2011 Rutgers Men's Lacrosse Media Guide

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TABLE OF CONTENTS Quick Facts........................................................................................................... 1 Head Coach Jim Stagnitta........................................................................2-4 Assistant Coach Errol Wilson..................................................................... 5 Assistant Coach Rob Cross......................................................................... 6 Support Staff................................................................................................... 6-8 BIG EAST Lacrosse/National Exposure................................................. 9 Facilities.......................................................................................................10-11 Season Outlook.........................................................................................12-13 2011 Season Roster................................................................................... 15 Scarlet Knights.........................................................................................16-37 2010 Final Stats............................................................................................ 38 2011 Opponents............................................................................................ 39 RU Lacrosee: A Proud Tradition......................................................41-42 All-Americans............................................................................................43-44 North/South Game Participants............................................................ 45 All-Time Letterwinners..........................................................................46-50 Award Winners........................................................................................52-54 Career and Season Records.................................................................... 55 Single Game Records................................................................................... 56 All-Time Results........................................................................................57-64 Series Records................................................................................................ 65 Team Captains/Records........................................................................... 66 University Section....................................................................................67-74 The 2010-11 Rutgers University Men’s Lacrosse Media Guide is published by the Rutgers Division of Intercollegiate Athletics, Tim Pernetti, Director. Writing, layout, and design by the Office of Athletic Communications. Editor: Matt Haas Layout & Design: Kevin Revoir Editorial Assistance: Hasim Phillips, Alli Miller Photography: Joe Campbell, Tom Cizsek, Alex Restrepo, Elane Coleman, Larry Levanti and Kelly Graham, Jim O’Connor The 2010-11 Rutgers University Men’s Lacrosse Media Guide has been compiled to assist the media with their coverage of the team. Updated statistics and information can be obtained throughout the season by contacting Matt Haas, Athletic Communications Assistant, in the Office of Athletic Communications, at (732) 445-4200. For additional information on Scarlet Knight Men’s Lacrosse, please visit our website at: www.scarletknights.com Office of Athletic Communications Office Phone: (732) 445-4200 FAX: (732) 445-3063 Lacrosse Office: (732) 445-4211 Assistant Athletic Director Jason Baum Associate Director Kevin Lorincz Assistant Director Doug Drabik Assistant Director Hasim Phillips Assistant Matt Haas Assistant Alli Miller Assistant Kevin Revoir Web Developer Colin Osborne

quick facts UNIVERSITY Location: ................................................................... New Brunswick, N.J. Founded: .................................................................................................. 1766 Enrollment: .........................................................................................37,364 Nickname: . ......................................................................... Scarlet Knights Facility: ....................................................................... Yurcak Field (5,000) Colors: ................................................................................................... Scarlet Conference: .................................................................................... BIG EAST Affiliation: ............................................................................. NCAA Division I President: .............................................................Richard L. McCormick Director of Athletics:............................................................. Tim Pernetti COACHES Head Coach: .......................................................................... Jim Stagnitta Alma Mater: .............................................................................Penn, 1984 Stagnitta’s Record at Rutgers: ................... 52-72 (10th Season) Career Record: ............................................188-115 (22nd Season) Assistant Coach: ....................................Errol Wilson (First Season) Alma Mater: .............................................................. Stony Brook, 2006 Assistant Coach: .........................................Rob Cross (First Season) Alma Mater: ..........................................................................UMBC, 2005 TEAM INFORMATION 2010 Record: ........................................................................................... 6-8 BIG EAST Record: .................................................................................... 2-4 Postseason: ............................................................................................ None Starters Returning and Lost: ...........................................................4/6 Letterwinners Returning and Lost: .........................................24/12 Newcomers: ................................................................................................ 14 Top Returnees:........ Kory Kelly (Sr., M), Brian Shemesh (Sr., D), Mike Diehl (Jr., M), Will Mangan (Jr., M), Jacob Fradkin (Jr., D) Top Newcomers: ................ Nick Contino (D), Jack Matthews (M) ATHLETIC COMMUNICATIONS Sports Information:......................................................... 732-445-4200 Sports Information Fax:................................................ 732-445-3063 Men’s lacrosse contact:..........................................................Matt Haas E-mail:............................................................mhaas@scarletknights.com Haas’ Office:...................................................................... 732-445-7746 Haas’ Cell: .......................................................................... 810-287-1651 WebSite: .......................................................... www.scarletknights.com MAILING ADDRESS

Louis Brown Athletic Center 83 Rockafeller Road Piscataway, NJ 08854-8053

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Jim stagnitta Head Coach • 10th Season

Jim Stagnitta is in his ninth season at the helm of the Rutgers University men’s lacrosse team and 21st overall as a head coach. As one of the winningest active coaches in the country, Stagnitta has re-established Rutgers as one of the nation’s most respected lacrosse programs during his tenure ‘On the Banks.’ In 21 years of coaching, Stagnitta has won 62 percent of his games, 14th best among active coaches. During his time at Rutgers, Stagnitta has led the Scarlet Knights to back-to-back NCAA Tournament berths (2003, 2004) and victories over 12 ranked opponents. Additionally, Stagnitta enters the 2011 season with 188 total collegiate victories.

Yearly Recaps The growing pains in 2002 soon paid dividends as Rutgers stormed out of the gates 7-0 in the 2003 season and made the rest of the country take notice with impressive wins over No. 3 Massachusetts, No. 4 Syracuse, No. 10 Navy, No. 13 Towson and No. 17 UMBC. On the strength of a 10-4 regular season record, Rutgers advanced to the NCAA Tournament for the first time since 1991, and Stagnitta was rewarded by being named the 2003 USILA National Coach of the Year. After leading the Scarlet Knights to the biggest turnaround in Division I lacrosse in ‘03, Stagnitta and his team proved its storybook season was no fluke by finishing 8-6 overall and earning an at-large bid to the NCAA Tournament in 2004. The season was highlighted by a 14-10 victory over eventual national champion Syracuse at Yurcak Field, which marked the first time in program history that RU had defeated Syracuse in consecutive seasons. The Scarlet Knights were ranked in the USILA Top 15 the entire season, climbing as high as No. 4 for two weeks in March. Ravaged by injuries, Stagnitta’s 2005 squad posted a 4-9 record against one of the toughest schedules in the country. An 8-5 victory over Princeton on April 9 helped RU end a 16-year drought against the Tigers. The 2006 team was a bounce here or a break there away from having a record that was much better than the final 5-9 mark would suggest. Rutgers’ lineup featured six freshmen and dropped four one-goal games. The Scarlet Knights again played one of the nation’s

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THE jim stagnitta FILE • Has guided six players to All-America honors including Justin Pennington in 2010. • Earned back-to-back NCAA Tournament at-large bids (2003, 2004). • Has defeated 12 ranked opponents, including a 10-8 victory over eventualy National Finalist Notre Dame last season in South Bend. • Finished the regular season with a Top 10 national ranking from the USILA in consecutive seasons (2003, 2004).

• His summer high school tournaments were ranked in the top-five by ESPN.com

most challenging schedules, including games against four NCAA Tournament teams, two of which advanced to the Final Four (Syracuse and Massachusetts). The 2007 squad, which faced four ranked opponents, won two more ECAC contests than the previous year to finish with a 7-6 overall record and a 4-3 mark in conference play. It was the first winning season for the program since 2004 and earned Rutgers a final ranking of 18 in the USILA Poll and a No. 19 spot in the Nike/Inside Lacrosse rankings. The 2008 Rutgers men’s lacrosse season was chock-full of closely contested games against some of the best competition in the country. Rutgers finished the year 6-7 overall and took home third place in the ECAC with a 4-3 conference mark. The Scarlet Knights faced eight opponents that were ranked in the top 20, including six squads who made appearances in the top 10 and three in the top five. Each of Rutgers’ seven losses were to nationally ranked teams.

• 11 Players have been selected to the prestigious North/South All-Star Game, including Gerhard Buehning and Justin Pennington last season.

The Scarlet Knights picked up their biggest win of the season on Feb. 24 when RU breezed past No. 11 UMBC, 13-4. UMBC ended the year ranked No. 6. Several postseason accolades followed the 2008 season as Kory Kelly earned ECAC Co-Rookie of the Year, Justin Pennington was named an Honorable Mention All-American and Brian Shemesh captured gold with the men’s lacrosse U-19 USA squad. The injury bug hit RU’s 2009 squad harder than most years and despite some heavily contested games against ranked squads, including a 5-4 win over No. 14 Hobart, the Scarlet Knights finished with a 4-11 record and 2-5 mark in conference play in their final season in the ECAC. RU finished with high marks off the field as the ECAC recognized Rutgers for its academic performance as it had a conference-best eight student-athletes on the 2009 All-ECAC Academic Team. 2010 saw the Scarlet Knights begin their first season in the newly formed BIG EAST Conference. Due to the highly competitive schedule and a few missed opportunities, RU fisnished the season 6-8. The season was hilighted by a 10-8 road victory over eventual National Finalist Notre Dame and Justin Pennington being named an All-American.

National Recognition As a by-product of his team’s success, several of Stagnitta’s players have earned conference and national awards. In 2006, goalie Greg Havalchak, who was part of Stagnitta’s first recruiting class, was selected in the 2006 Major League Lacrosse draft by the Baltimore Bayhawks as the 32nd overall pick. The 2003 ECAC and Inside Lacrosse Rookie of the Year, Havalchak earned Second Team All-America honors from the USILA in 2004, while finishing second nationally in save percentage and fourth in goals-against average. Attackman Devon Britts, who finished his Scarlet Knights career with 21 goals and seven assists, was also selected in the 2006 Major League Lacrosse Draft by the Los Angeles Riptide as the 45th pick in the draft. The latest Scarlet Knight to be drafted is Justin Pennington who was selected by the Chigaco Machine, with the 25th overall selection, in 2010. Several other Scarlet Knights have also gone on to their careers with Major League Lacrosse teams. Delby Powless, who scored 63 goals over his two-year Rutgers career, was a two-time USILA Honorable Mention All-America and was selected by the Buffalo Bandits with the first overall pick in the 2004 National Lacrosse League Draft. Two-time All-ECAC selection Chris O’Dougherty was selected in the fourth round (31st overall) of the 2009 Major League Lacrosse Draft . He was chosen by the Denver Outlaws.

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11 of Stagnitta’s players - Brad Kerwin (2002), Nick Schmidt (2003), Jeff Duca (2003), Joe Duncan (2004), Powless (2004), Jamie Lovejoy (2005),Havalchak (2006), Colin Checcio (2007), O’Dougherty (2009), Pennington (2010) and Gerhard Buehning (2010) - have played in the prestigious North/South All-Star Classic. Stagnitta coached the South squad in 2009. Off the field, Stagnitta served for two years as the President of the United States Intercollegiate Lacrosse Association, which is the governing body of college lacrosse and was honored as the 2005 USILA Man of the Year. During the summer, he is the director of the MVP Lacrosse camps, which are held in New Jersey.

Prior to Rutgers A perennial winner in the sport of lacrosse as a player and coach, Stagnitta arrived in Piscataway after molding Washington & Lee University into one of the most dominant programs at the NCAA Division III level. Stagnitta’s team at the Lexington, Va. school never lost more than five contests in his 12 seasons as head coach. Named the head coach of the Generals in November of 1989, he compiled a staggering 136-42 (.764) record at Washington & Lee, including 12-consecutive winning seasons and a 56-8 record (.875) from 1998-2001. The Generals won the Old Dominion Athletic Conference (ODAC) Championship six times in Stagnitta’s tenure and advanced to the NCAA Division III Quarterfinals in 1991, 1993, 1998, and 1999, and the NCAA Division III Semifinals in 2000. Stagnitta led his 1990 team to a 9-4 season and the Generals then won four ODAC championships in the next five seasons, making two NCAA Tournament appearances. Stagnitta guided Washington and Lee to the NCAA Quarterfinals in 1998 and 1999 with records of 13-3 and 13-2, before the Generals posted a 16-2 record and advanced to the Division III Final Four in 2000. In 2001, the Generals recorded a sterling 14-1 mark COACH stagnitta’s and were ranked No. 3 in the country. year-by-year head coachiing records Year School W L Post-Season Personal 1990 Washington & Lee 9 4 Stagnitta attended college at the University of 1991 Washington & Lee 11 4 ODAC Champions Pennsylvania, where he spent time as both a NCAA Quarterfinals player and coach. As a player, he was a three1992 Washington & Lee 9 5 year letterwinner and starting defenseman 1993 Washington & Lee 12 3 ODAC Champions for the Quakers. Stagnitta led Penn to two Ivy NCAA Quarterfinals League Championships, including the school’s 1994 Washington & Lee 9 5 ODAC Champions first-ever league title in 1983. Following grad1995 Washington & Lee 9 5 ODAC Champions uation from Penn in 1984, Stagnitta coached 1996 Washington & Lee 10 5 at Hudson Valley Community College (New 1997 Washington & Lee 11 3 York) for a year. 1998 Washington & Lee 13 3 NCAA Quarterfinals 1999 Washington & Lee 13 2 ODAC Champions He then coached at the scholastic level for NCAA Quarterfinals two seasons at Cicero-North Syracuse and 2000 Washington & Lee 16 2 ODAC Champions Bishop Ludden High Schools before returning to the Quakers as an assistant coach un NCAA Semifinals der Tony Seaman, currently the head coach 2001 Washington & Lee 14 1 at Towson. Stagnitta helped the Quakers to 2002 Rutgers 2 12 2003 Rutgers 10 5 NCAA Tournament consecutive NCAA Tournament berths, in2004 Rutgers 8 6 NCAA Tournament cluding a memorable Final Four run in 1988 when the underdog Quakers fell in the last 2005 Rutgers 4 9 minute to eventual national champion Syra2006 Rutgers 5 9 cuse. Penn won the 1988 Ivy championship 2007 Rutgers 7 6 and was 20-9 in Stagnitta’s two seasons as 2008 Rutgers 6 7 an assistant coach. 2009 Rutgers 4 11 2010 Rutgers 6 8 Stagnitta, who earned a bachelor’s degree in Totals (21 Years) 188 115 (.620) political science from Penn, and his wife Laurie, are the parents of Alexis and Matthew.

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assistant coaches

Errol Wilson Assistant Coach • First Season

Errol Wilson is set to begin his first season as an assitant coach for the Rutgers men’s lacrosse program. Wilson arrives “On the Banks” after serving as an assistant at Brown University since 2006. While with the Bears, Wilson served as the offensive coordinator and goalie coach helping the program reach new heights by winning the Ivy League title in 2008, and gaining an NCAA berth in 2009. Wilson also helped develop some of the finest players in the nation during his time at Brown. As goalie coach, Wilson mentored Jordan Burke, one of the top goalies in the nation. Under Wilson’s tutelage, Burke was named the 2009 USILA Goalie of the Year, was twice named the Ivy League Player of the Year, was a First Team All-American and was twice honored as the New England Player of the Year. In addition to his work with the Brown goalkeepers, Wilson created and implemented schemes and gameplans for the Bears’ offense, worked with offensive players on developing their individual skills, assisted in the clearing game, managed game day personnel and substitutions, and did extensive recruiting. Wilson came to Brown from Stony Brook, where he was a fouryear goalie for the Seawolves, graduating in 2006 with a degree in Economics. Wilson is a member of US Lacrosse and the Rhode Island Lacrosse Association.

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Assistant coaches

Rob Cross Assistant Coach • First Season

Rob Cross is set to begin his first season as an assitant coach for the Rutgers men’s lacrosse program. Cross arrives “On the Banks” after assistant coaching stints at Harvard, University of Maryland Baltimore County and Mercyhurst College. In his most recent stint at Harvard, Cross served as the team’s offensive coordinator and was in charge of implementing offensive strategies for all even and extra man situations. The Crimson offense flourished under Cross’ tutelage, ranking in the top-20 in scoring offense and in the top-15 in extra man offense. While at Harvard, Cross also assisted in the organization and planning of practices, film breakdown, scouting reports and recruiting. Prior to Harvard, Cross served as assistant coach and co-offensive coordinator at his alma mater, UMBC. During his three seasons with the Retrievers staff, UMBC advanced to three NCAA Tournaments (2007, 2008, 2009), were the America East Conference Champions twice (2008, 2009) and boasted one of the most powerful offenses in collegiate lacrosse. Prior to his time at UMBC, Cross spent a season at Mercyhurst College where he served as the assistant head coach and offensive coordinator. During his season at Mercyhurst, the Lakers advanced to the Division II National Semifinals and were among the Division II leaders in total offense. Cross got into coaching after a solid playing career at UMBC where he was a three-year letterwinner for the Retrievers. Cross graduated from UMBC in 2005 with a degree in sociology.

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Support staff

Bob Gilmartin Strength Coach

Bob Gilmartin joined the Rutgers strenght and conditioning staff in July 2001. Gilmartin works closely with the Scarlet Knight football, men’s lacrosse and women’s lcarosse programs. A 1989 graduate of the University of Massachusetts at Amherst, Gilmartin earned a bachelors degree in management. He is a NSCA Certified Strength and Conditioning Specialist and a USAW Level 1 Club Coach. Gilmartin has served as the strength and conditioning coach at Serie A Soccer Acadey since Sept. 1997, and trained the 1998 and 199 State Champion Medford Strikers, including former Scarlet Knights women’s soccer player and US Olympic gold medalist Carli Lloyd. He also traied the 2001 and 2002 state chamption PDA Splash, including women’s National Soccer Team member Heather O’Reilly. Gilmartin graduated from Millis High School in Millis, Mass., where he played football and basketball for the Mohwaks. He resides in Somerset, N.J..

Uly Molina Equipment Manager

The job of equipping the Scarlet Knights lacrosse team is an undertaking headed by Uly Molina. Molina is in his 11th season working with the men’s lacrosse program. Molina is responsible for the daily suiting-up of the lacrosse squad, and is also responsible for the care, repair, and distribution of all equipment. Molina graduated from Rutgers in 1990 with a bachlor’s degree in sports management. Upon graduation, he worked in the RU ticket office before moving to eqipment. Molina and his wife, Denise, reside in Somerville, N.J. and are the parents of a seven year-old duaghter, Isabella.

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Support staff

Chris D’Andrea Athletic Trainer

Chris D’Andrea enters his sixth year as an athletic trainer at Rutgers. Prior to working at Rutgers, D’Andrea was an assistant certified athletic trainer at Baldwin-Wallace College in conjunction with the Cleveland Clinic Foundation. He has also worked as a seasonal intern with the Cleveland Browns, New England Patriots and Philadelphia Eagles. D’Andrea is a 1994 graduate of the University of Cincinnati and recieved his masters in Health Education from Ashland University in 2000. He is a NSCA certified strength and conditioning specialist and is an adjunct instructor for the Exercise Science Department at Rutgers.

Additional Men’s Lacrosse Support Staff

Matt Haas Athletic Communications

Kevin MacConnell Senior Administrator

Barbara Spicuzzo Lacrosse Secretary

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Rob Cormio Facilities

Doug Kokoskie Operations

John Ternyila Budget Administrator

Kate Hickey Sr. Associate AD/SWA


big east lacrosse/national coverage The Scarlet Knights are set to begin their second season in one of the elite collegiate lacrosse conferences in the country, the BIG EAST.

What You Need to Know About BIG EAST Lacrosse • The seven-team BIG EAST Men’s Lacrosse league will be made up of Georgetown, Notre Dame, Providence, Rutgers, St. John’s, Syracuse and Villanova. Marquette will join the conference in 2013. • Men’s lacrosse is the BIG EAST’s 24th sport and the 11th men’s sport – the 2009-10 academic year was the first season for the BIG EAST men’s lacrosse league. • There will be no BIG EAST Men’s Lacrosse Championship for the 2011 season - the BIG EAST Champion will be determined by conference-game winning percentage at the conclusion of the regular season. • The BIG EAST regular-season format will be a six-game, single round-robin schedule with each team playing each league opponent once. • The BIG EAST is the largest and most diverse Division I conference in the country with 16 institutions - seven sponsor the sport of men’s lacrosse. • The BIG EAST Conference has captured 27 national championships in six different sports.

National Coverage

Big Stage

The ESPN family of networks will have 13 games involving BIG EAST teams in 2011, while 10 other games will air locally, either in New Jersey or upstate New York. Some highlights of the national schedule are: a rematch of last year’s NCAA Championship final as Notre Dame hosts Duke on ESPN Feb. 20; Syracuse meeting Georgetown March 12 in the Konica Minolta FaceOff Classic in Baltimore; and Rutgers facing Syracuse in the ESPNU Warrior Classic in East Hartford, Conn., April 23 on ESPNU. The ESPN platforms will have coverage of both games of the Konica Minolta Big City Classic at New Meadowlands Stadium as Rutgers meets St. John’s on ESPN3.com and Syracuse faces Duke on ESPNU. In addition to the nationally televised games on the ESPN family, 10 games are slotted for local broadcasts, including Rutgers’ home games against Army, Notre Dame and Princeton and a St. John’s home date against Hofstra. Each of those games will be carried locally by FiOS1.

The Rutgers lacrosse team will play on some of the biggest stages in men’s lacrosse this season as it takes part in the Big City and ESPNU Warrior Classics.

RU on TV 3/19 Army FiOS 1 p.m. 3/27 Notre Dame FiOS Noon 4/3 St. John’s* ESPN3 1 p.m. 4/12 Princeton FiOS 7 p.m. 4/23 Syracuse^ ESPNU 5:30 p.m. 5/7 Providence FiOS 1 p.m. BOLD - Indicates home game * - Indicates Big City Classic ^ - Indicates ESPNU Warrior Classic

RU will faceoff with BIG EAST rival St. John’s as part of the 2011 Konica Minolta Big City Classic at the New Meadowlands Stadium. The matchup, which kicks off a lacrosse tripleheader at the state-of-the-art facility, is scheduled for 1 p.m. on Sunday, April 3, 2011. Last year, the Konica Minolta Big City Classic broke the attendance record for a regular season, lacrosee-only event with 25,742 fans at the New Meadowlands Stadium. The Scarlet Knights will faceoff with BIG EAST rival Syracuse as part of the second annual ESPNU Warrior Classic at Rentschler Field in East Hartford, Conn. The matchup, which closes out a lacrosse doubleheader, is scheduled for 5:30 p.m. on Saturday, April 23, and will be televised live nationally on ESPNU.

2011 Big City Classic Branding Guide (2D Globe)

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roster No. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 35 37 38 39 41 42 43 44 45

Name Nicholas DePaolera Edward Bartleson Nicholas Contino Nicholas Zerrillo Zachary Zenda Mike Diehl Salvatore Carfaro Daniel Ingraldi Michael Stagnitta Joseph Donnelly Duncan Clancy Anthony Terranova Andrew Parrilla Steven Lusby Rudy Butler Kevin Hover Jack Matthews Matthew Klimchak Andrew D’Ambrosio Will Mangan Christopher Mattes Christopher Zybrick Jonathan Lefferts Peter Noto Steven Watson Brian Shemesh Alex Ball Scott Klimchak Benjamin Schwing Kory Kelly Steven Shemesh Jacob Fradkin Joseph Stottler Stephen Belichick Brett O’Donnell Andrew D’Agostino Zachary Donnelly Kyle Robinson Ryan Scott Ryan Warnick David Kelly

Pos. A D D M M M M D A G A M M G G A M A M M M D M M M D M A M M D D M D G D M A M D D

Cl. Fr. RS/So Fr. Jr. Jr. Jr. So. So. Jr. So. So. RS/Fr Fr. Fr. So. Jr. Fr. RS/Fr Fr. Jr. Sr. RS/Fr Jr. Fr. Sr. Sr. So. RS/Fr Fr. Sr. So. Jr. Fr. Sr. Fr. RS/Jr So. Fr. Fr. Jr. Fr.

Ht. 5-11 6-0 6-0 5-10 5-10 6-3 6-0 5-11 5-8 5-8 6-2 6-0 6-0 5-9 6-2 5-11 5-11 6-2 5-11 5-10 6-3 6-1 5-9 5-9 6-1 6-1 6-1 6-1 5-7 6-5 5-10 6-2 5-11 5-11 6-1 6-2 5-10 6-5 5-10 6-1 6-3

Wt. Hometown/High School 180 Kinnelon, N.J./St. Joseph’s Metuchen 182 Morristown, N.J./Montclair Kimberly Acad. 185 Branchburg, N.J./St. Joseph’s Metuchen 175 Brewerton, N.Y./Central Square 175 Monmouth Jct., N.J./South Brunswick 225 Flemington, N.J./Hunterdon Central 210 Long Valley, N.J./West Morris Central 175 Clifton, N.J./Morristown-Beard 165 Brewerton, N.Y./Central Square 160 Newtown Square, Pa./Radnor 190 Princeton, N.J./Lawrenceville School 155 Flemington, N.J./Hunterdon Central 180 Ramsey, N.J./Don Bosco Prep 165 Severna Park, Md./Severna Park 205 Belle Mead, N.J./Montgomery 195 Belle Mead, N.J./Montgomery 165 Baltimore, Md./Gilman School 180 Clark, N.J./A.L. Johnson 180 Monroe Twp. N.J./St. Joseph’s Metuchen 170 Maplewood, N.J./Columbia 200 Westfield, N.J./Westfield 210 Kinnelon, N.J./Kinnelon 175 Moorestown, N.J./Mt. St. Mary’s 175 Webster, N.Y./Schroeder 175 Belle Mead, N.J./Montgomery 190 Hillsborough, N.J./Immaculata 170 Crofton, Md./Arundel 180 Clark, N.J./A.L. Johnson 175 Medford, N.J./Shawnee 220 Princeton, N.J./South Brunswick 175 Hillsborough, N.J./Immaculata 195 Owings Mills, Md./St. Paul’s School 178 Wantagh, N.Y./Wantagh 185 Weston, Mass./Rivers Academy 180 Glen Ridge, N.J./Glen Ridge 205 Syracuse, N.Y./Christian Bros. Academy 165 Newtown Square, Pa./Radnor 220 Jersey City, N.J./St. Peter’s Prep 170 Easton, Pa./Easton 180 Boonton Twp., N.J./Mountain Lakes 215 Timonium, Md./Calvert Hall

Head Coach: Jim Stagnitta (Penn ’84) Assistant Coach– Errol Wilson (Stony Brook ‘06) Assistant Coach – Rob Cross (UMBC ‘05) Volunteer – Zach Colburn

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SCARLET KNIGHTS

31 | Kory Kelly Senior • Midfielder • 6-5 • 220 Princeton, N.J./South Brunswick

2010 (Junior): Played in all 14 games with starts in 11 … Scored a total of 20 goals throughout the year, third highest on the team ... Scored a goal against No. 11 Notre Dame (Mar 27) … Had a total of five assists ... Attempted 74 shots; third highest on the team ... Totaled 25 points for the Scarlet Knights … Achieved his first game winning goal for the season against Marist (Mar 16) … Scooped up five ground balls for the season. 2009 (Sophomore): Played in 15 games, starting nine … Led the team in goals (27), shots (83), shots on goal (50) and man-up goals (9) … Fifth on the team in shot percentage (.325) … Netted two goals in the season finale against No. 15 UMass on May 2 … Scored a goal against Penn State in a match that was played in front of 2,500 fans at Rutgers Stadium on April 18 … Posted his third-straight hat trick in Rutgers’ dominating 17-1 win over Wagner on March 31 … Scored four goals at St. John’s to lead the Scarlet Knights to a 14-10 conference win on March 28 … Tallied his third hat trick of the season against No. 5 Princeton on March 24 … Scored a team-best two goals and dished out an assist in ECAC opener at Fairfield on March 7 … Notched two goals at Saint Joseph’s on Feb. 28 … Tied a career high in goals with four against No. 9 UMBC on March 21 … Tallied a team-high three goals in a win at Manhattan on Feb. 18 … Selected to the 2009 Preseason All-ECAC Team. 2008 (Freshman): Named the ECAC Co-Rookie of the Year … Won the Al Twitchell Award given out by the team to the top freshman … Ranked 42nd in the country with 1.9 goals per game … Led the team with 24 goals and ranked sixth in the conference with 12 league game tallies … Was named ECAC Rookie of the Week on four separate occasions … Led the Scarlet Knights and was fifth in the conference in goals per game … Led the team with 85 shots … Recorded team-best four hat tricks … Second on the team and eighth in the ECAC with 2.46 points per game … Tied for eighth in the league with one game winning goal … Second in the ECAC with 6.54 shots per game … Tied for sixth in the league with four man-up goals … Dished out two assists, caused three turnovers and scooped four groundballs during the year … Scored his season-high four goals, including three in the final seven minutes to give RU a 7-6 win over Massachusetts (April 3) … Recorded his first four-point game of his career against Hobart (March 21) with three goals and an assist … Scooped a season-best two groundballs versus Manhattan (April 1) … Caused a season-high two turnovers against Fairfield (March 8) … Had three goals or more against UMBC, Army, Hobart and Massachusetts. Prior to Rutgers: Was named to the All-State Second Team and the All-Division First Team as a sophomore at South Brunswick HS … Missed his junior season due to a knee injury … Set school records with 77 goals and 100 points during his senior campaign … Ended his career at South Brunswick with 173 goals and 216 points in just three years of play, both school records … Received numerous accolades including being named a high school All-American and to the All-State, All-Division and All-Conference Teams … Was the Home News Tribune’s Player of the Year and a Senior Gill Gibbs All-Star selection … Named to Inside Lacrosse’s Top 100 Incoming Freshman list … Has two sisters, Kacy and Kayla … Parents are Timothy and Michelle Kelly … Majoring in labor studies at Rutgers … Born April 11, 1989.

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SCARLET KNIGHTS

27 | brian shemesh Senior • Defenseman • 6-1 • 190 Hillsborough, N.J./Immaculata

2010 (Junior): Saw action in 13 games with starts in all 13 … Attempted one shot at Princeton on April 13 … Scooped a total of 20 ground balls for the year ... Tallied 19 caused turnovers. 2009 (Sophomore): Played in all 15 games and started 11 contests … Earned the Collins Award, which is given to the Scarlet Knight that had the greatest increase in grade point average … Named to the 2009 All-ECAC Academic team … Fifth on the team in ground balls with 25 … Caused six turnovers … Scored his first goal of the season in Rutgers’ win at Manhattan on Feb. 18. 2008 (Freshman): Played in 12 games and started three as a freshman for the Scarlet Knights … Seventh on the team and second amongst freshmen with six goals on the year … Tied for eighth in the ECAC with one game-winning goal … Scooped five groundballs and caused one turnover … Tallied his first career hat trick with three goals against Hobart (March 21) … Won a gold medal as part of the United States Under-19 team that competed at the 2008 International Lacrosse Federation (ILS) World Championships … Tallied four goals, including a two-goal effort against Australia (July 4), in the Championships. Prior to Rutgers: Selected as an All-American in 2007 … Was the Courier News Player of the Year and named to the Star Ledger First Team AllState after his senior campaign … Named to All-Area, All-League, and All-State First Teams during each of his last three seasons at Immaculata … Ended his career with a school record 213 points … Selected to represent the United States in the 2008 International Lacrosse Federation (ILF) Under-19 World Championships … Named to Inside Lacrosse’s Top 100 Incoming Freshman list … has a brother, Steven and a sister, Alexis … Parents are Larry Shemesh and Lisa Bocra, and stepfather Ronald Bocra … Pajoring in exercise science at Rutgers … Born May 4, 1989.

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SCARLET KNIGHTS

37 | stephen belichick Senior • Long Stick Mid • 5-11 • 185 Weston, Mass./Rivers Academy

2010 (Junior): Played in thirteen games… Scooped up five ground balls for the season, one against No. 19 UMBC. 2009 (Sophomore): Saw action in seven games … Scooped up a ground ball at No. 5 Syracuse on April 11. 2008 (Freshman): Played in five games for the Scarlet Knights … He was a part of a RU defense that ranked 27th nationally in scoring defense and 28th in man-down defense … Scooped three groundballs and caused one turnover … Had a season-high two groundballs against Manhattan on April 18. Prior to Rutgers: Was named the team captain during his final two years at Rivers High School … Named to the All-ISL Team during his senior campaign … Played football for Rivers … Named captain of the team in his senior year … Named to the All-ISL Team … Played one prep season at Northfield Mount Hermon … Selected to the New England All-Star game … Has a brother Brian and sister Amanda … Parents are Bill Belichick and Debby Clarke … Father is the current head coach of the New England Patriots and has led the Patriots to three Super Bowl Championships … Family has a strong history of lacrosse as his father Bill played football and lacrosse at Wesleyan University and his sister Amanda played lacrosse at Wesleyan University and is currently an assistant lacrosse coach at UMass … Born March 25, 1987.

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22 | chris mattes Senior • Midfielder • 6-3 • 200 Westfield, N.J./Westfield

2010 (Junior): Saw action in all 14 games … Scored two goals for the Scarlet Knights at Princeton (Apr 13) and at Providence (May 9) … Scopped a team-leading 65 ground balls … Had one assist against SJU (Mar 6). 2009 (Sophomore): Competed in nine games … Won 69 of 115 face offs to finish second on the team in face off percentage (.600) … Placed fourth on the team in ground balls with 30 … Claimed victory in 16 of 23 face-off’s against No. 5 Princeton on March 24 … Won six face-offs against No. 20 Army on March 14. 2008 (Freshman): Saw action in six contests for the Scarlet Knights as a freshman … Was second on the squad in face-off wins (23-of-55) … Scooped five groundballs during the year … Had a season-best three groundballs at Penn State (April 20). Prior to Rutgers: A four-year starter in both lacrosse and soccer at Westfield High School … set the career and single season groundball records en route to being First Team All-State, All-Area and All-Fitch Division at Westfield … Was named captain of both the lacrosse and soccer teams during his senior campaign … Selected First Team All-State and All-County after his senior soccer season … Has one sister, Lauren … Parents are Ray and Sue Mattes … Dad played football at Wagner College … Majoring in sports management … Born May 12, 1988.

