. Lohr ’56 P’79 William E. Corrigan Jr. ’58 Bruce W. Lovell ’56 Stan Dobson ’58 P’87 James P. McGuinness ’56 Lenore Donofrio DeLucia ’58 Kenneth C. Morley ’56 P’85 AM’61 PhD’63 and Clement A. GP’13 DeLucia ’63 P’88 Stanley R. Orczyk Jr. ’56 P’82 Joseph H. Des Roches ’58 Mary I. Pett ’56 Philip G. DuMond ’58 Anthony P. Randazzo Jr. ’56 P’81 Anne Browne Easton ’58 and Robert W. Read ’56 George W. Easton ’56 David M. Rosenbaum ’56 P’91 Dennis J. Fish ’58 Carl H. Seligson ’56 Terry Franc III ’58 P’94 Peter M. Shutkin ’56 and Henry J. Flynn Jr. ’58 Elizabeth P. Shutkin P’85 ’87 William F. Johnston ’58 P’86 ’90 GP’10 ’13 Maxwell R. McCreery ’58 Barry L. Sloane ’56 P’87 ’89 Richard A. Strickland ’56 Ludlow Miller ’58 P’95 Marvin L. Wilenzik ’56 P’89 Jane Bertram Miluski ’58 and ’91 ’96 Joseph J. Miluski ’58 P’81 David S. Willis ’56 James R. Moody ’58 ScM’65
P’97 William G. Nicholson ’58 P’88 James J. Noonan ’58 Donald A. Nelson ’58 P’85 Hugh W. Pearson ’58 George H. Perry Jr. ’58 Priscilla Kingston Rollins ’58 Alan S. Rosenberg ’58 Arnold M. Rothstein ’58 and Arden Aibel Rothstein P’10 GP’13 Robert P. Sanchez ’58 P’89 Joseph A. Santangini ’58 Radley D. Sheldrick ’58 P’93 Frank D. Young III ’58 P’85 1959 John F. Bennett Jr. ’59 Michael F. Bergan ’59 Elizabeth Zopfi Chace ’59 and Malcolm G. Chace LHD’04 GP’13 Richard A. Cleary ’59 P’91 Charles V. Dedrick ’59 Wyndham Eaton II ’59 Peter Gray ’59 John G. Halliday ’59 William B. Hayes ’59 P’87 ’89 William L. Kantaros ’59 P’87 AM’94 ’88 Francis W. Kennedy Jr. ’59 Peter A. Mackie ’59 Ellen Eisha Maloney ’59 and Matthew C. Maloney ’57 P’88 James M. McMorris ’59 David M. Merchant ’59 P’82 David L. Morton ’59 P’90 ’92 ’99 Michael M. Peters ’59 Robert F. Pyper ’59 James Steiner ’59 Tom Sullivan Jr. ’59 P’86 ’88 George W. Ullrich ’59 and Amy Lautman Ullrich ’61 P’87 ’90 William F. Wenning Jr. ’59 Bruce J. Westcott ’59 1960 Carlton F. Andrus ’60 Robert L. Battel ’60 P’88 ’90 David A. Belden ’60 John E. Bellavance ’60 James M. Bower ’60 Bernard V. Buonanno Jr. ’60 P’88 ’92 ’96 J. Barry Burns ’60 P’90 Michael J. Burns ’60 Robert B. Carlin ’60 J. Terry Case ’60 Paul J. Choquette Jr. ’60 P’88 ’97 Dan Cromack ’60 P’92 Norman M. Enman Jr. ’60 Walter A. Foley ’60 MAT’65 Louise Cox McDaniels ’60 and John F. McDaniels ’57 P’82 ’92 John S. Moyle ’60 P’90 ’92 Charles L. Olobri ’60 Daniel C. Soriano Jr. ’60 P’86 Robert E. Stetson ’60 1961 Howard M. Bromage ’61 Forrest A. Broman ’61 Jack D. Fisher ’61 John S. Hoover ’61 William C. McClaskey ’61
loyal bears 1967 William G. Ballaine ’67 David F. Bartman ’67 Herschel N. Bird ’67 P’97 James W. Castellan ’67 and Lynn C. Kelley ’69 David N. Chichester ’67 Elaine M. Decker ’67 Michael C. Fahey ’67 Joel M. Goldberg ’67 Stephen B. Hazard ’67 B. Frederick Helmkamp ’67 1962 Michael J. Hutter ’67 Carl W. Hally ’62 Susan Fischer Jeans ’67 and Peggy Snyder Hinman ’62 Jonathan S. Jeans ’67 ScM’70 and Harvey D. Hinman II ’62 Peter D. Johnson Jr. ’67 P’87 ’90 Robert S. Kissam ’67 P’00 Kenneth E. Hogberg ’62 Charles R. McClaskey ’67 and Jack G. Mancuso ’62 P’90 Sandra Mertens McClaskey ’68 ’92 ’95 F. Thomas Moran ’67 Thomas B. McMullen ’62 Albin Moser ’67 Stephen P. Sandell ’62 Eric J. Natwig ’69 AM’72 and Charles A. Spacagna ’62 Carol M. Lemlein ’67 P’90 Willard P. Yeats ’62 Thomas C. O’Donnell ’67 1965 Robert H. Ormerod Jr. ’67 P’93 1963 Walter R. Becker ’65 Richard A. Patt ’67 P’96 A. Dean Abelon ’63 Stanley J. Bernstein ’65 P’02 ’09 Joseph R. Randall ’67 Eugene F. Barth ’63 Wendell S. Brown III ’65 Robert M. Reymers ’67 ScM’68 Edward Berman ’63 ScM’67 P’03 Frederick E. Rugg ’67 William R. Caroselli ’63 Nancy L. Buc ’65 LLD’94 Elias Safdie ’67 P’95 ’00 Dayton T. Carr ’63 Martin S. Cooper ’65 David G. Santry ’67 R. Glenn Cashion ’63 Paul F. Coughlan ’65 and Neil D. Sklarew ’67 Clement A. DeLucia ’63 P’88 Denise E. Coughlan E. Clinton Swift ’67 and Lenore Donofrio DeLucia Charles L. Donahue Jr. ’65 and Paula Allemang Turner ’67 and ’58 AM’61 PhD’63 Nancy T. Donahue William D. Turner ’67 Eugene P. DePatie ’63 Susan Tinnon Dunham ’65 and James R. Van Blarcom ’67 William E. Dyer ’63 John M. Dunham ’64 Donald S. Weiss ’67 Joseph K. Fisler ’63 David M. Ferrarini ’65 John D. Witmeyer ’67 Robert G. Goering ’63 Richard W. Holt ’65 Richard D. Greene ’63 Emerson L. Moore ’65 1968 J. Thomas Gunzelman ’63 John C. Parry IV ’65 P’91 John R. Alexander ’68 Thomas W. Hoagland ’63 Dean B. Pineles ’65 Diana Lamb Bain ’68 P’04 Robert S. Hodavance ’63 P’08 David A. Reid ’65 Bruce A. Blodgett ’68 P’91 ’92 John W. Kaufmann ’63 and Gerald M. Richmond Jr. ’65 Randall B. Brown ’68 Katherine S. Kaufmann Henry L. Savage Jr. ’65 Kenneth Chernack ’68 Dante J. Lanzetta Jr. ’63 Jonathan B. Seale ’65 P’96 Thomas E. Clifford Jr. ’68 C. Martin Lawyer III ’63 Mark S. Slonim ’65 P’90 Robert H. Cooper ’68 Gail Caslowitz Levine ’63 and Philip A. Solomita ’65 Arthur DiMartino ’68 P’02 William A. Levine ’64 P’88 ’91 Rhoda Lipson Tillman ’65 and Ronald J. Gerts ’68 Daniel M. McDonald ’63 Stephen J. Tillman ’65 PhD’70 Richard I. Gouse ’68 and Bruce R. McIntyre ’63 Michael Zifcak ’65 Cheryl Connors Gouse ’70 Fred A. Parker ’63 and Patricia Nancy Steinhaus Zisson ’65 and AM’71 P’02 Lahan Parker AM’81 William J. Zisson ’63 P’91 Jay H. Hedlund ’68 William R. Patterson III ’63 Jesse B. Jupiter ’68 ScM’66 1966 Seth A. Kurn ’68 S. Lawrence Prendergast ’63 P’99 Richard E. Ballou ’66 Richard S. Landau ’68 Peter E. Rubin ’63 Charles H. Blood Jr. ’66 Bill McElyea ’68 James M. Seed ’63 P’02 John S. Brandon ’66 Sandra Mertens McClaskey ’68 Robert E. Tortolani ’63 William D. Brisbane Jr. ’66 and Charles R. McClaskey ’67 James G. Valeo ’63 P’91 Robert G. Bruce ’66 David A. Meehan ’68 MAT’92 ’94 Jay A. Burgess ’66 John M. Mogulescu ’68 P’01 ’04 Richard P. Wallace ’63 P’00 Ronald J. DelSignore ’66 P’92 Lawrence H. Polin ’68 AM’85 Victoria Buchanan Ward ’63 ’99 Robert W. Powers ’68 P’01 P’89 Robert J. DeLuca ’66 Susan A. Semonoff ’68 and SteWilliam J. Zisson ’63 and Nancy James F. Franco ’66 phen M. Sagar ’68 MMSc’70 Steinhaus Zisson ’65 P’91 Robert F. Hall ’66 Michael D. Serotta ’68 William J. Jenkins ’66 Henry J. Stevens ’68 1964 William P. Kinsella ’66 Robert F. Szul ’68 Linda Mason Aminoff ’64 P’01 John L. Kirsten Jr. ’66 Roy W. Walker ’68 and Kathy Stephen C. Biklen ’64 Paul D. Laffal ’66 Walker Edith Smith Blish MAT’64 Clifford B. LePage Jr. ’66 James R. Wich ’68 Chester F. Bloden Jr. ’64 Wayne W. Long ’66 P’97 Robin Newsome Wittusen ’68 Charles P. Boukus Jr. ’64 P’96 Arthur B. Mathews ’66 and Dag F. Wittusen ’68 P’98 David M. Brodsky ’64 P’89 and William A. McNickle ’66 Stacey Moritz Brodsky P’13 Michael E. Schwab ’66 1969 Gerald A. Bucci ’64 Hugh C. Wakefield ’66 Gregory T. Beckham ’69 James C. Deveney Jr. ’64 John M. Weatherby ’66 and Lawrence A. Campbell ’69 Thomas H. Draper ’64 P’93 Elizabeth R. Weatherby Robert F. Christin ’69 and John M. Dunham ’64 and Terry J. Zerngast ’66 Barbara K. Christin Susan Tinnon Dunham ’65 Stephen M. Zwarg ’66 P’97 Richard A. Dreissigacker ’69 David J. Farley ’64 and Patricia L. Gene DuBay ’69 Frank H. Monahan ’61 Timothy P. Orcutt ’61 Sandra Newman Penz ’61 and P. Andrew Penz ’61 P’91 Paul T. Putzel ’61 P’89 Robert W. Schmid ’61 John P. Schuyler ’61 Richard A. Siebel ’61 Alan J. Tapper ’61 P’82 ’86 Amy Lautman Ullrich ’61 and George W. Ullrich ’59 P’87 ’90
