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TABLE OF CONTENTS WOMEN’S GOLF QUICK FACTS Location: Piscataway, N.J. Enrollment: 43,386 President: Dr. Robert L. Barchi Athletic Director: Tim Pernetti Nickname: Scarlet Knights School Color: Scarlet Athletics Website: www.scarletknights.com Home Course: Rutgers University Golf Course Conference: BIG EAST Director of Golf/ Women’s Golf Coach: Assistant Coaches: 2012 BE Finish:
Maura Ballard (Rutgers ‘88) Wally Kim (Vermont ‘90) Dr. Jeffrey Sommer (Daemen ‘04) 5th
Golf SID: Office Phone: Email:
Kevin Lorincz 732-445-7812 klorincz@scarletknights.com
Date(s) March 17-19 March 22-24 April 8-9 April 14-15 April 21-23
TABLE OF CONTENTS Quick Facts/TOC....................................................................1 2013 Schedule.......................................................................1 2013 Spring Preview.......................................................2-3 Coaching Staff..........................................................................4 2013 Scarlet Knights......................................................5-7 History/Rutgers Golf Course...........................................8 Rutgers University...................................................... 10-16 Office of Athletic Communications Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey Rutgers Athletic Center 83 Rockafeller Rd. Piscataway, NJ 08854 (732) 445–4200 (732) 445–3636 / 3063 – FAX Written and edited by: Kevin Lorincz & Stephanie Mamakas Design: Kevin Revoir This guide has been compiled to assist the media with its coverage of the team. Updated results may be obtained throughout the season from the Office of Athletic Communications at (732) 445-4200 or by accessing the Golf Website at www.scarletknights.com
2013 WOMen’s Golf Spring Schedule Event Location Morehead State Spring Invitational Ocala, Fla. Cincinnati Spring Invitational Crystal River, Fla. Georgetown Invitational Washington, D.C. Brown BEAR Invitational Providence, R.I. BIG EAST Championship Orlando, Fla.
2013 Spring Roster
Name Karen Cash Melanie Chambers Samantha Moyal Jaquelyn Mullens Gabrielle Sacheli Brittany Weddell Racquel Zurick
Class Sr. Fr. Fr. Fr. Fr. Sr. Fr.
High School/Hometown Northern Highlands/Allendale, N.J. Henderson, Nev. Alameda/Alameda, Calif. Brookside, N.J. Pittsford, N.Y. Bourne/Buzzards Bay, Mass. Notre Dame/West Trenton, N.J.
Women’s Golf Coach: Maura Ballard (21st season) (Rutgers ‘88) Assistant Golf Coaches: Wally Kim (Vermont ’90) and Dr. Jeffrey Sommer (Daemen ‘04)
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2013 SPRING PREVIEW PISCATAWAY, N.J. - After fighting the elements of a Northeast winter, the Rutgers women’s golf team readies to return to spring play. During the off-season, the team had to make do with months off the actual course by practicing at a local golf center. The colder climate may appear to be a disadvantage to the sport, but in head coach Maura Ballard’s eyes it was certainly an advantage. “We have done more work this winter than in the fall because when the weather is nice all you want to do is go play golf. Well there is a lot of work to be done off the golf course in order to perform well on the golf course. The bad weather has been a blessing in disguise,” Coach Ballard explained.