26 | Steven Watson Senior • Midfielder • 6-1 • 175 Belle Mead, N.J./Montgomery

2010 (Junior): Saw action in 11 games with two assists; one against SJU on March 6 and one at Jacksonville April 10… Had a total of four ground balls and six caused turnovers. 2009 (Sophomore): Played in all 15 games … Named to the 2009 All-ECAC Academic team … Posted five caused turnovers … Tallied three shots and two ground balls on the season. 2008 (Freshman): Saw action in six games for the Scarlet Knights during his first season ‘On the Banks’ … Scooped up his first career groundball at Princeton on March 25 … Provided depth to the team at the midfield position. Prior to Rutgers: Earned First Team All-League honors during both his sophomore and junior seasons, and was named team captain for his senior season … Named to the All-State lacrosse team after his senior campaign … Was a 2006 Group II State Finalist as a junior … was also a standout on the football field … The wide receiver holds the school record for receptions and touchdowns … Earned First Team All-State honors as a junior and senior … A four-year honor roll student at Montgomery … Named Sportsman of the Year at Montgomery … Has a brother, Kevin … Parents are Lynn and Dave Watson … Dad played basketball at Grove City College … Born August 24, 1988.

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6 | mike diehl Junior • Midfielder • 6-3 • 225 Flemington, N.J./Hunterdon Central

2010 (Sophomore): Saw action in all 14 games with starting in 10… Scored an overall of eight goals, one of those at No. 11 Notre Dame on March 27… Made 13 points and 34 shots making that the fifth highest for the season… Scooped up two ground balls against Wagner on Feb 21 and Princeton on Apr 13. 2009 (Freshman): Played in all 15 games with 13 starts … Third on the squad in points (21) … Fourth on the team in goals (14) and shots on goal (28) … Finished fifth on the team in assists (7) and shots (51) … Dished out an assist against Penn State in a match that was played in front of 2,500 fans at Rutgers Stadium on April 18th … Scored the game-winning goal in a 14-10 victory at St. John’s on March 28 … Scored two goals to notch his fourth two-goal game of the season and dished out the game-winning assist in a 5-4 win at No. 14 Hobart on March 21 … Posted two goals at St. Joseph’s on Feb. 28 … Notched two goals and an assist in Rutgers’ first win of the season at Manhattan on Feb. 18 … Scored two goals in the season opener against Villanova on Feb. 14. Prior to Rutgers: Named to 2008 High School Boy’s Lacrosse AllAmerica Team ... Selected a one of the top 100 incoming freshmen by Inside Lacrosse ... Four-year letterman and three-year starter at Hunerdon Central high school ... As a junior he was named to the New Jersey Interscholastic Lacrosse Coaches Association Division A All-State Second Team and to the All-Skyland Conference First Team ... Led his team with 49 goals and 25 assists during the 2007 season ... Was a three-year football letterwinner and named to the Star Ledger First Team All-State team as a linebacker ... Was a three-time New Jersey Group 4 state lacrosse champion and a tow-time New Jersey Group 4 state football champion ... Parents are Matty and Gary Diehl ... Bon Feb. 9, 1990.

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17 | Kevin hover Junior • Attack • 5-11 • 195 Belle Mead, N.J./Montgomery

2010 (Sophomore): Played in all 14 games and also started in all 14 games… Had the fourth highest for goals this season with a total of 13 goals… Also had the fourth highest for scoring points with totaling 20 points… Made 31 shots and made two of the winning goals this season against Wagner on Feb 21 and Providence on May 9… Scooped up a total of ten ground balls and had two college turnovers with also three man – up goals. 2009 (Freshman): Played in 10 games and started two of them … Scored five points with three goals and two assists … 11 of his 18 shots (.611) were on goal … Scored his first goal of the season in the ECAC opener at Fairfield on March 7. Prior to Rutgers: Selected as one of the top-100 incoming freshmen by Inside Lacrosse … starred at Montgomery High School in both lacrosse and ice hockey … Led his lacrosse team to the 2007 Group 3 State Championship, while scoring 65 goals and adding 29 assists ... The lefty ended the year in the top-10 in scoring in the state of New Jersey ... The Cougars ended the year ranked fifth in the state … Captain of his lacrosse and ice hockey teams during his senior year … Named to the New Jersey Interscholastic Lacrosse Coaches Association All-America Team, First Team All-State, First Team All Skyland Conference and the Bianchi Division Player of the Year ... In 2008, tallied 70 goals, 50 assists and scooped 90 groundballs … Named in Inside Lacrosse as a ‘Scorpion USA Top 50 Senior’ … Third team All-State in ice hockey … Made the Honor Roll every marking period and has been in the National Honor Society for two years … Has an older sister, Meghan and two older brothers, Mickey and Sean … Mickey is an assistant lacrosse coach at Gwynedd-Mercy College and Sean is a defenseman for the Scarlet Knights … Parents are Denise and Mike Hover … Dad played baseball at Rutgers and Mom played lacrosse for the Scarlet Knights … Born Feb. 14, 1990.

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33 | jacob fradkin Junior • Defenseman • 6-2 • 195 Owing Mills, Md./St. Paul’s School

2010 (Sophomore): Saw action in all 14 games with also starting in all 14 games…Had a total of 29 ground balls and 23 caused turnovers… Recorded one point on an assist. 2009 (Freshman): Played in all 15 games, including 13 starts … Fifth on the team in caused turnovers with 11 … Scooped up a season-high three ground balls at Manhattan (Feb. 18) and at UMBC (Feb. 21). Prior to Rutgers: Standout defenseman on the St. Paul’s High School lacrosse team in Brooklandville, Md. … Member of the 2008 MSLCA Maryland Senior All-Star lacrosse game … led St. Paul’s to the junior varsity lacrosse championship in 2005 as a freshman ... Was a two-year member of the varsity lacrosse squad and a two-way star on the varsity football team ... Honored with the McCormick Unsung Hero Award from the football team … Earned numerous Player of the Game awards ... Named to the Headmasters list each year of high school by maintaining above a 3.5 grade point average … Named to the Cum Laude Society in 2008 … Member of the national modern language honor society in Spanish … Parents are Patricia and Steven Fradkin … Born July 11, 1990.

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39 | Andrew D’Agostino RS-Junior • Defenseman • 6-2 • 205 Syracuse, N.Y./Christian Brothers Academy

2010 (RS-Sophomore): Saw action in all 14 games earning eight starts ... Scored a goal against No. 2 Syracuse (4/18) ... Scooped 52 ground balls, good for second most on the team ... caused 18 turnovers. 2009 (RS-Freshman): Played in all 15 games … Led the team in caused turnovers with 18 … Scooped 45 groundballs, which ranked third on the squad … Fifth on the team in shots on goal percentage (.750) … Tallied a season-high six ground balls against No. 9 UMBC on Feb. 21 and against Penn State on April 18. 2008 (Freshman): Redshirted as a defenseman … Did not see any game action. Prior to Rutgers: Was named an alternate to the 2006 Empire State Team and reached the Class B State Finals in 2006 … As a junior, scooped up 103 groundballs, earned All-League honors and was also named a member of the Third-Team All-Central N.Y. team … As a senior grabbed AllLeague honors and was named Second Team All-Central N.Y … Parents are James and Stephanie D’Agostino … Dad played lacrosse at Bowling Green University … Majoring in pharmacy at Rutgers … Born April 17, 1989.

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9 | Michael stagnitta Junior • Attack • 5-8 • 165 Brewerton, N.Y./Central Square

2010 (Sophomore): Played in four games ... Scored a goal at No. 15 Georgetown on May 1 ... Tallied eight shots on the season. 2009 (Freshman): Saw action against eventual NCAA Champion Syracuse on April 11 and Wagner on May 31 … Picked up a ground ball and caused a turnover against Wagner. Prior to Rutgers: As a captain in 2008, Stagnitta compiled 44 goals and dished out 23 assists for Central Square … Named First Team All-League as a junior and senior … Exploded during his junior season, tallying 42 goals and 20 assists ... Recorded 107 goals and 56 assists during his career … Uncle Jim Stagnitta played lacrosse for Penn and is currently the head coach of the Scarlet Knights … Parents are Pennie and Michael Stagnitta … Born Dec. 27, 1989.

5 | Zach Zenda Junior • Midfielder • 5-10 • 175 Monmouth Jct., N.J./South Brunswick

2010 (Sophomore): Saw action in four games ... Attempted a shot at Wagner on Feb 21 … Scooped up a ground ball at No. 15 Georgetown ... Tallied one caused turnover on the season. 2009 (Freshman): Saw action against Georgetown on April 25 and Wagner on March 31 … Tallied a ground ball against Wagner. Prior to Rutgers: Named to 2008 High School Boy’s Lacrosse All-America Team … A two-sport athlete excelling in both lacrosse and soccer at nearby South Brunswick High School in Monmouth Junction, N.J. ... Won the GMC Championship in both 2006 and 2007 and was named First Team All-State and First Team All-Area as a senior in 2008 … Second Team All-Middlesex Country during his junior campaign ... In soccer, Zenda was named First Team All-Central Jersey, First Team All-Middlesex Country and Second Team All-State ... Captained his lacrosse and soccer teams during the 2008 season … Has a brother, Tyler … Parents are Phyllis and Steve Zenda … Born on Jan. 8, 1990.

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SCARLET KNIGHTS

4 | Nick Zerrillo Junior • Midfielder • 5-10 • 175 Brewerton, N.Y./Central Square

2010 (Sophomore): Saw action in nine games throughout the season ... Scored goals at Wagner (Feb 21) and against SJU (March 6) … Had one assist at No. 15 Georgetown on May 1 … Notched a total of five ground balls for the year. 2009 (Freshman): Competed in seven contests … Finished third on the team in face-off victories with 23 … Scooped 10 ground balls … Compiled a career-high six ground balls against Wagner on March. 31. Prior to Rutgers: First Team All-League New York State Section III in each of his final two seasons at Central Square High School in Central Square, N.Y. … Captain of the team during his senior campaign … Led the team in assists with 33 in 2007 and added 19 goals … Honorable mention All-League as a sophomore … Coaches named him the Most Valuable Player in 2007 and 2008 … Honored with the Work Horse Award in 2006 … National Honor Society member in 2007 and 2008 … Also played varsity hockey … Has a younger brother Jack and a younger sister Jillian … Parents are Nick and Colette Zerrillo … Born Dec. 11, 1989.

24 | jonathan Lefferts Junior • Midfielder • 5-9 • 175 Moorestown, N.J./Mt. St. Mary’s

2010 (Sophomore): Played in two games during the season scoring two goals; one at Wagner (Feb 21) and another against St. John’s (March 6) … Had a total of two assists with a total of four points for the year … Attempted one shot in each game played. Prior to Rutgers: 2009: Played in 10 games and started five for Mount St. Mary’s University … Scored six points with four goals and two assists … Took 18 shots with 12 on goal (.667) … Competed in lacrosse, swimming and football at Moorestown High School … Three –year letterman on the lacrosse team … Served as captain during his junior year … received All-Conference and All-County honors for football and lacrosse during his senior year … Parents are Roger and Elisabeth Lefferts … Has two siblings – Sarah and Martha … Born on Feb. 13, 1990 … Plans to major in exercise science/sports management.

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SCARLET KNIGHTS

21 | Will Mangan Junior • Midfielder • 5-10• 170 Maplewood, N.J./Columbia

2010 (Sophomore): Saw action in all 14 games … Scored a total of four goals for the season; two at Wagner (Feb 21), one at No. 19 UMBC (Feb 28) and one at Providence (May 9) … Had three assists for an overall total of seven points … Attempted 25 shots ... Scooped 22 ground balls. 2009 (Freshman): Played in 12 games and started in the season finale against UMass on May 2 … Took 11 shots and scooped 16 ground balls … Scored a goal against St. John’s on March 28 … Scored his first goal of the season against No. 20 Army on March 14 Prior to Rutgers: Named to the 2008 High School Boy’s Lacrosse All-America Team … selected as one of the top 100 incoming freshmen by Inside Lacrosse … Standout midfielder and four-year letterman and starter at Columbia High School ... As a senior, tallied 59 goals and 31 assists … FirstTeam All-Fitch Division and First Team All-Iron Hills Conference ... Named First Team All-State and Co-Player of the Year in the Fitch Division … Team captain and MVP as a senior … During his junior season in 2007, tallied 39 goals, 15 assists and 133 groundballs ... Second Team All-State and named to the Garden State Team in 2007 … Has a younger brother Brett and younger sister Olivia … Parents are Monica and Bill Mangan … Born October 10, 1990.

44 | Ryan Warnick Junior • Defenseman • 6-1 • 180 Boonton Twp., N.J./Mountain Lakes

2010 (Sophomore): Played in seven games ... Scooped up a ground ball against No. 2 SU on April 18 … Had three caused turnovers for the season. 2009 (Freshman): Competed against Wagner on March 31. Prior to Rutgers: Three-time varsity letterwinner in both lacrosse and football at Mountain Lakes High School in Mountain Lakes, N.J. … As a junior and senior team captain, the defenseman started for the Group I New Jersey State Championship team that won the 2007 and 2008 Tournament of Champions ... Named First Team All-Gibbs Conference … Named Second Team All-State in lacrosse … Awarded the Skip Watts Memorial Award for the football player that exhibited unwavering dedication to his team … Has a younger brother, Devin and an older brother Colin who is a senior at Rutgers … Parents are Deb and Craig Warnick … Born Feb. 5, 1989.

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SCARLET KNIGHTS

11 | Duncan Clancy Sophomore • Attack • 6-2 • 190 Princeton, N.J./Lawrenceville School

2010 (Freshman): Earned the Al Twitchell Award for outstanding play by a freshman ... Saw action in all 14 games on the season ... Started against No. 15 Georgetown and Providence … Scored goals in six games, including at No. 11 Notre Dame and at No. 15 Georgetown … Had a total of five assists,for 11 points on the season … Scooped up a total of nine ground balls including three against Georgetown … Caused one turnover during the season. Prior to Rutgers: Three-year starter at Lawrenceville … Was the team’s leading scorer as a senior with 63 points … Earned Second-Team All-State and First-Team All-MAPL honors during his senior campaign … Named to the school’s dean’s list his senior year … Tallied 65 points as a junior … Son of Kary and Brian Clancy … Has one sibling – Patrick … Born on Nov. 26, 1990.

2 | edward bartleson R-Sophomore • Defenseman • 6-0 • 182 Morristown, N.J./Montclair Kimberly Academy

2010 (RS-Freshman): Saw action in three games ... Recorded a shot against Villanova (April 25) ... Scopped a groundball against Providence (May 9). 2009 (Freshman): Received a redshirt for the season. Prior to Rutgers: Was a standout defenseman at Montclair Kimberley Academy in Morristown, N.J. … Named Second-Team Group B All-State and was also chosen as a First-Team All-Rizk Division selection as a junior during the 2007 season … In his senior campaign in 2008, received All Conference accolades … A three-year varsity starter in lacrosse and a four-year varsity starter in hockey … Served as a team captain in both sports during his senior season … Named a National Merit Commended Scholar … Parents are Stephanie and Edward Bartleson … Born May 11, 1990.

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SCARLET KNIGHTS

7 | Salvatore Carfaro Sophomore • Midfielder • 6-0 • 210 Long Valley, N.J./West Morris Central

2010 (Freshman): Played in four games during season … Tallied a goal and an assist against Wagner … Scopped four ground balls, including two at No. 15 Georgetown. Prior to Rutgers: Received All-Conference honors in lacrosse, football and wrestling during his senior year at West Morris High School … Garnered First Team All-State honors in 2009 … Scored 112 career points … Born on April 20, 1991 … son of Sal and Ellen Carfaro ... Has two siblings – Chris and Matt … Majoring in International Business.

8 | Dan Ingraldi Sophomore • Defenseman • 5-11 • 175 Clifton, N.J./Morristown-Beard

2010 (Freshman): Saw action in six games at defense during the season. Prior to Rutgers: Received All-State and All-Conference honors in his senior year at Morristown-Beard High School … Earned All-Conference honors on the football team … Parents are Anthony and Janet Ingraldi … Has two siblings – Michael and David … Born on March 8, 1990.

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SCARLET KNIGHTS

10 | Joe Donnelly Sophomore • Goalkeeper • 5-8 • 160 Newton Square, Pa./Radnor

2010 (Freshman): Saw action in four games ... Recorded two saves on the season ... Tallied a 1.96 goals against average in 30:41 of work. PRIOR TO RUTGERS: Left Radnor high school as the all-time leader in saves … A two-time All-State EPSLA selection and earned 2009 First Team All-Conference honors … Spent one postgraduate year at Northfield Mt Hermon … Parents are Joe and Wendy Donnelly .. Has four siblings- Megan, Maddie, Grace and Zach … His brother Zach is also on the lacrosse team … Born on October, 4, 1988.

16 | Rudy Butler Sophomore • Goalkeeper • 6-2 • 205 Belle Mead, N.J./Montgomery

2010 (Freshman): Saw action in seven games as a true freshman posting a team-leading four wins against two losses ... Complied 37 saves on the season with a .457 save percentage. Prior to Rutgers: Spent three years as a varsity player at Montgomery High School … During his senior year, earned Second Team All-State honors and was the Skyland Conference Player of the Year … Garnered First Team All-Skyland honors and was named the Courier News Player of the Year in 2009 … Born on May 28, 1991 … Son of Thomas and Lisa Butler … A communications major … Has two siblings - Ryan and Olivia … Ryan plays lacrosse at Lynchburg College.

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32 | steven shemesh Sophomore • Defenseman • 5-10 • 175 Hillsborough, N.J./Immaculata

2010 (Freshman): Saw action in five games ... Scooped up a total of three ground balls. Prior to Rutgers: Four-year varsity member at Immaculata High School … Earned First Team All-Division honors … Named to Second Team All State … Part of state championship team during his sophomore and senior year … son of Larry Shemesh and Lisa Bocra .. Has two siblings Brian and Lexie … Brian is also a member of the Rutgers lacrosse team. .

41 | zachary donnelly Sophomore • Midfielder • 5-10 • 165 Newton Square, Pa./Radnor

2010 (Freshman): Played in three games throughout the season ... Tallied two shots … Grabbed three ground balls, including two against Wagner on Feb 21. PRIOR TO RUTGERS: Earned 2009 First Team All-State, All-Central League and All-County honors at Randor High School … Was team captain and MVP during his junior and senior season … A three-year letterman on the wrestling team … Parents are Joe and Wendy Donnelly … Has four siblings – Megan, Maddie, Grace and Joseph … His brother Joseph is also on the lacrosse team … Born on Dec. 3, 1989.

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SCARLET KNIGHTS

28 | alex ball Sophomore • Midfielder • 6-1 • 170 Crofton, Md./Arundel

2010 (Freshman): Saw action in two games during his freshman season ... Attempted a shot at Wagner (Feb 21) … Scooped up a ground ball at Wagner. Prior to Rutgers: Played both football and lacrosse all four years at Arundel High School … Earned All-County Honorable Mention honors at midfield his senior year … Member of the Arundel Club team during his senior year … Member of the Southern County Club Lacrosse Team during his junior year … Captain of the football team his senior year … Born on Nov. 27, 1991 … Son of Horace and Sandra Ball ... Has one sibling – Lauren … Majoring in political science.

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12 | antohny terranova R-Freshman • Midfielder • 6-0 • 155 Flemington, N.J./Hunterdon Central

2010 (Freshman): Redshirt season. Prior to Rutgers: Posted 104 goals and 60 assists at Hunterdon Central High School … Named an AllAmerican and earned First Team All-State and All-Conference honors during his senior year … Part of state championship team during his junior and senior year … Played wide receiver and safety for the football team … Has one sibling – Nicole … Parents are Vince and Cindy Terrenova … Born on July 27, 1990.

19 | Matt Klimchak R-Freshman • Attack • 6-2 • 180 Clark, N.J./A.L. Johnson

2010 (Freshman): Redshirt season. Prior to Rutgers: Named an Under Armour All-American his junior year at A.L. Johnson High School … Missed his senior year due to injury … Finished his high school campaign fifth in career points in New Jersey all-time prep record book with 229 points … The two-sport star also earned the 2008 AllConference honors on the school’s hockey team … Parents are Mike and Kathy Klimchak … Has three brothers – twins Mike and Bryan and a twin brother Scott, who is also on the Rutgers lacrosse team … Born on Jan. 14, 1991.

29 | Scott Klimchak R-Freshman • Attack • 6-1 • 180 Clark, N.J./A.L. Johnson

2010 (Freshman): Redshirt season. Prior to Rutgers: Earned All-American, All-State and All-League honors in his senior year at AL. Johnson High School … Garnered Under Armour All-American honors his junior year … Finished his high school career fourth on the New Jersey all-time scorers list with 385 points. … Earned All-State honors in ice hockey and All-Conference honors in football during his senior year … Parents are Mike and Kathy Klimchak … Has three brothers – twins Mike and Bryan and a twin brother Matt, who is also on the Rutgers lacrosse team … Born on Jan. 14, 1991.

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23 | Chris Zybrick R-Freshman • Defenseman • 6-1 • 210 Kinnelon, N.J./Kinnelon

2010 (Freshman): Redshirt season. Prior to Rutgers: Earned Second Team All-State honors at Kinnelon High School and helped his team win the 2009 Group I State Championship … Three-year starter … Earned First Team All-Morris County Honors … Three siblings – Mike Rob and Madeline … Son of Peter and Margaret Zybrick … Born on March 11, 1991.

45 | David Kelly Freshman • Defender • 6-3 • 215 Timonium, Md./Calvert Hall

Prior to Rutgers: Four-year varisty letterwinner at Calvert Hall....Led Calvert Hall to 2009 MIAA A Conference championship match and No. 4 national ranking...Helped the Cardinals reach the MIAA A Conference semifinals his junior year...Played on teams which went 32-7 his sophomore and junior years.

1 | Nick Depaolera Freshman • Attack • 5-11 • 180 Kinnelon, N.J./St. Joseph’s Metuchen

Prior to Rutgers: Four-year varsity starter at Kinnelon…Two-time All-American player his junior and senior years…Named First-Team All-State as a senior and Second-Team All-State as a junior…Earned First-Team All Conference both junior and senior seasons…Led team to County Champions his senior year…Team was the State Sectional Champions during his junior campaign…Named as the player to watch during the state tournament his junior year…Chosen for the Top 100 US Lacrosse rising seniors in Florida sponsored by Champion…Parents are Gary and Pamela DePaolera…Has an older sister Jill and has two older brothers Matt and Gary…Jill plays lacrosse at Scranton University…Matt played lacrosse at Herkimer Community College and then transferred to play at Montclair University…Born Dec. 2, 1991…Intends to major in communications and sports management.

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3 | nick contino Freshman • Defenseman • 6-0 • 185 Branchburg, N.J./St. Joseph’s Metuchen

Prior to Rutgers: Four-year varsity starter at St. Joseph’s…Two-time High School All-American…Earned All-State honors both junior and senior year…Also played three years of varsity basketball…Parents are Mike and Mary Contino…Born June 9, 1992.

13 | andrew parrilla Freshman • Midfielder • 6-0 • 180 Ramsey, N.J./Don Bosco Prep

Prior to Rutgers: Four-year varsity starter for Don Bosco…Captain of the team both junior and senior year…Was the leading scorer for his team during his final two years…Earned team MVP in 2010 and Offensive MVP in 2009…Named second-team All-State and All-Suburban…In 2009 and 2010 was named first-team All-Gibbs…Also played football at Don Bosco where he was a two-year starter…earned four state championships and won the 2009 National Championship for football…Received the Don Bosco Prep Iron Man Award…Parents are Kieran and Bill Parrilla…Has an older sister Meredith and an older brother Matthew…Meredith played soccer at NC State…Born April 13, 1992.

14 | Steven Lusby Freshman • Goalkeeper • 5-9 • 165 Severna Park, Md./Severna Park

Prior to Rutgers: A three sport athlete at Severna…Played varsity lacrosse for two years…Also played Varsity hockey for four years and varsity golf for two years…Led Severna to the 2010 Maryland State Championship for lacrosse…Third-team All-State and second-team All-County as a senior…played in the 2010 Maryland seniors All-Star game…Competed in the 2007 U-15 Ann Arunder County Lacrosse Exchange with England…Played club ball for SOCO…Parents are Kevin and Claudia Lusby…Has an older sister Kirsten and has an older brother Eric…Eric currently plays lacrosse at Loyola…Born July 15, 1992.

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18 | jack matthews Freshman • Midfielder • 5-11 • 165 Baltimore, Md./Gilman School

Prior to Rutgers: A three sport athlete for The Gilman School…Played varsity lacrosse for three years… Also played varsity soccer for four years and indoor track for two years…Earned first-team all state for the 4x800 in indoor track…Parents are Mickey and Dia Matthews…Dad played lacrosse at Brown and Mom played lacrosse at Richmond…Has an older sister Brooke and a younger brother Andy…Brooke currently plays lacrosse at Northwestern University…Born Aug. 8, 1991.

20 | Andrew d’ambrosio Freshman • Midfielder • 5-11 • 180 Monroe Twp., N.J./St. Joseph’s Metuchen

Prior to Rutgers: The GMC player of the year…Four-year varsity player for St. Joseph’s…Named firstteam All-State his senior year…Earned first-team All-GMC and first-team All-Area his sophomore, junior and senior year and was on the Honorable Mention for All-State as a junior…Played club ball for Leading Edge for four years…Parents are Paul and Lisa D’Ambrosio…Has a younger brother Michael and a younger sister Nicole…Born Oct. 16, 1991…Intends to major in business.

25 | Peter Noto Freshman • Midfielder • 5-9 • 175 Webster, N.Y./Schroeder

Prior to Rutgers: Three-year varsity starter at Schroder…Two-time first-team All-County…Also played football for Schroder…Two-time first-team All-Greater Rochester and Monroe County Player of the year during his junior season…Named the Adidas All-American in 2009 and won the Brogden Cup…Parents are Peter and Mary Noto…Born Oct. 17, 1991…intends to major in business.

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30 | ben schwing Freshman • Midfielder • 5-7 • 175 Medford, N.J./Shawnee

Prior to Rutgers: Selected as a Tri-State Lacrosse All-Star…Four-year varsity starter at Shawnee…AllAmerican as a senior…All-County his junior and senior year…All-Conference his sophomore, junior, and senior season…Received the Burlington County Scholar Athlete Award…Also played football for Shawnee…Was named to the NJ Super 100 for football and was also a two-time Group 3 State Champion… Parents are Barb and Ken Schwing…Has two older brother Ty and Jake…Cousin Doug was a wrestler at Rider University and was a two-time All-American…Born June 10, 1991…Intends to major in business.

35 | Joe Stottler Freshman • Midfielder • 5-11 • 178 Wantagh, N.Y./Wantagh

Prior to Rutgers: Three-year varsity starter at Wantagh…Named captain his senior year…Named AllCounty during his senior campaign…Also a Nassau County finalist his senior year…Named All-Conference his junior year…Earned Academic All-County his senior year for lacrosse and Academic All-Conference during his junior year…Also was a two-year starter and captain for the football team…Was a Nassau County Golden II nominee…Received the Unsung Hero Award and was a Nassau County finalist his senior year…Played club ball for Long Island Sting…Parent are Bill and Joyce Stotter…Has an older sister Kristen and an older brother Mike…Kristen is a cheerleader at Towson University and Mike was a four-year starter at Quinnipiac…Born Feb. 13, 1992…Intends to major in business.

38 | Brett O’Donnell Freshman • Goalkeeper • 6-1 • 180 Glen Ridger, N.J./Glen Ridge

Prior to Rutgers: A two-time defensive MVP and a four-year starter at Glen Ridge…The Essex County runner up his junior and senior years…Earned first-team All-Conference during his senior campaign… Named as a Tri-State Black All-Star…Parents are William and Stephanie O’Donnell…Has two older sisters Courtney and Caitlin and has two older brothers Kyle and Trevor…Trevor played hockey at Montclair State…Born Sept. 11, 1991…intends to major in criminal justice.

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SCARLET KNIGHTS

42 | Kyle Robinson Freshman • Attack • 6-5 • 220 Jersey City, N.J./St. Peter’s Prep

Prior to Rutgers: Four-year varsity starter in both lacrosse and ice hockey…Two-year captain on both teams…Named first-team All-Conference for lacrosse his sophomore, junior and senior seasons… Played club ball for Leading Edge for one year…Parents are Eric and Kathleen Robinson…Has an older sister Katlyn and an older brother Bryan…Born March 11, 1992…Intends to major in communication.

43 | ryan scott Freshman • Midfielder • 5-10 • 170 Easton, Pa./Easton

Prior to Rutgers: Three-year starter for Easton…Captain of the team his senior year…Also ran indoor track and field…Played club ball for the Skyhawks and was the 2009 Keystone State Champions for Lehigh Valley…Vice President of his senior class and a honor roll student…Parents are John and Miriam Scott…Has a younger brother Brandon…Born Nov. 11, 1991…Plans to major in psychology with a minor in communication.

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The Automated ScoreBook For Lacrosse RU Combined Team Statistics All games (as of Jan 05, 2011)

2010 Final statistics RECORD: ALL GAMES CONFERENCE NON-CONFERENCE Date Feb 21 Feb 28 201 Mar 06 Mar 13 Mar 16 Mar 20 * Mar 27 * Apr 03 Apr 10 Apr 13 *G Apr 18 * Apr 18 * Apr 25 * May 01 * May 09

Opponent at WAGNER #19 UMBC SJU PSU MAR at Army at #11 Notre Dame STJ at Jacksonville at Princeton #2 SU #2 SU #9 VU at #15 Georgetown at Providence

TEAM STATISTICS SHOT STATISTICS Goals-Shot attempts Goals scored per game Shot pct. Shots on goal-Attempts SOG pct. Shots/Game As s i s t s MAN-UP OPPORTUNITIES Goals-Opportunities Conversion Percent GOAL BREAKDOWN Total Goals Man-up Man-down Unassisted Overtime Goals scored average GROUND BALLS TURNOVERS CAUSED TURNOVERS FACEOFFS (W-L) Faceoff W-L Pct. CLEARS Clear Pct. PENALTIES Number Minutes ATTENDANCE Total Dates/Avg Per Date Neutral Site #/Avg

OVERALL 6-8 2-4 4-4

W L W W W L W L L L L L L W

Score 24-4 5-6 15-6 7-4 10-9 8-11 10-8 10-11 10-17 8-10

Att. 461 420 520 200 424 1401 1357 730 849 1106

5-11 4-8 9-14 12-2

3253 473 1834 607

RUTGERS

OPP

137-488 9.79 .281 289-488 .592 34.9 79

121-364 8.64 .332 228-364 .626 26.0 76

15-55 .273

16-58 .276

137 15 0 58 0 9.79 388 208 133 160-299 .535 194-238 .815

121 16 4 45 0 8.64 363 239 117 139-299 .465 205-267 .768

61 47:30

56 40:30

6020 7/860 0/0

7615 7/1088

HOME 3-4 0-3 3-1 ## 1 20 31 17 18 12 6 11 21 9 4 3 22 43 40 25 42 39 27 29 19 30 44 41 37 33 32 28 26 24 23 16 14 13 10 8 7 5 2 34

PLAYER

GP G 14 26 14 23 14 20 14 13 13 11 14 11 14 8 14 6 14 4 14 3 9 2 14 2 14 2 2 2 3 1 4 1 4 1 14 1 13 0 1 0 1 0 1 0 7 0 3 0 12 0 14 0 5 0 2 0 11 0 6 0 13 0 9 0 6 0 13 0 4 0 10 0 13 0 4 0 3 0 1 0 14 137 14 121

## 10 16 8

Goalie

GP 4 7 10 14 14

BUEHNING, Gerhard PENNINGTON, Justi KELLY, Kory HOVER, Kevin GOLDBERG, Adam STANWICK, Tad DIEHL, Michael CLANCY, Duncan MANGAN, Will BURNARD, Hunter ZERRILLO, Nicholas PORTER, Brendan MATTES, Christophe LEFFERTS, Jonatha TEATOM, Greg STAGNITTA, Michae CARFARO, Salvator D'AGOSTINO, Andrew SHEMESH, Brian KLIMCHAK, Scott KLIMCHAK, Matthew ZYBRICK, Christopher WARNICK, Ryan DONNELLY, Zachar STILLEY,Erik FRADKIN, Jacob SHEMESH, Steve BALL, Alexander WATSON, Steven ENGELHARDT, Dre BELICHICK, Stephe BUTLER, Rudy INGRALDI, Daniel VICKERS-ANNIS,Taylor DONNELLY, Joseph OLIN, Billy HOVER, Sean ZENDA, Zachary BARTLESON, Edwar NEINSTEDT, Chris Total Opponents DONNELLY, Joseph BUTLER, Rudy OLIN, Billy Total Opponents

NEUTRAL 0-0 0-0 0-0 A

Pts

Sh Up Dn

8 34 82 5 15 38 83 3 5 25 74 1 7 20 31 3 3 14 33 0 10 21 47 2 5 13 34 0 5 11 16 1 3 7 25 0 6 9 15 0 1 3 4 0 0 2 9 0 1 3 3 0 2 4 2 0 0 1 1 0 0 1 8 0 1 2 2 0 0 1 3 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 0 4 4 8 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 2 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 79 216 488 15 76 197 364 16

Min. 30:41 326:36 482:43 840:00 840:00

GA

1 44 76 121 137

1.96 8.08 9.45 8.64 9.79

1st 2nd

3rd

4th

Total 137 121

Saves by Period RU Opponents

1st 2nd

3rd

4th

Total 107 152

1st 2nd

3rd

4th

Total 488 364

1st 2nd

3rd

4th

Total 289 228

Shots on Goal RU Opponents

33 27 25 35

36 23 26 38

32 30 31 42

36 41 25 37

119 126 122 121 85 88 94 97 68 52

74 49

74 61

73 66

GB

Faceoff

0 10 0-0 0 29 8-18 0 5 0-0 0 10 0-0 0 4 0-0 0 11 0-0 0 2 0-0 0 9 0-0 0 22 0-0 0 2 0-0 0 5 10-21 0 14 0-0 0 65 125-232 0 0 0-0 0 1 4-6 0 0 0-0 0 4 11-17 0 52 0-0 0 20 0-1 0 0 0-0 0 0 0-0 0 1 0-0 0 1 0-0 0 3 0-1 0 2 0-0 0 29 0-0 0 3 2-3 0 1 0-0 0 4 0-0 0 0 0-0 0 5 0-0 0 18 0-0 0 0 0-0 0 14 0-0 0 2 0-0 0 14 0-0 0 12 0-0 0 1 0-0 0 1 0-0 0 0 0-0 0 388 160-299 4 363 139-299

GAAvg Save

Goals by Period RU Opponents

Shots by Period RU Opponents

38

AWAY 3-4 2-1 1-3

2 37 68 107 152

Pct

.667 .457 .472 .469 .526

W-L-T

0-0-0 4-2-0 2-6-0 6-8-0 8-6-0


2011 opponents The Scarlet Knights face a difficult schedule that is highlighted by matchups with four teams that advanced to the NCAA Tournament. RU begins its spring with a trip to Hempstead, N.Y. for a scrimmage with Hofstra on Feb. 12. The following weekend, the Scarlet Knights open their 2011 regular season by welcoming Wagner (Feb. 18) and Manhattan (Feb. 20) to Piscataway for a pair of weekend matches. Following its contests with the Seahawks and Jaspers, RU hits the road for three-consecutive weekends taking on UMBC (Feb 26), Saint Joseph’s (March 5) and Penn State (March 12). Rutgers then returns home for a three-match home stand starting with a midweek matchup against Jacksonville on Tuesday, March 15. The following Saturday, March 19, RU hosts Army in a 1 p.m. contest at Yurcak Field. The Scarlet Knights close out their home stand by opening BIG EAST play against 2010 national finalist Notre Dame. Rutgers will stay in New Jersey for the next weekend, as it faces off with BIG EAST rival St. John’s on Sunday, April 3, at the New Meadowlands Stadium in the first match of the 2011 Big City Classic. The 1 p.m. matchup will be tboradcast live on ESPN3. The Scarlet Knights face another New York opponent the following Saturday (April 9) when they take on the Marist Red Foxes.