W. Farley ’01 Laurens W. Goff ’64 John H. Hartman V ’64 P’87 ’98 James R. Johnson ’64 Ints Kaleps ’64 Zurab S. Kobiashvili ’64 William A. Levine ’64 and Gail Caslowitz Levine ’63 P’88 ’91 John G. Lewis Jr. ’64 P’88 Albert C. Libutti ’64 Manuel E. Menezes ’64 Margaret Cox Moser ’64 and G. Dewey Moser ’64 P’90 Jackson W. Robinson ’64 P’89 Alan L. Stanzler ’64 P’94 ’96 Albert Suttle Jr. ’64 Richard J. Talbot ’64 Theodore J. Thelin ’64 D. Wesley Thomas Jr. ’64 John M. Tucker ’64 A. Sheffield Tulp ’64 William J. Vareschi Jr. ’64 Francis D. Wright III ’64
Paul H. Ellenbogen ’69 P’97 Thomas F. Gilbane Jr. ’69 and Mary O. Gilbane P’97 ’98 ’00 Willis J. Goldsmith ’69 P’99 Lynn C. Kelley ’69 and James W. Castellan ’67 John E. Liebmann Jr. ’69 Carol M. Lemlein ’67 and Eric J. Natwig ’69 AM’72 P’90 Bruce W. Pierstorff ’69 and Carol Armitage Pierstorff ’70 Frank A. Scofield ’69 Kevin A. Seaman ’69 Anne Neely Seeley ’69 and Morgan B. Seeley ’69 Peter E. Senkowski ’69 Barbara Corcoran Sherman ’69 and Robert S. Sherman ’69 P’98 Daniel C. Stewart ’69 Sanford Stoddard ’69 John R. Thelin ’69 L. James Walker Jr. ’69 ScM’75 and Alicia P. Walker Stephen A. Wiener ’69
Robert P. Elfering Jr. ’72 William C. Kavan ’72 Robert S. Ludwig ’72 and Joan M. Ryder ’73 P’09 Francis G. Maaz ’72 Paul L. Maddock Jr. ’72 P’04 Justin D. Mahon Jr. ’72 Linda L. Miller ’72 David R. Owens ’72 Susan Stamm Peet ’72 and Gary R. Peet Michael J. Perna ’72 Douglas A. Price ’72 William J. Roland II ’72 Joan Wernig Sorensen ’72 and E. Paul Sorensen ’71 ScM’75 PhD’77 P’06 ’06 David R. Speth ’72 Henry R. Swirsky ’72 Gary R. Westmoreland ’72 Sarah Lloyd Wolf ’72 and Charles B. Wolf ’72
M. Allison McMillan ’74 and Mark M. Nickel P’09 Daniel A. Neff ’74 and Nancy Fuld Neff ’76 P’06 ’14 Marc A. Silverstein ’74 P’12 ’13 Anita V. Spivey ’74 and Dean A. Dent ’74 P’09 Dominic D. Starsia ’74 and Kristin R. Lasagna ’76 Mary Aguiar Vascellaro ’74 and Jerome C. Vascellaro ’74 P’07 Donna Erickson Williamson ’74 and Scott H. Williamson 1975 John G. Berylson ’75 and Amy S. Berylson John S. Breuer ’75 Paul G. Brodeur ’75 Kenneth H. Colburn ’75 Dennis M. Coleman ’75 and Miriam Curtis Coleman ’77 Charles T. Connell ’75 and Michelle A. Proulx ’76 Rebecca E. Crown ’75 and Richard H. Robb ’75 P’08 ’14 Marianne Michael Culich ’75 and Dusan Culich ’75 Douglas S. Ebenstein ’75 and Robin C. Ebenstein John C. Ford ’75 David P. Given ’75 Roger G. Hatheway ’75 Kirk S. Heilbrun ’75 William W. Hill IV ’75 Gary P. Howanec ’75 Peter M. Hunt ’75 Pamela Stratton Hutchinson ’75 and Alexander Hutchinson ’75 P’03 ’08 John G. Irvin Jr. ’75 Josef Machac ’75 MD’78 Julie Liddicoet Meister ’75 and Richard W. Meister ’75 P’03 ’06 Philip A. Mousin ’75 Seth G. Parker ’75 William L. Roberts ’75 Vincent R. Sghiatti ’75 P’13 David B. Sholem ’75 and Jan Mecklenburger Sholem P’06 ’12 Gregory M. Storrs ’75 Alex Szabo ’75 Vassie C. Ware ’75 and William J. Taylor ’75
1973 Kathleen E. Barry ’73 and John 1970 Magladery ’73 Allan P. Armbruster ’70 James J. Burke Jr. ’73 P’05 ’06 ’10 James G. Bruen ’70 Richard F. Casher ’73 William T. Carr ’70 Robert Checkoway ’73 Robert S. Davidson Jr. ’70 Arthur Corvese Jr. ’73 William P. Foley ’70 John D. Fassett ’73 and Miriam Steven D. Fraade ’70 A. Bolotin ’74 Nancy Gidwitz ’70 Charles P. Frost ’73 P’98 ’01 Cheryl Connors Gouse ’70 Alan R. Gallotta ’73 P’05 AM’71 and Richard I. Gouse Elizabeth Ruedisueli George ’73 ’68 P’02 MD’76 and Robert B. George II Delos E. Hibner IV ’70 ’73 MD’77 P’02 ’02 Glenn F. Morse ’70 Charles J. Hinckley ’73 Mary Ann Phillips Muirhead Constance E. Kulik Morgan ’73 MAT’70 and Ronald C. HausMark D. Lacedonia ’73 mann P’07 Christiane R. Mollet ’73 Michael L. Murray ’70 Stephan S. Russo ’73 and Susan Carol Armitage Pierstorff ’70 J. Souder P’11 and Bruce W. Pierstorff ’69 Joan M. Ryder ’73 and Robert Kenneth E. Prager ’70 ScM’74 S. Ludwig ’72 P’09 David E. Schreiner ’70 Paul D. Sampson ’73 ScM’74 William E. Turrentine ’70 Barry C. Schuster ’73 P’11 Shelley G. Shinn and Jeffrey S. 1971 Shinn ’73 Charles L. Babcock IV ’71 P’05 Rebecca Keyte Staehlin ’73 and ’06 and Nancy W. Hamilton Martin E. Staehlin ’71 Serge Brunner ’71 Joseph M. Steed ’73 ScM’73 Sandra Prioleau Crew ’71 and Craig J. Tillery ’73 Spencer R. Crew ’71 P’00 ’04 Jeffrey A. Wagner ’73 and Peter S. Guterman ’71 Nancy E. Leopold ’76 P’12 1976 William C. Haggerty ’71 Victor J. Weinstein ’73 P’04 Todd K. Abraham ’76 Alan J. Hartman ’71 and Sheila Michael J. Bernert ’76 Hartman 1974 Marcia L. Hoffer ’71 P’08 Stephen B. Barlow ’74 and Sally Stacey Holston Bewkes ’76 Linda Lou Borges-DuBois ’76 Marc L. Jacobs ’71 L. Barlow and Ethan E. DuBois ’76 Walter H. Kuhnen ’71 Charles S. Barrett ’74 Stephen L. Lehrer ’71 Miriam A. Bolotin ’74 and John Robert E. Colborn ’76 Jane Mackenzie Dennison ’76 Robert W. Lynch ’71 D. Fassett ’73 and Allen M. Dennison P’06 ’07 Richard J. Marshall ’71 P’10 Carol Norris Brown ’74 and Daniel S. Harrop ’76 MD’79 Cyrus L. Miller ’71 Carlton Q. Brown ’74 Roberta Haynes de Regt ’76 Ernest D. Moritz ’71 Sarah Bryant Capobianco ’74 MD’79 and Mark A. de Regt ’74 Everett M. Schenk Jr. ’71 P’07 Libby Hirsh Heimark ’76 and Carol Robinson Schepp ’71 and James D. Dawson ’74 Craig F. Heimark ’76 P’11 Louis J. Schepp ’71 ScM’74 Mark A. de Regt ’74 and Charisse Stauffer Hiigel ’76 Martin E. Staehlin ’71 and Roberta Haynes de Regt ’76 Robert C. Lang ’76 Rebecca Keyte Staehlin ’73 MD’79 Kristin R. Lasagna ’76 and E. Paul Sorensen ’71 ScM’75 J. Richard Gamble ’74 Dominic D. Starsia ’74 PhD’77 and Joan Wernig Mark J. Gittler ’74 Nancy E. Leopold ’76 and JefSorensen ’72 P’06 ’06 John F. Hirsch ’74 and Susan frey A. Wagner ’73 P’12 David R. Williams III ’71 R. Hirsch Neal M. Lerer ’76 Steven P. Kalter ’74 Charles N. Macfarlane ’76 and 1972 Marshall K. Luther ’74 and Christiana Geffen Macfarlane R. Anthony Allison ’72 Laurie S. Luther Arnold L. Berman ’72 Wendy Ternes Malgieri ’74 and ’78 P’10 Stephen J. Meister ’76 Gene L. Colice ’72 P’99 James A. Malgieri ’74 ScM’75 Anna Bobiak Nagurney ’76 Arthur R. Dresdale ’72 P’10