using a K Vest, which provides 3D biomechanical feedback on their movement. The feedback is transformed into individual workout plans based on the specific strengths and weaknesses in each player’s golf swing. The workouts help the players focus on the basics of their swing during their off-season training, which will help them improve on their performances from the fall. WEDDELL
Coach Ballard, in her 21st season “On the Banks,” knows in order to be successful in competition the team needs to focus on training that will enhance all aspects of their play, mentally and emotionally, as well as physically and technically. Coach Ballard has implemented programs over the winter that have targeted these specific areas to develop the complete golfer. “These programs are increasing our individual development and in turn increasing our performance as a team. We are really excited about the amount of time that we have put in this winter in the gym and at the chalkboard. I know that in order to be successful in [competition] we need to instill programs that will enhance all aspects of our play. We have taken steps to enhance that process and our team is very excited to get our spring season started. We believe our focus and hard work in these areas will make a huge impact on our play this spring, and moving forward,” said Coach Ballard. The weather has not stopped the team from improving their game. The Scarlet Knights have been working out in the gym three days a week with their strength and conditioning coach, Aimee Pardington. This training consists of specific golf-related exercises prescribed to each player individually by Volunteer Assistant Coach, Dr. Jeff Sommer. Dr. Sommer assesses each golfer’s strength and performance
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Leading the Scarlet Knights, senior Brittany Weddell (Buzzards Bay, Mass.) stands as one of the steadiest competitors on the team. The co-captain not only leads the team with a scoring average of 76.6, but also leads by example with her levelheaded demeanor and strong attitude to never give up. Senior Karen Cash (Allendale, N.J.) competed in all five events for the Scarlet Knights this past fall, carding an 82 stroke average. As a co-captain, she helps guide the younger girls with her years of experience on the banks. The freshmen all show promise as they enter their second season of competition. Melanie Chambers (Henderson, Nevada) and Samantha Moyal (Alamenda, California) competed in all five events as freshmen. Chambers proved strong for the team, finishing in the top 20 in two events, recording an 80.4 scoring average. Moyal showed strength as well in her first season, recording a scoring average of 81.7.
2013 SPRING PREVIEW Competing in one event this past fall, Gabrielle Sacheli (Pittsford, N.Y.) carded a 153 (77-76) to tie for 11th out of 119 competitors at the Rutgers Women’s Invitational.
As for specific goals on the season, the main concern is to stay in the process and focus on the moment at hand. Coach Ballard emphasized, “I do not want to put any specific goals out there for anybody to be looking at. I want them to focus on the moment that they are in. Being the best person, player, and student-athlete they can be if they can take care of the moment at hand, [things such as] the place we finish in the tournament and the scoring average, will all take care of themselves.”
CASH
With the winter training and process in mind, the Scarlet Knights are prepared to take on their spring schedule. The team begins their spring campaign on March 17 in Ocala, Fla. at the Moorehead State Spring Invitational. After the Cincinnati Spring Invitational in Crystal River, Fla., the team travels to Washington, D.C. for the Georgetown Invitational. The Scarlet Knights wrap up the season at the Brown BEAR Invitational in Providence, R.I., before heading to the BIG EAST Championship in Orlando, Fla. April 21-23.
Jacquelun Mullens (Brookside, N.J.) and Racquel Zurick (West Trenton, N.J.) competed as individuals at the Rutgers Women’s Invitational, showing great potential. Both will provide strength to the Scarlet Knights this season. “Although Brittany has the lowest scoring average from the fall, I believe that every player on the team has the focus and talent to make an impact on the top five. Everyone will be a part of reaching our spring goals,” Coach Ballard foresees.
CHAMBERS
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COACHING STAFF Maura Ballard
Wally Kim
Maura Ballard is in her 21st season mentoring Rutgers University golf. After serving as head coach for the men’s and women’s teams and overseeing the operations and recruitment for both, she is now focused solely on the women’s squad.
Wally Kim has 19 years of experience teaching golf at all levels. A PGA Class A Member since 1998, he has brought another level of instruction to the members of the Scarlet Knights men’s and women’s golf teams.