PENN STATE

Sat., March 12 • Happy Valley, Pa. Head Coach: Jeff Tambroni 2010 Record: 2-11

PSU vs. RU: RU leads, 41-19 Last Meeting: RU won 7-4

JACKSONVILLE

Tues. March 15 • Piscataway, N.J. Head Coach: Matt Kerwick 2010 Record: 6-7

JU vs. RU: JU leads, 1-0 Last Meeting: JU won 17-10

ARMY

Sat. March 19 • Piscataway, N.J. Head Coach: Joe Alberici 2010 Record: 11-6

A vs. RU: A leads, 51-20-1 Last Meeting: A won 11-8

NOTRE DAME

Sun., March 27 • Piscataway, N.J. Head Coach: Kevin Corrigan 2010 Record: 10-7

ND vs. RU: ND leads, 3-2 Last Meeting: RU won 10-8

ST. JOHN’S

Sun., April 3 • East Rutherford, N.J.

RU returns to Yurcak Field for a Tuesday night match with in-state rival Princeton. Following the game with their in-state rivals, the Scarlet Knights return to BIG EAST play when they take on Villanova on Saturday, April 16.

Head Coach: Jason Miller 2010 Record: 5-9

Rutgers closes out its road slate the following weekend when it takes on another BIG EAST rival, Syracuse (April 23). The game, which is part of the ESPNU Warrior Classic, will be played at Rentschler Field in Hartford, Conn.

Head Coach: Scott Nelson 2010 Record: 8-7

STJ vs. RU: RU leads, 16-3 Last Meeting: StJ won 11-10

MARIST

Sat., April 9 • Poughkeepsie, N.Y. MAR vs. RU: RU leads, 2-0 Last Meeting: RU won 10-9

PRINCETON

Tues., April 12 • Piscataway, N.J.

RU ends its regular season by hosting a pair of BIG EAST opponents in Georgetown (April 30) and Providence (May 7).

Wagner

Sat. Feb. 18 • Piscataway, N.J. Head Coach: Jason Rife 2010 Record: 1-14

WU vs. RU: RU leads, 2-0 Last Meeting: RU won 24-4

Manhattan

Sun. Feb. 20 • Piscataway, N.J. Head Coach: Tim McIntee 2010 Record: 7-9

MC vs. RU: RU leads, 9-0 Last Meeting: RU won 11-7

umbc

Sat. Feb. 26 • Baltimore, Md. Head Coach: Don Zimmerman 2010 Record: 4-9

UMBC vs. RU: RU leads, 8-5 Last Meeting: UMBC won 6-5

saint joseph’s

Sat. March 5 • Philidephia, Pa. Head Coach: Pat Cullinan 2010 Record: 3-12

SJU vs. RU: RU leads, 5-1 Last Meeting: RU won 15-6

Head Coach: Chris Bates 2010 Record: 11-5

P vs. RU: P leads 29-56-3 Last Meeting: P won 10-8

VILLANOVA

Sat., April 16 • Philadelphia, Pa. Head Coach: Michael Corrado 2010 Record: 10-5

VU vs. RU: RU leads, 6-2 Last Meeting: VU won 8-4

SYRACUSE

Sat., April 23 • Hartford, Conn. Head Coach: John Desko 2010 Record: 13-2

SU vs. RU: SU leads, 38-9 Last Meeting: SU won 11-5

GEORGETOWN

Sat., April 30 • Piscataway, N.J. Head Coach: Dave Urick 2010 Record: 9-5

GT vs. RU: GT leads, 13-0 Last Meeting: GT won 14-9

PROVIDENCE

Sat., May 7 • Piscataway, N.J. Head Coach: Chris Burdick 2010 Record: 0-14

PC vs. RU: RU leads, 1-0 Last Meeting: RU won 12-2

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A Proud tradition Over 100 years ago, three Rutgers University students organized the first men’s lacrosse team and unknowingly initiated a Rutgers sports program that would consistently be among the nation’s best. It was the year 1887. The first squad, which went 0-4 that season, would be the only squad in school history to suffer through a season without a victory. Rutgers’ first team captain was Charles Devine, class of 1890; John Polack, class of 1889, served as the first business manager of the 1887 and 1888 teams. In 1889, player-coach Samuel Lockett paced the Scarlet to the squads’ first winning season as the team went 2-1. Three decades would pass before the game would be witnessed at Rutgers again. Through the efforts of Harland W. “Tots” Meistrell, lacrosse was reinstated at the University in 1920. In his first and only season as head coach, Frank Graham led the newly re-established Scarlet Knights squad to a 1-5 record. Over the next five years, Albert Brisotti would occupy the helm of the Rutgers lacrosse program and lead the Scarlet to a 16-21-2 record. He unfortunately has been immortalized in Rutgers lacrosse history as the only coach to hold the reins for more than one season and come away with a career losing record. Regardless of this fact, many noted and successful Rutgers alumni wore the Scarlet on the lacrosse field during the Brisotti years, including the late United States Senator Clifford Case (Class of 1925) and Ozzie Nelson (Class of 1927). Rutgers’ proud winning lacrosse tradition began when former Syracuse All-American Fred Fitch took over the coaching reins in 1926. Since the Fitch years and leading up to the present day, the Rutgers lacrosse program has only suffered 18 losing campaigns in more than 70 seasons of competition. While under Fitch’s direction, the Scarlet Knights joined the United States Intercollegiate Lacrosse Association (USILA). During the late 1920’s and 30’s, Fitch transformed Rutgers into a national men’s lacrosse powerhouse. In 1928, Rutgers was named co-national champions along with Johns Hopkins, Maryland and Navy. In 1927 and 1932, Rutgers finished fourth in the USILA rankings. The 1932 Scarlet Knights, who netted a 7-2-1 season, were selected to participate in the Olympic tryouts, securing a win over Syracuse in the first round,

but losing by one goal (5-4) to Maryland in the second round. A tandem termed “the best attack pair in the country,” George Latimer and Joseph “Frenchy” Julien led that squad to national prominence. Both men were eventually inducted into the National Lacrosse Hall of Fame along with their coach, Fred Fitch. Fitch, who has the honor of being the second all-time winningest coach “On the Banks”, recorded 10671-8 record during his 22-year career which was interrupted by World War II in 1943. He resumed coaching the Scarlet at the conclusion of the war Keith Cromwell was a three time All-American at RU (‘99, ‘00, ‘01) in 1946, and ended his tenure in 1949. The program reached an even higher level with the arrival of head coach Al Twitchell in 1950. The Scarlet squad only underwent two losing seasons during his campaign, but reached a number of milestones that far outshone those records. Twitchell’s 1955 team won the Laurie Cox Division Championship, a national division championship, which it shared with Hofstra. The 1955 season was also significant for several other reasons. That year, the Scarlet Knights battled Princeton to a 14-14 tie in an epic, double-overtime war. Rutgers, who went 8-1-1 that year, also defeated Syracuse on the road, 23-19. That Orangemen team featured AllAmerican Jim Brown who, historians recall, was outplayed by RU’s Hall of Famer, Bob Kelley. The 1956 Scarlet Knights, captained by Bob Andrews and Kelley, went 9-1, losing their lone contest to Syracuse but finishing third in the nation. Between 1950 and 1961, Twitchell led Rutgers to an impressive 86-39-1 record, including a fourth-ranked finish in 1958. Twitchell was honored by being inducted into the Hall of Fame in 1967. Three-time Scarlet All-American Bob Naso, who played under Twitchell from 1956-1959, took over the program from his mentor in 1962. In his 13 seasons, which spanned 1962 to 1974, Naso led the squad to 10 winning campaigns. He recovered from an inaugural 3-7 season and completed his coaching career with an impressive 95-59-1 record. The highlight of Naso’s career came in 1972 as he directed Rutgers to its first-ever NCAA playoff appearance. The NCAA playoff system was instituted in 1971. He repeated the feat with his 1974 squad.

Tom Hayes is the winningest coach in RU history with 194 victories.

Tom Hayes moved into the leadership role in 1975. Hayes led the

41


A Proud tradition Scarlet Knights to 21 winning seasons and to final Top 20 rankings for 24 straight years. Under Hayes, Rutgers lacrosse teams established a 194-156 record, including five NCAA appearances, two of which occurred in back-toback seasons. Three of Hayes’ teams earned national rankings of seven, occurring in 1975, 1982, and 1986. During the Hayes era, 55 All-Americans were selected from Rutgers and 30 North-South All-Star game participants, as well as an international player in Brody Bush, who played with the United States team that won the international championship in 1996. Scarlet Knight firsts which occurred under Hayes include the first team to win 11 games in a season (1986), the first victory in an NCAA tournament game (1986), and the longest winning streak of nine (1982). Hayes brought international distinction to the Scarlet Knight lacrosse program by traveling his squads around the world. In addition to bringing teams to British Columbia and Australia for exhibition tournaments, Hayes took his 1992 squad to Bermuda for the first-ever Bermuda Lacrosse Invitational, and his 1996 squad to England for a two-week round of games, camps, and clinics. In 2001, Jim Stagnitta took over as head coach. In just his second year, he guided RU to an NCAA Tournament appearance, as Rutgers improved from 2-12 in 2002 to 10-5 and hosted Georgetown in the first round of the tournament. Stagnitta was named the ECAC and USILA National Coach of the Year. Stagnitta came to RU from Washington and Lee University, where he led the Generals to 12 consecutive winning seasons and five appearances in the NCAA Tournament.

John E. Danowski was a member of three RU teams that advanced to the NCAA Tournament (‘72, ‘74, ’75) Ten men who have been associated with the Rutgers University lacrosse program have had the distinction being named to the United States International Lacrosse Association Hall of Fame. Four coaches have been honored, including former coaches Al Brisotti in 1958, Fred Fitch in 1961, Tom Hayes in 1990, as well as former player and later coach Albert Twitchell (‘32) in 1967. Former Rutgers players include Joseph Julien (‘32) in 1965, George Latimer (‘32) in 1972, Willis Bilderback (‘30) in 1973, Robert Kelley (‘56) in 1985, and most recently, John Valestra (‘64) in 1996. In addition, the man responsible for reinstating the Rutgers lacrosse program in 1920, Harland Meistrell, in 1962. Since its inception, the lacrosse program at the State University of New Jersey has produced 554 victories and 197 All-Americans. In keeping the university in the national spotlight for almost three-quarters of a century, the Scarlet Knight laxmen truly have established a proud tradition, and Jim Stagnitta is looking to build upon the winning lacrosse tradition at Rutgers University.

Justin Pennington became the 197th Scarlet Knight to be named an All-American in 2010.

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all-americans --A-Alton, Henry Clay - D - First Team ‘28, Second Team ‘29 Ambrose, Joseph - M - Honorable Mention ‘53 Anderson, James - M - Second Team ‘63 Andrews, Robert - A - Second Team ‘55, Second Team ‘56 Apel, Charles - D - Honorable Mention ‘75, Third Team ‘77 Arata, Steven - M - Honorable Mention ‘74 Austin, William - M - Honorable Mention ‘58, Honorable Mention ‘59 --B-Babcock, Warren - A - Honorable Mention ‘33 Baser, Fred - M - Second Team ‘41 Bender, David - M - First Team ‘25 Beneville, Wallace - D - Third Team ‘51, First Team ‘52 Benkert, Henry - A - Second Team ‘24, Second Team ‘26 Bossow, Kenneth - D - Honorable Mention ‘55 Bryan, Robert - G - Third Team ‘72, Honorable Mention ‘73, Honorable Mention ‘74 --C-Calello, Albert -M - Honorable Mention ‘52 Canavan, Joe - A - Honorable Mention ‘64 Carney, Bob - M - Honorable Mention ‘73 Chandler, Wallace - D - Second Team ‘26 Clark, Robert - D - Honorable Mention ‘60 Cramer, Richard - M - Honorable Mention ‘48 Cromwell, Keith - A - Honorable Mention ‘99, Second Team ‘00, FIrst Team ‘01 Cronin, Jerry - M - First Team ‘32 Cuffe, Kenneth - M - Honorable Mention ‘49 Cyphers, Harry - A - Honorable Mention ‘47 --D-D’Antonio, James - A - Honorable Mention ‘64 Darlington, George - D - Third Team ‘61 Daut, Jack - A - First Team ‘55, Honorable Mention ‘56, First Team ‘57 DeCicco, Andrew - A - Honorable Mention ‘89 Dickson, Edward - D - First Team ‘23 DiLiberti, Charles - D - Honorable Mention ‘47, Second Team ‘48 Disciorio, David - M - Second Team ‘86 Duca, Jeff - A - Honorable Mention ‘03 --E-Emmer, Jack - D - Second Team ‘67 Evans, William - M - First Team ‘40 Evanson, E.W. - G - Second Team ‘30 --F-Farquaharson, Ross - M - Second Team ‘58 Ford, James - A - Honorable Mention ‘78, Honorable Mention ‘79, Second Team ‘80

--G-Gabriel, Gerald - M - Honorable Mention ‘53, Honorable Mention ‘54 Garrison, Samuel - D - Honorable Mention ‘54 Gilman, Jim - G - Honorable Mention ‘86, Honorable Mention ‘87 Gladwin, Richard -A - Honorable Mention ‘49, Honorable Mention ‘50 Glucker, Donald - G - Honorable Mention ‘55, Honorable Mention ‘57 Gosnell, Douglas - M - Honorable Mention ‘51 --H-Hallock, George - G - Third Team ‘36, Second Team ‘37 Haugevik, Andrew - M - Honorable Mention ‘71, Honorable Mention ‘72 Haugevik, Ed - D - First Team ‘72, First Team ‘73 Havalchak, Greg - G - Honorable Mention ‘03, Second Team ‘04, Honorable Mention ‘06 Hitchner, Stephen - D - Second Team ‘38, Second Team ‘39 Howland, John - A - Honorable Mention ‘57, Second Team’58, First Team ‘59 Humphreys, James - M - First Team ‘34 --J-Jackson, Reid - D - Honorable Mention ‘92, Second Team ‘93, First Team ‘94 Joinnides, Paul - A -Third Team ‘68 Julien, Joseph - A - Honorable Mention ‘30 --K-Kearney, Edward - M - Second Team ‘29, First Team ‘30 Keiler, Henry - M - First Team ‘24 Kelley, Robert - M - Honorable Mention ‘54, First Team ‘55, First Team ‘56 Knauss, W. Richard - M - Second Team ‘31 Koch, Ted - G - Honorable Mention ‘60, Second Team ‘61 Kopley, Matt - M - Honorable Mention ‘98 Kowalski, Jay - M - Honorable Mention ‘62 --L-Lamb, George - M - Honorable Mention ‘65 Latimer, George - M - First Team ‘30 , First Team ‘31, First Team ‘32 Leitch, Richard - A - Honorable Mention ‘68 Lewis, Rich - D - Honorable Mention ‘86, Honorable Mention ‘87 Lincoln, Allan B. - A - Honorable Mention ‘23 Little, George - D - Honorable Mention ‘50 Luciano, Steve - A - Honorable Mention ‘90, Honorable Mention ‘91 Lugossy, Frank - D - Honorable Mention ‘61 --M-Martocci, Victor - D - Second Team ‘70 Matthews, Roger - A - Honorable Mention ‘63 McVeigh, Malcolm - A - Honorable Mention ‘50, Honorable Mention ‘51 Montgomery, Monte - M - Honorable Mention ‘54, Honorable Mention ‘55 Moreau, Mark - D - Honorable Mention ‘88, Third Team ‘89 Mudie, Bob - M - Second Team ‘65 Mudie, Charles - M - Third Team ‘66, Third Team ‘67

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all-americans --N-Naslonski, Bill - M - Honorable Mention ‘83, Second Team ‘84 Naslonski, John - G - Honorable Mention ‘84 Naso, Robert - M - Honorable Mention ‘57, Third Team ‘58, Second Team ‘59 Neuman, William - M - Second Team ‘43 Nicklas, Rich - A -Third Team ‘59 --O-O’Dougherty, Chris - D - Honorable Mention ‘07 O’Shea, Ryan - A - Honorable Mention ‘93, Honorable Mention ‘94, Third Team ‘95 Opdyke, Dwight - M - Third Team ‘33, Second Team ‘34 Orlick, Joseph - M - Honorable Mention ‘49, Honorable Mention ‘50 Osgood, Charles - M - Third Team ‘25 --P-Pencek, Dick - D - Third Team ‘59, Second Team ‘60 Pennington, Justin - M - Honorable Mention ‘08, Honorable Mention ‘10 Perry, Arthur - M - First Team ‘38 Polcanis, Franklin - M - First Team ‘36 Potter, Edgar J. - G - Honorable Mention ‘25 Powless, Delby - A - Honorable Mention ‘03, Honorable Mention ‘04 --R-Raniere, George - D - Honorable Mention ‘47 Ray, Al - M - Honorable Mention ‘80, First Team ‘82, Second Team ‘83 Reilly, Joe - M - Third Team ‘78, Honorable Mention ‘79 Rinaldi, Greg - M - Third Team ‘88, Third Team ‘89, First Team ‘90 Rinck, Michael - A - Honorable Mention ‘75 Roberts, Clifford - A - First Team ‘27, First Team ‘28 Robinson, Arthur - D - Honorable Mention ‘57 Rockafeller II, Harry - G - Third Team ‘40 Rogers, Mike - D - Third Team ‘90, Honorable Mention ‘91 Rohrbach, Nelson - A - Third Team ‘29 Roos, Brad - M - Honorable Mention ‘85 Ross, Kenneth - M - Third Team ‘42 Ruch, Kenneth - M - Honorable Mention ‘26 --S-Sasser, Alfred - M - Honorable Mention ‘47, Honorable Mention ‘48 Savidge, G. Peter - D - Third Team ‘64, Second Team ‘65, Second Team ‘66 Schmidt, Herb - M - Honorable Mention ‘62 Schmidt, Ralph - A - First Team ‘42 Schmidt, Walter - M - Honorable Mention ‘61 Scipione, Rich - G - Honorable Mention ‘77 Seaman, Lloyd - M - Honorable Mention ‘59 Seward, Mike - D - Honorable Mention ‘96 Shaivitz, Ed - G - Honorable Mention ‘67, Honorable Mention ‘68 Stevens, Donald - A - Honorable Mention ‘52, Honorable Mention ‘53 Sweeney, Tom - A - Honorable Mention ‘77, Honorable Mention ‘78, Honorable Mention ‘79, Honorable Mention ‘80

44

--T-Teatom, Jim - M - Honorable Mention ‘75, Second Team ‘76, Second Team ‘77 Thropp, Frank - M - Honorable Mention ‘49 Trabulsy, Ed - A - Second Team ‘87 Trapp, Lou - D - Honorable Mention ‘84, Third Team ‘85 Twitchell, Albert - D - Third Team ‘35 Tyree, Mark - M - Third Team ‘79 --V-Valestra, John - A - Third Team ‘62, First Team ‘63, First Team ‘64 Van Ness, Bruce - M - Honorable Mention ‘69 Vanmater, Daniel - M - First Team ‘35, Third Team ‘36 Vencak, Bob - D - Honorable Mention ‘80, Honorable Mention ‘81, Second Team ‘82

--W-Ward, William - M - First Team ‘33 Watson, Jamie - M - Honorable Mention ‘92 Weismeier, Ed - A - Honorable Mention ‘60 --Y-Yurcak, Ronald - A - Honorable Mention ‘65


all-time north/south game participants

1941................................................................ Fred Baser, M 1942...........................................................Kenneth Ross, M 1943....................................................................... Bob Byrum ........................................................................ Bob Neuman, M ..................................................................... George Ranieri, D .................................................................................... Don White 1947........................................................... Alfred Sasser, M 1948...................................................... Charles DiLiberti, D 1950...............................................................Dick Gladwin, A 1952..................................................Wallace Benneville, D 1953..................................................... Joseph Ambrose, D ...........................................................................Don Stevens, A ...................................................................Robert Tillotsen, M 1954........................................................... Gerald Gabriel, A ........................................................................Sam Garrison, D 1955..............................................Monte Montgomery, M 1956.......................................................Robert Andrews, A ........................................................................ Robert Kelley, M 1957............................................................ Bruce Barney, A ................................................................................ Jack Daut, A .............................................................................Don Gucker, G 1958.....................................................................Henry Goetz ................................................................................ David Pooley .................................................................... Walter J. Schmidt 1959..........................................................William Austin, M ......................................................................... Robert Naso, M 1960.....................................................................Bob Clark, D .....................................................................Bill Fleischman, M ............................................................................Dick Pencek, D ........................................................................Ed Wiesmeier, A 1961.................................................. George Darlington, D .......................................................................Frank Lugossy, D 1962....................................................... Hosted by Rutgers ............................................................... Richard Anderson, A ................................................................. Joseph Kowalski, M ...................................................................... Samuel Mudie, M 1963...........................................................Jim Anderson, M ......................................................................Robert Applegate .............................................................................Robert Flower 1964........................................................... John Canavan, D ............................................................... James D’ Antonio, M ........................................................................ John Valestra, A 1965................................................................. Ron Yurcak, A 1966......................................................Barry Goldsmith, M ........................................................................... John Okulski, D ........................................................................... Paul Popson, A ..........................................................................Pete Savidge, D 1967...............................................................Jack Emmer, D ......................................................................Charles Mudie, M ..................................................................... Frank Rotunda, M 1968........................................................... Paul Joinnides, A ..................................................................... Edward Shavitz, G 1969..........................................................Richard Leitch, M ............................................................................. Glenn Ritch, A 1970.............................................................. Russ Hanna, M 1971.............................................................. Vic Martocci, D

1972............................................................... John Chrillo, M ......................................................................Andy Haugevik, M 1973................................................................Bob Carney, M ............................................................................Ed Haugevik, D 1974............................................................... Steve Arata, M ........................................................................Kevin Barrett, M 1975............................................................... John Meigel, D ...............................................................................Mike Ruick, A ...........................................................................Al Zwillinger, M 1976..........................................................John Danowski, A 1977..................................................................Chuck Apel, D ...........................................................................Jim Teatom, M 1978..................................................Richard Prokopcyk, D 1980..................................................................... Jim Ford, A ........................................................................ Tom Sweeney, A 1982.................................................................. Albert Ray, M ......................................................................Robert Vencak, D 1983........................................................... Peter Fienerman 1984...................................................William Naslonski, M ............................................................................ Louis Trapp, D 1985......................................................... John Naslonski, G 1986............................................................... Gregg Fried, M ...................................................................... Dave Disciorio, M 1987...................................................... Edward Trabulsy, A ........................................................................Richard Lewis, D 1988..................................................................Jim Gilman, G 1989............................................................Marc Moreau, D .......................................................................................Lou Fusilli 1990...............................................................Greg Rinaldi, M 1991............................................................ Steve Luciano, A .......................................................................... Mike Rogers, D ...................................................................... John Schmunk, G 1993.................................................................Nick Delapi, M .............................................................................. Chris Pratt, A ..................................................................... Jamie Watson, M 1994............................................................. Reid Jackson, D 1995..................................................................John Kidon, G ........................................................................... Ryan O’Shea, A ............................................................................ Dan Spillett, M 1996..............................................................Mike Seward, D 1998................................................................Matt Kopley, D 1999................................................................. Brody Bush, A 2000.............................................................. Paul Boniello, D ........................................................................... Rich Brezski, D 2002...............................................................Brad Kerwin, D 2003..................................................................... Jeff Duca, A ........................................................................ Nick Schmidt, M 2004........................................................... Delby Powless, A ............................................................................ Joe Duncan, D 2005...........................................................Jamie Lovejoy, M 2006........................................................ Greg Havalchak, G 2007............................................................. Colin Checcio, A 2009..................................................Chris O’Dougherty, M 2010................................................. Gerhard Buehning, M .............................................................. Justin Pennington, M

45


all-time letterwinners --A-Abbott, Howard - 1930, 31 Abidin, Richard R. - 1958 Achatz, Dan - 2002, 03, 04, 05 Allio, Richard - 1960, 61 Alton, Henry Clay 0- 1927, 28, 29 Ambrose, Joseph T. - 1951, 52, 53 Anderson, Richard 1961, 62 Anderson, Victor - 1960 Anderson, James R. - 1961, 62, 63 Andrews, Robert - 1954, 55, 56 Apel, Andrew - 1993, 94 Apel, Charles A. - 1974, 75, 76, 77 Apel, Matthew - 2001, 02, 03, 04 Applegate, Robert T. - 1961, 62, 63 Aquila, John - 1935 Arata, M. Stephen - 1973, 74 Arps, Walter E. - 1928 Ashcraft, Josh - 2004, 05, 06, 07 Ashforth, Brian - 1982 Atkinson, Robert W. - 1949, 50 Atwood, Donner R. - 1943 Aubry, Robert - 1938 Austin, Jr., William W. - 1957, 58, 59 Auten, Jr., George M. - 1924, 25, 26, 27 --B-Babcock, Warren L. - 1931, 33 Bach, Michael A. - 1963, 64, 65 Bachardy, Mark - 1993, 94, 95 Bacon, Jermey - Mgr - 1952 Badger, Thomas - 1990, 91, 92 Ball, Alex - 2010 Bania, Kent - 1996, 97, 98, 99 Barbero, Albert L. - 1954 Barile, Joseph Vito - 1936, 37, 83 Barney, Bruce A. - 1955, 56, 57 Barrett, John - 2005, 06 Barrett, Kevin T. - 1971, 72, 73, 74 Barske, Harry - 1933, 34 Bartleson, Edward - 2010 Bartlett, Henry M. - 1923 Baser, Fred R. - 1941, 42 Bass, David - 1987, 88 Basso, Jason - 2001, 02 Battoni, Sean - 2002, 03, 04, 05 Baumann, Arthur H. - 1930, 31 Bayuk, Jeff - 1983, 84, 85, 86 Bayvel, Greg - 2001 Beachem, Terence M. - Mgr - 1968 Beadle, Patti - Mgr - 1978 Beams, Albert S. - 1928 Beckwith, Charles A. - 1955, 56 Bedford, Richard A. - 1980, 81 Beeler, Douglas - 1987, 88, 89, 90 Behrend, John A. - 1949, 50, 51 Bekkevold, Ralph B. - 1976, 77, 78, 79 Belichick, Stephen - 2008, 09, 10 Belshaw, Paul - 1979 Bender, David T. - 1924, 25 Beneville, Wallace L. - 1950, 51, 52 Benjamin, Seth - 1999, 00, 01 Benkert, Henry M. - 1923, 24 Benson, Dan - 2003 Berkeley, Stephen - 1988, 89, 90 Berlitz, Karen - Mgr - 1980, 81 Bernesser, George C. - 1976

46

Bernston, Chas - 2003, 04, 05, 06 Beyrer, Michael - 1990, 91, 92 Bianchi, Richard - 1987, 88 Bilderback, Willis P. - 1929, 30 Bird, Richard R. - 1963 Bivona, Danny - 2001, 02 Blinn, Cindy - Mgr - 1983, 84, 85 Blitstein, Clifford F. - 1970, 71, 72 Block, Paul A. - 1968 Blomquist, Leif - 2002, 03, 04, 05 Blum, David - 1956 Bohlinger, Anthony - 2001 Bohlinger, Mike - 1999, 00, 01, 02 Bohus, William - 1957 Boniello, Paul - 1998, 99, 00 Bopp, H. John - 1972, 73, 74, 75 Borges, Joseph - 1991, 92 Boroff, Randy S. - 1971, 72, 73 Bosley, Arthur K. - 1965, 67 Bossow, Kenneth R. - 1953, 54, 55 Bottar, Taylor - 2007, 08, 09 Bottini, Thomas - 2007, 08 Bowers, Charles H. - 1967, 68 Boyce, C. O’Donnell - 1969 Breenbery, Benjamin N. - 1929 Brennan, E. G. - 1923, 24 Brennan, John - 1999 Brickley II, Theodore - 1964 Briggs, Charles David - 1964, 65 Briggs, Andrew - 1983, 84, 85 Britts, Devon - 2003, 04, 05, 06 Brocklebank, S. Wayne - 1949, 50 Brody, David S. - 1960, 62 Bromley, Heather - Mgr - 1990, 91 Brothers, Daivd - 1989 Brown, Harry A. - 1948 Brown, Jason -- 2000 Brown, Steve - 1984, 85 Brown, Timothy T. - 1974 Brown, Alfred G. - 1926, 27 Brown, William J. - 1978, 79 Brush, Robert W. - 1964, 65 Bryan, Christopher - 1998, 99, 00, 01 Bryan, Robert J. - 1971, 72, 73, 74 Brzeski, Richard - 1997, 98, 99, 00 Buchan, Kevin - 1998, 99, 00, 01 Buchanan, Amanada - Mgr - 1999 Buck, Michael - 2001, 02 Buckley, Philip - 1988, 89, 90 Buckley, Craig - 1995, 96, 97, 98 Buehning, Gerhard - 2008, 09, 10 Buki, Shawn - 1988, 89 Bullard, Maurice L. - 1934, 36, 37 Burbank, Rembert W. 1920 Burnard, Hunter, 2007, 08, 09, 10 Burrows, Raymond H. 1962 Burton, Richard - 1987, 88, 89 Buschhorn, Alfred H. - 1934, 35 Bush, R. Brody - 1996, 97, 98, 99 Butler, Kenneth W. 1936 Butler, Rudy - 2010 Butt, Ronald G. - 1963, 64 Buttle, George - 1938 Button, Jr, Forrest C. - 1948, 49 Byram, Robert L. - 1942, 43 Byrne, Albert H. 1928 Bzik, John - 1974, 75, 76