Brown Bear Magazine
35
loyal bears ScM’80 PhD’83 and Ladimer S. Nagurney ScM’74 PhD’86 Nancy Fuld Neff ’76 and Daniel A. Neff ’74 P’06 ’14 Fritz D. Pollard III ’76 Michelle A. Proulx ’76 and Charles T. Connell ’75 Steven Ralbovsky ’76 Steven C. Ramsey ’76 Stephen J. Rinkus ’76 Thomas E. Rothman ’76 and Jessica Harper Rothman P’11 ’13 Arthur C. Schoeller ’76 Paul A. Sheehy ’76 Pamela K. Silverman ’76 and Mark W. Whalen ’76 P’07 Richard J. Starzak ’76 Steven M. Swidler AM’76 PhD’81 Benjamin H. Thompson IV ’76 Robert J. Tracy ’76
Edward R. Goracy ’78 P’06 ’09 ScMIMEE’10 Habib Y. Gorgi ’78 and Susan C. Gorgi James R. Love ’78 P’08 Christiana Geffen Macfarlane ’78 and Charles N. Macfarlane ’76 P’10 Seth J. Morris ’78 Michael R. Offit ’78 Thomas J. Peirce ’78 Nathaniel D. Philbrick ’78 and Melissa Douthart Philbrick ’79 P’08 Laurie A. Raymond ’78 Kathryn M. Reith ’78 Roosevelt Robinson III ’78 Marjorie Sachs ’78 and Daniel Miller ’78 P’11 Catherine Spicer Tolliver ’78 Thomas R. Turnbull II ’78
1977 James J. Aguiar ’77 Paul D. Appolonia ’77 Ellen Nickerson Bernard ’77 and Edward C. Bernard ’77 P’06 Stuart A. Billings ’77 Susan Bowker Clarendon ’77 and Richard P. Clarendon ’78 P’06 Raymond S. Broadhead ScM’77 P’98 ’03 Miriam Curtis Coleman ’77 and Dennis M. Coleman ’75 Judith Pollard Danforth ’77 and Murray S. Danforth III ’77 P’06 Genine Macks Fidler ’77 and Josh E. Fidler ’77 P’04 ’12 Lynn Dawley Forsell ’77 Susan Pilch Friedman ’77 and Richard A. Friedman ’79 P’08 Lynda A. Ingham ’77 Jeffrey P. Jacobs ’77 Paula E. Maguire ’77 Gerald L. Massa ’77 Robert S. Miller ’77 P’04 Ellen B. Miller-Sonet ’77 Betts Howes Murray ’77 Deborah A. Neimeth ’77 and George S. Barrett ’77 P’06 George G. Pennacchi ’77 Stephen J. Pomeranz ’77 and Penny K. Pomeranz Cynthia Mock Reusché ’77 James R. Reynolds II ’77 Robert A. Rich ’77 William E. Roman ’77 Susan Greenhaus Silverman ’77 and Joseph H. Silverman ’77 P’03 ScM’05 ’06 ’10 Gail Wynne ’77
1979 Jeanne B. Cushman ’79 Raymond Entwistle ’79 MD’86 and Lori Pride Entwistle ’82 Richard A. Friedman ’79 and Susan Pilch Friedman ’77 P’08 Laurence D. Goldstein ’79 Neil M. Goodman ’79 Ellen F. Hartwell ’80 and William L. Blais ’79 Charles L. MacCabe ’79 John H. Meister ’79 David B. Peters ’79 Melissa Douthart Philbrick ’79 and Nathaniel D. Philbrick ’78 P’08
1978 Jay J. Abraham ’78 Jeanne E. Adams ’78 and Levi C. Adams Paula Condaxis Angell ’78 and Robert A. Angell ’78 Richard J. Bauerfeld ’78 Thomas E. Binet ’78 John V. Boulton ’78 and Laura B. Boulton Lucia A. Burke ’78 Richard P. Clarendon ’78 and Susan Bowker Clarendon ’77 P’06 Louis D. Cole ’78 MD’82 Elizabeth B. Davis ’78 David W. Field ’78 Nancy Brisson Goracy ’78 and
Robert P. Kindler ’81 Brian R. Leach ’81 Angelo C. LoBosco ’81 and Laura M. Bello David S. Loeb ’81 Adam E. Loory ’82 and Jenni M. Rodda AM’81 Charles P. Meister ’81 Patricia Lahan Parker AM’81 and Fred A. Parker ’63 John N. Prassas ’81 Jennifer Clayson Rapp ’81 and Kent M. Rapp ’80 P’12 Jenni M. Rodda AM’81 and Adam E. Loory ’82 Jeffrey G. Schneider ’81 Eric A. Schubert ’81 and Dawn W. Schubert Susan L. Schwartz ’81 Martin S. Silverman ’81 and Pamela Carlsten Silverman P’12 Frances Y. Wu ’81 MD’84 and Grant J. Price MD’82 P’13
1982 Donna Kishi Abbott ’82 Geoffrey A. Curtis ’82 Yul D. Ejnes ’82 MD’85 and Anne Edwards Ejnes ’83 Lori Pride Entwistle ’82 and Raymond Entwistle ’79 MD’86 Leila Saidenberg Furman ’82 Yvonne P. Goldsberry ’82 Timothy R. Hearn ’82 Kimberly Kee Hollister ’82 Amanda Hopkins Tirrell FACHE ’82 Robert S. Jolson ’82 and Julia E. Roth Jolson ’83 1980 Steven R. Jordan ’82 Fred H. Barrows IV ’80 Dante J. Lancellotti ’82 Peter M. Benjamin ’80 Adam E. Loory ’82 and Jenni William L. Blais ’79 and Ellen F. M. Rodda AM’81 Hartwell ’80 Phoebe Manzella Murphy ’82 David N. Duke ’80 and John F. Murphy P’11 Suzanne G. Frisch ’80 Grant J. Price MD’82 and FranMark A. Gould Jr. ’80 ces Y. Wu ’81 MD’84 P’13 Efraim Grinberg ’80 P’12 Nina Bogosian Quigley ’82 and Mary Drakeley Heath ’80 Matthew W. Quigley ’80 Jay P. Hickey ’80 Lisa Casanova Rento ’82 MD’86 Susan B. Howitt ’80 and Nigel and Richard G. Rento II ’82 J. Foster ’81 MD’86 Howard S. Klein ’80 Hope Mead Wynn ’82 Renee Hankins McNulty ’80 David A. O’Brien ’80 1983 Matthew W. Quigley ’80 and Jeffrey W. Bantly ’83 Nina Bogosian Quigley ’82 Francis A. Brooks III ’83 Kent M. Rapp ’80 and Jennifer Patrick A. Dillon ’83 Clayson Rapp ’81 P’12 Philip J. Donnellan ’83 Mara H. Rogers ’80 Anne Edwards Ejnes ’83 and Stephanie Sanders Sullivan ’80 Yul D. Ejnes ’82 MD’85 and John H. Sullivan Lisa Heavey Evans ’83 ScM’85 William M. Waggaman ’80 and Peter T. Evans ’83 P’10 P’11 Patrick T. Weir ’80 Carolyn Ross Francisco ’83 Katharine F. Wellman ’80 ScM’85 Sarah Herndon Glaser ’83 1981 Joan MacLeod Heminway ’83 Michael F. Audie ’81 and Merrit A. Heminway ’83 Elizabeth A. Burlingame ’81 Julia E. Roth Jolson ’83 and Kevin K. Callahan ’81 Robert S. Jolson ’82 Annesley Williamson Copeland Katharine B. Lanou ’83 ’81 Craig J. Linden ’83 and Asami Stephen L. Curtin ’81 and Tracy Ishimaru S. Curtin Frederick W. Reinhardt III ’83 Stephen J. DiCarlo ’81 Carmen Garcia Rodriguez ’83 Nigel J. Foster ’81 and Susan B. and Carlos A. Rodriguez P’14 Howitt ’80 Peter E. Ruhlin ’83 Ronald E. Gutfleish ’81 William H. Scott ’83 Jeffrey L. Hacker ’81 David Speer ’83 Joseph S. Harris ’81 Timothy P. Stevens ’83 Marion T. Kasaian ’81 Kent M. Swig ’83 P’13
Brown University Sports Foundation
Luiz F. Valente PhD’83 Peter M. Voss ’83 1984 Susan Woodring Ahrens ’84 Curtis L. Alexander Jr. ’84 Gerald W. Brady Jr. ’84 Michael Cappello ’84 Catherine Carolan Daniel ’84 and John C. Daniel ’84 Brian M. Driscoll ’84 Torrey N. Foster Jr. ’84 Deborah L. Fuhrman ’84 Michael J. Gibbons ’84 Adam P. Godfrey ’84 Thomas M. Heckard ’84 J. Garth Klimchuk ’84 Robert M. Mangiacotti ’84 Paul F. McCarthy ’84 and Alexis Egan McCarthy ’85 Paula Murray McNamara ’84 and Kevin J. McNamara Neal P. Monagle ’84 Laura L. Oot-Sheridan ’84 Scott F. Schultz ’84 Cameron J. Sears ’84 A. Jonathan Speed ’84 Michael J. Sweeney ’84 Margaret J. Tormey ’84 Jonathan C. Wilk ’84 1985 Teresa M. Abrahamsohn ’85 Sheilia Terranova Beattie ’85 John E. Blank ’85 Emily Low Boenning ’85 Carolyn Sugar Bohmiller ’85 Elizabeth Epstein Brenner ’85 Susan Comolli Davis ’85 Erik P. Farrar ’85 and Hannelore B. Rodriguez-Farrar ’87 AM’90 PhD’09 John E. Gagliano ’85 Leonardo C. Goulandris ’85 Debra Glazerman Grossbaum ’85 Amy Petruzzelli Hale ’85 and Clark R. Hale ’85 Greg W. Hausler ’85 Thomas M. Love ’85 Michael E. Marrus ’85 John Matzko ’85 Ian A. Mc Donald ’85 Michael R. McAleer ’85 Alexis Egan McCarthy ’85 and Paul F. McCarthy ’84 Lisa Benenson Quattrocchi ’85 Mary Duffy Safian ’85 and L. Robert Safian ’85 Paul J. Salem ’85 Darcy Honig Simon ’85 Lisa R. Smith ’85 Jeffrey A. Turi ’85 Scott R. Whittemore ’85 1986 John W. Bliss ’86 Mary Starkweather Bushman ’86 Lisa M. Caputo Morris ’86 David L. Chaiken ’86 Thomas J. Cole Jr. ’86 Elizabeth Wood Gagnon ’86 and Thomas A. Gagnon ’86 Christopher J. Good ’86 Scott C. Heckman ’86 Christian Ingerslev ’86 John M. Ireland III ’86 ScM’87 Stephen J. Kettelberger ’86 Rebecca Hale Malone ’86 Amy McCoy Mastin ’86
Elizabeth A. McLarney ’86 Susan Clark Randaccio ’86 and Alan R. Randaccio ’86 Ann Dowgin Reilly ’86 and Joseph G. Reilly ’87 Stephen J. Saali ’86 Catherine Beermann Sullivan ’86 MD’89 and Raymond J. Sullivan ’86 Scott M. Sullivan ’86 and Jill Goldsmith Sullivan ’89 Patrick G. Turchick ’86 Michael G. Waitkus ’86 Mara Spaulder White ’86 Jose R. Zorola ’86 1987 David J. Andreychuk ’87 Pamela S. Bol Riess ’87 Barbara M. Calhoun ’87 Catherine Cockrum Dean ’87 Eric N. Dobson ’87 Thomas S. Dugan ’87 Nancy P. Dynan ’87 Christopher F. Esemplare ’87 Ellen D. Field ’87 Charles B. Fischman ’87 Bruce D. Gardner ’87 Jarl Ginsberg ’87 E. Anderson Griswold ’87 William B. Hayes ’87 Edward W. Hu ’87 Michael W. Joukowsky ’87 and Jane S. Joukowsky Jaime L. Kline ’87 Kathryn J. Kostic ’87 William R. Kraus ’87 Anne Siegenthaler Loucks ’87 James P. Mackey IV ’87 Harry M. Matternas ’87 Margaret S. McCreery ’87 John P. McDermott ’87 Kelly A. McGarry ’87 Cormac D. Molloy ’87 Kristen Simmons Murray ’87 and Todd A. Murray ’87 Reed E. Overby ’87 Sue Porter ’87 Colleen Mc Guire Reed ’87 and Ronald P. Reed ’87 Joseph G. Reilly ’87 and Ann Dowgin Reilly ’86 Hannelore B. Rodriguez-Farrar ’87 AM’90 PhD’09 and Erik P. Farrar ’85 Miriam D. Rosenthal ’87 Lauren Becker Rubin ’87 Tracy Goldstein Shemano ’87 Scott E. Stevens ’87 Eileen Cates Stone ’87 David M. Tingue ’87 Jeffrey M. Toussaint ’87 1988 G. Lee Anderson ’88 James E. Anderson ’88 and Karen Urbaniak Anderson Michel Bayard ’88 Kazimir W. Bilinski ’88 and Bridget L. Bilinski David E. Brown ’88 Bernard V. Buonanno III ’88 Laurel Reed Caputo ’88 and A. Richard Caputo Jr. ’88 John A. Caragliano ’88 Kristine Carlsten Salvo ’88 MD’91 and Kirk A. Salvo ’89 Charles C. Chester ’88 Erika C. Collins ’88 Andrew J. Coon ’88 Aurelie M. Cornil Foucaut ’88
J. Ari Day ’88 Louise M. Gillis ’88 William H. Goodman ’88 Robert F. Hill Jr. ’88 Frances Fogelman Hyde ’88 Samuel L. Iserson ’88 William A. McComas ’88 Michael S. McGarry ’88 Matthew H. Parker ’88 Laura Loewen Patton ’88 and Edward B. Patton ’88 George J. Pfeffer ’88 Jon D. Pliner ’88 and Emma Pliner Maria E. Rabb ’88 Nicholas R. Rhind ’88 Dana I. Rogers and Gregory T. Rogers ’88 James R. Simone ’88 Sue Cutler Turner ’88 Lauren E. Westreich ’88 Phoebe A. Wilkinson ’88 Mike E. Wittenburg ’88 Tyler J. Wolfram ’88 1989 Jonathan F. Bastian ’89 Rex S. Chiu ’89 MD’94 James R. Dayton ’89 Victoria Spooner Dunn ’89 Bob Ernst ’89 Daniel T. Finn ’89 and Elana Rone Finn ’90 Joseph C. Flynn ’89 Katharine Ward Fontaine ’89 Jennifer A. Gross ’89 Amy Litman Guiot ’89 and Bruce A. Guiot ’90 Robert J. Hardy Jr. ’89 Stephanie Ip Hunter ’80 and Timothy J. Hunter MD’89 P’12 Eric W. Kimble ’89 Mark W. LaChance ’89 Lance Minor ’89 Edward C. Muelhaupt III ’89 Matthew M. Nalbandian ’89 Amanda Lehrer Nash ’89 and Lewis R. Nash ’89 Ann M. Leonard ’89 MAT’93 M. Kathleen O’Halloran ’89 Kathleen Coskren Parks ’89 Kirk A. Salvo ’89 and Kristine Carlsten Salvo ’88 MD’91 Curt Sigfstead ’89 and Lara K. Witter ’92 Catherine M. Spath ’89 and Katherine A. Kruckemeyer ’90 MAT’91 Jill Goldsmith Sullivan ’89 and Scott M. Sullivan ’86 Cayley M. Torgeson ’89 Kurt C. Wulfekuhler ’89 1990 Jennifer Ord Bonadio ’90 Sean O. Bosack ’90 and Carole Bosack David C. Bosch ’90 Carter L. Brown ’90 Caroline Gallagher Bruno ’90 and David W. Bruno ’90 Michael C. Buchanan ’90 Sebastian M. Cianci ’90 Lynn A. DeNucci ’90 Elana Rone Finn ’90 and Daniel T. Finn ’89 Kathryn Quadracci Flores ’90 John R. Gassenheimer ’90 Ned Gibbons ’90 Andrew D. Gramley ’90 Bruce A. Guiot ’90 and Amy
loyal bears Litman Guiot ’89 Steve Harrison ’90 Leigh R. Hochberg ’90 Torri Connell Horovitz ’90 Bruce R. Keeler ’90 Kathy Silva Kichula ’90 and John R. Kichula ’91 Katherine A. Kruckemeyer ’90 MAT’91 and Catherine M. Spath ’89 John J. Loveless ’90 Christopher J. Mancuso ’90 Peter J. Manias ’90 James F. Moore ’90 Bernard M. Muir ’90 Whitney C. Robbins ’90 Alexandre M. Santos ’90 Sara Leppo Savage ’90 and Robert F. Savage Jr. ’90 Dominic S. Spaethling ’90 Jeanine Gill Strawderman ’90 Laura J. Sullivan ’90 Ronald J. Tache ’90 Aaron J. Velli ’90
and Joseph A. DiMiceli ’92 Wesley D. Dupont ’92 Jeffrey S. Feingold ’92 Randall W. Gourley ’92 Katherine S. Greenberg ’92 William G. Hamilton ’92 and Susan Hamilton Brett M. Johnson ’92 Eugene J. Keohane ’92 Nathan Kovalchick ’92 Richard R. Lloyd ’92 Erich P. Mauff ’92 Kristen Tomec May ’92 James F. Remington ’92 and Laura Gardner Remington ’94 John H. Robison ’92 Jocelyn A. Segall ’92 Bradley C. Sidwell ’92 and Eileen J. Rocchio ’93 David F. Smail Jr. ’92 Stephen J. Thoma ’92 Todd P. Vandam ’92 Lara K. Witter ’92 and Curt Sigfstead ’89 Michael R. Zani ’92
Gregory D. Reidy ’94 Laura Gardner Remington ’94 and James F. Remington ’92 James C. Stanzler ’94 Hallie K. Ziesmer ’94
Kathleen Killoran Milewski ’96 and Michael R. Milewski ’96 Constantinos E. Panagos ’96 Joshua C. Patt ’96 Eric H. Sillman ’96 and Rebecca J. Locke Shane A. Shapiro ’96 Chris U. Tachiki ’96 Iman M. Tyson ’96 ScM’97
Jodi J. Johnson ’99 Sharad Kohli ’99 and Subha Ghosh-Kohli ’01 Ashley Russell Krasinski ’99 and Paul E. Krasinski ’98 Jonathan N. Mekinda ’99 Sean J. Morey ’99 and Cara Gardner Morey ’01 G. David Poznik ’99 Benjamin S. Reardon ’99 Decker B. Rolph ’99 Michael J. Thoyer ’99 Michael P. Wall ’99 and Minette M. Loula ’00 Joseph R. Wetzel ’99 Christine L. Wilt ’99 and Devan K. Ganeshananthan ’99