--C-Caleollo, Jr., Albert T. - 1950, 51, 52 Camerino, Mike - 1996, 99 Cameron, Matthew - 1991, 93, 94 Campanile, Paul - 1998, 99 Campbell, Norman A. - 1934 Campbell, Steve - 2007, 08 Campbell, Walter E. - 1937, 38 Campion, Albert E. - 1928, 29, 30 Canavan, John A. - 1963, 64 Capro, Rex - 1974, 75, 76, 77 Carfaro, Salvatore - 2010 Carafello, Greg - 2006, 07, 08 Cariati, Steven P. - 1962, 63 Carney, Robert E. - 1971, 72, 73 Carolan, Roderick - 1996, 97, 98, 99 Carroll, William J. - 1964, 66, 67 Carter, Randy - Mgr - 1983, 84, 85 Case, Clifford P. - 1924, 25 Cass, F. Richard - 1923, 24, 26, 27 Castagna, John D. - 1978 Cavallaro, Steven Mike - 1981, 82, 83 Cavallo, Joseph - 1977, 78 Ceccoli, Mike - 1996, 98 Chandler, Wallace - 1922, 24, 26 Chandler, James H. - 1941, 42, 43 Chartrand, Richard E. - 1935, 36, 37 Chartrand, Edward - 1939, 40 Chase, Alan I. - 1932 Checcio, Colin - 2004, 05, 06, 07 Chirillo, John R. - 1970, 71, 72 Chopey, Gabriel A. - 1948, 49 Cilip, Christopher -- 2000 Cillo, Anthony R. - 1950, 51, 52 Cirillo, Louis - 1976, 77, 78, 79 Clancy, Duncan - 2010 Clark, Robert N. - 1958, 59, 60 Clarke, Theodore H. - 1923, 24, 25, 26 Cleary, Thomas - 1990, 91, 92 Clurman, Andrew W. - 1982 Collett, Robert - 1934, 35 Collins, Francis - 2006, 07, 08 Conforti, Andrew - 2001, 02, 03, 04 Cook, Harvey C. - 1921, 22, 23 Cook, Jeffrey J. - 1970 Coomber, Michael - 2001, 02, 03, 04 Corbo, Ricahrd J. - 1974 Corso, Johathan - 1994, 95, 96, 97 Costello, Joseph E. - 1976 Costello, John - 1986, 87, 88, 89 Counes, George - 1999 Couse, Robert L. - Mgr - 1947 Cox, Edwin - 1946 Cramer, Richard T. - 1946, 48, 49 Cromwell, Keith - 1998, 99, 00, 01 Cronin, Jerry G. - 1931, 32 Crowther, John - 1984 Cuffe, Kenneth W. - 1946, 47, 48, 49 Cummins, Christie - Mgr - 1996, 97 Cunningham, David - 1989, 90, 91, 92 Curto, Anthony V. - 1958 Cwikowski, Theodore E. - 1952, 53 Cyphers, Harry W. - 1942, 43, 46, 47 Cyphers, Robert - 1949 --D-D’Agostino, Andrew - 2009, 10


all-time letterwinners D’Andraia, Rocco - 1992 D’Antonio, James A. - 1962, 63, 54 D’Antonio, Jonathan - 1996, 97, 98, 99 Daisley - 1921 Danowski, John E. - 1973, 74, 75, 76 Darby, Wilbur S. - 1938, 39, 40 Darlington, George - 1960, 61 Daut, John F. - 1955, 56, 57 David, Robert E. - 1967, 68 Davis, Dominique - 2004 Davis, Maurice - 1981 Dawson, Patrick - 1984, 85, 86, 87 Deakin, Oliver - 1927 Dechowitz, Fred L. - 1949 DeCicco, Andrew - 1987, 88, 89, 90 Decker, Edward H. - 1929, 30, 31 Deissler, Carl - 1984 Delahunt, Charles S. - 1948, 49, 50 DeLapi, Nicholas - 1990, 91, 92, 93 Delp, Christopher - 1993, 94 DeLucca, Dan - 1994, 95, 96 Demby, Neal A. - 1964 DeMeo, Mike - 2006, 07, 08, 09 Diamond, Arthur M. - 1972, 73, 74 Dickerson, Donald A. - Mgr - 1934 Dickinson, Edward A. - 1922, 23 Diehl, Michael - 2009, 10 DiLiberti, Charles - 1947, 48 DiOrio, Joseph - 1946, 47, 48 DiSciorio, David - 1983, 84, 85, 86 Dittmar, K. A. - 1920 Doctor, Chris - 2004, 05, 06, 07 Doherty, Steve - 2007 Doig, Stephen C. - 1928, 29 Domogala, Thomas G. - 1964, 65, 66 Donahue, Colin - 2008, 09 Donnelly, Joe - 2010 Donnelly, Zach - 2010 Donovan, Colin - 1992, 93 Donovan, Timothy - 1983, 84, 85, 86 Dorne, Peter D. - 1974, 75 Dougherty, Heather - Mgr - 1999 Dougherty, Patrick - 1988, 89 Dove, William C. - 1947, 48 Drews, Reynold H. - 1928 Drews, Reynold H. - Mgr - 1929 Drost, Todd - 1987 Dublier, George L. - 1925 Duca, Jeffrey - 2000, 01, 02, 03 Dugan, Mike - 2006, 07, 08, 09 Duggan, T.D. - 1921 Duncan, Joseph - 2001, 02, 03, 04 Dunne, Owen - 1983, 84, 85 --E-Eastwick, Alan R. - 1942, 43, 47 Eastwood, Andrew - 1978, 79, 80, 81 Eckert, James - 1985, 86, 88, 89 Eckhardt, J.W. - 1920, 21, 22 Edgerly, Charles R. - 1937, 38 Eisenhauer, D. Kevin - 1975 Ekedahl, Duane H. - 1952, 53, 54 Ely, Daniel Kyle - 1981, 82 Elzer, Matthew - 1993, 94, 95, 96 Emmer, John S. - 1965, 66, 67 Enander, Ellis A. - 1923, 24 Engelhardt, Drew - 2007, 08, 09, 10

Epperson, Donald - 1986 Epstein, Marc J. - 1967 Ergenbright, Troy - 1999, 00, 01 Erickson, Robert D. - 1969, 70, 71 Evans, William W. - 1937, 39, 40 Evanson, E.W. - 1930 --F-Facciponti, Debbie - Mgr - 1987, 88 Fagan, Shannon - Mgr - 1999 Fairchild, Ralph B. - 1929 Falso, Joseph - 1995, 96, 98, 99 Falzon, Dean - 1995, 96, 97, 98 Farnsworth, Gregory - 1982, 83 Farrar, Lyle - 2005, 06, 07, 08 Farquharson, Jr., William R. - 1956, 57, 58 Feinerman, Peter S. - 1980, 82, 83 Feirer, William A. - 1920, 21 Ferraro, Michael - 1983, 84 Ferraro, Clem - 1961 Fertal, Tom - 1994 Filippone, Nick - 2005, 06, 07, 08 Firkser, Boaz - 1952 Fish, Bradford - 1984, 85, 86, 87 Fisher, Brian - 1998, 99, 00, 01 Fisher, William J. 1978, 79, 80 Fitch, Fred - 1925 Flanagan, Henry E. - 1965, 66, 67 Flanagan, John - 2002, 03, 04, 05 Fleischman, William E. - 1958, 59, 60 Flesch, Renee - Mgr - 1984 Flower, Robert A. - 1962, 63 Flynn, Joseph R. - 1947, 48 Flynn, Brian - 1984, 85 Ford, J. Alexander - 1925 Ford, Ben E. - 1943, 47 Ford, James D. - 1977, 78, 79, 80 Forman, Randolph - 1928, 29 Fornaro, Robert L. - 1973, 74, 75 Forrest, Deborah J. - Mgr - 1973, 74 Fox, Jason - 1994 Fradkin, Jacob - 2009, 2010 Francke III, William F. - 1952, 53 Freid, Gregg - 1983, 84, 85, 86 Fuller, Richard G. - 1947, 48 Furey, Raymond J. - 1966, 67, 68 Fusilli, Louis - 1986, 87, 88, 89 --G-Gabriel, Gerald V. - 1952, 53, 54 Gaines, Matthew - 2004, 05, 06, 07 Gammello, Chris - 2006, 07, 08 Gant, Jr., Charles H. - Mgr - 1941 Gant, Jr., Charles H. - 1940 Garcia, Frank J. - 1971 Garrison, Samuel - 1953, 54 Gasior, Walter J. - 1950, 51 Gaughran, Jr., Gerard W. - 1974, 76 Gaunt, Stanley N. - 1938 Gerweck, Richard A. - 1949, 50 Ghedina, Joe - 1996 Gilbert, Zachary - 1999, 00, 01 Gilman, James - 1985, 86, 87, 88 Gisser, Arthur - 1958 Gladwin, Richard A. - 1948, 49, 50 Glass, Norman - 1935, 37 Gleason, Richard W. - 1954, 55

Gleave, Michael T. - 1976, 77 Godfrey, William - 1939, 40 Goetz, Henry W. 1956, 57, 58 Goldberg, Adam - 2007, 08, 09, 10 Goldberg, Jeffrey - 1968 Goldsmith, Bernard - 1964, 65, 66 Goodman, Livingston T. - 1942, 43, 46 Gosnell, Douglas E. - 1949, 50, 51 Gowen, Winthrop - 1940 Gowen, Ernest L. - 1963 Graf, Henry W. - 1933, 34 Graham, Robert W. 1950, 51 Gramarossa, Stephen - 1976, 77, 78, 79 Graulich, George J. - 1958 Gray, Edward D. - 1926, 27, 28 Greason, George H. - 1932 Greenberg, Benjamin N. - 1928, 30 Griffin, Patricia A. - Mgr - 1976 Griswold, Elmer - 1935 Grosch, Blake - 1999 Grubb, Robert N. - 1971, 72 Gucker, Donald H. - 1955, 56, 57 Gutzwiller, James E. - 1939, 40, 41 --H-Hall, William H. - 1961, 62, 63 Hall, Brian K. - 1973 75, 76 Hallock, George M. - 1936, 37,38 Halloran, William B. - 1966, 67, 68 Hamilton, Thomas B. - 1962, 63 Hammel, Alexander - 1942, 43 Hancox, Steve - 1959 Hankins, James B. - 1951 Hanna, Jr., Howard R. - 1970 Harding, Jr., Fred R. - 1964, 65 Hart, Gordon J. - Mgr - 1926 Hart, Gordon J. - 1925 Hasbrouck, Albert R. - 1939, 40, 41 Haugevik, Edward A. - 1972, 73 Haugevik, Andrew L. - 1970, 71 Hayden, Matthew - 1990, 91 Hayden, John - 1984, 85, 86, 87 Hayes, Tom R. - 1992, 93, 94 Hayes, Shannon - Mgr - 1984, 85, 86, 87 Havalchak, Greg - 2003, 04, 05, 06 Heath, Jr., Raymond P. - Mgr - 1948 Heffernan, Christopher - 1981, 82, 83, 84 Hemphill, Clifford J. - 1964, 66 Herbert, Carl M. - 1969, 70 Herger, William - 1987 Heumann, Steven - 1986, 87 Hext, Rachel E. - Mgr - 1973 Heyd, Edward M. - 1931 Higgins, Ivanhoe B. - 1965, 66 Hille, Scott - 1990, 91, 92 Hilliard, A.E. - 1921 Hilliard, J.C. - 1920, 21, 22 Hitchner, Stephen B. - 1937, 38, 39 Hobleman, Alfred C. - 1922, 23 Hoffman, Chris - 2005, 06, 07, 08 Hohman, Michael J. - 1974, 76, 77 Holliman, Kirk E. - 1966, 67, 68 Hollingsworth, Marvin G. - 1987, 88, 89, 90 Holly, Nicholas - 1992, 93, 94 Holthusen, J.A. - 1930 Hopkins, Carroll W. - 1926, 27 Horgan, Timothy - 1999, 00, 01, 02

47


all-time letterwinners Horn, Stephen, A - 1967, 68 Horoszewski, Roman - 1962, 63 Hover, Kevin - 2009, 10 Hover, Sean - 2007, 08, 09, 10 Howard, Cary - 2005 Howard, Jr., Willis W. - 1952, 53 Howell, Robert C. - 1951, 52, 53 Howell, C. Stuart - 1963 Howland, John B. - 1957, 58, 59 Hubbard, Robert D. - 1949, 50 Huber, William - Mgr - 1963 Hubner, Chris J. - 1977, 78, 79, 80 Hulsmann, James - 1995, 96, 97, 98 Humphreys, James F. - 1932, 33, 34 Hunter, Scott - 1996 Hunton, Jay E. - 1959 Hurlburt, Stewart A. - 1941 Hurwitz, Michael - 2007, 08, 09 Hutchinson, Charles V.A. - Mgr - 1925 Hutchinson, Charles V.A. - 1924 Hutton, John - 1984, 85, 86, 87 --I-Iannascola, Denise - Mgr - 1983 Idowu, Henry - 2007 Ingraldi, Dan - 2010 Irving, Delmont S. - 1966 Irwin, Whitney - 1953 --J-Jackman, Craig - 1995, 96, 97 Jackson, Reid - 1991, 92, 93, 94 Jaffe, Lane - 1995, 96, 97 James, Donald M. - 1920, 21, 22 Jaquiss Harold M. - 1963 Jarema, Andrew - 1936, 37 Jarvis, Ronald - 1940, 41 Jefferds, Vincent H. - 1939, 40, 41 Jennings, Bruce - 1977 Jochim, Frank W. - 1929, 30, 31 Johnson, J. Munson - 1920, 21 Johnson, Robert G. - 1928, 29 Johnson, Wayne K. - 1927, 28 Johnson, Eugene - 1982, 84, 85 Johnson, C. Stanley - 1925 Joinnides, Paul - 1966, 67, 68 Jones, Brandon - 2000, 01, 02 Jones, Darrell - 1985, 86 Jordon, Allan H. - 1963 Juergens, George A. - 1955, 56 Julien, Joseph J. - 1930, 31, 32 Junier, R. Roland - 1966 Jurczak, Greg - 1994, 95, 96, 97 --K-Kahn, Steven - 1977, 78, 79 Kaiman, Dan - 2004 Kampe, Richard A. - 1965, 66 Kane, Michael E. - 1978 Kanterakis, Irene - Mgr - 1999 Keaestner, Sonya - Mgr - 1984, 85, 86 Kearney, Edward - 1928, 29, 30 Keating, Melvin L. - 1967 Kee, Brian A. - 1978 Keel, Stephen - 1998, 99 Keeler, Elmer - 1939, 40 Keiler, Henry F. - 1923, 24

48

Kelley, - 1922 Kelley, Robert E. - 1954, 55, 56 Kelly, Kory - 2008, 09, 10 Kempf, William - 1928 Kenney, Robert P. - 1954, 55 Kenny, William - 1946 Kent, William - 1981 Kenyon, Alexander - 2001 Kenyon, Christopher - 2001, 02, 04 Kerr, Bradley F. - 1967, 68 Kerwin, Brad - 2000, 01, 02 Kessler, Brent - 1991, 92, 93 Kidon, John - 1992, 93, 94, 95 Kielb, Stephen - 1992, 93 Kiernan, James W. - 1923, 24, 25 Kiley, Alfred - 1960 Kirchner, Richard C. - 1963, 64 Kirkwood, John P. - 1929, 30, 31 Kirst, Kyle - 1988, 89, 90 Kiselick, Mary Ellen - Mgr - 1974 Kizis, Michael L. - 1969, 70 Klinsman, Elmer H. - 1935, 36, 37 Knabb, George T. - 1932 Knacke, Gary f. - 1971, 72, 73 Knauss, Richard J. -1930, 31 Knopf, Mark R. - 1979, 80, 81, 82 Knowles, Albert L. - 1932, 33 Koch, Theodore H. - 1959, 60, 61 Kohmescher, Kristin - Mgr - 1996, 97 Kolon, Chris - 1996, 97, 98, 99 Kopcsik, Jeremy - 1995, 96, 97, 98 Kopley, Matthew - 1995, 96, 97, 98 Kosnac, Stephani - Mgr - 1980 Kowalski, Joseph - 1960, 61, 62 Kramer, George A. - 1932, 33, 34 Kresge, Jonathan - 1992, 93 Krost, Brian S. - 1982, 83, 85 Krueger, Kyle - 1999 Kuchta, Kurt J. - 1973, 74, 75 Kulthau, R.Y. - 1923, 24 Kurdyla, Allen - 1993, 94, 95 Kurdyla, Aaron - 1994, 95, 96, 97 Kyprianou, Cooper - 09 --L-Lagunowich, P. Nicholas - 1992, 93, 94, 95 Lamanna, Christian - 1992, 93, 94, 95 Lamb, George A. - 1963, 64, 65 Lamscha, R. Burton - 1921, 22 Landemare, Jr., H. Maurice - 1952, 53, 54 Lathrop, Churchill P. - Mgr - 1922 Latimer, George A. - 1930, 31, 32 Latona, Joseph - 1978 Lebo, Michael - 1993 Lechtonen, Reino O. - 1935, 36, 37 Lederer, Robert - 1993, 94 Lee, Christopher - 1993, 94 Lee, Jr., Walter A. - 1949, 50 LeFebvre, Michael - 1991 Lefferts, Jonathan - 2010 Leitch, Richard J. - 1966, 68, 69 Lemert, Kenneth D. - 1969 Lemken, Robert - 1991, 92, 93, 94 Lenhart, Paul H. - 1943 Letson, Charles T. - 1932 Lewis, Richard - 1984, 85, 86, 87 Lieber, Steven I. - 1968, 69, 70

Lilien, Matthew - 2002, 03, 04, 05 Lincoln, Allan B. - 1921, 22, 23 Lindsay, Perry C. - 1921, 22, 23 Little, George P. - 1947, 48, 49, 50 Locker, Steven - 1988, 89, 90, 91 Locks, Brian - 1996, 97, 98 Lockwood, David - 1992, 93, 94, 95 Loppacker, R. A. - 1922 Lord, Thomas A. - 1964 Lott, William H. - 1920, 21 Lovejoy, Jamie - 2002, 03, 04, 05 Luca, Vincent - 1985 Luciano, Steven - 1988, 89, 90, 91 Lugossy, Frank T. - 1959, 60, 61 Lundwall, Albert A. - 1935, 36, 37 Luthman, Carl R. - Mgr - 1964, 65 Lutwyler, Craig - 2002 Lynch, Jeffrey - 1983, 84, 85, 86 Lyon, C. Keith - 1997 --M-MacDonald, Kenneth W. - 1941, 42, 43 MacDonald, George E. - 1969, 70, 71 MacDonnell, Richard - 2000, 01 MacGilvary, Donald P. - 1926, 27, 28 MacGregor, John - 1952 Mackessey, J.N. - 1923 Mackey, Russ - 1995, 97, 98 MacLin, Thomas - 1957 Maddox, John L. - 1935, 36 MaGee, Joseph W. - 1974 Maher, Daniel - 1990, 91 Malekoff, Andrew - 1971 Malinak, Roy M. - 1971, 72, 73 Malinow, Martin - 1981, 82, 83, 84 Mangan, Will - 2009, 10 Manners, John - 2003, 04, 05, 06 Mannix, Kevin P. - 1978 Mareau, Marc - 1987, 88, 89 Marinelli, Adriano J. - 1952, 53 Marino, Ralph M. - 1977 Mark, Bernard F. - 1926, 27, 28 Marshall, Steven A. - 1976 Martello, Thomas - 1984, 85, 86 Martin, Peter J. - 1966, 67, 68 Martino, John - 1997, 98, 99, 00 Martocci, Victor F. - 1969, 70, 71 Martocci, Emil V. - 1941 Massey, George P. - 1970, 71, 72 Massey, Eugene S. - 1932, 33 Massey, Scott - 1999, 00, 01 Mastropaolo, Wendy - Mgr - 1994 Matheis, Leland V. - 1920, 21, 22 Mattes, Christopher - 2008, 09, 10 Matthews, Roger C. - 1961, 62, 63 Mattia, Hector A. - 1932, 33 Mauro, Michael A. - 1976, 78,79 Mayer, Brad - 1996, 97, 98, 99 Mayer, Griffin - 1999, 00, 01 McCabe, Douglas L. - 1943 McCarthy, Stuart R. - 1966, 67, 68 McGinty, Ryan - 1994 McInnes, John C. - 1931, 32 McKiernan, James H. - 1979 McLaughlin, Michael - 2000, 01 McMahon, Mark - 1982, 83, 84 McVeigh, Malcolm J. - 1950, 51, 52


all-time letterwinners Meier, Henry H. - 1931 Meigel, John - 1972, 73, 74, 75 Meistrell, H.L. - Mgr - 1920 Melanson, Ted - 2005, 06 Mellone, Richard A. - 1982 Mellone, Richard A. - Mgr - 1981 Melvin, Brian - 2005, 06, 07 Mercurio, Richard A. - 1974, 75 Meredith, Alan - 1947, 49 Meredith, George P. - 1948 Metzger, Karl E. - 1932, 33 Michaelis, Eric - 1992, 93 Miller, Jr., William C. - 1925, 26 Miller, Paul C. - 1980, 81, 82 Miller, Robert - 2004, 05 Milligan, John - 1946 Milne, James G. - 1975, 76, 77 Mirabito, Richard J. - 1973, 74, 75, 76 Mitek, Adam - 1993, 94 Mitschele, Kristin (Mgr.) - 2002 Moffett, Thomas W. - 1953, 54, 55 Mohn, Robert A. - 1958 Molineaux, P.R. - 1920, 21 Molloy, J. A. - 1920 Mone, John - 1990, 91 Montgomery, Monte D - 1953, 54, 55 Moon, Ridgeway, V.C. - 1935, 36, 37 Mooney, Brett - 2003, 04, 05, 06 Moore, Scott - 1987, 89, 90 Moore, Robert L. - Mgr - 1933 Moore, Warner A. - 1923 Moorhead, John R. - 1932 Morea, Stephen - 1968 Morris, Robert - 2004 Morton, Jr., Thomas V. - Mgr - 1939 Mosher III, Robert R. - 1952, 53, 54 Mosteiro, Kenneth J. - 1974, 76 Moyse, Kenneth R. - 1958 Mudie, Samuel H. - 1960, 61, 62 Mudie, Robert E. - 1963, 64, 65 Mudie, Charles R. - 1965, 66, 67 Mulcahey, Fordon H. - 1925 Mullar, Robert J. - 1977 Muller, H. Clark - 1946, 48 Mulvey, Susan - Mgr - 1985, 86, 87, 88 Murphy, Patrick - 1998, 99, 00, 01 --N-Naporano, Jr., Andrew J. - 1969, 70 Naslonski, William - 1981, 82, 83, 84 Naslonski, James - 1989 Naslonski, John - 1982, 83, 84, 85 Naso, Robert J. - 1957, 58, 59 Nazzaro, Joseph P. - 1961, 62 Neiley, Nicholas W. - 1957, 59 Neinstedt, Chris - 2009, 10 Nelson, Richard - 1942 Nelson, John R. - 1975 Nelson, Milton - 1939, 40, 41 Nelson, Oswald - 1926, 27 Nesbitt, Robert D. - 1968, 69, 70 Neumann, William G. - 1942, 43 Newman, Edward - 1989, 90 Nicklas, Richard M. - 1957, 58, 59 Nomer, Howell - Mgr - 1946 Norton, Chris - 1994, 95 Norton, Keith - 1996, 97, 98, 99

Norton, Mark A. - 1968, 69, 70 Nuzzi, John A. - 1980, 82 --O-O’Brien, John - 1985 O’Dougherty, Chris - 2006, 07, 08, 09 O’Shea, Ryan - 1992, 93, 94, 95 O’Toole, Timothy - 2003, 04, 05, 06 Ohiokpehai, Daren - 2004 Okulski, John A. - 1964, 65, 66 Olin, Billy - 2007, 08, 09, 10 Oliva, Anthony D. - Mgr - 1961, 62 Oliver, Scott - 1997, 98, 99, 00 Olsen, Robert F. - 1977, 78, 79, 80 Omley, Herbert - 1946 Opdyke, Dwight A. - 1933 34 Orlick, Joseph E. - 1948, 49, 50 Orrizzi, John D. - 1968, 69, 70 Ortega, Felix - Mgr - 1997, 98, 99 Osgood, Jr., Charles F. - 1923, 24, 25, 26 --P-Padella, Carmita - Mgr - 1987 Palcanis, Franklin G. - 1934, 35, 36 Palenscar, Arthur T. - 1971, 72 Palermo, Nicholas J. - 1957, 58 Palmatier, W.A.C. - 1920 Palmer, Herbert G. - 1927, 28, 29 Pantages, Pete - 2006, 07, 08, 09 Parsons, Donald C. - 1948, 49, 50 Paul, Irvin - 1935 Pavelec, Barry - 1961, 62 Peezick, Richard B. - 1977 Pencek, Richard W. - 1958, 59, 60 Pendleton, E.C. - 1920 Pennington, Justin - 2007, 08, 09, 10 Pense, Robert M. - 1966, 67, 68 Percival, Ned - 1998, 99 Pereyra, Thomas Edwin - 1927, 28, 29 Perry, Arthur C. - 1936, 37, 38 Peters, Bill - 1995, 96 Pfaltz, H.M. - 1921 Phillips, Edwin W. - 1927 Phillips, Samuel E. - 1972 Pickar, David - 1969 Pilato, Edward C. - 1981 Pinajian, Mark 1998 Pisano, Anthony - 1960, 61 Pitt, Lawrence W. - 1938, 39 Pizzi, Danielle - Mgr - 1991 Plath, Trevor - 1999 Plummer, J. Thornton - 1926 Pooley, David W. - 1956, 57, 58 Popson, Paul D. - 1964, 65, 66 Popson, Kenneth J. - 1967 Porter, Brendan - 2007, 08, 09, 10 Portillo, Raul - 1985 Ports, George - 1956 Potter, Edgar J. - 1925 Power, Ian - 1999 Powless, Delby - 2003, 04 Prakopcyk, Richard A. - 1975, 76, 77,78 Prat, Christopher - 1990, 91, 92, 93 Pritts, Timothy - 1987, 88, 89, 90 Purdy, Michael - 1994, 95, 96

--Q-Quimby, Nel D. - 1920 Quinones, Edward J. - 1977, 78, 80, 81 --R-Rabideau, Luke - 1999 Race, Ernest S. - 1941, 42 Raggi, Jams L. - 180, 81 Ranieri, George B. - 1943, 46, 47 Rasmuson, Erik - 1995, 96, 97, 98 Raub, Howard B. - 1923, 24 Rauch, Daniel - 2003, 04, 05, 06 Ray, Albert - 1979, 81, 82, 83 Recouso, Chris - 1984 Reibel, Samuel - Mgr - 1953 Reilly, Joseph E. - 1977, 78, 79 Reilly, Thomas - 1986, 87 Renshaw, Richard N. - 1937, 38 Ress, Warren L. - 1938 Rhoads, Brian - 1997, 98, 99, 00 Rhodes, Robert D. - 1925, 26 Rhodes, Robert J. - 1976, 77 Richardson, Charles A. - 1954, 55, 56 Riemenschneider, Robert - 1972 Rinaldi, Gregory - 1987, 88, 89, 90 Rinck, Michael J. - 1972, 73, 74, 75 Rionda, Marcos - 1991, 92 Ritch, Glenn T. - 1967, 68, 69 Rizk, Richard A. - 1954, 55 Roberts, Brad - 2006 Roberts, George H. - 1950, 51 Roberts, Clifford E. - 1926, 27 Roberts, Edwin B. - 1926, 27, 28 Robinson, George A. - 1962, 63, 64 Robinson, Arthur - 1956, 57 Rochon, Alex - 2004 Rockafeller, Harry, II - 1939, 40, 41 Rodgers, Austin - 2003, 04, 05, 06 Rogers, Kelly - 1991, 92, 93, 94 Rogers, Michael - 1988, 89, 90, 91 Rohrbach, Nelson J. - 1927, 28, 29 Rolph, Arthur B. - 1936, 37, 38 Rommel, Jeff - 2006, 07, 08, 09 Rommel, Tim - 09 Roos, Brad - 1984, 85 Rosenwald, Theodore - 1925 Rosetti, William B. - 1924, 25 Ross, Kenneth - 1940, 41, 42 Rothenberg, Steven G. - 1968, 69 Rotkin, Alan M. - 1969, 70 Rotunda, Frank J. - 1965, 66, 67 Rough, David - 1999, 00, 01 Rouse, Rodney T. - 1925 Rowe, James F. - 1946, 47 Rubin, Albert - 1936, 37 Rubeling, Kyle - 2003, 04, 05, 06 Ruch, Kenneth A. - 1924, 25, 26 Ruhlman, John - 1960 Russ, Stanley E. - Mgr - 1931 Russo, Ralph J. - 1938, 39, 40 Rutledge, Melinda - Mgr - 1996,97,98 Ryan, James J. - 1977 --S-Sacco, Toni S. - Mgr - 1978 St. George, Mike - 1999 Salowe, Alan - 1990, 91

49


all-time letterwinners Sample, Jr., Samuel R. - 1952, 53 Sanderson, Nate - 2005, 06 Sasser, Alfred - 1947, 48 Savidge, George Peter - 1964, 65, 66 Sbert, Robert S. - 1964 Schablik, Keith - 1995, 96, 97, 98 Schaffel, Aaron D. - 1977, 79 Schaffer, John - 1986 Schaible, Kenneth W. - 1923 Schaller, David - 1996, 97, 98, 99 Schambach, Mike - 1999, 00, 02, 03 Schambach, Phil - 1999, 2003 Scheffer, Richard H. - 1968, 69, 70 Schermer, Anton - 1986, 87, 88, 89 Schettino, C. Thomas - 1929 Schmauder, Arthur E. - 1925 Schmidt, Ralph - 1941, 42 Schmidt, Walter J. - 1957, 58 Schmidt, Herb Walter - 1960, 61, 62 Schmidt, John - 1941 Schmidt, Nicholas - 2000, 01, 02, 03 Schmunk, John - 1989, 90, 91 Schoenfeld, Melissa - Mgr - 1994 Schultz, William A. - Mgr - 1965 Schweiker, Malcolm A. - 1942, 43 Schwenker, Carl - 1935 Sciacca, Joseph A. - 1979, 80, 81, 82 Scipione, Richard A. - 1974, 75, 76, 77 Scudder, W. Tracy - 1928, 29 Scudder, Jr., Henry J. - Mgr - 1930 Scudder, Jr., Henry J. - 1929 Seaman, Lloyd s. - 1957, 58, 59 Seeley, Robert D. - 1938, 39, 40 Seward, Michael - 1993, 94, 95, 96 Sewell, Richard - 1969 Shaivitz, Edward G. - 1966, 67, 68 Shaivitz, Daniel - 1999, 00 Shallcross, Donald C. - 1941 Sharrett, Allan C. - 1947, 48, 50 Shedden, James M. - 1929 Shemesh, Brian - 2008, 09, 10 Shemesh, Steve - 2010 Sheridan, James - 1981, 82, 83, 84 Sheridan, Kevin - 1987, 88, 89 Shuster, Ricahrd - 1986 Shuster, Carl N. - Mgr - 1941, 42 Shuster, John W. - Mgr - 1951 Sicoli, Anthony - 2002, 03, 04, 05 Simon, Harry - 1954, 55 Sindle, Harry - 1949 Sissler, Michael - 2004, 05, 07, 08 Smith, Matthew - 1999 Smith, Rob - 2006 Smoyer, Thomas R. - 1931 Snedeker, Leonard D. - 1930, 31 Snider, Steve - 1997, 98, 99, 00 Sorensen, Nancy - Mgr - 1985, 86, 87, 88 Spangenberger, Joseph G. - 1954 Sparks, William E. - 1920, 21, 22, 23 Sparrow, John - 1986 Spillett, Daniel - 1992, 93, 94, 95 Spizuoco, Richard S. - 1969, 70 Springer, Kenneth - 2000, 01, 02, 03 Stack, Keith W. - 1979 Stagnitta, Michael - 2009, 10 Stanwick, Tad - 2006, 08, 09, 10 Steiner, Alfred - 1942

50

Stevens, Michael - 1993, 95 Stilley, Erik - 2008, 09, 10 Stone, Will - 2006, 07, 08, 09 Sturgess, Billy - 2007, 08 Sulfnar, Lisa - Mgr - 1989 Sullivan, Scott - 1992, 93, 94, 95 Sullivan, Barry D. - 1958 Summer, William - Mgr - 1927 Summer, William - 1926 Sutphin, Ellsworth E. - 1939 Sutphin, Ellsworth E. - Mgr - 1940 Sweeney, Thomas P. - 1977, 78, 79, 80 --T-Tahan, John - 1996, 97, 98 Tarjan, Armen Charles - 1943, 47 Teare, Malcolm M. - 1948 Teatom, James R. - 1974, 75, 76,77 Teatom, Greg - 2010 Teller, D. Woolsey - 1921, 22, 23 Temple, Samuel B. - 1933, 34, 35 Temple, Leon B. - 1938, 39, 40 Terrizzi, Anthony - 1960, 61 Terry, Lea E. - 1946, 47, 48, 49 Tevlin, Patrick - 1984, 85, 86, 87 Thomas, Jr., Henry F. - 1953, 54, 55 Thompson, DuBois S. - 1925, 26 Thralls, Jr., Jerome - 1926, 27, 28 Thropp, Frank W. - 1946, 47, 48, 49 Tillotson, Robert B. - 1952, 53 Tobin, Caylin - Mgr - 1990 Togno, Vincent - 1959, 60 Tolochko, John - 1985, 86, 87 Tomsky, Craig - 1985, 86 Topping, Lawrence D. - 1969, 70, 71 Totorella, Peter - 1986, 88, 89, 90 Townsend, Alexander - 1926, 27, 28 Trabulsky, Edward - 1984, 85, 86, 87 Trapp, Louis - 1981, 83, 84, 85 Trent, Zach - 2004, 05, 06 Tully, James F. - 1980, 81, 82 Tuman, Martin - Mgr - 1949, 50 Twitchell, Albert W. - 1933, 34, 35 Twitchell, Richard W. - 1963 Tyree, Mark - 1978, 79, 80, 81 --U-Udert, Roland - Mgr - 1987, 88 Ullman, Rocky - 1997 Updike, Harold - 1934 --V-Valestra, John M. - 1962, 63, 64 Vallario, Michael - 1993, 94 Van Mater, George - 1939 Van Mater, Daniel D. - 1934, 35, 36 Van Ness, Bruce R. - 1969 Van Orden, Frank - 1926 Van Roten, Mike - 1996, 97, 98, 99 Vecchio, Aaron - 1997, 98, 99, 00 Vecchio, Robert - 1961, 62 Vencak, Robert D. - 1979, 80, 81, 82 Vickers-Annis, Taylor - 2007, 08, 09, 2010 Villani, John J. - 1952 Voorhees - 1920 Vukov, Glenn - 1978, 79, 80, 81

--W-Wagner, Christopher - 1987, 88, 89 Waldron, Jerome H. - 1927 Waldron, Jerome H. - Mgr - 1928 Walgrove, Jr., George R. - 1954 Walsh, Lawrence A. - 1969, 70, 71 Walsh, Matthew - 1986, 87, 88, 89 Ward, William F. - 1931, 32, 33 Warner, Bryan - 2000, 01, 02, 03 Warnick, Ryan - 2009, 10 Warr, Richard - 1928 Waters, Kelly - Mgr - 1988 Waters, Kyle - 2002, 03, 04, 05 Watson, James - 1990, 91, 92, 93 Watson, Steven - 2008, 09, 10 Weber, Garth F - 1965, 66, 67 Wehner, Robert - 1987 Weil, Jessica - Mgr - 1983, 84, 85, 86 Weiler, Richard C. - 1949, 50 Weingarten, James - 1990, 91, 92 Weingarten, Dale - 1979, 80, 81, 82 Weis, Arthur H. - 1922, 23 Wells, Evon - 1946 Wetjen, Rolf G. - 1962 Whelan, Matthew - 1988, 89 Whiffin, Lawrence R. - 1970, 71 White, Donald K. - 1941, 42, 43 White, Tim - 2001, 02, 03, 04 White, Chris - 2006, 07, 08 Whitson, Richard C. - 1950 Wiesmeier, Edward - 1958, 59, 60 Willott, James F. - 1965, 66, 67 Williams, David - 1999 Wojcik, Joseph - 1985 Wolfing, Christopher - 1987 Wolverton, George R. - Mgr - 1966, 67 Wood, W.A. - 1922, 24 Wooden, Kenneth - 1956, 67 Worden, Walter A. - 1934, 36 --Y-Yarusso, Michael - 1989, 90, 91, 92 Yatauro, Richard E. - 1951 Young, Harry C. - Mgr - 1943 Young, D.W. - 1928 Yurcak, Jenny (Mgr.) - 2002 Yurcak, Ronald N. - 1963, 64, 65 --Z-Zanetti, Vincent P. - 1977, 78, 79 Zenda, Zachary - 2009, 2010 Zerrillo, Nick - 2009, 2010 Zoanetti, Michael - 1995, 96, 97, 98 Zukaukas, Charles L. - 1941, 42 Zwillinger, Alan S. - 1972, 73, 74, 75 Bold indicates currently active player


ZERO CALORIES TASTE

THE OFFICIAL SOFT DRINK OF

RUTGERS UNIVERSITY

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award winners Rutgers lacrosse prides itself on the storied history and tradtion of the program. Part of that tradition are the awards that are given out annually. Head Coach Al Twitchell introduced the William Miller, Frederick Fitch and Alfred Sasser Tophies during the 1950 season. Tom Hayes brought the Robert Collett and Scholar-Athlete Awards as well as the Knight Cup during his tenure as head coach. Recently head coach Jim Stagnitta added his own awards to the rich history of RU lacrosse; the Al Twitchell Award for top freshman and the Collins Award for improvement in GPA. Below is a list of RU award winners.