Mary Kate Austin ’02 Andrew W. Baird ’02 and Sarah Broadhead Baird ’03 Amanda Forte Barash ’02 Robin Bettarel ’02 Elizabeth Quadros Betten ’02 and Donald W. Betten ’02 1995 Martha E. Blake ’02 Emily S. Benson ’95 Vanessa W. Chandis ’02 Igor Boraska ’95 Virginia Nuckols Chiarello ’02 David K. Bowsher ’95 Henry A. Clark IV ’02 Reid F. Brackin ’95 1997 Deborah Yoon Colley ’02 and Bridget O’Connor Burkhardt Lindsay K. Amsberry ’97 Sebastian R. Colley ’02 ’95 Paul J. Choquette III ’97 and Kevin B. Connolly Jr. ’02 Sean P. Cahill ’95 Alana K. Bozelko ’96 Danielle Schwartz Craighead Charles A. Cianfrani Jr. ’95 Porter Collins ’97 ’02 and Michael Craighead ScM’96 and Susan Jankovsky Joshua D. Crosby ’97 Tamara Chestna Danison ’02 Cianfrani ’96 ScM’97 Kathryn King Crowley ’97 Mark A. Ferguson ’02 Bradley G. Critchell ’95 Jeffrey D. Ellenbogen ’97 Peter R. Feroe ’02 Denise M. Desjardins ’95 Brett M. Frood ’97 and Robin 2000 Stephen S. Francis ’02 Nicolas R. Gentin ’95 B. Frood Anda M. Adams ’00 Drew A. Freilich ’02 Elizabeth A. Gilliland ’95 Jessica Hatfield Guaragna ’97 Kristen Verdicchio Calabrese Michael G. Isaac ’95 Michelle Kupka Keyes ’97 and ’00 and Peter W. Calabrese ’00 Benjamin L. Gould ’02 Predrag S. Jovanovic ’95 Michael F. Keyes ’95 Stephanie Nichols-Smith Cole- David Grossman ’02 George K. Kaufman ’02 ScM’02 Joel S. Kent ’95 Sophia Coquillette Koven ’97 man ’00 Kimberly M. Lanzire ’02 Michael F. Keyes ’95 and and James W. Koven ’95 Samanttabhiram W. Das ’00 Lauren F. LaRochelle ’02 1991 Michelle Kupka Keyes ’97 Susan Hsia Lew ’97 and Canyon Michael G. Flood ’00 Alexander Lew ’02 Christian H. Albert ’91 1993 James W. Koven ’95 and Sophia J. Lew ’97 Cristina C. Gigon ’00 Sarah M. Markowitz ’02 Jonathan B. Ashman ’91 Tori L. Breithaupt ’93 Coquillette Koven ’97 James S. Moody ’97 Caroline G. Grogan ’00 Suzanne L. Bailey ’91 Manish J. Butte ’93 MMSc’94 Lorraine Gardinier Liebenberg Jessica Gonzalez Ortiz ’02 and Kristen Michalopoulos Haddon Heather J. McCrea ’02 Jamie Olson McKee ’02 and Malcolm P. Baker ’91 and MD’96 ’95 Hector A. Ortiz ’97 ’00 and Benjamin Haddon Derek L. McKee ’02 Christina Wood Baker ’92 Paul J. DiGiacomo ’93 and Jonathan L. Manders ’95 Michael J. Robertson ’97 James P. Harris ’00 ScM’01 Meredith Nelson Mormile ’02 Pamela D. Bass ’91 Cassie Whittet DiGiacomo ’94 Mia Dammen Mihopoulos ’95 Matthew J. Sitter ’97 Douglas M. Humphrey ’00 and Richard C. Mormile ’02 Sharon L. Besser ’91 Jason A. DiLullo ’93 Ludlow C. Miller ’95 and Katy Derek S. Snyder ’97 ScM’06 Douglas J. Kezirian ’00 Carl F. Olson ’02 Eric D. Bommer ’91 Sepp Dobler ’93 B. Miller Patrick J. Walsh ’97 Margaret C. Kosmala ’00 and Hector A. Ortiz ’97 and Jessica Ronald J. Dalgliesh ’91 Eli D. Friedman ’93 Alison A. Pease ’95 Sally C. Washburn ’97 Benjamin F. Hardt ’99 Gonzalez Ortiz ’02 Brian T. Day ’91 and Michelle Holly R. Hagens ’93 Stuart M. Perry ’95 Minette M. Loula ’00 and Hyun-Joo Park ’02 Miller Day ’92 Mark C. Hardy ’93 Rae Ann E. Darling Reed ’95 1998 Michael P. Wall ’99 Rachel E. Pepper ’02 Abigail Marr Doft ’91 AM’92 Susan E. Heffernan ’93 Molly Driscoll Santry ’95 Eric B. Allen ’98 Liane M. Malcos ’00 Elizabeth M. McKinney ’02 and Melissa Walton English ’91 Andrew R. Hull ’93 and Joshua S. Spector ’95 and David J. Blackburn ’98 Josh S. Marinelli ’00 Moses K. Rifkin ’01 Michael T. Geroux ’91 Veronica Hull Elizabeth J. Shaffer ’98 Brian Forsythe ’98 and Elaheh James M. Perkins ’00 A. Peter Morello III ’02 PhD’08 William S. Herrick ’91 Melanie Bartol Jones ’93 Mandy Lee Tachiki ’95 Sluder Forsythe ’04 Jeremy B. Sinaikin ’00 and Dorian Wu Morello ’03 Gordon S. Jones ’91 Aleks A. Kins ’93 Mark A. Tracy ’95 Lauren Berkeley Freer ’98 and William A. Walker ’00 Alisa Ruttenberg Kagan ’91 Oliver A. Marti ’93 Robert G. Warden ’95 E. Peter Freer ’98 Louise K. Francois Watkins ’00 David M. Rothschild ’02 Rebecca E. Sadun ’02 John R. Kichula ’91 and Kathy Sarah Neumann McGowan ’93 Roberta Forbes Warren ’95 and Christine Fuqua Gay ’98 and Adam F. Watkins ’00 Matthew J. Salzler ’02 and Erika Silva Kichula ’90 Andrew R. Misener ’93 Michael J. Warren ’95 Jonathan S. Gherardini ’98 Eric C. Webber ’00 L. Faires ’04 Steven A. King ’91 Robert H. Monnes ’93 Brian G. Warshawsky ’95 Jeffrey D. Holowaty ’98 Duncan G. Welstead ’00 Jason S. Sobel ’02 ScM’03 Sarah Lamont Kocmond ’91 Eileen J. Rocchio ’93 and BradJanice S. Kim ’98 Sarah E. Squire ’02 MD’06 and Jonathan H. Kocmond ’91 ley C. Sidwell ’92 1996 Paul E. Krasinski ’98 and Ashley 2001 Richard P. Sutherland ’02 and Daniel A. Levine ’91 Frank T. Schettino Jr. ’93 Derek Z. Aframe ’96 Russell Krasinski ’99 Elissa M. Aminoff ’01 Eliene O. Sutherland Kevin F. McCarthy ’91 Joseph C. Shanahan ’93 Wendi Richmond Agre ’96 Michael S. Mancuso ’98 Molly C. Breyfogle ’01 Kerry E. Verrone ’02 and John Pamela DiDonato O’Sullivan ’91 Kevin D. Spinner ’93 Elizabeth N. Alt ’96 John H. McKlveen III ’98 Matthew L. Bycer ’01 Jacobs ’02 Richard R. Patton ’91 Sarah Perham Vidal ’93 Jonathan C. Berg ’96 Christoph R. Meier ’98 Alexander M. Cynamon ’01 Kyle A. Weisbrod ’02 and Sara Michael S. Robinson ’91 Peter J. Worth Jr. ’93 Morgen J. Bernius ’96 Daniel H. Olstein ’98 David A. Earl ’01 Gravelin Christopher L. Scalia ’91 Jeffrey J. Bloomquist ’96 and Ginger Dewing Saariaho ’98 Patricia W. Farley ’01 and Chanley M. Small ’91 and 1994 Mileidis Gort ’94 Christopher A. Sailer ’98 David J. Farley ’64 2003 Michael J. Gannon ’91 Joseph Y. Allen ’94 Alana K. Bozelko ’96 and Paul J. Andrew A. Schwartz ’98 Alexander J. Feltham ’01 Marisa Ihara Amory ’03 Teri L. Smith ’91 Melisa W. Lai Becker ’94 MD’99 Choquette III ’97 Elizabeth J. Shaffer ’98 and Susana Garcia ’01 Kimberly Fogarty Arth ’03 Angelina M. Vieira ’91 Angelique G. Brunner ’94 Roslyn P. Clarke ’96 Joshua S. Spector ’95 Subha Ghosh-Kohli ’01 and Selom H. Azuma ’03 Anne Downes Whelan ’91 and Kiza J. Brunner ’94 Elizabeth T. Crone ’96 Liz Turner Suscha ’98 Sharad Kohli ’99 Robert F. Whelan ’91 Cassie Whittet DiGiacomo ’94 Edward J. Culotta ’96 Jonathan Taqqu ’98 Elisabeth Cozzens Guthrie ’01 Sarah Broadhead Baird ’03 and Andrew W. Baird ’02 Duncan B. Wilkinson ’91 and Paul J. DiGiacomo ’93 Jason C. Dummert ’96 James J. Vetelino ’98 Katherine C. Hughes ’01 Brendan J. Baran ’03 Monique Kapitulik Wolanin ’91 Jennifer Shaw Finch ’94 and Suzanne K. Fisher-Fox ’96 and Hans Fredrik W. Wittusen ’98 James H. Johnson ’01 Anne E. Barylick ’03 Mara M. Yale ’91 Geoffrey C. Finch ’94 Christopher K. Fox ’96 Scott L. Kellman ’01 William J. Behuniak ’03 William A. Fisher ’94 Natasha P. Flora ’96 and Mat1999 Laurel Ried Langworthy ’01 Frances M. Betancourt ’03 1992 Clare Davidson Flynn ’94 and thew B. Shoom-Kirsch ’96 Scott K. Banerjee ’99 Joan Doran Licata ’01 Bradley J. Bowery ’03 Jonathan D. Abbey ’92 Timothy J. Flynn ’94 Theodore J. Foster ’96 Bethany A. Boisvert ’99 Patricia M. Long ’01 Joel E. Breakstone ’03 Christina Wood Baker ’92 and Scott J. Friedman ’94 and Dawn William H. Friedman ’96 Justin Brown ’99 Amy F. Mendel ’01 Elizabeth Roach Breidinger ’03 Malcolm P. Baker ’91 Pieper Evan A. Fromberg ’96 Emily Brennan Chase ’99 and Cara Gardner Morey ’01 and Sarah Gordon Carroll ’03 Sara Hennessey Berney ’92 Mikhail Glezin ’94 Neil A. Fromer ’96 Lowell J. Chase ’99 Sean J. Morey ’99 Sarah Keil Chernoff ’03 Stephanie Bratiotis ’92 Mileidis Gort ’94 and Jeffrey J. Daniel C. Grace ’96 and RaPeter D. DeYoung ’99 Scott G. Powers ’01 Brian Byrne ’92 Bloomquist ’96 chael A. Fox ’99 MD’03 Kira Kania-Lloyd Dickson ’99 Moses K. Rifkin ’01 and Eliza- Julie Petralia Derderian ’03 Ryan P. Devlin ’03 and ElizaThomas H. Condon ’92 Tara L. Harrington ’94 Kevin T. Hites ’96 and Strider L. Dickson ’99 beth M. McKinney ’02 beth L. Buza ’04 Jim Dand ’92 Scott C. Hensel Jr. ’94 Alisa Newman Hood ’96 and Michael A. Dixon ’99 Francesca G. Romano ’01 James J. Dominick ’03 Michelle Miller Day ’92 and Peter Kahn ’94 Ludovic Hood ’96 Herbert E. Eilberg ’99 and Cary Jeramy Bellwin Savage ’01 Christopher M. Drake ’03 Brian T. Day ’91 Jody Buckley Keating ’94 Scott N. Humber ’96 Vaughan James S. Sinai ’01 Jesse D. Funaro ’03 ScM’05 Cynthia A. DeRosa ’92 John H. Keenan ’94 Mark R. Jaffe ’96 Rachael A. Fox ’99 MD’03 and Ellie Blake Sullivan ’01 and Chelsea R. Hamilton ’03 Matthew T. DeSutter ’92 and Rahsan-Rahsan D. Lindsay ’94 Susan Jankovsky Cianfrani Daniel C. Grace ’96 Christopher M. Sullivan ’01 Benjamin P. Hernandez-Stern Donna Paglia Melissa T. Mattiace ’94 ’96 ScM’97 and Charles A. Benjamin F. Hardt ’99 and Michaella Rooney Tucker ’01 ’03 Malitta V. Engstrom ’92 and Sarah Paul O’Toole ’94 Cianfrani Jr. ’95 ScM’96 Margaret C. Kosmala ’00 Nathan S. Hughes ’03 David Dickson Nils H. Pohlmann ’94 Eric C. Lu ’96 Anna Susman Johnson ’99 2002 Earl E. Hunt II ’03 Emily Sikorovsky DiMiceli ’92 Tara G. Schulz-Reidy ’94 and Sandra D. Milberg ’96 MAT’00 Uwadiae J. Airhiavbere ’02
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loyal bears Matthew D. Ivester ’03 Kathryne Tone Jennings ’03 Robin T. Juliano ’03 Colleen Kanara Kempf ’03 Michael J. Kreidman ’03 Sarah Staveley-O’Carroll Matthews ’03 and Michael K. Matthews ’05 Kristen Accordino McMahon ’03 Alexander R. Mehran Jr. ’03 Joanna Grossman Miller ’03 Dorian Wu Morello ’03 and A. Peter Morello III ’02 PhD’08 Alysson A. Oakley ’03 Robert Parisien ’03 Jamie L. Shapiro ’03 Brooke E. Stevens ’03 Ashley R. Wallace ’03 Jillian Filipek Welch ’03 Julie E. Williams ’03 Matthew T. Winkler ’03
Michelle L. Roach ’05 Lauren B. Rogoff ’05 Julie I. Stein ’05 Christopher J. Swon ’05 Kirk J. Teatom ’05 Jabari-Jason Tyson-Phipps ’05 Paul J. Vandenberg ’05 Megan A. Wachs ’05 Deborah E. Witzburg ’05 and Jacob A. Beidler ’05 Edward A. Young ’05
2006 Laura B. Almeida ’06 Ariana T. Arcenas ’06 Lindsay M. Boris ’06 Bridgette Cahill ’06 Shawn P. Cully ’06 Merebea M. Danforth ’06 Deborah H. Dryer ’06 Rachel A. Fleitell ’06 Craig K. Fountain ’06 Elizabeth M. Fritz ’06 2004 Alexis H. Gilbard ’06 Liza M. Aguiar ’04 MD’08 Sean M. Gosselin ’06 Katherine A. Ahmann ’04 Elizabeth G. Greenberg ’06 Ashley M. Branca ’04 Debra H. Greenspan ’06 Sophia F. Branson Gill ’04 Eugene R. Hamlin Jr. ’06 Severine M. Brustlein ’04 Gregory T. Harm ’06 Katharine Tremaine Buchanan Alexandra Will Hedberg ’06 ’04 and William G. Hedberg ’06 Elizabeth L. Buza ’04 and Ryan Reid L. Hopkins ’06 P. Devlin ’03 Mallory A. Kass ’06 Christina A. Cambruzzi ’04 Jessica A. Larson ’06 Molly C. Carleton ’04 Joanna V. MacLean ’06 MD’10 Nicolas A. Ciarcia ’04 and Simon J. Salgado ’07 Michael E. Decoste ’04 Mira A. Mehta ’06 Erika L. Faires ’04 and Matthew Jeremy W. Moore ’06 J. Salzler ’02 Katharine W. Reynolds ’06 Jayne D. Finst ’04 Mary J. Seid ’06 Elaheh Sluder Forsythe ’04 and Ruth B. Schneider ’06 and Brian Forsythe ’98 Adrian R. Martin ’06 Kristofer R. Goddard ’04 Tatyana K. TsangarakisBrent J. Grinna ’04 Almeida ’06 Susan M. Kwiatkowski ’04 Kristen L. Vincent ’06 Dan M. Le ’04 Lauren E. McGeoch ’04 2007 Deirdre A. Negrini ’04 MAT’06 R. Evan Barbosa ’07 Toni A. Pullman ’04 Stephen P. Bernardi ’07 Hayley A. Sennott ’04 Evelyn E. Brosi ’07 AM’08 Stephen J. Silhan ’04 Chandler E. Clarke ’07 Eric L. Sumberg ’04 Meredith S. Cocco ’07 Gina Verge Susi ’04 Rachel S. Dearborn ’07 Shirley Wu ’04 Michael P. DiBartolo ’07 Konstandina E. Zorzos ’04 and Joseph D. Donahue ’07 Pascal Denis ’04 Tracy P. Dungo ’07 Gwen W. Elwood ’07 and 2005 Benjamin M. Saper ’07 Phoebe H. Anderson ’05 Stacy L. Gugliotta ’07 Kurt P. Bazarewski ’05 Alexandra C. Hammer ’07 Alexander K. Bowman ’05 Patrick R. Haynes III ’07 Michael G. Buff ’05 David M. Healy ’07 William Burroughs ’05 Elizabeth A. Fison ’07 and Andrea E. Conrad ’05 Benjamin D. Hudson ’07 Alexis K. Crow ’05 Daniel M. Mahoney ’07 Anne B. Davidson ’05 Jill E. Mansfield ’07 Shauna E. Edson ’05 Lindsay A. McKenna ’07 Vinay K. Ganti ’05 Olivia A. Partyka ’07 Katie J. Guay ’05 John A. Ploeg ’07 Jonathan W. Hastings ’05 Daniella R. Priebatsch ’07 Brian J. Hulse ’05 Patrick M. Ryan ’07 Fara N. Kitton ’05 Simon J. Salgado ’07 and JoTerence R. Kooyker ’05 anna V. MacLean ’06 MD’10 Michael J. Krawczynski ’05 Samuel D. Searle ’07 Kristin Loening MacArthur ’05 Ryan A. Shewcraft ’07 and Daniel H. MacArthur ’05 Stephen Ting ’07 Michael K. Matthews ’05 and Kathleen M. Waddell ’07 Sarah Staveley-O’Carroll Mat- Devorah J. West ’07 thews ’03 Sarah Passano Meech ’05 and 2008 Michael R. Meech ’05 David J. Robertson ’08
Brown University Sports Foundation
Parents and Grandparents Abby Adams P’08 Marie-Louise and Douglas Allen Jr. P’08 Alice and August Anneberg P’04 Lorraine and Samuel Appello P’06 Jeanne and Norman Asher P’08 Dorothy and David Bailey P’06 Eugene A. Bass P’86 ’91 Jamie and Joseph Behrendt P’08 Charlotte C. Betancourt P’98 ’03 Robin and Barry Blaxberg P’08 Margaret and A. Linn Bogle P’90 Donna and Duane Brady P’86 Pamela and F. H. Brewer III P’00 Camille and William Broadbent P’04 Margaret and Milton Brown P’94 Michele and Glen Burke P’09 Allyn and David Buzzell P’10 Patricia and John Callahan P’10 Susan and Ronald Capalbo P’03 Laura and Carmine Castellano P’02 Geraldine and Philip Ching P’82 ’83 ’89 Margaret and Nicholas Christ P’05 Ki and Kwang Chung P’06 Alice Cisek P’94 Elizabeth and Anthony Colantonio P’11 Ellen and David Conrad P’05 Elizabeth R. Cowan P’00 Holly and John Cratsley P’91 Elizabeth and Brian Crudden P’10 Patricia and Thomas Cully P’06 ’08 Sarah and Thomas Davidson P’05 Pamela Murphy and Richard D’Avino P’05 Dorrance E. Dean P’95 Debra and Alfred Deluca P’09 ’13 Donna and James Develin Sr. P’10 Ellen and Christopher di Bonaventura P’10 Rose and Gary DiBartolo P’07 Theresa and Georgi Dimitrov P’94 The late John F. Dolan P’76 ’82 GP’10 Barbara and Robert Donohue P’93 ’98 P’01 Nancy and Chris Doran P’01 Judith and Robert Dudley P’01 Suzanne and Patrick Duffy Jr. P’03 Sally and Michael Edwards P’01 ’04 ’04 Laurie Burt and Thomas Engelman P’04 Mary and Richard Engle P’11 Lenore and Frank Esemplare P’87 Barbara and J. Douglas Faires P’04 Alice and Jay Finst P’04 Jeanne and Frank Fischer P’98 Susan R. Fison P’07 Michele and Sanford Fleitell P’06 Jacquelyn and Peter Flynn P’06 Roseanne and Robert Flynn P’08 Nancy and Kevin Fountain P’06