The William Miller Trophy Awarded to that team member in good academic standing who, by his own example, has constituted an inspiration to his teammates and made the greatest contribution to the team in the season’s play. 2010 Justin Pennington 2009 Chris O’Dougherty 2008 Chris O’Dougherty 2007 Colin Checcio 2006 Greg Havalchak 2005 Jamie Lovejoy 2004 Greg Havalchak 2003 Jeff Duca Greg Havalchak 2002 Brad Kerwin 2001 Keith Cromwell 2000 Keith Cromwell 1999 Keith Cromwell 1998 Keith Cromwell 1997 Brody Bush Brad Mayer 1996 Mike Seward 1995 Ryan O’Shea 1994 Reid Jackson 1993 Nick DeLapi 1992 Mike Yarusso 1991 Greg Rinaldi 1990 Steve Luciano 1989 Lou Fusilli 1988 Greg Rinaldi, Jim Gilman 1987 Ed Trabulsy 1986 Dave Disciorio 1985 Brian Krost 1984 John Naslonski 1983 Bill Naslonski 1982 Albert Ray

52

1981 1980 1979 1978 1977 1976 1975 1974 1973 1972 1971 1970 1969 1968 1967 1966 1965 1964 1963 1962 1961

1960 1959 1958 1957 1956 1955 1954 1953 1952

1951 1950 1949 1948

Robert Vencak Robert Vencak Robert Vencak James Ford Mike Mauro Tom Sweeney James Teatom Richard Scipione Alan Zwillinger Robert Bryan Edward Haugevik George Massey Victor Martocci Richard Scheffer Bruce Van Ness Edward Shaivitz Jack Emmer G. Peter Savidge George Lamb James D’Antonio John Valestra Roger Matthews Joseph Kowalski George Darlington Theodore Koch Dick Pencek Robert Naso Robert Naso John Daut Robert Andrews Robert Andrews Samuel Garrison Donald Stevens Wallace Beneville, Malcolm McVeigh Douglas Gosnell Joseph Orlick Joseph Orlick Charles DiLiberti

The Frederick Fitch Trophy Awarded to the varsity letterwinner who, through personal effort to develop his lacrosse ability, has shown the greatest improvement during the season.

2010 2009 2008 2007 2006 2005 2004 2003 2002 2001 2000 1999 1998 1997

Adam Goldberg Gerhard Buehning Chris Hoffmann Will Stone Austin Rodgers Sean Battoni Tom O’Toole Antony Sicoli Tim White Pat Murphy Brian Fisher Rod Carolan Steve Snider Brian Locks

1996 1995 1994 1993 1992 1991 1990 1989 1988 1987 1986 1985 1984 1983 1982 1981 1980 1979 1978 1977 1976 1975 1974 1973 1972 1971 1970 1969 1968 1967 1966 1965 1964 1963 1962 1961 1960 1959 1958 1957 1956 1955 1954 1953 1952 1951 1950

Keith Schablik Mike Seward Dan Spillett Mark Bachardy Mike Beyrer Jamie Watson Scott Moore Steve Berkeley Phil Buckley Mark Moreau Gregg Freid Pat Dawson Tom Martello Andy Briggs Dale Weingarten Joseph Sciacca Robert Olsen Stephen Gramarossa Joseph Reilly James Milne Ralph Bekkevold Charles Apel Richard Mirabito Richard Mercurio Roy Malinak Robert Erickson Lawrence Walsh Kenneth Lampert John David Orrizzi Peter Martin Paul Joinnides Jack Emmer George Lamb James D’Antonio Richard Anderson George Darlington Frank Lugossy Jay Hutton William Fleischman Dick Pencek Nicholas Neiley Charles Richardson George Juergens Duane Ekadahl Adriano Marinelli Albert Calello Robert Graham Wallace Beneville

The Alfred Sasser Trophy Awarded to that member of the Rutgers varsity lacrosse team who, in the spirit of team play, has made the most assists during that year.

2010 2009 2008 2007 2006

Justin Pennington Justin Pennington Justin Pennington Chris Doctor Chris Doctor


award winners 2005 2004 2003 2002 2001 2000 1999 1998 1997 1996 1995 1994 1993 1992 1991 1990 1989 1988 1987 1986 1985 1984 1983 1982 1981 1980 1979 1978 1977 1976 1975 1974 1973 1972 1971 1970 1969 1968 1967 1966 1965 1964 1963 1962 1961 1960 1959 1958 1957 1956 1955 1954 1953 1952 1951

Leif Blomquist Leif Blomquist Tim White Leif Blomquist Jamie Lovejoy Keith Cromwell Mike McLaughlin Brody Bush Keith Cromwell Brody Bush Brody Bush Ryan O’Shea Matt Cameron Christian Lamanna Chris Prat Steve Luciano Steve Luciano Steve Luciano Peter Tortorella Ed Trabulsy Ed Trabulsy Ed Trabulsy Bill Naslonski Bill Naslonski Paul Miller Paul Miller James Ford James Ford James Ford Robert Olsen Richard Mirabito John Danowski John Danowski John Danowski George Massey George Massey George Massey Richard Scheffer Bruce Van Ness Paul Joinnides Raymond Furey Paul Popson Paul Popson John Valestra John Valestra John Valestra Anthony Pisano Anthony Pisano John Howland Richard Nicklas John Howland John Howland Robert Andrews Robert Andrews Robert Andrews Gerald Gabriel Gerald Gabriel Douglas Gosnell

1950

Richard Gladwin

The Robert Collett Award Awarded to that member of the Rutgers varsity lacrosse team who displays the best mental and physical spirit. 2010 2009 2008 2007 2006 2005 2004 2003 2002 2001 2000 1999 1998 1997 1996 1995 1994 1993 1992 1991 1990 1989 1988 1987 1986 1985 1984 1983 1982 1981 1980 1979 1978 1977

Billy Olin Michael DeMeo Tad Stanwick Chris O’Dougherty Brett Mooney John Flanagan Andrew Conforti Ken Springer Michael Bohlinger Chris Bryan Paul Boniello Paul Boniello Brian Locks Jeremy Kopcsik Jon Corso Bill Peters John Kidon Andrew Apel Nick DeLapi Tom Badger Scott Hille Phil Buckley Anton Schermer Greg Rinaldi Tom Reilly Pat Tevlin Lou Trapp Marty Malinow Mike Ferraro John Nuzzi Edward Quinones William Fisher Aaron Schaffel Richard Prakopcyk Charles Apel

The Rutgers Lacrosse Knight Cup Awarded to the player who has played the game of lacrosse to the best of his ability, who has, by example, inspired or led his teammates both on and off the field and who, above all, has consistently demonstrated the qualities of unselfishness and loyalty to his team and Rutgers University.

2010 2009 2008 2007

Brendan Porter Taylor Bottar Lyle Farrar Steve Campbell

2006 2005 2004 2003 2002 2001 2000 1999 1998 1997 1996 1995 1994 1993 1992 1991 1990 1989 1988 1987 1986 1985 1984 1983 1982 1981 1980 1979 1978 1977

Chas Berntson Kyle Waters Matt Apel Dan Achatz Jason Basso Brain Fisher, Dave Rough John Martino Paul Campanile Matt Kopley Greg Jurczak Matt Elzer Mark Bachardy John Kidon Reid Jackson Jamie Watson John Mone John Schmunk Mark Moreau Richard Bianchi Pat Dawson Jeff Bayuk John Naslonski Jim Sheridan Mike Cavallaro Richard Mellon James Tully Thomas Sweeney Edwin Zipf Chris Hubner Richard Scipione

All Time Scholar-Athletes Awarded to the member of the team who had the highest GPA.

2010 2009 2008 2007 2006 2005 2004 2003 2002 2001 2000 1999 1998 1997 1996 1995 1994 1993 1992 1991 1990 1989 1988

Sean Hover Jeff Rommel Jeff Rommel Jeff Rommel Jeff Rommel Kyle Rubeling John Flanagan Matt Apel Matt Apel Brian Fisher Steve Snider Steve Snider Steve Snider Steve Snider Mike Zoanetti Mike Zoanetti Reid Jackson Eric Michaelis Christopher Prat John Mone Scott Moore Shawn Buki Shawn Buki

53


award winners

1987 1986 1985 1984 1983 1982 1981

Patrick Tevlin Gregg Freid Andrew Briggs Andrew Briggs Peter Feinerman Paul Miller Paul Miller

Al Twitchell Award Awarded to the freshman who was ssen as the most valuable to his team.

2010 2009 2008

Duncan Clancy Michael Diehl Kory Kelly

Lacrosse Hall of Fame (year of election)

New Jersey Lacrosse Hall of Fame 1997 1998

Tom Hayes (Coach) Reid Jackson ‘94 Joseph Nazzaro ‘62 Lawrence Pitt ‘39 (Coach) David Pooley Richard Rizk ‘55 Albert Twitchell ‘35 (Coach) Joseph Reilley ‘78 Peter Savidge ‘66

GTE Academic All-American

1998

Michael Zoanetti (District II)

Long Island Metropolitan Lacrosse Hall of Fame (year of election) 2008 2002 1999 1996 1995 1991 1990 1989 1987 1986

54

James Ford Albert Ray James Teatom Bob Vencak ‘82 Tom Sweeney ‘80 John Howland ‘59 John Daut ‘57 Robert Andrews ‘56 Ed Haugevick ‘73 Bob Naso ‘59 John Valestra ‘64 Tom Hayes (Coach) Al Brisotti (Coach) Jack Emmer ‘’67 Joseph Julien ‘32 Harland Miestrell ‘20

John Danowski ‘76 John Valestra ‘64 Tom Hayes (Coach) Robert Kelley ‘56 Willis Bilderback ‘30 George Latimer ‘32 Albert Twitchell ‘35 (Coach) Joseph Julien ‘32 Fred Fitch (Coach) Harland Meistrell ‘20 Al Brisotti (Coach)

­Lacrosse Recipients of the Donald Leslie Coursen Award (Rutgers Outstanding Male Athlete)

Collins Award Awarded to the member of the team who had the greatest increase in GPA. 2010 Stephen Belichick 2009 Taylor Bottar 2008 Hunter Burnard

2000 1996 1990 1985 1973 1972 1967 1965 1961 1962 1958

1994 1986 1982 1966 1964 1962 1960 1959 1957 1956 1948 1943 1942 1938 1937 1936 1935 1934 1932

Outstanding Attackman in Country 1957 Jack Daut ‘57

Reid Jackson David Disciorio Albert Ray Peter Savidge Jim D’Antonio Sam Mudie Robert Clark William Austin Don Gucker Bob Andrews Charles DiLiberti Ken McDonald Ralph Schmidt Arthur Perry Maurice Bullard Daniel Van Mater Albert Twitchell George Kramer George Latimer

Jack Turnbull Award

Morris Touchstone Award Coach of the Year

1993 1974 1960 1958

John Danowski ‘76 Jack Emmer ‘67 Willis Bilderback ‘30 Albert Twitchell ‘35

Outstanding Defenseman in Country 1994 Reid Jackson

Schmeisser Award

USILA Man of the Year

1987 1974 1965 1962

1976

Tom Hayes Tom Hayes Joseph Julien ‘32 Albert Twitchell ‘35

USILA Special Award 1997 1990 1986 1974

Joseph Julien ‘32 USA National Team Reid Jackson ‘94 Greg Rinaldi (Alternate) ‘90 Bob Vencak ‘82 Tom Sweeney (Alternate) ‘80 Bill Naslonski (Alternate) ‘84 Ed Haugevik ‘731940 William Evans, M

Rutgers Olypic Sports Hall of Fame 2006 2004 2003 2002 1999 1997 1995 1994

Albert Ray, ‘83 Bob Naso Reid Jackson Tom Sweeney Jack Daut ‘57 Edward Haugevik ‘73 Al Twitchell ‘35 Robert Kelley ‘56 George Latimer ‘32


career and season records Season

Career Points 1. 2. 3. 4. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10.

Keith Cromwell (1998-2001) Ed Trabulsy (1984-87) James Ford (1977-80) Steve Luciano (1988-91) Ryan O’Shea (1992-1995) Tom Sweeney (1977-80) Greg Rinaldi (1987-90) John Danowski (1973-76) Bob Andrews (1954-56) Brody Bush (1995-99)

266 202 201 196 196 191 178 177 174 173

Goals 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10.

Keith Cromwell (1998-2001) Greg Rinaldi (1987-90) Tom Sweeney (1977-80) Mike Rinck (1972-75) Ryan O’Shea (1992-1995) Jack Daut (1955-57) Ed Trabulsy (1984-87) Bob Kelley (1954-56) Chris Heffernan (1981-84) Paul Joinnides (1966-68) Don Stevens (1951-53)

152 144 141 134 128 113 112 100 96 91 91

James Ford (1977-80) John Danowski (1973-76) Keith Cromwell (1998-2001) Bob Andrews (1954-56) Steve Luciano (1988-91) Brody Bush (1995-99) Ed Trabulsy (1984-87) Paul Popson (1964-66) John Valestra (1962-64) Bill Naslonski (1981-84)

131 120 114 111 111 101 90 89 86 84

John Kidon (1992-1995) Greg Havalchak (2002-06) John Schmunk (1988-91) John Naslonski (1982-83) Michael Zoanetti (1995-98) Bob Bryan (1972-74) Rich Scipione (1974-77) Jim Gilman (1984-88) Don Gucker (1955-57) Billy Fisher (1978-80)

846 663 614 609 525 524 499 499 457 347

Assists 1. 2. 3. 4. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. Saves 1. 2. 3. 4 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10.

Points 1. 2. 4. 5. 6. 8. 10. Goals 1. 2. 3. 5. 7. 9. 10. Assists 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 7. Saves 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 10.

Bill Naslonski (1983) James Ford (1980) Keith Cromwell (2000) John Danowski (1976) Keith Cromwell (1998) Tom Sweeney (1978) John Valestra (1964) Steve Luciano (1990) Keith Cromwell (1999) Bill Naslonski (1984)

81 73 73 72 71 70 70 65 65 64

Tom Sweeney (1978) Greg Rinaldi (1990) Roger Matthews (1962) Keith Cromwell (1999) Jack Daut (1957) John Howland (1958) Ryan O’Shea (1993) Keith Cromwell (1998) Jack Daut (1955) Jack Daut (1956) Mike Rinck (1974)

50 48 44 44 43 43 42 42 41 40 40

John Danowski (1973) James Ford (1978) Bill Naslonski (1983) Bob Andrews (1955) Bob Andrews (1956) John Valestra (1964) Steve Luciano (1990) Brody Bush (1997) John Danowski (1974) Bill Naslonski (1984)

54 51 49 44 39 39 37 37 37 37

John Kidon (1994) John Kidon (1995) John Schmunk (1990) Bob Bryan (1973) John Schmunk (1989) Rich Scipione (1975) Greg Havalchak (2003) Jim Gilman (1988) John Schmunk (1991) Rich Scipione (1977)

260 241 227 202 199 191 188 186 186 183

55


single game records Points 1. 2. 3. 4. 5.

Assists

John Danowski Tom Sweeney Bob Andrews John Danowski Bob Kelley Roger Matthews Bill Naslonski Ryan O’Shea Bob Olsen Ed Trabulsy John Valestra John Valestra Keith Cromwell

14 13 12 11 11 11 11 11 11 11 11 11 10

Greg Rinaldi Tom Sweeney Roger Matthews Don Stevens Chris Heffernan Bob Kelley Ryan O’Shea Greg Rinaldi Dick Leitch Bill Naslonski Delby Powless Paul Popson Tom Sweeney Ed Trabulsy Dale Wiengarten Keith Cromwell Keith Cromwell Keith Cromwell Keith Cromwell

10 10 9 9 8 8 8 8 7 7 7 7 7 7 7 6 6 6 6

(vs. Penn State, 1974 - 5g, 9a) (vs. C.W. Post, 1978 - 10g, 3a) (vs. Syracuse, 1955 - 4g, 8a) (vs. Penn State, 1973 - 3g, 8a) (vs. Syracuse, 1955 - 8g, 3a) (vs. Penn State, 1963 - 9g, 2a) (vs. Princeton, 1984 - 5g, 6a) (vs. Lafayette, 1993 - 8g, 3a) (vs. Connecticut, 1980 - 3g, 8a) (vs. Bucknell, 1987 - 4g, 7a) (vs. Harvard, 1962 - 4g, 7a) (vs. Colgate, 1964 - 3g, 8a) (vs. Radford, 2000 - 6g,4a)

Goals

1. 2. 3. 4. 5.

56

(vs. Lehigh, 1990) (vs. C.W. Post, 1978) (vs. Penn State, 1963) (vs. Delaware, 1951) (vs. Air Force, 1983) (vs. Syracuse, 1955) (vs. Lafayette, 1993) (vs. Bucknell, 1987) (vs. Colgate, 1966) (vs. Syracuse, 1984) (vs. Navy, 2003) (vs. Colgate, 1964) (vs. Air Force, 1978) (vs. Bucknell, 1984) (vs. Hofstra, 1982) (vs. Denver, 1999) (vs. Delaware, 1999) (vs. Radford, 2000) (vs. Army, 1999)

1. 2. 3.

John Danowski Bob Andrews John Danowski Bob Olsen John Valestra Keith Cromwell Keith Cromwell Brody Bush Brody Bush John Danowski Andy DeCicco James Ford Gerald Gabriel Brian Krost Bill Naslonski Bill Naslonski Ed Trabulsy John Valestra

9 8 8 8 8 7 7 7 7 7 7 7 7 7 7 7 7 7

(vs. Penn State, 1973) (vs. Syracuse, 1955) (vs. Yale, 1973) (vs. Connecticut, 1980) (vs. Colgate, 1964) (vs. Sacred Heart, 2000) (vs. Albany, 2001) (vs. VMI, 1997) (vs. Villanova, 1997) (vs. Adelphi, 1983) (vs. Whittier, 1989) (vs. Penn State, 1978) (vs. CCNY, 1952) (vs. Princeton, 1985) (vs. Montclair, 1983) (vs. Drexel, 1984) (vs. Bucknell, 1987) (vs. Harvard, 1962)

Saves 1. 2. 3. 4. 5.

John Kidon Bob Bryan Ted Koch Roman Horoszewski Mike Zoanetti John Martino Roman Horoszewski John Kidon Ted Koch John Schmunk Billy Fisher John Kidon John Schmunk

32 29 29 27 27 26 26 26 26 26 25 25 25

(vs Army, 1995) (vs. Navy, 1972) (vs. Johns Hopkins, 1962) (vs. Princeton, 1962) (vs. Butler, 1996) (vs. UMBC, 2000) (vs. Johns Hopkins, 1962) (vs. Princeton, 1993) (vs. Navy, 1960) (vs. Johns Hopkins, 1989) (vs. Adelphi, 1979) (vs. Delaware, 1992) (vs. Syracuse, 1990)


Game-by-game results 1887 (0-4)

Lehigh L Stevens L NYU L Brooklyn Athletics L Captain: Charles Devine

0-9 0-5 2-3 2-4

4/28 5/4 5/12 5/19 5/26 6/9 6/12

1888 (1-7-1)

NYU L NYLC L Stevens W Stevens T NYLC L Nassau L NYU L CCNY L CCNY L Captain: Charles Divine

Brooklyn Athletics L CCNY W Bedfords W Captain: Samuel Lockett

0-3 0-3 3-0 1-1 0-3 3-4 0-3 0-2 1-2

Swarthmore L Johns Hopkins L NYLC W Stevens L Crescent AC L BROOKLYN LC L Captain: William H. Lott

4/5 4/18 4/25 5/2 5/9 5/16 5/23

4/9 4/10 4/17 4/24 4/28 5/1 5/8 5/15 5/22

1-5 5-4 12-1 4-2 7-4 15-1 1-6

4/8 4/15 4/23 4/30 5/6 5/7 5/14 5/17 5/20

14-0 1-0

4/7

3-8 0-13 3-0 1-2 1-9 2-3

1921 (1-6) 4/16 NYLC L 4/23 Yale L 4/30 MANUAL TRAINING HS W 5/7 Crescent AC L 5/14 Lehigh L 5/21 STEVENS L 5/28 SWARTHMORE L Captain: J. Munson Johnson

4-5 3-5 9-2 5-7 0-11 1-4 3-6

LEHIGH L Swarthmore W NYU W Yale W Stevens W NYLC W PRINCETON L Captain: R. Burton Lamscha

Brooklyn Poly HARVARD

W W

NYLC W 4-1 SYRACUSE L 2-7 PENN L 2-3 Crescent AC L 2-11 NYU L 1-2 Navy L 3-6 SWARTHMORE W 6-3 Captain: James W. Kiernan

1926 (4-5)

1923 (5-4) 4/7 4/19

2-8 3-3 1-2 3-7 1-1 1-0 6-2 7-0 1-4

Union W 5-4 Syracuse L 2-13 Lehigh L 2-7 LAFAYETTE W 12-0 Princeton L 4-7 Navy L 2-10 Montclair AC W 6-4 Swarthmore W 6-5 Army L 4-9 Captain: Kenneth A. Ruch

1927 (6-3)

1922 (5-2) 4/7 4/22 4/29 5/6 5/10 5/13 5/20

Crescent A. C. L LEHIGH T PRINCETON L Army L NYU T NYLC W Swarthmore W Union W Syracuse L Captain: H.F. Keiler

1925 (2-5)

1920 (1-5) 4/24 5/1 5/8 5/12 5/15 5/22

3-7 1-13 0-6 12-6 12-0 5-12 11-3

1924 (3-4-2) 4/5 4/12 4/26 5/3 5/10 5/17 5/24 5/30 5/31

1889 (2-1) 1-3 5-1 4-3

Lehigh L Princeton L SWARTHMORE L STEVENS W NYLC W Army L NYU W Captain: William E. Sparks

Penn W Montclair AC W UNION W Lehigh W Brown W Yale L SYRACUSE W Army L PRINCETON L Captain: F. Richard Cass

5-3 4-3 7-5 9-3 4-0 4-7 6-5 0-1 3-4

1928 (8-2) Montclair AC

W

12-4

4/14 4/21 4/28 5/4 5/5 5/12 5/16 5/19 6/9

Lehigh W 11-3 Princeton W 5-4 St. John’S (Md.) W 7-1 Union W 5-0 Syracuse L 4-7 STEVENS W 7-3 Army W 8-3 PENN W 4-3 *Maryland L 4-7 *Olympic Playoffs Captain: Edwin B. Roberts

3/30 4/13 4/20 4/24 4/27 5/3 5/11 5/18

Montclair AC W Stevens W St. John’s L NYU W LEHIGH W Princeton L Johns Hopkins W CCNY W Captain: Henry Clay Alton

4/12 4/16 4/19 4/26 5/1 5/3 5/10 5/17 5/24

Lafayette W 11-3 NYU W 7-4 Crescent AC L 4-5 STEVENS W 8-2 CCNY W 7-2 Lehigh W 9-2 St. John’S (Md.) L 1-7 PRINCETON W 5-1 Penn W 6-5 Captain: Edward Kearney

4/4 4/11 4/18 4/25 4/29 5/2 5/9 5/16 5/23

MONTCLAIR AC W 8-1 LAFAYETTE W 12-2 Yale L 4-6 Stevens W 7-2 NYU L 2-3 Lehigh W 10-4 PRINCETON W 9-2 Maryland L 3-10 PENN W 6-3 Captain: John P. Kirkwood

1929 (6-2) 9-6 2-1 2-9 9-0 5-2 1-9 5-4 8-0

1930 (7-2)

1931 (6-3)

1932 (7-2-1) 4/9 4/13 4/16 4/23 4/30 5/6 5/14 5/21

Penn STEVENS LEHIGH Lafayette MARYLAND Princeton NYU UNION *Syracuse

W W W W L T W W W

7-6 6-0 25-0 8-0 2-10 4-4 9-4 9-1 10-2

57


Game-by-game results

*Maryland L *Olympic Playoff Captain: Joseph J. Julien

4-5

4/8 4/15 4/22 4/29 5/6 5/10 5/13 5/20

PENN W NYU W #PRINCETON L CRESCENT AC L Maryland L Stevens W Union W Crescent AC T #Denotes Overtime Captain: William F. Ward

8-4 12-1 3-4 8-10 2-6 2-1 15-3 7-7

1934 (4-2-1)

4/14 4/18 4/21 4/28 5/5 5/12 5/19

4/13 4/20 4/26 4/27 5/4 5/11 5/18 5/22

CCNY W 14-8 LEHIGH W 13-4 #STEVENS T 3-3 ARMY W 5-4 Crescent AC L 5-8 Princeton L 5-7 Penn W 11-6 #Denotes Overtime Captain: Dwight A. Opdyke

1935 (5-3) CCNY W Swarthmore W SPRINGFIELD W Johns Hopkins L Army L PRINCETON L Stevens W PENN W Captain: Samuel B. Temple

10-6 10-4 11-8 0-7 3-9 2-4 7-5 13-4

1936 (3-3-2)

4/11 CCNY W 14-1 4/18 Stevens W 13-7 4/25 Army T 7-7 5/2 Johns Hopkins L 7-12 5/9 Princeton L 6-11 5/16 Maryland L 6-8 5/23 Penn W 20-5 6/11 All-American T 7-7 Captain: Daniel D. Van Mater

4/10 4/17 4/24 5/1 5/8 5/15 5/19

1937 (5-3)

58

CCNY Swarthmore PRINCETON LAFAYETTE Maryland Stevens Army

W W L W L W L

PENN W 10-4 Captain: Richard Chartrand

1938 (4-2)

1933 (4-3-1)

5/22

17-5 16-9 7-8 16-1 4-16 6-3 9-14

4/2 4/16 4/23 4/30 5/11 5/14

WILLIAMS W CCNY W ARMY W MARYLAND L Princeton L CRESCENT AC W Captain: George Hallock

11-2 9-6 4-3 9-11 2-4 4-3

4/8 4/15 4/22 4/29 5/6 5/10 5/20

LEHIGH W Yale W Maryland L St. John’S L CCNY W Army L PRINCETON L Captain: Stephen Hitchner

14-3 6-5 0-12 5-12 10-6 2-7 3-10

3/30 4/13 4/20 4/27 5/4 5/8 5/11 5/18

4/12 YALE L 2-8 4/19 Maryland L 1-10 4/26 LEHIGH W 13-1 5/3 LAFAYETTE W 16-1 5/10 Syracuse L 4-11 5/17 CCNY W 14-2 5/21 PRINCETON L 3-9 Captains: Harry J. Rockafeller II, James E. Gutzwiller

11-7 8-8 2-6 7-6 14-3 9-4 3-10 1-7

3/21 4/4 4/11 4/15 4/18 4/25 4/29 5/2 5/6 5/9

1941 (3-4)

1942 (6-3-1) UNION T LAFAYETTE W CCNY W DREXEL W Princeton L Navy L Lehigh W MONTCLAIR AC W SYRACUSE W MARYLAND L Captain: Kenneth Ross

(no team in 1944 and 1945 due to World War II)

4/20 5/1 5/4 5/11 5/15 5/18 5/22

CCNY W SWARTHMORE L Penn State L DREXEL W PRINCETON L MANHASSETT LC L Stevens L Captain: George Ranieri

11-2 5-6 1-9 6-4 3-18 1-11 6-7

1947 (3-7-1)

1940 (4-3-1) CRESCENT AC W Yale T MARYLAND L SYRACUSE W CCNY W Lehigh W Army L Princeton L Captain: Bill Evans

4/7 STEVENS L 4-7 4/10 Maryland L 0-15 4/24 CCNY W 21-5 4/28 LEHIGH W 8-3 5/5 PRINCETON W 7-5 Captain: William G. Neumann

1946 (2-5)

1939 (3-4)

1943 (3-2)

6-6 13-3 13-5 12-4 0-17 6-10 10-6 9-6 8-6 1-14

4/5 4/12 4/19 4/26 4/30 5/3 5/7 5/10 5/17 5/24

ARMY L MIT L Penn W CCNY L STEVENS W MONTCLAIR AC T PRINCETON L Lehigh L MARYLAND L Drexel W Manhasset LC L Captain: Harry Cyphers

1-14 4-5 2-1 6-7 8-3 8-8 2-9 2-5 3-16 13-2 6-11

1948 (6-5)

4/1 4/7 4/10 4/17 4/24 4/28 5/1 5/5 5/8 5/12 5/14

4/9 4/13 4/16 4/23 4/27 4/30 5/4

Army L WILLIAMS L CCNY W LI BOMBERS AC W PENN W YALE L Stevens W PRINCETON L Montclair AC W LEHIGH W Maryland L Captain: Charles DiLiberti

3-15 5-6 11-3 13-3 11-3 3-5 11-3 1-12 7-3 11-6 3-12

1949 (7-3) MONTCLAIR AC MARYLAND SYRACUSE LAFAYETTE Yale Lehigh Princeton

W W L W L W L

12-5 4-3 9-17 16-2 2-9 14-3 7-8


Game-by-game results 5/7 5/11 5/14

Penn W CCNY W Army W Captain: Kenneth Coffe

7-5 8-7 12-4

1950 (6-7)

3/29 Virginia L 8-9 3/31 Washington & Lee L 6-9 4/8 WILLIAMS W 7-5 4/12 CCNY W 17-7 4/15 Maryland L 3-11 4/19 LEHIGH W 17-4 4/22 Penn State W 11-6 4/26 Stevens W 12-0 5/3 Yale L 3-10 5/6 PENN W 17-5 5/10 PRINCETON L 6-11 5/13 Army L 9-18 5/20 Syracuse L 10-13 Captains: Joseph Orlick, Richard Gladwin

4/11 Princeton L 7-19 4/18 STEVENS W 12-7 4/21 LAFAYETTE W 19-7 4/28 Delaware W 16-9 5/2 Yale W 8-7 5/5 CCNY W 12-3 5/9 Penn W 14-5 5/12 MONTCLAIR AC W 10-4 5/16 Lehigh W 10-4 Captains: Douglas Gosnell, George Roberts

4/5 4/12 4/16 4/26 5/3 5/7 5/10 5/14 Captains:

1951 (8-1)

1952 (6-2)