Mary Frances and Jude Franklin P’94 Anne Brafford Fritz P’06 Raymond J. Gallogly P’97 Barbara and Ben Giliberti P’10 Mary and Clinton Gilliland P’95 Robert Glennon P’99 Mary and Ronald Greene P’08 Keith A. Greiner P’91 Diane and David Grillo P’02 Michele and Lawrence Haertel P’08 Donna and Stephen Hallberg P’08 Lauren Ginsberg Hannan P’10 Julia and William Hardt III P’99 Gail and James Harwood P’04 Pamela and Frank Hastings P’05 Elizabeth Hatfield P’86 Patricia and Wayne Hawksley P’09 Pamela and Timothy Hays P’95 Ann S. Hayward P’09 Eliza and Roger Hein P’10 Cynthia and Donald Heitzmann P’10 Nancy and Donald Hess P’08 Geri and Ron Hill P’98 Laura Hoenig P’85 P’98 Barbara and Joseph Hoffman P’09 Elizabeth and Timothy Hosea P’01 ’09 Marilyn A. Ingham P’77 Barbara and Mark Jacobs P’98 Susan E. Cozzens and Juan Jewell P’01 Priscilla S. Fitzhugh and Kenneth W. Johnson P’01 Joseph C. Kambe P’10 Esta and Eric Kawaoka P’00 MD’04 Diane C. Nordin and Thomas L. Keller P’12 Valerie Kelly P’06 ’11 Ann and Thomas Kiely P’04 Caroline and Gary Kiev P’94 Branwen Smith-King and Anselm King P’08 Daniel D. Knowlton P’10 Florence Kotowski P’89 Joyce and Frederick Krull P’84 ’89 Hillary R. Mankin-Kufe and Donald W. Kufe P’06 ’08 Theresa and Theodore Kwiatkowski P’04 Cornelia and Robert Lanou P’83 ’90 Catherine and Frederick Lavery P’96 Gene M. Levitz P’90 Sharon and Jack Lew P’97 ’02 Katherine Miller and Lester Libfraind P’11 Carol and Michael Lipman P’08 Marian and Richard Lloyd P’92 ’96 Antigone and Robert Love P’78 ’85 Melanie K. Maher P’98 Margaret L. Trebish and Richard J. Male P’09 Anne and David Manners P’10 Beverly and Dennis Mansfield P’07 Laura Mansur P’09 Joseph M. Marcus P’08 Lucille and William Markle P’02 Janet and Rodger Marticke P’06
Keith McCrae P’09 Miriam and James McCrea III P’02 Mr. and Mrs. Charles McDonald P’00 Barbara and Thomas McElligott P’04 Brenda and Byron McFadgen P’09 Eileen Mahoney and Andrew Medcalf P’09 Valerie and Michael Mellano P’10 Fran and Mark Meyers P’09 Sharon and Peter Michalopoulos P’00 Tammie and William Mock P’08 Carol and Douglas Moore P’08 Kathleen and Harry Mullery Sr. P’10 Suzanne and Terrence Murray P’84 ’94 Deborah Verbinski Neff P’10 Heather and George Nemcosky P’04 Phyllis and Gary Nichols P’05 Pamela and Michael Noe P’05 Nancy and John Nunn III P’09 Lynn and John Pagliaccio P’10 Paula and Michael Panchuck P’98 Carole and Norman Parisien P’03 Marcia and John Pelli P’97 Donna E. de Varona and John H. Pinto P’10 Claire and David Premo P’07 Suzanne and Norman Priebatsch P’07 Lisa and Robert Pyne P’10 Katherine and Paul Quadros P’02 Katharine Swan and Ronald Quidachay P’04 Sara and Robert Reichley P’77 Rebekah Kaufman and Michael C. Ricketts P’09 Jeanne and Walter Rittger P’02 Aileen and Brian Roberts P’10 The late Howard P. Ronson P’92 Rachelle and Michael Rosen P’10 Eileen F. Fitzgerald and Paul H. Rosenblum P’09 Jacqueline and Daniel Rosenthal P’05 ’07 Robert Rottenberg P’03 Alan A. Rozycki P’95 MD’02 Leah and Scott Rued P’10 Nancy and Richard Russell P’99 Cheryl and Francis Ryan P’03 Soossan Salmassi P’08 ’12 Shelah and Burton Scherl P’87 ’89 Gloria J. Baciewicz and Eugene J. Schneider P’06 Jean and James Schreier P’01 Marleen and Warren Schwartz P’08 Laurie and Andrew Segal P’10 Linda and Thomas Senter P’10 Christine and Mark Serdjenian P’06 Linda Nearing and Ronald Sharpin P’05 Janet Sherry P’09 Melanie and Gary Singer P’04 ’06 ’12 Colleen and Craig Slater P’10 ’11 Patricia and Ronald Sloan P’97
Barbara and James Smith P’06 Louise and Wayne Smith P’00 Terry and John Stevenson P’95 ScM’99 Cathy and David Strombom P’08 Leslie and Paul Tombari P’08 C. June Tow P’98 Maryanne and Anthony Travers P’11 Patricia and John Tully P’98 Judith and John Urquhart Jr. P’04 Mary Hediger and George E. Weaver P’02 Teresa and Charles Weidig P’10 Mary-Eliza and Ted Wengren Jr. P’99 Jacqueline and Geoffrey West P’07 Virginia and Richard Whelan P’04 Mrs. Joan Wieczorek P’95 Colleen and Robert Wiginton P’05 Lisa and Robert Wilcox Sr. P’10 Phyllis and Sheldon Willner P’04 Susan and Elliot Winer P’98 Donna and James Wood P’10 Margaret Millson Wu and Jonathan S. Wu P’09 Laurie and Gary Yarnell P’10 Carol Day Yaster P’05 Friends Patricia and Philip Bucci Frances P. Conklin Elizabeth R. Crabtree Merritt A. Crowley Jayran H. Davani Frances Lathrop Drew Armand Ferrucci Lynne Fraser Kathleen and Michael Goldberger Nancy and Stephen Harris Carol T. Jeffrey Lisa King Karen and David Laroche The late Mary Ann Lippitt Katherine and John Norris Nicole Labelle Peters David M. Philips Tammie L. Ruda Diane Straker Teresa and Kevin Walsh Pamela and Scott Woodward
bear tracks
Brown Bear Magazine Editor & Publisher Davies Bisset ’85 Executive Director, BUSF Managing Editor/Art Director Craig Schroeder Production Coordinator Matthew Jarret Contributing Editors Laura Almeida ’06, Kelly Fitzsimmons, Kyla Harrington ’13, Lauren Hylton, Peter Mackie ’59
BUSF Board Officers
Chairman & Past President Artemis A. W. Joukowsky ’55 LLD ’85 hon., P’87, GP ’13 ’14 Past Presidents Richard F. Carolan ’58 P’84 ’90 ’95 GP’11 Gordon E. Perry ’55 P’88 ’92 GP’10 Vice-President Emeriti Kip H. Cohen ’50 P’86 Elizabeth Zopfi Chace ’59, PHB ’96 hon., GP ’13 Treasurer Emeritus William A. Pollard ’50 P’77 ’81 ’85 GP’06 ’08 ’08 ’13 Secretary Emeritus Henry C. Cashen II ’61 P’92 ’94 ’97 President Kenneth J. O’Keefe ’76 P’02 ’04 ’09 Vice-President Paula M. McNamara ’84 Treasurer Marcia J. Hooper ’77 P’09 ’11 Assistant Treasurer Kevin A. Mundt ’76 P’11 Secretary Bernard V. Buonanno, Jr. ’60 P’88 ’92 ’96 Assistant Secretary Judith P. Danforth ’77 P’06 Find more information on the Brown University Sports Foundation on the following websites: www.sportsfoundation.brown.edu www.brownbears.com www.facebook.com
Rose Bowl team arriving in Chicago, January 6th 1916.
(continued from page 40) water. At Chicago, “Fritz” Pollard’s ’19 fans greeted the entourage with a brass band, after which the team practiced at Northwestern. After snowball fights in Kansas, a racial incident over Pollard in Oklahoma, and an exchange of Christmas gifts in Albuquerque, the group arrived in Pasadena on December 27th for the New Year’s Day clash with Washington State. After the return trip, a Providence Journal reporter summed up the players’ experience; “All of them did not hesitate to say it was a ‘corking’ trip from start to finish.” Fifty years later, members of the Rose Bowl Team jetted across the country in a few hours, in stark contrast to their five day odyssey in 1915. The best-laid travel plans did not always go smoothly, especially in periods such as World War II. In 1943, the football team went to Princeton to take on the Tigers. They trained to New York City, where they stayed at the Biltmore on Friday night. On Saturday morning, Manager Philip Steiger, Jr. ’50 took an early train to Princeton with uniforms, equipment, and the second string. Game time was set for 1:00 p.m. The later train, with Coach “Skip” Stahley and the starters was delayed, but Princeton officials insisted on starting on time because of radio broadcast obligations. Steiger became manager/coach (not unlike the early days of football), and when the starters arrived after the first period, the Bruins were down by 13 points. Not to worry though, as 21 unanswered points sealed a victory for Brown. The team celebrated together on the return trip home. Team travel outside of the United States was virtually unheard of during the first 100 years of Brown athletics (ice polo players did venture to Canada in the 1890’s). However, many Brown athletes competed abroad in the Olympic Games, beginning with David Hall ’01, who won John Collier ’29, a bronze medal at the 1900 Games in Paris. 1928 Olympic hurdler on deck The development of the Ivy League in the 1950’s for practice. expanded the landscape for team travel, with teams now flying to Europe and other distant destinations to compete. Brown currently spends $1.5 million annually on team travel, with arrangements orchestrated by an Athletic Department coordinator. As they hurtle down the interstate, Brown athletes of today, with their time-compressed hectic schedules might well prefer the longer junkets which were part of the athletic experience back in the day. Peter Mackie ’59 is the sports archivist for the Edward North Robinson 1896 Collection of Brown Athletics.
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Bear Tracks: The View from the Archives Getting to the Games: Team Travel Back in the Day
By Peter Mackie ’59 Images Provided by Brown University Archives
nia. According to Manager Harold Muir’s ’11 report, a group of eleven began the trip on Tuesday, February 21st with an 11:10 a.m. train to New York, arriving at 4:00 p.m. The group stayed at the Cumberland Hotel for a special rate of $1.25 per day and $.75 per meal. They left the hotel at 7:45 p.m. for Pratt Institute, taking the subway at Broadway and 50th to In Connecticut, it was all aboard for the park - Sketch by Adams Carroll, 1871. the Brooklyn Bridge, and then the elevated train to Grand Avenue. Game time oday, Brown student-athletes travel far and wide, was 9:30 p.m. Next evening the group left the hotel at 8:00 p.m. point to point, riding in luxury buses and jet planes. for C.C.N.Y., taking several subways and finally walking five By contrast, in the 19th century, trains, boats and blocks to the gym, where the center jump was called at 10:15 horse-drawn carriages were the norm for ferrying p.m.! Muir’s report included the following suggestion; “Arathletes to their contests. For teams in that formative period range with the manager to have the Brown game played beof Brown athletics, getting there was half the battle. Most trips tween the halves and after the last preliminary game so that the were a circuitous adventure, arranged by team managers who game will be over before eleven.” were also responsible for scheduling the games. The 1912 verOn Saturday June 27, 1863, Brown played its first intercolsion of the trip legiate baseball game. The visiting Harvard team arrived on took four days, “the middle train” and was taken to lunch and on a campus beginning with an tour. At 2:30 the teams were transported to the Dexter Trainovernight steamer ing Ground in hacks (horse-drawn carriages) to begin the four leg from Fall Rivhour-plus game. er to New York Baseball also provided one of our most intriguing athletic for the C.C.N.Y. trips, when in July of 1869 the freshman team embarked on a game, and then barnstorming tour, unheard of at the time, playing Harvard, on to Bethlehem, Yale, Wesleyan, Amherst and Dartmouth. Travel was via train, Pembroke sailors walking from campus PA. by train to steamer, and carriage. The trip was documented by Adams to the train station to compete in MIT take on Lehigh. dinghy regatta, May 1939. Carroll 1871, whose clever sketch book captured some of the Assistant Mantrip’s lighter moments as well as the various modes of travel. ager Ralph Drury Although most early travel was confined to New England ’12 reported four cuts to the Faculty Committee on Athletics. locations, teams began to venture farther afield in the early The total cost of the trip was $186.26 which was offset by pay1900’s. The men’s basketball team trips in February of 1911 ments of $70.00 from C.C.N.Y. and $85.00 from Lehigh. and 1912 took the hoopsters to New York City and PennsylvaBrown’s first intersectional football trip was to the University of Chicago for a Thanksgiving Day game in 1899, but it was the famous Rose Bowl Team of 1915 which took the granddaddy of all athletic trips in the early part of the century. On December 22nd, President Faunce excused students from morning classes, and the entire student body snake-danced down College Hill to Union Station, where they gave the team a rousing sendoff. Brown authorities announced that “every arrangement has been made for a safe and sane trip.” The touring party of 26 traveled in a special new steel Pullman car, stocked Heading up the Connecticut River for with Rhode Island drinking (continued on previous page) Amherst - Sketch by Adams Carroll, 1871.
T
Brown University Sports Foundation