CCNY W 18-2 DELAWARE W 14-3 Army L 5-11 LEHIGH W 16-0 Lafayette W 21-1 PRINCETON L 5-7 Penn State W 16-15 PENN W 15-6 Wallace Beneville, Malcolm McVeigh

1953 (8-2) 3/28 4/4 4/11 4/15 4/18 4/25 5/2 5/6 5/9 5/12

Ohio State W 14-2 WILLIAMS W 7-6 Mt. Washington W 5-4 Delaware W 16-4 Lehigh W 13-6 CCNY W 18-4 LAFAYETTE W 18-3 Princeton L 10-19 Penn State W 14-7 Penn L 6-8 Captain: Donald E. Stevens

1954 (7-3)

4/3 LEHIGH W 12-2 4/9 DARTMOUTH W 9-5 4/10 Johns Hopkins L 3-11 4/17 Hofstra L 7-8 4/24 STEVENS W 13-3 4/28 PENN W 14-11 5/8 Penn State W 20-7 5/12 CCNY W 14-4 5/19 PRINCETON L 9-11 5/22 DELAWARE W 19-4 Captains: Gerald Gabriel, Samuel Garrison

1955 (8-1-1) 4/2 ARMY W 11-7 4/13 Lehigh W 21-0 4/16 Johns Hopkins W 12-2 4/20 Stevens W 17-6 4/23 Penn State W 17-6 4/30 Syracuse W 23-19 5/4 CCNY W 17-6 5/7 Penn W 20-5 5/11 Princeton T 14-14 5/20 HOFSTRA L 6-16 Captains: Monte Montgomery, Thomas Moffett

1956 (9-1)

3/31 CORNELL W 16-7 4/3 HARVARD W 19-8 4/7 STEVENS W 13-4 4/14 PENN W 18-2 4/18 Army W 13-11 4/28 SYRACUSE L 5-13 5/2 PRINCETON W 17-11 5/5 LEHIGH W 13-0 5/9 CCNY W 15-3 5/19 Penn State W 19-11 Captains: Robert Andrews, Robert Kelley

1959 (7-4)

1960 (7-5)

4/2 4/5 4/6 4/9 4/13 4/16 4/20 4/23 4/30 5/7 5/14 5/18 Captains:

NAVY L 2-15 HARVARD W 9-3 New Hampshire W 11-2 COLGATE W 11-2 Stevens W 13-4 Army L 3-17 Yale W 8-7 Johns Hopkins L 2-12 Penn State W 15-5 Mt. Washington L 8-15 LEHIGH W 13-5 PRINCETON L 6-9 Richard Pencek, William Fleischman

4/1 Navy L 3-12 4/5 New Hampshire W 17-0 4/6 HARVARD L 11-14 4/12 STEVENS W 17-3 4/15 ARMY L 10-11 4/19 YALE L 7-12 4/22 Johns Hopkins L 7-9 4/29 Penn State W 6-3 5/6 Colgate W 11-5 5/10 Lehigh L 7-8 5/13 Mt. Washington L 6-14 5/17 Princeton L 5-7 Captains: Theodore Koch, Anthony Pisano

1961 (4-8)

1958 (9-2) Johns Hopkins Virginia

W 12-3 W 15-1 W 12-7 L 2-13 W 15-2 W 17-2 W 16-4 W 10-8 W 11-9 Anthony Curto

3/28 Navy L 9-10 4/2 New Hampshire W 15-0 4/11 Colgate W 16-8 4/15 YALE W 14-10 4/18 Army L 11-13 4/25 Johns Hopkins L 14-17 5/2 Lehigh W 15-8 5/6 STEVENS W 16-4 5/9 Mt. Washington L 9-18 5/13 Princeton W 9-6 5/16 Penn State W 17-6 Captains: Robert Naso, John Howland

1957 (7-3) 3/30 CORNELL W 19-10 4/2 HARVARD W 18-9 4/6 STEVENS W 15-2 4/13 Army L 4-9 4/17 YALE W 14-3 4/20 Mt. Washington L 9-14 4/27 VIRGINIA W 10-8 5/4 Lehigh W 17-2 5/8 Princeton L 7-8 5/17 Penn State W 17-9 Captains: John Daut, Donald Glucker

3/29 3/31

4/1 Duke 4/12 Penn 4/16 Yale 4/19 ARMY 4/26 Penn State 5/3 LEHIGH 5/8 Stevens 5/10 Mt. Washington 5/14 PRINCETON Captains: Walter J. Schmidt,

L W

5-17 10-8

59


Game-by-game results 1962 (4-7)

3/31 NAVY L 6-17 4/4 HARVARD L 13-18 4/5 New Hampshire W 15-10 4/8 AUSTRALIA ALL STARS W 18-11 4/14 Army L 10-15 4/18 Yale W 16-11 4/21 HOFSTRA L 9-10 4/28 Penn State L 13-18 5/5 Johns Hopkins L 11-13 5/11 Lehigh W 9-6 5/16 PRINCETON L 7-13 Captains: Sam Mudie, Herb Schmidt

1963 (7-4) 3/30 Navy L 3-13 4/2 HARVARD W 17-10 4/10 New Hampshire W 13-5 4/13 ARMY L 6-14 4/17 YALE W 11-7 4/20 Hofstra W 13-8 4/27 Penn State W 16-7 5/1 COLGATE W 19-9 5/4 Johns Hopkins L 8-14 5/11 LEHIGH W 6-3 5/15 Princeton L 7-11 Captains: James Anderson, Roger Matthews

1964 (8-3)

3/28 3/31 4/1 4/11 4/18 4/22 4/25 4/29 5/2 5/9 5/13

NAVY L 3-20 HARVARD W 9-6 New Hampshire W 17-5 Army L 3-10 HOFSTRA W 12-4 Yale L 8-9 Penn State W 14-8 Colgate W 21-8 Johns Hopkins W 11-10 Lehigh W 14-3 PRINCETON W 15-10 Captain: John Valestra

1965 (8-4)

60

4/3 WILLIAMS W 10-9 4/6 HARVARD W 11-4 4/7 New Hampshire W 6-5 4/10 ARMY L 3-11 4/14 Johns Hopkins L 9-15 4/17 Hofstra W 16-8 4/21 YALE L 6-9 4/24 COLGATE W 13-5 5/1 Penn State W 19-9 5/8 Mt. Washington L 10-15 5/15 LEHIGH W 14-3 5/19 Princeton W 10-6 Captains: Ronald N. Yurcak, George A. Lamb

1966 (9-5)

3/19 3/26 4/2 4/5 4/7 4/9 4/16 4/20 4/23 4/27 4/30 5/7 5/11 5/14 Captains:

VIRGINIA W 9-4 BROWN L 5-7 WILLIAMS W 9-2 HARVARD W 8-6 New Hampshire W 16-5 Army L 6-10 HOFSTRA W 15-2 Johns Hopkins L 7-8 COLGATE W 15-5 Yale L 6-11 Penn State W 17-1 Mt. Washington L 6-13 PRINCETON W 11-6 Lehigh W 18-4 Paul Popson, G. Peter Savidge

3/25 Virginia L 4-9 3/31 New Hampshire W 9-4 4/1 WILLIAMS W 14-4 4/4 HARVARD W 7-3 4/8 ARMY L 9-11 4/15 Hofstra W 13-3 4/22 Colgate W 9-3 4/26 YALE W 6-5 4/29 Penn State L 6-7 5/2 LEHIGH W 15-5 5/6 Mt. Washington L 6-9 5/9 Princeton T 5-5 Captains: Jack Emmer, Charles Mudie

3/28 WILLIAMS W 13-4 4/2 New Hampshire W 20-5 4/4 Army L 0-18 4/11 HOFSTRA W 10-9 4/18 Long Island AC L 9-14 4/22 Yale L 10-13 4/25 Penn State W 8-2 4/28 Lehigh W 22-3 5/2 Johns Hopkins L 5-13 5/12 PRINCETON W 11-6 Captains: Robert Nesbitt, John Orrizzi

3/27 WILLIAMS W 13-3 3/31 ADELPHI L 6-10 4/3 ARMY L 8-21 4/6 HARVARD L 6-7 4/10 Hofstra L 3-15 4/17 BUCKNELL W 9-6 4/21 Yale W 11-8 4/24 Penn State W 20-7 4/28 LEHIGH W 17-1 5/1 Johns Hopkins L 9-21 5/7 Penn L 7-12 5/11 Princeton W 13-7 Captains: Victor Martocci, George MacDonald

1971 (6-6)

1968 (7-4)

3/30 4/2 4/6 4/11 4/13 4/17 4/20 4/24 4/27 4/30 5/4

3/29 4/1 4/5 4/10 4/12 4/19 4/23 4/26 4/29 5/3

WILLIAMS W 10-3 HARVARD L 7-8 Army L 5-10 New Hampshire W 14-2 HOFSTRA W 11-2 PRINCETON W 5-2 COLGATE W 14-4 Yale L 4-8 Penn State W 10-1 Lehigh W 15-4 Mt. Washington L 11-14 Captain: Edward G. Shaivitz

1969 (7-7) WILLIAMS HARVARD ARMY New Hampshire Hofstra Long Island AC YALE Penn State LEHIGH Johns Hopkins

W 15-6 W 9-5 L 5-13 W 12-4 L 6-8 L 7-11 L 1-6 W 12-10 W 15-6 L 5-20

1970 (6-4)

1967 (7-4-1)

5/5 PRINCETON JV L 2-3 5/10 Air Force W 17-6 5/12 Colgate W 12-7 5/14 Princeton L 13-15 Captains: Richard Leitch, Glenn Ritch

1972 (9-3) 3/25 4/4 4/8 4/11 4/15 4/19 4/22 4/26 4/29 5/3 5/6 5/9 5/20

WILLIAMS W 9-2 HARVARD W 12-3 HOFSTRA W 4-3 Johns Hopkins L 5-12 Bucknell W 13-3 PENN W 6-3 Adelphi W 9-6 Army L 5-6 Penn State W 15-6 Navy L 4-5 YALE W 11-3 PRINCETON W 9-6 *Maryland L 3-9 *NCAA Tournament Captains: George Massey, Andrew Haugevik

1973 (9-4)

3/23 3/31 4/3 4/5

CONNECTICUT PENN HARVARD MIDDLEBURY

W W W W

16-1 11-6 11-4 16-2


Game-by-game results

4/7 ARMY L 4-8 4/11 Yale W 18-2 4/14 BUCKNELL W 16-1 4/17 Johns Hopkins L 9-14 4/21 ADELPHI W 17-9 4/25 NAVY L 4-6 4/28 Penn State W 16-7 5/5 Hofstra L 8-12 5/8 Princeton W 14-6 Captains: Bob Carney, Ed Haugevik

1974 (8-5)

3/16 3/30 4/3 4/6 4/10 4/13 4/16 4/20 4/24 4/27 5/4 5/7 5/20

CONNECTICUT W 17-3 Penn W 14-8 MIDDLEBURY W 24-3 Army W 10-3 CORNELL L 6-17 Bucknell W 10-1 Johns Hopkins L 10-13 Adelphi W 9-8 Navy L 8-12 Penn State W 21-7 HOFSTRA L 5-6 PRINCETON W 15-12 *Maryland L 6-12 *NCAA Tournament Captains: Art Diamond, Bob Bryan

3/19 3/22 3/29 4/5 4/9 4/12 4/16 4/19 4/26 5/3 5/6 5/10 5/21

1975 (7-6) Connecticut W 12-4 CW Post W 18-4 PENN W 6-5 ARMY W 11-8 Cornell L 5-15 BUCKNELL W 18-3 NAVY L 6-8 ADELPHI L 5-9 Penn State W 10-5 Hofstra L 10-14 Princeton W 13-11 Washington & Lee L 13-14 *Cornell L 5-18 *NCAA Tournament Captains: Michael Rinck, H. John Bopp, John Meigel

1976 (4-6) 3/17 3/20 3/27 4/3 4/7 4/10 4/18 4/25 5/1 5/4

CW Post Navy Penn #Army CORNELL Bucknell Adelphi #Penn State HOFSTRA PRINCETON

W 14-11 L 10-14 L 3-12 W 9-8 L 6-14 W 8-6 L 14-16 L 8-9 W 13-7 L 6-16

# Denotes overtime Captain: John Danowski

1977 (7-5)

3/12 CW Post W 14-7 3/19 Navy W 9-7 3/26 PENN L 12-13 4/2 ARMY W 13-8 4/6 BUCKNELL W 14-6 4/9 Cornell L 10-15 4/13 ADELPHI W 14-6 4/16 Massachusetts L 11-12 4/22 Penn State W 13-10 4/30 Hofstra W 6-5 5/4 Princeton L 7-12 5/7 Washington & Lee L 8-13 Captains: Rich Scipione, Rex Capro

1978 (9-4) 3/18 3/25 4/1 4/5 4/7 4/12 4/15 4/18 4/22 4/27 4/29 5/3 5/6 Captains:

Navy L 7-13 Penn W 10-9 Army L 8-15 Bucknell W 16-3 LONG ISLAND AC W 16-8 Adelphi W 13-8 MASSACHUSETTS W 14-6 CW Post W 24-7 Penn State W 20-6 Air Force W 16-3 CORNELL L 9-10 PRINCETON W 17-8 Washington & Lee L 9-11 James Milne, Richard Prakopcyk

1979 (8-4) 3/17 NAVY W 16-15 3/24 PENN W 16-6 3/31 ARMY L 4-7 4/7 Syracuse L 8-13 4/12 ADELPHI W 17-10 4/14 Massachusetts W 16-11 4/18 Washington & Lee L 10-11 4/21 Penn State W 10-3 4/25 CW Post W 20-4 4/28 Cornell L 11-12 5/2 Princeton W 16-15 5/5 BUCKNELL W 14-10 Captains: Joseph Reilly, Tom Sweeney, Mike Mauro

1980 (7-5) 3/18 3/22 3/29 4/2 4/5 4/12

UMBC Maryland Army Bucknell SYRACUSE @ LIHS MASSACHUSETTS

W 12-10 W 9-8 L 8-9 W 12-10 L 7-8 L 14-15

4/16 Montclair State W 15-3 4/19 Penn State W 7-6 4/24 CONNECTICUT W 27-3 4/27 CORNELL L 10-13 4/30 PRINCETON W 16-11 5/3 Washington & Lee L 7-17 Captains: Tom Sweeney, James Ford, Bill Fisher, Robert Olsen

1981 (7-6) 3/14 Navy W 14-11 3/21 Maryland L 9-10 3/28 Army W 6-5 4/4 Syracuse L 7-18 4/8 BUCKNELL W 15-9 4/11 Massachusetts L 9-12 4/15 Montclair State W 27-3 4/18 Penn State L 11-12 4/23 Connecticut W 27-4 4/24 UMBC W 14-12 4/25 TOWSON STATE L 15-16 4/29 Princeton *** W 10-9 5/2 MARYLAND L 12-15 *** 4 Overtimes (RU Record) Game took 74 minutes to play. Captains: Edward Quinones, Andrew Eastwood

1982 (10-2)

3/20 UMBC W 16-9 3/27 Army L 4-14 4/3 SYRACUSE L 4-5 4/14 Montclair State W 28-7 4/17 Penn State W 11-3 4/20 Bucknell W 14-6 4/24 Towson State W 10-8 4/28 PRINCETON W 11-10 5/1 Harvard W 8-6 5/6 HOFSTRA W 13-6 5/9 DREXEL W 19-5 5/16 MASSACHUSETTS W 15-9 Captains: Bob Vencak, Joseph Sciacca

3/12 Delaware W 3/19 CW Post W 3/26 New Hampshire L 3/27 Air Force (at UMBC) W 4/2 Syracuse L 4/6 BUCKNELL W 4/9 Massachusetts W 4/13 Montclair State W 4/16 Penn State W 4/20 YALE W 4/27 Princeton L 4/30 HARVARD W 5/4 HOFSTRA L

1983 (9-5) 9-6 15-5 11-12 26-2 13-21 16-7 14-13 35-6 106 15-7 16-17 11-4 11-15

61


Game-by-game results 5/7 ARMY L 6-9 Captains: Albert Ray, Mike Cavallaro, Peter Feineman

1984 (8-5)

3/10 3/17 3/31 4/4 4/7 4/11 4/14 4/18 4/21 4/25 4/28 5/2 5/5

PENN W 15-11 Bucknell W 17-4 Massachusetts W 8-4 DELAWARE L 4-7 St. John’s W 15-3 Penn State W 13-10 Drexel W 17-4 #Army L 5-6 PRINCETON W 18-9 SYRACUSE L 12-15 Johns Hopkins L 10-21 HOFSTRA W 11-7 *Syracuse L 7-8 #Denotes Overtime *NCAA Tournament Captains: Bill Naslonski, Chris Heffernan, Mike Ferraro

1985 (7-6)

3/17 Penn L 8-15 3/23 UMBC W 10-8 3/30 CW Post L 6-11 4/3 BUCKNELL W 17-6 4/6 Massachusetts W 12-9 4/10 St. John’s W 14-9 4/13 Penn State W 13-3 4/17 DREXEL W 25-3 4/20 ARMY L 8-12 4/24 Princeton W 8-4 4/27 Syracuse L 6-15 5/1 Johns Hopkins L 8-13 5/4 Hofstra L 9-10 Captains: John Naslonski, Andy Briggs

3/4 3/15 3/22 3/29 4/2 4/5 4/9 4/12 4/16 4/19 4/21 4/23 4/26 5/3 5/9

1986 (11-4)

62

NAVY L 12-14 PENN W 16-5 UMBC W 13-8 CW Post W 9-3 Bucknell W 17-9 TOWSON STATE W 10-5 St. John’S W 10-2 Penn State W 8-5 Army L 7-11 PRINCETON W 8-7 Syracuse L 5-13 Drexel W 15-8 MASSACHUSETTS W 7-4 *CW Post W 13-8 *Syracuse L 5-17 *NCAA Tournament Captains: Jeff Bayuk, Dave DiSciorio

1987 (8-5)

3/4 3/14 3/18 3/28 4/1 4/4 4/8 4/11 4/18 4/22 4/25 5/2 5/8

Navy L 6-7 Johns Hopkins L 7-10 Whittier W 15-4 CW Post W 11-7 FDU W 14-1 Towson State W 12-10 St. John’s W 12-4 #Penn State W 10-9 Army L 8-11 Princeton W 6-4 Syracuse L 5-17 Massachusetts L 8-10 BUCKNELL W 21-4 #Denotes Overtime Captains: Tom Reilly, Pat Dawson

1988 (8-5)

3/12 3/19 3/26 3/30 4/2 4/6 4/9 4/16 4/20 4/23 4/23 5/3 5/7

NAVY W 9-4 Johns Hopkins L 9-13 CW Post L 2-12 FDU W 15-3 TOWSON STATE W 10-9 St. John’S W 10-7 #Penn State W 9-8 Air Force W 9-3 PRINCETON W 10-5 SYRACUSE L 9-12 MASSACHUSETTS L 8-10 Bucknell W 12-5 Army L 6-11 #Denotes Overtime Captains: Dave Bass, Rich Bianchi, Jim Gilman

3/4 Princeton W 10-7 3/11 Navy L 8-11 3/18 Johns Hopkins L 6-10 3/22 Sonoma State W 27-5 3/24 Whittier W 33-7 3/28 FDU W 32-1 4/1 Towson State L 6-9 4/5 St. John’s W 16-9 4/8 CW Post W 10-4 4/12 Lehigh W 20-5 4/15 Penn State W 12-6 4/22 Syracuse L 15-27 4/29 Massachusetts L 10-13 5/6 ARMY W 8-6 Captains: Greg Rinaldi, Lou Fusilli, Mark Mareau

3/24 IROQUOIS NATIONALS W 16-4 3/25 New Hampshire W 15-4 3/27 FDU W 26-7 3/31 PRINCETON L 7-12 4/4 St. John’S W 17-11 4/11 LEHIGH W 21-6 4/14 #Penn State W 18-17 4/21 SYRACUSE L 8-22 4/28 MASSACHUSETTS L 11-12 5/5 Army W 11-8 5/10 *Virginia W 7-6 5/17 *Loyola L 10-19 #Denotes Overtime *NCAA Tournament Captains: Greg Rinaldi, Tim Pritts, Andy DeCicco

1991 (7-6)

3/2 3/9 3/16 3/19 3/23 3/30 4/3 4/6 4/13 4/20 4/27 5/4 5/13

Loyola L 9-17 Navy W 13-6 Johns Hopkins L 5-13 Franklin & Marshall W 17-7 Michigan State W 14-2 Princeton L 6-9 St. John’s W 21-11 CW Post W 10-9 Penn State W 17-10 Syracuse L 15-20 Massachusetts L 11-17 ARMY W 16-14 *Maryland L 7-13 *NCAA Tournament Captains: Steve Luciano, John Schmunk, Scott Moore

3/1 LOYOLA L 10-18 3/7 Hofstra L 9-13 3/14 Johns Hopkins L 3-18 3/18 Ohio State W 17-6 3/21 Michigan State L 7-8 3/28 PRINCETON L 10-11 4/1 St. John’s W 15-10 4/4 Delaware (at Bermuda) W 8-7 4/7 LAFAYETTE W 19-7 4/11 Penn State L 10-11 4/18 SYRACUSE L 13-19 4/22 Villanova W 11-10 4/25 #MASSACHUSETTS L 8-9 5/2 Army W 13-9 #Denotes Overtime Captains: Joe Borges, Dave Cunningham, Scott Hille

1989 (9-5)

1992 (6-8)

1990 (10-5) 3/3 3/10 3/17

LOYOLA NAVY Johns Hopkins

L 13-14 W 11-9 W 14-10

1993 (8-5) 3/6 3/20

Michigan State Johns Hopkins

W 13-9 L 10-15


Game-by-game results

3/23 Ohio State W 23-7 3/28 PRINCETON L 7-14 3/31 St. John’S W 17-7 4/7 Lafayette W 22-6 4/10 Penn State W 16-9 4/13 Delaware W 14-8 4/17 Syracuse L 7-21 4/21 VILLANOVA W 18-10 4/24 Massachusetts L 7-10 5/1 ARMY L 6-12 5/4 HOFSTRA W 16-6 Captains: Nick DeLapi, Eric Michaelis, Reid Jackson

3/19 3/23 3/30 4/6 4/13 4/16 4/20 4/23 4/27 4/30 5/4

OHIO STATE W 11-8 Princeton L 7-16 DELAWARE W 7-6 Yale L 8-14 SYRACUSE W 9-8 # Villanova W 5-1 Penn State L 5-6 BOSTON COLLEGE W 16-4 MARYLAND L 5-15 Hofstra L 4-12 Army L 11-18 #Denotes Overtime Captains: Matt Elzer, Mike Seward

1994 (7-9)

2/28 3/9 3/12 3/16 3/19 3/26 3/30 4/2 4/9 4/12 4/16 4/19 4/23 4/26 4/30 5/7

AIR FORCE W 20-8 #NOTRE DAME L 8-7 Johns Hopkins L 7-11 Yale L 7-8 Loyola L 6-17 PRINCETON L 5-15 St. John’S W 23-3 DELAWARE L 11-12 #Penn State L 12-13 STONY BROOK W 12-5 SYRACUSE L 12-21 Villanova W 20-11 MASSACHUSETTS L 9-12 DREXEL W 15-11 Army W 12-9 #Hofstra W 16-15 #Denotes Overtime Captains: Reid Jackson, Bubba Lemken

1995 (9-6) 3/4 UMBC L 6-9 3/11 Johns Hopkins L 5-16 3/15 Colorado College W 17-2 3/18 Air Force L 12-13 3/25 Princeton L 9-13 3/29 St. John’s W 13-12 4/1 Delaware W 13-8 4/8 Yale W 6-5 4/11 Stony Brook W 15-11 4/15 Syracuse L 6-20 4/18 Villanova W 9-4 4/22 Penn State L 14-15 4/25 Boston College W 10-6 4/29 Army W 13-7 5/6 Hofstra W 14-11 Captains: Mark Bachardy, Nick Lagunowich, Dan Spillett

1996 (5-9) 3/3 3/13 3/16

at UMBC L 5-17 BUTLER L 7-8 MICHIGAN STATE L 12-13#

1997 (8-7)

2/23 OHIO STATE W 17-6 3/1 VMI W 19-5 3/8 Johns Hopkins L 8-22 3/15 HARTFORD L 12-13 3/19 Radford W 14-4 3/23 AIR FORCE W 14-5 3/29 Delaware W 15-13 4/5 YALE W 9-8 4/12 Syracuse L 7-19 4/15 VILLANOVA W 17-6 4/19 PENN STATE L 7-15 4/22 PRINCETON L 8-19 4/26 Maryland L 4-12 4/29 HOFSTRA L 4-5 5/3 ARMY W 8-7 Captains: Craig Jackman, Greg Jurczak

1998 (8-7) 3/1 at Ohio State W 10-3 3/7 JOHNS HOPKINS L 9-18 3/14 RADFORD W 20-10 3/21 at Notre Dame W 13-12 3/24 HARTFORD W 22-5 3/29 DELAWARE L 12-17 4/4 at Yale L 10-1 4/6 ST. JOSEPH’S W 19-7 4/7 MARIST W 22--4 4/11 SYRACUSE W 12-10 4/18 at Penn State L 9-11 4/21 at Princeton L 7-19 4/25 MARYLAND L 11-16 4/28 at Hofstra L 9-13 5/2 at Army W 15-14 (ot) Captains: Matt Kopley, Brian Locks, Mike Zoanetti

1999 (4-10)

3/1 3/6 3/13 3/16 3/20

at Syracuse OHIO STATE at Radford at Virginia DENVER

L 13-20 L 9-11 W 14-13 L 6-24 W 17-4

3/27 PRINCETON L 3-13 4/3 at Delaware L 18-19 4/6 at St. Joseph’s W 16-8 4/10 YALE W 10-9 4/17 PENN STATE L 8-15 4/24 at Hobart L 12-17 5/1 at Georgetown L 10-15 5/4 HOFSTRA L 6-15 5/8 ARMY L 15-16 Captains: Brody Bush, David Schaller, Mike Van Roten

3/4 DELAWARE L 5-15 3/11 RADFORD W 19-10 3/14 VIRGINIA L 8-17 3/18 NAVY* L 8-11 3/25 at Princeton L 5-15 4/1 at UMBC* L 3-11 4/8 at Yale L 16-19 4/11 STONY BROOK* W 13-10 4/15 SYRACUSE L 8-16 4/18 SACRED HEART W 16-9 4/22 at Penn State* L 6-12 4/29 GEORGETOWN* L 9-14 5/2 at UMass* L 11-16 5/6 at Army L 12-13 Captains: Paul Boniello, Keith Cromwell, John Martino

2000 (3-11)

2001 (5-8) 2/24 Manhattan W 16-4 3/3 Delaware W 13-8 3/9 NOTRE DAME L 4-9 3/17 Navy L 9-11 3/27 PRINCETON L 5-14 3/31 UMBC W 10-7 4/7 Albany W 19-2 4/10 Stony Brook W 12-11 4/14 Syracuse L 8-13 4/21 PENN STATE L 9-18 4/28 Georgetown L 7-15 5/2 MASSACHUSETTS L 7-17 5/5 ARMY L 9-13 Captains: Chris Bryan, Keith Cromwell, Scott Massey, David Rough

2002 (2-12)

2/23 2/27 3/2 3/5 3/9 3/16 3/20 3/26 3/30

Towson L 8-15 Manhattan W 12-5 Delaware L 10-12 Albany L 6-8 at Notre Dame L 6-11 Navy L 3-6 at St. Joseph’s W 14-3 at Princeton L 6-16 at UMBC L 6-10

63


Game-by-game results 4/6 at Army L 12-13 4/13 Syracuse L 4-13 4/20 at Penn State L 3-15 4/28 Georgetown L 2-13 5/5 at Massachusetts L 9-21 Captains: Michael Bohlinger, Tim Horgan, Brad Kerwin

2003 (10-5)

2/23 at Towson W 10-9 (ot) 2/26 MANHATTAN W 7-3 3/1 DELAWARE W 11-6 3/5 SAINT JOSEPH’S W 15-4 3/8 ALBANY W 14-7 3/15 at Navy W 13-8 3/22 vs. Vermont W 8-5 3/25 PRINCETON L 8-10 3/29 UMBC W 12-11 (ot) 4/5 ARMY L 8-9 4/12 at Syracuse W 12-11 (ot) 4/19 Penn State L 6-7 4/26 at Georgetown L 4-8 5/3 MASSACHUSETTS W 12-9 5/11 GEORGETOWN L 6-9 Captains: Ken Springer, Andrew Conforti

2004 (8-6)

2/28 vs. Dartmouth W 13-9 3/6 DELAWARE W 12-4 3/10 at Saint Joseph’s W 10-3 3/13 QUINNIPIAC W 17-4 3/20 at Army L 11-12 3/27 TOWSON L 4-7 4/1 at Fairfield W 7-6 (3 OT) 4/6 MANHATTAN W 10-6 4/10 at Princeton L 7-9 4/17 SYRACUSE W 14-10 4/24 at Penn State W 10-6 5/1 GEORGETOWN L 6-7 5/8 at Massachusetts L 6-9 5/15 at Princeton L 4-12 Captains: Andrew Conforti, Delby Powless, Joe Duncan, Jamie Lovejoy

2005 (4-9)

64

3/5 3/9 3/15 3/19 3/22 3/26 3/30 4/2 4/9 4/16 4/23 4/30

at Delaware MANHATTAN at Towson ARMY STONY BROOK at Hobart at St. John’s LOYOLA PRINCETON at Syracuse PENN STATE at Georgetown

W 8-7 W 11-4 L 6-7 L 6-8 L 9-13 L 10-16 W 9-6 L 5-10 W 8-5 L 6-17 L 7-8 L 7-14

5/7 MASSACHUSETTS L 7-13 Captains: Leif Blomquist, Jamie Lovejoy, John Flanagan, Dan Achatz

2006 (5-9)

2/25 3/4 3/10 3/14 3/18 3/25 3/28 4/5 4/8 4/15 4/22 4/25 4/29 5/6

BUTLER W 11-3 DELAWARE L 6-10 FAIRFIELD L 7-11 MANHATTAN W 15-2 Army L 4-5 # HOBART W 8-7 Stony Brook W 6-3 ST. JOHN’S W 4-3 Loyola (Md.) L 4-9 # SYRACUSE L 12-13 # Penn State L 7-8 Princeton L 5-11 GEORGETOWN L 8-9 Massachusetts L 5-10 # denotes overtime Captains: Matt Gaines, Tom O’Toole, Dan Rauch

2007 (7-6)

2/27 DOWLING W 17-9 3/3 Delaware L 5-7 3/10 Fairfield L 10-14 3/13 PRINCETON L 8-15 3/24 Hobart W 12-11 3/31 St. John’s L 4-6 4/3 MANHATTAN W 10-3 4/7 LOYOLA W 17-7 4/15 Syracuse L 9-22 4/22 PENN STATE W 8-7 4/28 Georgetown L 8-12 5/2 ARMY W 10-9 5/5 MASSACHUSETTS W 9-8 Captains: Matt Gaines, Chris O’Dougherty, Jeff Rommel

2/24 UMBC W 13-4 3/1 DELAWARE L 10-8 3/8 FAIRFIELD* L 10-7 3/15 Army L 12-11 3/21 HOBART W 13-10 3/25 Princeton L 7-6 3/29 ST. JOHN’S* W 9-6 4/1 MANHATTAN W 13-2 4/5 Loyola* L 15-3 4/12 SYRACUSE L 17-9 4/20 Penn State* W 8-4 4/26 GEORGETOWN* L 13-7 5/3 Massachusetts* W 7-6 Captains: Nick Filippone, Chris Hoffmann, Chris O’Dougherty, Jeff Rommel

2008 (6-7)

2009 (4-11)

2/14 VILLANOVA L 4-8 2/18 at Manhattan W 11-7 2/21 at UMBC L 10-17 2/28 at St. Joseph’s L 7-10 3/7 at Fairfield* L 4-5 3/14 ARMY L 6-9 3/21 HOBART W 5-4 3/24 PRINCETON L 6-13 3/28 ST. JOHN’S W 14-10 3/31 WAGNER W 17-1 4/4 LOYOLA L 9-12 4/11 at Syracuse L 3-10 4/18 PENN STATE L 4-9 4/25 GEORGETOWN L 7-15 5/2 UMASS L 10-11 (ot) Captains: Chris O’Dougherty, Jeff Rommel

2/21 at Wagner W 24-4 2/28 UMBC L 5-6 3/6 ST. JOSEPH’S W 15-6 3/13 PENN STATE W 7-4 3/16 MARIST W 10-9 3/20 at Army L 8-11 3/27 at Notre Dame* W 10-8 4/3 ST. JOHN’S* L 10-11 4/10 at Jacksonville L 10-17 4/13 at Princeton L 8-10 4/18 SYRACUSE* L 5-11 4/25 VILLANOVA* L 4-8 5/1 at Georgetown* L 9-14 5/9 at Providence* W 12-2 Captains: Gerhard Buehning, Tad Stanwick

2010 (6-8)


series records Opponent W L T Pct Adelphi 6 3 0 .667 Air Force 6 1 0 .857 Albany 2 1 0 .667 Army 20 52 1 .273 Boston College 2 0 0 1.000 Brooklyn Poly 1 0 0 1.000 Brown 1 1 0 .500 Bucknell 18 0 0 1.000 Butler 1 1 0 .500 CCNY 23 3 0 .885 Colgate 10 0 0 1.000 Colorado College 1 0 0 1.000 Connecticut 5 0 0 1.000 Cornell 2 8 0 .200 C.W. Post 11 2 0 .846 Dartmouth 2 0 0 1.000 Denver 1 0 0 1.000 Delaware 15 9 0 .625 Dowling 1 0 0 1.000 Drexel 8 0 0 1.000 Duke 1 0 0 1.000 Fairfield 1 4 0 .200 Fairleigh Dickinson 4 0 0 1.000 Franklin & Marshall 1 0 0 1.000 Georgetown 0 13 0 .000 Hartford 1 1 0 .500 Harvard 14 4 0 .778 Hobart 4 2 1 .667 Hofstra 15 15 0 .500 Jacksonville 0 1 0 .000 Johns Hopkins 4 30 0 .118 Lafayette 13 0 0 1.000 Lehigh 38 7 1 .826 Loyola (Md.) 1 9 0 .100 Manhattan 9 0 0 1.000 Marist 2 0 0 1.000 Maryland 2 23 0 .080 UMBC 8 5 0 ..615 Massachusetts 10 18 0 .357 MIT 0 1 0 .000 Michigan State 2 2 0 .500

Series Began 1971 1969 2001 1923 1995 1923 1927 1971 1996 1888 1959 1995 1973 1956 1975 1954 1999 1951 2007 1942 1958 2004 1987 1991 1999 1997 1923 1999 1954 2010 1920 1926 1887 1990 2001 1998 1928 1980 1977 1947 1991

Last Game 1979 1997 2003 2010 1996 1923 1966 1988 2006 1956 1969 1995 1981 1980 1991 2004 1999 2008 2007 1994 1958 2009 1990 1991 2010 1998 1983 2009 1999 2010 1998 1953 1990 2009 2009 2010 1998 2010 2009 1947 1996

Opponent W L T Pct Middlebury 2 0 0 1.000 Montclair State 4 0 0 1.000 Mt. Washington 2 8 0 .200 Navy 7 21 0 .250 New Hampshire 13 1 0 .929 NYU 6 5 1 .542 Notre Dame 2 3 0 .400 Ohio State 6 1 0 .858 Pennsylvania 28 6 0 .824 Penn State 41 19 0 .683 Princeton 29 56 3 .329 Providence 1 0 0 1.000 Quinnipiac 1 0 0 1.000 Radford 4 0 0 1.000 St. John’s (Md.) 1 2 0 .333 St. John’s (N.Y.) 16 3 0 .842 Sacred Heart 1 0 0 1.000 St. Joseph’s 5 1 0 .833 Sonoma State 1 0 0 1.000 Springfield 1 0 0 1.000 Stevens 24 5 2 .774 Stony Brook 5 1 0 .833 Swarthmore 6 4 0 .600 Syracuse 9 38 0 .191 Towson 5 5 0 .500 Union 6 0 1 .857 Villanova 6 2 0 .750 Virginia 4 4 0 .500 VMI 1 0 0 1.000 Wagner 2 0 0 1.000 Washington & Lee 0 6 0 .000 Whittier 2 0 0 1.000 Williams 11 1 0 .917 Yale 17 17 1 .486 Clubs 23 19 3 .418 Totals 554 434 13 .553

Series Began 1973 1980 1953 1925 1959 1887 1994 1953 1925 1946 1922 2010 2004 1997 1928 1984 2000 1999 1989 1935 1887 1994 1920 1924 1981 1924 1992 1966 1997 2009 1950 1987 1938 1921 --

Last Game 1974 1983 1968 2003 1990 1933 2010 1999 1986 2010 2010 2010 2004 2000 1930 2010 2000 2010 1989 1935 1961 2006 1946 2010 2005 1942 2010 2000 1997 2010 1980 1989 1972 2000 --

BOLD indicates 2011 opponent.

65


team records and captains

66

Year 1887 1888 1889 1920 1921 1922 1923 1924 1925 1926 1927 1928 1929 1930 1931 1932 1933 1934 1935 1936 1937 1938 1939 1940 1941 1942 1943 1946 1947 1948 1949 1950 1951 1952 1953 1954 1955 1956 1957 1958 1959 1960 1961 1962 1963 1964 1965 1966 1967 1968 1969 1970 1971 1972* 1973 1974*

Record 0-4 1-7-1 2-1 1-5 1-6 5-2 5-4 3-4-2 2-5 4-5 6-3 8-2 6-2 7-2 6-3 7-2-1 4-3-1 4-2-1 5-3 3-3-2 5-3 4-2 3-4 4-3-1 3-4 6-3-1 3-2 2-5 3-7-1 6-5 7-3 6-7 8-1 6-2 8-2 7-3 8-1-1 9-1 7-3 9-2 7-4 7-5 4-8 4-7 7-4 8-3 8-4 9-5 7-4-1 7-4 7-7 6-4 6-6 9-3 9-4 8-5

Team Captains Charles Devine Charles Devine Samuel Lockett William Lott J. Munson Johnson R. Burton Lamscha William Sparks Henry F. Keiler James Kiernan Kenneth Ruch F. Richard Cass Edwin Roberts Henry Clay Alton Edward Kearney John Kirkwood Joseph Julien William Ward Dwight Opdyke Samuel Temple Daniel Van Mater Richard Chartran George Hallock Stephen Hitchner Bill Evans Harry Rockafeller, II, James Gutzwiller Kenneth Ross William Neumann George RanieriM Harry Cyphers Charles DiLiberti Kenneth Coffe Joseph Orlick, Richard Gladwin Douglas Gosnell, George Roberts Wallace Beneville, Malcolm McVeigh Donald Stevens Gerald Gabriel, Samuel Garrison Monte Montgomery, Thomas Moffett Robert Andrews, Robert Kelley Jack Daut, Donald Glucker Walter Schmidt, Anthony Curto Bob Naso, John Howland Richard Pencek, William Fleischman Ted Koch, Anthony Pisano Samuel Mudie, Herb Schmidt James Anderson, Roger Matthews John Valestra Ronald N. Yurcak, George Lamb Paul Popson, George Peter Savidge Jack Emmer , Charles Mudie Edward Shaivitz Richard Leitch, Glenn Ritch Robert Nesbitt, John Orrizzi Victor Martocci, George MacDonald George Massey, Andrew Haugevik Bob Carney, Ed Haugevik Art Diamond, Bob Bryan

Year Record 1975* 7-6 1976 4-6 1977 7-5 1978 9-4 1979 8-4 1980 7-5 1981 7-6 1982 10-2 1983 9-5 1984* 8-5 1985 7-6 1986* 11-4 1987 8-5 1988 8-5 1989 9-5 1990* 10-5 1991* 7-6 1992 6-8 1993 8-5 1994 7-9 1995 9-6 1996 5-9 1997 8-7 1998 8-7 1999 4-10 2000 3-11 2001 5-8 2002 2-12 2003* 10-5 2004* 8-6 2005 4-9 2006 5-9 2007 7-6 2008 6-7 2009 4-11 2010 6-8

Team Captains Michael Rinck, John Bopp, John Meigel John Danowski Rich Scipione, Rex Capro James Milne, Richard Prakopcyk Joseph Reilly, Tom Sweeney, Mike Mauro Tom Sweeney, James Ford, Bill Fisher, Robert Olsen Edward Quinones, Andrew Eastwood Bob Vencak, Joseph Sciacca Albert Ray, Mike Cavallaro, Peter Feineman Bill Naslonski, Chris Heffernan, Mike Ferraro John Naslonski, Andy Briggs Jeff Bayuk, Dave DiSciorio Tom Reilly, Pat Dawson Dave Bass, Rich Bianchi, Jim Gilman Greg Rinaldi, Lou Fusilli, Marc Moreau Greg Rinaldi, Tim Pritts, Andrew DeCicco Steve Luciano, John Schmunk, Scott Moore Joe Borges, Dave Cunningham, Scott Hille Reid Jackson, Nick DeLapi, Eric Michaelis Reid Jackson, Robert Lemken Mark Bachardy, Nick Lagunowich, Dan Spillett Matt Elzer, Mike Seward Craig Jackman, Greg Jurczak Matt Kopley, Brian Locks, Mike Zoanetti Brody Bush, David Schaller, Mike Van Roten Paul Boniello, Keith Cromwell, John Martino Chris Bryan, Keith Cromwell, Scott Massey, David Rough Michael Bohlinger, Tim Horgan, Brad Kerwin Ken Springer, Andrew Conforti Andrew Conforti, Joe Duncan, Delby Powless, Jamie Lovejoy Leif Blomquist, Dan Achatz, John Flanagan, Jamie Lovejoy Matt Gaines, Tom O’Toole, Dan Rauch Jeff Rommel, Matt Gaines, Chris O’Dougherty Nick Filippone, Chris Hoffmann, Chris O’Dougherty, Jeff Rommel Chris O’Doughtery, Jeff Rommel Gerhard Buehning, Tad Stanwick

* NCAA Tournament Appearance



68

RICHAR D L . MCCORMIC K PRESIDENT OF THE UNIVERSITY Richard L. McCormick is the 19th president of Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey. A scholar of American political history who began his academic career on the Rutgers faculty, he returned as president in 2002 after serving as provost of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and president of the University of Washington. Dr. McCormick’s goal is to advance Rutgers within the top tier of American public research universities. His ambitions for the university include an enriched learning experience for every student; teaching and research focused on global human problems; diversity of students, faculty, staff, and programs; and deeper connections with the people of New Jersey. President McCormick led a major restructuring and reinvigoration of undergraduate education at Rutgers-New Brunswick, the university’s largest campus. The plan merged four undergraduate colleges into a School of Arts and Sciences, expanded access to academic programs and learning communities, and established a popular First-Year Seminar program that offers more than 100 courses – each with no more than 20 students – on a wide range of topics taught by top faculty. Other initiatives undertaken during Dr. McCormick’s tenure include: * The Rutgers Future Scholars Program, a pilot project to encourage minority and low-income teenagers from the university’s host cities to pursue higher education by offering mentorship and college preparation support, and the promise of free tuition to those admitted to Rutgers. * Establishment of the first-ever universitywide alumni body, the Rutgers University Alumni Association. * Rutgers Against Hunger, an initiative that combines volunteerism, research, education, and donations to address food security in the state of New Jersey. * Rutgers-Camden’s first-ever doctoral-level academic program, a Ph.D. in childhood studies – the first in the nation in this emerging discipline. * Establishment of the School of Public Affairs and Administration, Rutgers-Newark’s first new school in more than three decades. Born in 1947, President McCormick earned a B.A. in American studies from Amherst College in 1969 and a Ph.D. in history from Yale University in 1976. He is married to Joan Barry McCormick, RU ’88. Dr. McCormick has three children, Betsy, Michael, and Katie.


69

TIM P E RN E TTI DIRECTOR OF INTERCOLLEGIATE ATHLETICS A lifetime New Jersey native with a strong passion for his alma mater, Tim Pernetti has come full-circle in becoming one of the nation’s youngest leaders in college athletics. A former student-athlete “On the Banks”, Pernetti was named Rutgers’ sixth Director of Intercollegiate Athletics on February 26, 2009. He oversees 24 men’s and women’s intercollegiate teams in New Brunswick, a larger number than fielded at most of the university’s peer institutions. Pernetti has been influential in the world of college athletics since he received a bachelor’s degree in journalism and mass media from Rutgers in 1993, and a master’s degree in communication in 1995. Prior to returning to Rutgers, Pernetti was the Executive Vice President, Content, for CBS College Sports Network. In that role, he oversaw the rights and relationship business, on-air talent, and all network programming and content on air, online and across all screens for the nation’s first company dedicated to college sports. Pernetti helped to build the CBS College Sports Network, previously CSTV, prior to its launch in 2003, and has played a critical role in establishing it as the multimedia leader in college sports programming, content, news and information. He was a recipient of the prestigious Sports Business Journal Forty under Forty Award, and the Multichannel News 40 under 40 Award both in 2008. Charged with developing relationships, acquiring rights and creating multiplatform original programming for the first ever 24-hour sports college sports network, Pernetti successfully navigated through a complicated web of media rights deals to come up with new ways to serve college sports fans. Pernetti worked closely with the NCAA and hundreds of schools in every major conference, securing over 2,500 hours of event programming each year and multiple NCAA Championships across 35 men’s and women’s sports. Pernetti was in charge of the CBS College Sports Network exclusive long-term agreements with the US Naval Academy, Mountain West Conference, Conference USA, and the Atlantic 10. Further, he managed company relationships with more than 30 conferences and thousands of institutions. Pernetti remains most proud of establishing a strong relationship in women’s collegiate sports including the establishment of a women’s basketball game of the week package in 2004 with the Big East Conference. In 2006, Pernetti spearheaded a landmark multi-media partnership with the NCAA to make CBS College Sports Network the home of Division II Sports. The innovative deal effectively increased the scope and reach of NCAA Division II sports with hundreds of games now available nationally via the broadcast network and online. Pernetti’s commitment to providing greater exposure to women’s and underserved sports is evidenced by the network’s unprecedented coverage of lacrosse and volleyball, among others. He has also been at the forefront of the development and creation of the Collegiate Nationals, which crowns champions in dozens of high endurance sports, and innovative original production including

CBS College Sports Network’s groundbreaking NCAA March Madness Central, NCAA March Madness Highlights on CBS College Sports, and the WIRED franchise which gives viewers an inside look at games and events through wireless microphones on coaches during game action. Prior to joining CBS College Sports Network, Pernetti served eight years at ABCTV and ABC Sports most recently as Director of Programming, where he was integral in acquiring, managing and developing several ABC Sports properties including college football, the Bowl Championship Series, and college basketball. For five years, Pernetti handled relationships and negotiated television rights with all of the major collegiate conferences. As a student at Rutgers, Pernetti was a four-year letterwinner at tight end on the Rutgers football squad. He was also the color commentator for Rutgers Football on the Rutgers Football Radio Network and announced weekly NFL games nationally on Sports USA Radio. A resident of Oakland, N.J., Pernetti is married to the former Danielle Bahto. His wife also graduated from Rutgers and was a letterwinner on the women’s lacrosse team. Danielle and Tim are the proud parents of their three children – Max, Conor and Natalie.


70 A BRIEF HISTORY

Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey, is one of the leading universities in the nation. The university is comprised of 27 degree-granting divisions; 10 undergraduate colleges, 11 graduate schools, and six schools offering both undergraduate and graduate degrees. Five are located in Camden, eight in Newark, and 13 in New Brunswick and one in Newark and New Brunswick. Rutgers has a unique history as a colonial college, a land-grant institution, and a state university. Chartered in 1766 as Queen’s College, the eighth institution of higher learning to be founded in the colonies, the school opened its doors in New Brunswick in 1771 with a handful of first-year students. During its early years, the college developed as a classic liberal arts institution. In 1825, the name of the college was changed to honor a former trustee and Revolutionary War veteran, Colonel Henry Rutgers. Rutgers College became the land-grant college of New Jersey in 1864, resulting in the establishment of the Rutgers Scientific School, featuring departments of agriculture, engineering, and chemistry. Further expansion in the sciences came with the founding of the New Jersey Agricultural Experiment Station in 1880, the College of Engineering (now the School of Engineering) in 1914, and the College of Agriculture (now the School of Environmental and Biological Sciences) in 1921. The precursors to several other Rutgers divisions were also established during this period: the College of Pharmacy (now the Ernest Mario School of Pharmacy) in 1892, the New Jersey College for Women (now Douglass Residential College, part of the School of Arts and Sciences) in 1918, and the School of Education (now Graduate School of Education) in 1924. In 1924, Rutgers College officially became Rutgers University, a reflection of the institution’s rapidly expanding number of schools and academic programs. Early in the century, Rutgers had begun offering educational opportunities to women when the New Jersey College for Women was founded in 1918, and to adult learners when University College, an evening division, was established in 1934. After World War II, enrollment exploded as Rutgers admitted all qualified candidates under the GI Bill. Rutgers was becoming an institution for all people, and in 1945 and 1956, state legislative acts formally designated Rutgers as The State University of New Jersey. A flurry of expansion ensued. The University of Newark (now Rutgers–Newark) joined Rutgers in 1946, followed by the College of South Jersey (now Rutgers–Camden) in 1950. An ambitious building program added libraries, classrooms, and student housing across the three regional campuses. In 1969, Livingston College opened, providing a coeducational residential experience with a special commitment to diversity. Graduate education in the arts and sciences grew through the establishment of the Graduate School–New Brunswick, the Graduate School–Newark, and the Graduate School–Camden. Professional schools were formed to serve students in the fields of business; communication, information, and library studies; criminal justice; education; fine arts; law; management and labor relations; nursing; planning and public policy; psychology; public affairs and administration; and social work. Meanwhile, as industry and government sought partners in solving problems and advancing knowledge, the concept of the research university emerged. In 1981, Rutgers adopted a blueprint for its transformation into a major public research university. With increased support from state, federal, and corporate partners, Rutgers’ strength in research grew dramatically. In 1989, in recognition of its enhanced stature, Rutgers was invited to join the prestigious Association of American Universities, an organization comprising the top 63 research universities in North America. Today, professors and students work in more than 230 specialized research centers, unraveling mysteries in marine sciences, early childhood education, neuroscience, advanced materials, climate change, nutrition, homeland security, transportation, stem cells, and many other areas that can improve life both in New Jersey and around the world. A 2007 major reorganization of undergraduate education in New Brunswick reinvigorated the undergraduate experience for both students and faculty by combining the traditions and strengths of four undergraduate liberal arts colleges—Douglass, Livingston, Rutgers, and University—into a single School of Arts and Sciences. With 27 schools and colleges, Rutgers offers over 100 undergraduate majors and more than 100 graduate and professional degree programs. The university graduates more than 10,000 students each year, and has more than 380,000 living alumni residing in all 50 states and on six continents. Rutgers also sponsors community initiatives in all 21 New Jersey counties. Universitywide, new degree programs, research endeavors, and community outreach are in development to meet the demands of the 21st century. Today, Rutgers continues to grow, both in its facilities and in the variety and depth of its educational and research programs. The university’s goals for the future include the continued provision of the highest quality education, along with the increased support of research and commitment to public service to meet the needs of society.

MAJOR PROGRAMS OF STUDY Accounting African & African-American Studies African-American Studies Africana Studies Agricultural Science Allied Health Technologies American Studies Ancient and Medieval Civilizations Animal Science Anthropology Anthropology, Evolutionary Art/Design/Digital Art (B.F.A.) Art/Visual Arts (B.A.) Art/Visual Arts (B.F.A.) Art History Astrophysics Biochemistry Bioenvironmental Engineering Biological Sciences Biology Biomathematics Biomedical Technology (B.S.) Biotechnology Botany

Business Administration Cell Biology and Neuroscience Central and Eastern European Studies Chemistry Childhood Studies Chinese Classics Clinical Laboratory Sciences Communication Comparative Literature Computer Science Criminal Justice Dance East Asian Languages and Area Studies Ecology and Natural Resources Education Economics Education Engineering Applied Sciences Engineering Biomedical Engineering Chemical Engineering

Civil Engineering Electrical and Computer Engineering General Engineering Industrial Engineering Materials Science Engineering Mechanical/Aerospace Engineering English Environmental/Business Economics Environmental Planning and Design Environmental Policy, Institutions, and Behavior Environmental Science European Studies Exercise Science Finance Food Science French General Science Genetics Geography Geological Sciences Geoscience Engineering German History

History/French History/Political Science Hospitality Management Human-Computer Interaction Human Resource Management Independent/Individualized Major Information Systems Information Technology and Informatics Interdisciplinary Major Italian Italian Studies Jewish Studies Journalism and Media Studies Journalism Labor Studies/Employment Relations Landscape Architecture Latino and Hispanic Caribbean Studies Law Liberal Studies Linguistics Management Management and Global

Business Marine Sciences Marketing Mathematics Mathematics, Applied Medical Technology Medicine, Osteopathic Medicine Medieval Studies Meteorology Microbiology Middle Eastern Studies Molecular Biology and Biochemistry Music Nursing Nutritional Sciences Pharmacy Philosophy Physician Assistant Physics Physics, Applied Planning and Public Policy Plant Science Political Science Portuguese Portuguese and Lusophone World Studies Prebusiness

Predentistry Prelaw Premedicine Preveterinary Medicine Psychology Public Health Public Administration Puerto Rican Studies Religion Russian Science, Technology, and Society Science, General Social Work Sociology Spanish Statistics Statistics/Mathematics Teacher Certification Theater Arts Theater Arts, Television and Media Arts Urban Studies Women’s Studies Women’s and Gender Studies Zoology


71 Rutgers at a glance • Chartered in 1766 as Queen’s College, Rutgers is the eighth oldest college in the nation. • Rutgers was designated the State University of New Jersey by legislative acts in 1945 and 1956. • Rutgers is New Jersey’s largest public research university and is located on three regional campuses in Camden, Newark, and New Brunswick/Piscataway. • Rutgers was named New Jersey’s land-grant university in 1864 and has a special responsibility for serving the needs of the state. • Rutgers is a member of the Association of American Universities (AAU), a highly selective organization comprised of the 63 leading research universities in North America. • There are 27 degree-granting schools and colleges, offering more than 270 total bachelor’s, master’s and doctoral and professional degree programs. • Rutgers is one of New Jersey’s major employers with more than 13,000 full-time faculty and staff. • For every dollar New Jersey invests in Rutgers, the university channels $6 into the state’s economy. The University’s 2009 economic impact report showed that Rutgers and its faculty, staff, students and visitors channel $3.8 billion in direct and indirect spending into the state economy – more than six times the state’s $595.3 million investment in the university. • With holdings of more than 3.6 million volumes, the Rutgers library system ranks among the nation’s largest. • Rutgers enrolls more than 54,000 students, including over 40,000 undergraduates and 14,000 graduate students. • More than 10,000 students each year earn a degree from Rutgers. • The university has more than 380,000 living alumni; 216,000 alumni reside in New Jersey. • In 2008, the Middle States Commission on Higher Education reaccredited Rutgers for the next 10 years. TEACHING AND LEARNING • Rutgers faculty include Fulbright Scholars, Guggenheim Fellows, members of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences and the American Association for the Advancement of Science, and winners of many other prestigious awards and grants. • Rutgers History Professor Annette Gordon-Reed was awarded the 2009 Pulitzer Prize in history for her landmark work, The Hemingses of Monticello: An American Family (W. W. Norton, 2008). • The graduate philosophy department is ranked second in the English-speaking world by the Philosophical Gourmet Report. • Rutgers Business School-Newark and New Brunswick (RBS) is uniquely positioned at the epicenter of global business – just under 20 minutes from New York City – giving students easy access to leading global corporations to build lasting relationships. RBS delivers cutting-edge curricula that combine the mix of business and science required by today’s employers. • RBS is consistently ranked as the top business school in New Jersey and among the top three in the Greater New York Metropolitan area. The Executive MBA is ranked 13th in the U.S. by The Financial Times and the Master of Quantitative Finance is among the top 10 programs nationally, as ranked by Wall Street executives. The MBA program was ranked 17th in the country for the employment rate of its graduates three months after graduation by U.S. News & World Report. To meet rising demand, a new on-year MBA track was created for students with advanced standing. • In Newark, the business School resides in a new state-of-the-art building which opened in 2009. And in New Brunswick, a new building will open in 2013 as the center of a new Livingston Professional Campus, accommodating the massive growth in the new four-year undergraduate program. • The Edward J. Bloustein School of Planning and Public Policy is ranked fourth among the nation’s top graduate programs in urban planning according to a survey by Planetizen, a Los Angeles-based planning and development network. RESEARCH • Streptomycin, the first effective cure for tuberculosis, and other potent antibiotics were discovered at Rutgers by Professor Selman Waksman and his students in the 1940s. Waksman received the Nobel Prize for his important contributions to medicine. • The Rutgers Stem Cell Research Center, part of the Division of Life Sciences of the School of Arts and Sciences, is located in Nelson Laboratories on the New Brunswick campus where its mission is to support research with human embryonic stem cells for Rutgers University researchers and collaborators. • The Rutgers Cell and DNA Repository is a valuable resource for researchers around the world studying the role heredity plays in such complex genetic diseases as schizophrenia, bipolar disorder, autism, Alzheimer’s, alcoholism, diabetes, and Tourette’s syndrome. • The Protein Data Bank, based at Rutgers, is the international repository of three-dimensional protein structures. With $30 million in federal funding, the data bank provides vital information on more than 57,000 proteins and other macromolecules for scientists working to design more effective treatments for disease. • Rutgers’ Institute of Marine and Coastal Sciences ranks among America’s top 15 marine research organizations based on peer competition for all federally funded oceanographic research. • The Ernest Mario School of Pharmacy, the only pharmacy school in New Jersey and one of the top institutions of its kind in the nation, ranks in the top 10 percent among pharmacy schools nationwide in research dollars awarded by the National Institutes of Health with $8.8 million of funding awarded to the school in 2009. • Rutgers holds more than 550 United States patents, 325 of which have been issued since 2000. Since 1989, Rutgers has licensed more than 65 start-up or early-stage companies. • Rutgers is a partner in the Southern African Large Telescope, one of the world’s largest optical telescopes and the southern hemisphere’s newest eye-on-the-sky. • Rutgers University is leading the Northeast Structural Genomics Consortium, a $52.7 million research program to reveal the roles that proteins play in life’s most fundamental processes. service to new jersey • Rutgers’ Center for Government Services trains New Jersey’s municipal employees to better serve their constituents and trains approximately 8,000 annually through 18 separate programs and 150 courses. • In 2005, the Division of Continuing Studies offered 3,700 course sections to more than 45,000 individuals. Courses are offered in every county in New Jersey. • The Office of the New Jersey State Climatologist at Rutgers is the state’s official weather resource. • Each year, Rutgers holds the New Jersey Folk Festival and Ag Field Day on a single Saturday in April. In 2009, the University built on these events and hosted the inaugural “Rutgers Day,” which now encompasses the five New Brunswick campuses and brings more than 75,000 people to Rutgers to celebrate the institution’s three-part mission of teaching, research and service. service to the nation • Rutgers research on life deep beneath the ocean’s surface is prominently featured in “Volcanoes of the Deep,” an IMAX film that has been shown at museums around the country. • Rutgers New Jersey Agricultural Experiment Station has offices in all 21 New Jersey counties and serves the residents of the state through research, education and service programs that run the gamut from 4-H Youth Development to family and community health. Research from the Experiment Station has led to renowned Jersey tomatoes, disease-resistant dogwoods, improved coastline management, new forms of mosquito control and world-famous turfgrass varieties that have been used everywhere from the new Yankee Stadium to the Augusta National Golf Club. • Rutgers School of Environmental and Biological Sciences builds on a tradition of hands-on learning and research excellence in areas that cover the biological spectrum from organisms to ecosystems. Students and researchers alike are dedicated to finding solutions to the problems that most concern our state’s residents, particularly in the areas of environmental sustainability, alternative energy, food, health and nutrition. • Such nationally respected institutes at Rutgers as the National Transit Institute and the National Institute for Early Education Research are helping to shape national and state policy in critical areas. • Rutgers is the nation’s primary source for anti-terror security training for public transit workers. • In April of 2009, Rutgers was selected by the United States Department of Homeland Security (DHS) to co-lead a new DHS Center of Excellence in Command, Control, and Interoperability (CCI) to conduct research into the technological issues involved with maintaining homeland security. It is one of 12 DHS Centers of Excellence in the nation. • The Edward J. Bloustein School of Planning and Public Policy’s National Transit Institute is one of seven academic institutions around the nation that will make up a new National Transportation Security Center of Excellence. • Most meals ready to eat (MREs) manufactured for our nation’s troops are produced using Rutgers-developed technology. • The Douglass Developmental Disabilities Center is a pioneer in developing effective methods to help autistic children.


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DISTINGUISHED ALUMNI Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey, has produced numerous alumni who have achieved high levels of success in their chosen fields. All told, Rutgers has over 380,000 living alumni around the world, more than 215,000 of whom presently live in New Jersey. 2010 INDUCTEES Douglas P. Boyd GSNB’68, CEO of TeleSecurity Sciences Inc. and the holder of 13 U.S. patents. His pioneering research has advanced cardiac-imaging technology and explosive-detection systems worldwide. Greg Brown LC’82, Co-chief executive officer of Motorola Inc. and chief executive officer of Motorola’s Broadband Mobility Solutions business. Junot Díaz RC’92, Writer whose 2007 novel, The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao, won a Pulitzer Prize, National Book Critics Circle Award, and Dayton Literary Peace Prize. Alfred A. Edmond Jr. RC’83, Editor-in-chief of BlackEnterprise.com, senior vice president of Earl G. Graves Publishing Co. Inc., and a member of the Black Enterprise editorial board. Margaret Marsh CCAS’67, GSNB’69, ’74, Historian of medicine who has authored four books and numerous articles and reviews. She is also a University Professor of History at Rutgers–Camden. PREVIOUS INDUCTEES Judge Abraham Abuchowski, CCAS ’70, GSNB ’75, Created drugs to treat childhood diseases and later founded Enzon, Inc. Rutgers–Camden placed him among its top 50 graduates at its 50th anniversary in 2000. (2002) Roger G. Ackerman, Eng ’60, GSNB ‘62 Corning visionary who led the company to the forefront of the digital age through his work on fiberoptics for internet systems. (2001) Martin Agronsky, RC ’36, Distinguished Journalist; Emmy Winner. Best known as the host of PBS television’s Washington-based political talk show Agronsky & Company, Martin Agronsky pioneered the “talking heads” news format. He died in 1999 at age 84. (1995) Phillip Alampi, Ag ’34,GSE ’45, NJ Secretary of Agriculture. He earned 146 awards, including an honorary doctorate from Rutgers in 1969 and the Rutgers Alumni Association’s Ernest T. Gardner Award for public leadership in 1985. He died in 1992 at age 79. (1994) Walter G. Alexander II, COE ‘43, The first black man to graduate from the College of Engineering in 1943. He later became the first black man to be appointed to New Jersey’s State Board of Dentistry in 1972. He retired in 2007, having practiced dentistry for more than 50 years. (2009) Adrienne Scotchbrook Anderson, DC ’45, LHD ’91, Engineer; Chair, Board of Governors (1993) Richard L. Aregood, CCAS ’65, Pulitzer Prize-Winning Journalist and threetime winner of the Distinguished Writing Award of the American Society of Newspaper Editors. (1993) Jerome Aresty, RC ‘51, Developed Alfred Dunner Inc, a major sportswear firm in 1964. The company rose to the top of the fashion industry and currently has annual sales of nearly $100 million. Aresty has since retired from the business and concentrates his efforts on supporting several philanthropic organizations; chief among them is Rutgers. The state-of-the-art Aresty Amphitheater at Rutgers Stadium a prime example of his generosity. He passed away on June 5, 2009. (2007) Richard H. Askin Jr., RC ‘69, Askin recently completed a successful tenure as the second-longest-serving chairman and CEO of the Academy of Television Arts & Sciences, the honorary organization responsible for the Primetime Emmy Awards. For 10 years, he was president and CEO of Tribune Entertainment Company. (2008) Alice Aycock, DC ’68, Fine Arts Professor at Yale School of Visual Arts, Sculptor, Awarded National Endowment for the Arts (1993) Margaret C. Ayers, DC ’63, Philanthropist, activist. She is Executive Director of the Robert Sterling Clark Foundation. The foundation supports projects that advance women’s reproductive rights and health nationally, monitor government performance in providing services to New York’s most impoverished and vulnerable residents, and promote and nurture the arts in New York. (1998) Mary L. Baglivo, RC ‘79, One of the highest ranking women in the U.S. communications industry. As CEO and chair of the Americas at Saatchi & Saatchi, she has a seat on the Worldwide Executive Board and is responsible for the largest agency within the global network as well as Saatchi’s Latin American and Canadian regions. member of the American Advertising Federation Hall of Achievement and the 2007 Woman of the Year title by Advertising Women of New York. She sits on the Rutgers University Foundation Board of Overseers, serving as chair of The Rutgers Fund. She also supports the Mary L. Baglivo Scholarship in the School of Communications, Information and Library Studies. (2008) Charles Bailey, RC ’30, Heart Surgeon who developed new techniques and instruments for heart surgery, Passed away in 1993. (1991) Sol J. Barer, Graduate School-NB ‘74, Celgene Corporation’s chairman and CEO, delivering innovative and life-changing products that treat cancer and other severe immune/inflammatory conditions. (2008) Harland Bartholomew, Eng ’11, City planner (1998). For many years he was president of Harland Bartholomew & Associates, a firm that served as city planners for at least 125 major American and Canadian cities. He died in December 1989, a few months after his 100th birthday. Mario F. Batali, RC ‘82 Highly regarded chef with 14 restaurants, eight cookbooks, popular television programs, and philanthropy. (2004)

MARIO BATALI CELEBRITY CHEF Julia Baxter-Bates, DC ’38, Civil rights activist, The first African-American student admitted to Douglass College and was a Research Director for New York NAACP (1996). Julia Bates died in 2003. Fannie Bear Besser, NLaw ’20, Lawyer that was an Advocate for the Poor and social justice for over 60 years. In 1989, she earned the governor’s Alice Paul Humanitarian Award for professional performance that exemplifies the “best and noblest characteristics of humankind.” She died in 1992, just shy of her 92nd birthday. (1992) Felix M. Beck, SB ’49, GSM ’53, Housing and mortgage Executive. Was president of the Mortgage Bankers of America in 1983 and 1984. He also served as chair and CEO of Margaretten Financial Corporation and Margaretten & Company, Inc. (1998) Elise Biorn-Hansen Boulding, DC ’40, Sociologist, peace scholar, and activist, Founder of the International Peace Research Association. In 1990 she was nominated for a Nobel Peace Prize by the American Friends Service Committee. (1994) Samuel G. Blackman, RC ’27, GSNB ’30, AP Journalist who broke Lindbergh kidnapping story. Retired from Journalism in 1969 to direct the American Press Institute. He passed away in 1995. (1997) Elizabeth Blume-Silverstein, NLaw, 1911 A member of the first graduating class of Rutgers School of LawNewark, she was one of the first women to practice law in New Jersey and ran one of the most active law practices in Newark. She Died in 1991. (2001) F. Herbert Bormann, Ag ’48, Renowned Ecologist and past president of the Ecological Society of America and a member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences and the National Academy of Science. (1988) Joseph P. Bradley, RC 1836, President Ulysses S. Grant appointed him to the U.S. Supreme Court in 1870, where he served until his death in 1892. (1991) Floyd H. Bragg, RC ’36, Chairman, He served as chair of Rutgers’ Board of Governors and of the Rutgers University Foundation Board of Overseers, as well as president of the Rutgers Alumni Association. (1991) Philip Milledoler Brett, RC 1892, New York City Lawyer and former Rutgers President from 1930-1932. Brett Died in 1960 at the age of 89. (1998) Leonie Milhomme Brinkema, DC ‘66; SCILS ‘70 Legal professonal who led the conviction of three men who were directly involved in the attacks on Sept. 11. (2004) Avery F. Brooks, LC ’73, MGSA ’75, Actor, Director, Teacher. starred as Captain Sisko, the main character in the TV series Star Trek: Deep Space Nine. Awarded William Shakespeare Award for Classical Theater in 2007 (1993) Charles H. Brower, RC ’25, CEO, BBD&O; Chair, Board of Governors. He was inducted into the American Advertising Federation’s Hall of Fame in 1981. Passed away in 1984 at the age of 82. (1993) Arthur R. Brown, Jr. GSNB ’77, Served as a county agricultural agent with Rutgers Cooperative Extension for several years before Gov. Tom Kean named him New Jersey’s Secretary of Agriculture in 1982. Also worked for Gov. Jim Florio and Gov. Christine Whitman. (2002) Lester R. Brown, Ag ’55, Global Environmentalist and joined the U.S. Department of Agriculture in 1959. Founder and president of Earth Policy Institute. Former President World Watch. (1995) Wayne R. Bryant, CLAW ‘72 Former New Jersey state senator (1995-2008) and Attorney (2005) Frank R. Burns, Ed ’49, GSE ’64, Former Head Football Coach. Inducted into the Rutgers Football Hall of Fame in 1989. (1993) Ruth Ann Burns, DC ’67, GSNB ’75, Public Television Executive, former vice president and director of Educational Resource Center for Thirteen/WNET, president of Burns Group. (1989)

John J. Byrne, Jr., RC ’54, Chairman & CEO of Fund American Enterprises, Inc.; Former Chairman & CEO of GEICO Corporation (1996) William T. Cahill, CLaw ’37, New Jersey Governor. He died in 1996 at age 84(1990) Patricia Smith Campbell,DC ‘63 A research scientist with ALZA, pioneered the development of the technologies that allow treatments by using adhesive patches to deliver a controlled dose of medicine through the skin. (2004) Dorothy W. Cantor, Graduate School of APP ‘ 76, Became the first person with a Psy.D. degree and the first woman clinician to lead the American Psychological Association, the world’s largest association of psychologists. She has served as president of the American Psychological Foundation since 2001. (2009) James Dickson Carr, RC 1892, Lawyer; First African-American Graduate. Died in 1920. (1991) Clifford P. Case, RC ’25, Former Congressmen and U.S. Senator. passed away in 1982 (1988) Ida L. Castro, GSNB ’78, NLaw ’82, Chairwoman of the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, first Latina recipient of the Rutgers Hall of Distinguished Alumni Award. She became the first Latina commissioner of the New Jersey Department of Personnel in 2002, a position she held until 2007. (1999). Stanley F. Cherrie, RC ‘64, A member of the Rutgers baseball and football teams who went on to become an officer in the U.S. Army where he rose to brigadier general and had two assignments in Vietnam. Earned the Distinguished Superior Service Medal before he retired from the U.S. Army in April 1998. (2007) Deron L. Cherry, Cook ’81, Former football great, business entrepreneur, Co-owner NFL football team. Inducted into the Rutgers Football Hall of Fame in 1993. (2000) Jay Chiat, Educ ’53, Influential advertising giant, a trailblazer whose creative genius revolutionized his industry (2000) Carol Teda Christ, DC ‘ 66 In 2002, Carol Teda Christ became the 10th president of Smith College, one of the largest women’s colleges in the nation. She was inducted into the Douglass Society in 2001. Former chair of Screaming Media. Chiat died in April 2002. (2003) John P. Clum, RC 1874, American frontiersman, was acting governor of New Mexico territory. Clum died in 1932. (1996) Stanley N. Cohen, RC ’56, Geneticist and author, He was inducted into the National Inventors Hall of Fame for his DNA research and received National Medal of Science in 1986 from President Reagan. (1994) Barbara Bell Coleman, Newark College of Arts and Sciences 1974, Former President of the Boys and Girls Clubs of Newark, coordinating development programs for 5,000 youngsters. (2004) Kevin J. Collins, NLaw ’64, Attorney, investment banking authority. He has been chair of the Rutgers Board of Governors and Board of Trustees, and the Rutgers University Foundation Board of Overseers. (1998) David L. Cowen, RC ’30, GSNB ’31, Pharmaceutical Historian and former chairmen at the Council of the Institute of Pharmacy for 10 years. Cowen passed away in 2006. (1992) Spencer R. Crew, GSNB ’73, ‘79 Executive director and chief executive officer of the National Underground Railroad Freedom Center in Cincinnati, Ohio. The center, “show(s) the pro-active way African Americans sought freedom and the way people united in support of the belief that freedom was important to preserve for everyone.” (2003) James Cullen, RC ’64, Business executive and former president of Bell Atlantic Enterprises, New Jersey Bell, and the Bell Atlantic Corporation. He oversaw the merger of Bell Atlantic and NYNEX and was chair of the national steering committee for the Rutgers Campaign. (2002) Robert Curvin, NCAS ’60, SSW ’67, Political scientist; Author; National Advocate for the Poor. President of Greentree Foundation. (1995) Kristin Davis Mason Gross ‘87, Kristin Davis became a household name for her portrayal of Charlotte York in Sex and the City, the HBO series. She and the ensemble cast won or were nominated for numerous awards. At Rutgers, Davis studied under legendary acting coach

ACTRESS KRISTEN DAVIS


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ACTRESS CALISTA FLOCKHART and theater arts professor William Esper. (2009) William H.S. Demarest, RC 1883, Rutgers University President. Died in 1956. (1992) Simeon DeWitt, RC 1776, George Washington’s Chief Geographer. Died in 1834. (1995) Robert A. Druskin, RC ’69, Former COO of Citigroup Inc. Now Chairman of E*Trade Finanical Corporation. Established the Harriett and Robert Druskin Endowed Scholarship in 2001, which aids students who face financial challenges. He received the 2001-02 Rutgers University Medal for Philanthropic Excellence. Member of the Board of Trustees. (2007) Rene J. Dubos, GSNB ’27, Bacteriologist; Environmentalist. Dubos wrote 20 books, including So Human An Animal, for which he won a Pulitzer Prize for nonfiction in 1969. Dubos died in 1982. (1992) Janet Evanovich, DC ’65, Author of the popular comedy-crime novels featuring bounty hunter Stephanie Plum. The number-one New York Times best-selling Plum novels have been described as part Indiana Jones, part Moonlighting, and part Midnight Run.(2002) Calista Flockhart, MGSA ‘88 Flockhart became a household name, having starred for five years in the highly rated television show Ally McBeal. Won the 1998 Golden Globe award and a 1999 Emmy for outstanding comedy series. Stars on ABC drama Brothers and Sisters. (2003) Jim Florio, CLaw ’67, Former Congressmen and New Jersey Governor. He was the former chair of the Federal Home Loan Bank of New York. (1995) Sharon A. Fordham, DC ‘75 The chief executive officer of WeightWatchers.com, Inc., she has earned many industry awards for her new product efforts, including several Edison Awards for “New Product of the Year” and Gold Effies for Most Effective Advertising. (2003) Jeanne M. Fox, DC ’75, CLaw ’79, Environmentalist, Feminist, Fox is a former president of the state’s Board of Public Utilities who now serves as Commissioner. She is Former Regional Administrator for U.S. EPA (1997) Frederick T. Frelinghuysen, RC 1836, Senator, U.S. Secretary of State. Died in 1885 (1990) Milton Friedman, RC ’32, Economist and he won the Nobel Prize for economics in 1976. He passed away in 2006. (1987) C. Reed Funk, GSNB ’62, Joined Cook College as an instructor in 1956 and led one of the world’s most productive turf grass-breeding programs for 34 years. Inducted into inventors Hall of Fame, recipient of US Department of Agriculture’s Distinguished Service Award for Agricultural Research. (2002) Albert R. Gamper, Jr., UCN ’66, President and CEO of The CIT Group until 2004, charter member of the Rutgers Board of Trustees, a member of the Board of Governors and the Board Overseers. (1999) James J. Gandolfini, RC ‘83 Star of the Emmy-award winning HBO series, the Sopranos which earned him numerous Emmy, Screen Actors Guild, and Golden Globe awards and nominations. (2004) Ronald W. Giaconia, RC ‘58, Retired president of Giaconia Life Associates, Inc. A former baseball player who created the Ron and Toni Giaconia Endowed Scholarship for Rutgers baseball players. His various philanthropic efforts earned him the Silver Keystone award from the Boys & Girls Clubs of America. He was also the former chair of the university’s Board of Trustees and vice chair of the Board of Governors. He received a Meritorious Service Award in 1993 and a Loyal Sons of Rutgers Award in 1998. (2007) Louis Gluck, RC ‘48 Considered the father of Neonatologist. Died in 1997. (2005) Arthur M. Goldberg, RC ’63, Former President & CEO of Park Place Entertainment Corp., Bally Total Fitness Holding Corp. and chairman of DeGiorgio Company. Goldberg died in 2000. (1999) Bernard R. Goldberg, RC ‘67 Author, Television journalist, Real Sports with Bryan Gumbel. He has won a total of 8 Emmy awards. (2005) Matthew Golombek, RC ’76, Geologist, senior research scientist at NASA. (1998) Michael Gottlieb, MD, RC ’69, World-renowned AIDS doctor & researcher. He is a cofounder of the American Foundation for AIDS Research. He received Lifetime Science Award from Center for Study of Immunology and Aging. (1996) William Elliot Griffis, RC 1869, Educator, Targum Founder. Griffis died in 1928. (1990) Jean Coughlan Griswold, DC ’52, GSE ’56, Founder & Chief Executive, Special Care, Inc. (1995)

Richard M. Hale, AG ’44, GSNB ’48, Industrialist, Community Leader, Chairman & CEO of Halecrest Company. He served as president of the New Jersey Aggregates Association and founded the New Jersey Alliance for Action. Hale died in 2004. (1997) Elizabeth Cavanna Harrison, DC ’29, Author and has wrote more than 80 books. Harrison died in 2001 at age 92. (1990) Terry Hart, GSNB ’78, Astronaut, awarded National Defense medal. (1994) Douglas R. Heir, CLaw ’85, Lawyer, Writer. One of the world’s greatest wheelchair athletes, he has won more than 300 gold medals. (1987) John J. Heldrich, UCNB ’50, Former Executive Committee & Board of Directors, Johnson & Johnson (1995) George William Hill, RC 1859, World-renowned astronomer in celestial mechanics. Hill received a gold medal from the Royal Astronomical Society of London in 1887 and the Damoiscan Prize of the Paris Academy of Sciences for his research on the lunar theory. He died in 1914. (1996) Washington C. Hill, CCAS ‘61 One of the foremost perinatologists in the world and a leading expert on maternal-fetal medicine. Chair of the department of obstetrics and gynecology and director of Maternal-Fetal Medicine at Sarasota Memorial Hospital in Florida. (2006) Garret A. Hobart, RC 1863, U.S. Vice President. Died in 1899 (1990) Arthur J. Holland, UCNB ’54, GSNB ’59, Mayor of Trenton for 26 years. Holland died in 1989. (1990) Richard J. Hughes, NLaw ’31, New Jersey Governor. he had served as assistant U.S. attorney for the District of New Jersey, and as a judge on the Mercer County Court Bench, the state Superior Court, and later in the state Appellate Division. He died in 1992. (1987) William J. Hughes, RC ’55, CLaw ’58, Former Democratic Congressman and ambassador to Panama (19951998). (1997) Mir A. Imran, SOE ‘77, Renowned scientist and prolific inventor who developed the world’s first automatic implantable defibrillator, a device that has saved more than two million lives since 1981. He is also the founder and CEO of InCube Laboratories, Inc., one of North America’s oldest and most successful medical device incubators. Imran has been named in nearly 350 patents. (2009) Jerry Izenberg, NCAS ’52, Sports Writer, Newark Star-Ledger. A member of the National Sportscasters and Sportswriters Hall of Fame. Emmy Award winner for producing “A Man Named Lombardi” (1991) Ralph Izzo, Business School ‘02, Ralph Izzo has been chairman, president, and CEO of PSEG (Public Service Enterprise Group) since 2007. In 2007, NJBIZ named PSEG New Jersey Corporation of the Year for its financial stability, leadership on environmental issues, and commitment to the state. (2009) Jack H. Jacobs, RC ’66, GSNB ‘72 Col. Jack Jacobs, who entered military service through Rutgers ROTC, earned the Congressional Medal of Honor in 1969, the nation’s highest military award, for exceptional heroism on the battlefields of Vietnam. He also holds three Bronze Stars and two Silver Stars. Herb Jaffe, NCAS ’54, Former Legal Affairs Editor, Newark Star-Ledger. He is a two-time winner of the American Bar Association’s Certificate of Merit in Journalism. (1991) Paul “Pete” Jennings, RC ’45, Cardiologist, educator, author (1998) Edward M. Jordan, LC ‘77 National Basketball Association Player, Coach. Former coach of the NBA’s Washington Wizards and Philadelphia 76ers. (2004) Samuel B. Judah, RC 1816, First Jewish graduate of Rutgers. He served as Speaker of the House from 1840–41. President Andrew Jackson appointed him U.S. District Attorney for Indiana in 1829, a position he held until 1833. Judah died in 1869. (199 Robert E. Kelley, Ed ’56, Lieutenant General of the U.S. Air Force,Vietnam War hero, co-captained the Scarlet Knights football team, was All-American in lacrosse, and was inducted into the National Lacrosse Hall of Fame. (1999) James P. Kelly, UCN ‘73 Retired Chairman and CEO for United Parcel Service. (2001) Ricardo M. Khan, RC ’73, MGSA ’77, Founder/ Director of Crossroads Theatre, which won the 1999 Regional Theater Tony Award. (1992) Alfred J. Kilmer, RC ’08, Known and loved by generations as the heroic World War I soldier-poet, he left a rich legacy of books and poetry, the most famous, “Trees”. On July 30, 1918 he was killed in action. (2000) William English Kirwan II GSNB, ‘62, ’64, Former President of Ohio State University and the University of Maryland. (2000) David Lloyd Kreeger, RC ’29, Lawyer, Art Collector. In 1948, he purchased a tiny, privately-owned insurance company—Government Employees Insurance Company (GEICO). Kreeger died in November 1990. (1988) Alfred C. Koeppe, NCAS ‘69 Served as president and CEO of New Jersey Bell and retired in 2003 as president and COO of The Public Service Electric & Gas Co. In 2005, Gov. Richard Codey appointed Koeppe chair of School Construction Corporation Board. Current president and CEO of Newark Alliance, an organization dedicated to the improvement of Newark’s economy and public education system. (2003) Frederick J. Kroesen, RC ’44, CC ’80, LHD ’84, Four-Star General, Commander NATO European Forces until 1983. Currently chairman of the Board of Military Professional Resources, Inc. Vice president of the

American Security Council Foundation (1993) Alexander S. Kroll, RC ’62, Retired Chairman & CEO of Young & Rubican, Inc., Henry Rutgers scholar & All-American football player. He was inducted into the Rutgers Football Hall of Fame, the national College Football Hall of Fame, and the American Advertising Federation’s Hall of Fame. (1996) Barbara J. Krumsiek, DC ’74, manages billion-dollar portfolios of mutual funds is resident, CEO, and vice chair of the Calvert Group, Ltd. (2000) Irwin M. Lachman, School of Engineering ‘52, Member of a research team at Corning Glass Works (now Corning Inc.), Lachman and his research teammates received the 2003 National Medal of Technology and was also inducted into the National Inventors Hall of Fame in 2002. In 2005, he was recognized as the Malcolm G. McLaren Distinguished Lecturer by Rutgers’ School of Engineering. (2007) Clifton R. Lacy, Livingston College ‘75 Former senior vice president for medical affairs and chief of staff at Robert Wood Johnson University Hospital. In 2004, Lacy was named president and CEO of RWJ University Hospital and in 2006, he left that position to develop and direct the new Institute for Disaster and Terror Medicine UMDNJ-RWJ Medical School and RWJ University Hospital. (2004) Louis Lasagna, RC ’43, Acknowledged as the “father of clinical pharmacology.” His 1954 paper on the placebo response was cited by The Lancet as one of the landmark papers of the twentieth century. Lasagna died in 2003. (2002) Jaynee La Vecchia, DC ’76, NLaw ‘79 New Jersey Supreme Court Justice, recipient of NJ Women Achievement Award and Frannie Bear Besser Award for Public Service. (2001) Laurance Leeds, School of Eng. ‘34 Expert in the technology of high-energy propagation of electrical waves through space. Integral the introduction of television on a mass scale and the use of radar during World War II. He died in 1997 at age 90. (2006) Irwin Lerner, SB ’51, GSM ’58, Served as President and CEO of Hoffmann-LaRoche during his 32-year career, oversaw the passage of the landmark Prescription Drug User Fee legislation. (2000) Gerald H. Lipkin, NCAS ‘63 Chief executive officer of Valley National. Chairman and president of the bank’s board of directors. (2006) Edward V. Lipman, Ag ’33, GSNB ’39, Corporate Board of Directors, Ocean Spray. Lipman died in 1998 at age 87. (1995) Jacob G. Lipman, RC 1898, Dean, College of Agriculture, Director of N.J. Agricultural Experiment Station. Died in 1939. (1992) Robert E. Lloyd, RC ‘67, A prominent figure in Rutgers basketball history, having led the team to its first post-season appearance in 1967 while being named the school’s first All-American. A member of the Rutgers Basketball Hall of Fame and his was the first jersey retired by the university. Lloyd was also a success in the business world as CEO of several software companies, retiring in 1996 to devote more time to The V Foundation for Cancer Research, of which he has been chairman since its inception in 1993. The V Foundation, which has raised more than $70 million and awarded research grants in 37 states and the District of Columbia, was established by ESPN and the late Jim Valvano RC’67—Lloyd’s roommate, teammate, and friend—to support “the brilliant researchers that will eventually find cures for cancer.” Prior to his business career, Lloyd played two years for the NBA’s New Jersey Nets. He then launched a successful sales and marketing career. (2008) Virginia Long, NLaw ‘66 New Jersey Supreme Court Justice. (2001) Leonor F. Loree, RC 1877, Railroad magnate, Influential Rutgers Trustee. Died in 1940. (1997) Duncan L. MacMillan, RC ‘66 Designed computer systems by which the Bloomberg Company uses to disseminate information and communicates data. Member of the Rutgers University Foundation Board of Overseers. (2006) Beverly L. Malone, GSNB ’72, A national leader in nursing, education, and patients rights. CEO of the National League for Nursing. She was president of the American Nurses Association from 1996–2000. She was named one of the “Top 100 Most Influential African-Americans” by Ebony magazine. (2000) George W. Mamo, Camden Arts and Sciences ‘76 COO and vice president of International Fellowship of Christian and Jews. Former vice president for administration of Feed the Children, an international relief organization. George W. Mamo, chief operating officer and vice president of International Fellowship of Christians and Jews. (2004) Yolanda J. Mapp, DC ’53, Physician (1992) Bernard Marcus, Pharm ’54, co-founder of The Home Depot, Inc., one of the world’s largest home improvement retailer. Chairman of Marcus

ACTOR JAMES GANDOLFINI


74 Foundation, funded Atlanta Aquarium and The Marcus Institute. (2000) Ernest Mario, Pharm ’61, Pharmaceutical executive (1998) William Mastrosimone, MGSA ’80, Playwright, 1992 Golden Globe winner for his miniseries, Sinatra (1989) Richard P. McCormick, RC ’38, GSNB ’40, LHD ’82, Professor of History Emeritus, Rutgers University Historian. Richard P. McCormick died in 2006. (1990) Malcolm McLaren, Eng ’50, GSNB ’51, ‘62 Served as chairman of the U.N. World Health Organization’s committee on lead poisoning and led the effort to create international standards that allowed worldwide trade. Developed collaboration that resulted in the Center for Ceramic Research and Fiber Optic Materials Research Program at Rutgers. He died in 1996. (2001) Robert Menendez, NLaw ’79, U.S. Congressman for New Jersey, the 4th ranking Democrat in the U.S. House of Representatives. In November 2006, New Jerseyans elected Menendez to serve a full six-year term senator. Ratemo W. Michieka, CC ’74, GSE ’75, GSNB ‘78 Former director-general of the National Environmental Management Authority in Kenya. He has held administrative positions at the World Bank and the United Nations Environment Program, and consulted for CARE and the Swedish International Development Agency. Vice chancellor of Jomo Kenyatta University College of Agriculture and Technology in Nairobi. (2003) Morris Milgram, NCAS ’39, Affordable Housing Pioneer. Milgram died in 1997 at age 81. (1993) Julane W. Miller-Armbrister, DC ‘74, Former president and CEO of Plainfield Health Center which provided medical, dental, and ancillary support to more than 21,000 patients a year, holds position of vice president of government affairs at UMDNJ. School of Social Work ‘79 Business executive, Social activist (2005) Natalie Morales, RC ‘94, Joined NBC’s popular Today show as a national correspondent in 2006. In 2007, she was named a co-anchor; she also fills in regularly at the news desk. Prior to signing on with Today, Morales was an anchor and correspondent at MSNBC since March 2002. She has contributed to NBC News coverage of the 2006 Winter Olympics in Torino and the 2004 Summer Games in Athens. Hispanic Magazine named Morales a “Top Hispanic to Watch” in 2005, and a “Top Trendsetter” in 2003. (2009) Marilyn J. Morheuser, NLaw ’73, Civil Rights Activist and Lawyer. She died from cancer in 1995. (1997) John Howard Morrow, RC ’31, First U.S. Ambassador to Republic of Guinea. Morrow died in 2000. (1991) David A. Morse, RC ’29, Director General ILO, Nobel Laureate. He died in 1990 at age 83. (1991) Robert E. Mortensen, ED ‘63 Business executive, Humanitarian (2005) James Neilson, RC 1866, Pioneer in Soil Improvement, Drainage & Chemical Fertilizers. Died in 1937. (1995) Oswald G. Nelson, RC ’25, NLaw ’30, Entertainer. Ozzie Nelson died in California in 1975. (1989) Susan Ness, DC ’70, Attorney, FCC Commissioner from 1994-2001. (1998) William Newell, RC ’1836 Physician, U.S. Congressman and governor of New Jersey. Died in 1901. (2001) Nathan M. Newmark, Eng ’30, Civil Engineer and design consultant of the Torre Latinoamerica in Mexico City, the only major building to withstand the 1957 earthquake. Newmark died in 1981. (1989) Roy Franklin Nichols, RC ’18, Pulitzer Prize-Winning Historian. He died in 1973 at age 76. (1994) Elizabeth M. Norman, College of Nursing ‘73 Award-winning author who wrote Women at War (1990) and We Band of Angels (2000), two historical works chronicling the work of war-time nurses. (2004) Janet Lippe Norwood, DC ’45, Commissioner, U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics from 1979-1991. Earned a National Public Service Award (1987) James O’Brien, RC ’57, An expert on El Niño, in which unusually warm water forms in the eastern Pacific off the coast of South America, affecting global ecosystems and jet stream location. (2002) Eugene M. O’Hara, UC-N ‘62 Former CFO, Prudential. served as Rutgers chair of the university’s Board of Governors and on the Board of Trustees, the Rutgers University Foundation Board of Overseers, and the President’s Council. (2005) Hazel Rollins O’Leary, NLaw ’66, U.S. Secretary of Energy. In 2004, she became president of Fisk University in Nashville, Tennessee. (1994)

PAUL ROBESON

Remigio U. Pane, RC ’38, Professor of Italian. Pane died in 2000 at age 88. (1992) Herbert Pardes, RC ‘56, President and CEO of NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital and NewYork-Presbyterian Healthcare System. Pardes served as director of the National Institute of Mental Health and U.S. Assistant Surgeon General during the Carter and Reagan administrations. He was also president of the American Psychiatric Association. He was elected to the Institute of Medicine of the National Academy of Sciences, the Sarnat International Prize in Mental Health, and the U.S. Army Commendation Medal. (2008) John A. Pino, AG ‘44, GSNB ‘51 Scientist, Humanitarian (2005) Robert Pinsky, RC ’62, US Poet Laureate. Has received dozens of prestigious citations, including awards from the National Endowment for the Arts, the Guggenheim Foundation, and the American Academy of Arts and Letters.(2002) Clark V. Poling, RC ’33, World War II Chaplain. Passed away in 1943. (1990) Sylvia B. Pressler, NLaw ’59, Presiding Judge, New Jersey Superior Court, Appellate Division. Retired in 2004. (2002) Clement A. Price, GSNB ‘75 History professor at Rutgers-Newark for 37 years and since 2002, has served as a Board of Governors Distinguished Service Professor. (2006) Paris Qualles, RC ’74 Screenwriter and producer-director for television, his TV movies include the “The Tuskegee Airmen,” which won an Emmy in 1995, and, “The Color of Friendship,” which won an Emmy for “Outstanding Children’s Program” in 2000. (2001) Sheryl Lee Ralph, RC ‘75 Originated the role of Deena Jones in the musical Dreamgirls, which earned her a Tony Award nomination and a Drama Desk Award nomination for best actress. Is also a mainstay on TV, most recently as a cast member of Moesha (2002) Norman Reitman, RC ’32, Cardiologist, awarded Rutgers Medal in 1990. (1992) Thomas A. Renyi, RC ’67, GSM ’68, Chairman and CEO of The Bank of New York Company Inc, the nation’s oldest bank. After the 2007 merger with Mellon Financial Corp., he retired as the president of The Bank of New York Mellon in 2008. (2002) Paul Robeson, RC ’19, Actor, Singer, Activist. Died in 1976. (1987) Eduardo C. Robreno, Claw ’78, Started his career as a trial attorney with the Justice Department’s Antitrust Division, then practiced for 11 years with two Philadelphia law firms in the area of commercial litigation, including bankruptcy, real estate, construction, unfair trade practices, libel, labor, and administrative law. (2002) Alvin J. Rockoff, RC ’49, Community leader, former Chairman of Rutgers Board of Governors (1997) Peter W. Rodino, Jr., NLaw ’37, LLD ’75, U.S. Congressman for four decades. Rodino died in 2005 at age 95. (1993) Joseph H. Rodriguez, CLaw ’58, First Hispanic judge of U.S. District Court for NJ, Public advocate & defender (1996) John S. Ruggieri, CCAS ‘68 In 1990, he sold his interest in Comar Inc., a leading pharmaceuticals container manufacturer, and bought a 50,000-acre ranch in Kenya, thus preventing its subdivision and preserving its function as a migratory route for elephants and a shelter for zebras, gazelles, lions and giraffes, as well as saving the jobs of its 100 workers. (2003) Philip S. Schein, RC ‘61 Professor, Cancer researcher. Schein was ranked as one of the 120 best doctors in America. (2005) Barry Schuler, RC ‘76 Founded Medior Inc., a multimedia design firm, which pioneered the use of interactive multimedia for such applications as e-commerce, digital music and entertainment. When AOL merged with Time Warner, Schuler became AOL’s chair and CEO until 2003. He is the chairman and CEO of Raydiance. (2006) Peter Schultz, GSNB ’67, One of the key inventors of the century, propelled us all into the Information Age when he and two colleagues invented an optical fiber that has become the basis of the Information Superhighway (2000) James Schureman, QC 1775, Revolutionary War hero, served as the New Jersey delegate to the Continental Congress (1786), the first federal congress (1989-91). Former New Brunswick Mayor. Died in 1824. Gregory Kellam Scott, Ag ’70, GSE ’71, Youngest and first African-American Justice on Colorado Supreme Court (1997) George Segal, GSNB ’63, Sculptor. Died in 2000. (1987) Michael Shaara, RC ’51, Pulitzer Prize winning author for The Killer Angels; also wrote For Love of the Game, which later became a movie. Shaara died in 1988. George Henry Sharpe, RC 1847, 1850 Raised a regiment, the 120th New York, and commanded it during fighting in the Fredericksburg, Va., area during the Civil War. Served as a Rutgers College trustee until his death in 1900. (2006) Carole Frandsen St. Mark, DC ’65, Current president of Growth Management, a business development and strategic management company in Stamford. Former President & CEO, Pitney Bowes Business Services (1995) Raymond O. Stark, RC ‘35 He is one of Hollywood’ most successful producers, as well as a philanthropist. His classic films include “Funny Girl,” “The Goodbye Girl,” “The Way We Were,” “The Sunshine Boys” and “Steel Magnolias.” He led Ray Stark Productions and the Fran and Ray Stark Foundation until his death in 2004. (2001)

NBA COMMISHIONER DAVID STERN David Stern, RC ’63, Commissioner of the National Basketball Association; under Stern’s leadership, the NBA has added several franchises, enjoyed an increase in revenues, expanded its national television exposure dramatically, launched the WNBA, and created the National Basketball Development League. (1999) Jeffrey A. Torborg; School of Education 1963 Former Rutgers All-American, 10-year Major League veteran and Major League manager who caught three no-hitters and was named the American League Manager of the Year in 1990. (2004) Robert Torricelli, RC ’75, NLaw ’77, United States Senator from 1997-2003, founded Rosemont Assoc. in 2003. (1998) William Trager , RC ’30, His seminal research in the laboratory culture of malarial parasites will surely lead to the development of a life-saving vaccine to conquer malaria. Trager died in 2005 at age 94. (2000) James Valvano, RC ’67, Legendary basketball coach at North Carolina State and later a sports announcer, established The V Foundation which has awarded more than $45 million for cancer research. Valvano died in 1993 at age 47. Luke Visconti, Cook ‘82, Co-founded Diversity Inc in 1998. He is also a supporter of diversity-related charities and in 2006 he helped form the DiversityInc Foundation. (2007) Harry J. Volk, RC ’27, SL-N ‘30 Executive and philanthropist, revolutionized the insurance and banking industries. Innovations included daily interest compounding, banking by mail, and aggressive marketing. He was a founder of the Los Angeles County Museum of Art and the Los Angeles Music Center. (2003) Foster Voorhees, RC ‘1876, As New Jersey’s governor, the lifelong bachelor implemented reforms that benefited orphans, improved conditions for prison inmates, and protected the environment. He died in 1927. (2000) Ralph W. Voorhees, Educ ’48, Retired Senior VP of Paine Webber, Inc.; Former business manager of Peddie & Lawrenceville Schools (1996) Selman A. Waksman, RC ’15, Microbiologist, Nobel Laureate. Died in 1973. (1987) Monroe E. Wall, Ag ’36, GSNB ’38 and ’39, Cancer Researcher. Wall died in 2002 at age 85. (1994) David A. Werblin, RC ’31, Corporate Executive, Sportsman. When the American Football League’s New York Titans were up for sale in 1963, Werblin and four partners acquired the franchise for $1 million and renamed it the New York Jets. He died in 1991. (1990) Susan J. Wicks, CC ‘88, International and WNBA All-Star (2005) Melanie L. Willoughby, RC ‘76 For 17 years, Willoughby served as president of the New Jersey Retail Merchants Association. She is currently the Sr. VP NJ Business and Industry Assoc. (2005) Donna L. Wong, College of Nursing ‘70, Developed the Wong/Baker FACES Pain Rating, the international standard for assessing children’s pain. She was the first recipient of the Audrey Hepburn/Sigma Theta Tau International Award. She was also on the National Advisory Committee of the RWJ Excellence in End of Life Care Project. Died in May 2008. (2007) H. Boyd Woodruff; College of Agriculture ‘39; Graduate School - New Brunswick ‘42, Discovered actinomycin, which sparked a revolution in world medicine and agriculture. (2004) Carl R. Woodward, RC ‘14 and ’19, President of University of Rhode Island who contributed extensive writings about the College of Agriculture and NJ agriculture, published a book Ploughs and Politicks, which significantly influenced the field of agricultural history. Died in 1974 at age 84. (1999) Adelaide Marcus Zagoren, DC ‘40 Served for 26 years as the Associate Alumnae of Douglass College. Currently the trustee and president of the Blanche and Irving Laurie Foundation. (2006) William B. Ziff Jr., RC ‘55, Developed Ziff-Davis Publishing Company into a highly successful niche media empire that included PC Magazine. He helped foster the company’s growth to become the largest publisher of computer magazines with annual revenue of $1 billion. Peers presented him with the Henry Johnson Fisher Award in 1991, and in 1992 he was named executive of the year by Magazine Publishers of America. He died on September 9, 2006. (2008) For more information on Rutgers Alumni, visit: www.alumni.rutgers.edu




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