Head Coach Women’s Golf
Ballard knows what it takes to succeed “On the Banks” as a student-athlete. A 1988 graduate of Rutgers College with a BA in Economics, she relies on the experience she gained as a letterwinner for the Scarlet Knights golf team from 1984-1987. The 2005 BIG EAST Men’s Golf Coach of the Year brings not only her competitive experience to her athletes, but also great knowledge of the game of golf as well as familiarity with the University. A former “Futures Tour” player, Ballard had quite an extensive competitive golf career. She was runner-up in the 2009 New Jersey State Women’s Amateur Championship to Sherry Herman, who won the 2009 U.S. Senior Women’s Championship. In 2008, Ballard won the Garden State Pinehurst Championship with partner Ann Probert. She also won the 1992 New Jersey State Amateur Championship, the 1991 WMGA Better Ball with partner Mary Eichhorn, and the 1988 Garden State Stroke Play Championship. As a Scarlet Knight golfer, she won the 1986 Yale Invitational, and had several other top-three finishes while earning MVP honors all four years. In 1994, Ballard was inducted into the Somerville (NJ) High School Athletic Hall of Fame for her accomplishments in tennis, basketball and golf. “We are students first,” states Ballard. “That is why we are here, to earn a degree. My goal is for my athlete’s academic success and athletic prowess to grow hand in hand during their careers on the banks.” It is evident that Ballard’s vision for the team is working. Since joining the BIG EAST Conference in 1997, her athletes have earned BIG EAST All-Academic honors 103 times. The men’s golf team has won 17 tournaments, placed second 12 times, and 12 players have won individual titles. Brent Pittman (ENG ’05) earned All American Scholar honors while leading his team to the 2005 NCAA East Regional. On the women’s side, Lauren Huhnerkoch, Jeanne Waters and Elisa Mateer were named All-America Scholars by the National Golf Coaches Association in 2008, 2010 and 2012, respectively. In Waters Ballard’s 13 years at the helm of the women’s golf team, they have won five tournaments, placed second 15 times, and eight players have won individual titles. In addition to their success in the classroom and on the links, the women’s golf team has earned honors servicing the community as well. The team earned the “Athlete’s for Life” award from New Jersey Blood Services in 2001, 2003, 2004 and 2005 for having 100 percent team participation in their blood drives on campus. During the summer, Coach Ballard directs two-week-long Nike Junior Golf Camps. The campers are housed in the air-cooled, three-bedroom suites on the Busch Campus, and practice and play each day is held at the Rutgers University Golf course, also on the Busch Campus. Ballard’s positive attitude and focused demeanor has resulted in her athlete’s referring to her as the “eternal optimist.” When asked about that, she responds, “They may kid around about it, but I take it as a very high compliment. I want to be a continual source of inspiration for my team members.” Ballard resides in Flemington, N.J., with her husband, Bob, a 1981 Rutgers graduate. Ballard carries a 3 handicap at Raritan Valley Country Club where she is the club champion
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Assistant Coach
Working with each student-athlete on a weekly basis, Kim uses cutting edge technology to enhance player performance. He utilizes both video analysis and state-of-the-art training aids. His teaching focuses on the core of the body to make the swing more powerful and fluid. A 1990 graduate of the University of Vermont with a BS in Business Administration, Kim currently holds a full-time position as a golf professional at Stanton Ridge Golf and Country Club in Whitehouse Station, N.J. He resides in Flemington, with his wife Krista Lynn and three children, Kirsten, Claudia and Calvin.
Dr. Jeffrey Sommer Volunteer Assistant Coach
Dr. Jeffrey Sommer is in his first season as a volunteer assistant coach with the Rutgers women’s golf team. Dr. Sommer received his Doctor of Physical Therapy degree from Daemen College in 2004. Since that time he has worked in a variety of practice settings throughout NJ, including private practices in Springfield and Bernardsville, the out-patient orthopedic department at St. Barnabas Ambulatory Surgical Center, and Home Care for Muhlenberg Hospital. In 2008, Dr Sommer opened his own practice in Somerville, NJ. Elite Advantage Physical Therapy specializes in treating orthopedic injuries across the lift-span. As a Board Certified Orthopedic Physical Therapy Specialist, certified by the American Board of Physical Therapy Specialties, Dr. Sommer has in-depth knowledge of orthopedic injuries and surgeries, which allows all patients to experience an evidencebased practice model designed to facilitate the fastest return to function. Dr. Sommer combined his Physical Therapy knowledge with his NSCA Strength and Conditioning Specialist certification and created a series of sport-performance training programs designed to maximize power, speed, agility, and reduce the risk of non-contact injury for athletes. In addition to his Physical Therapy credentialing, Dr. Sommer is a Level 3 Certified Golf Fitness Instructor from the Titleist Performance Institute and has a Level 2 K-Vest certification. The Fairway F.I.T. golf performance program at Elite Advantage combines unique biomechanical screening to identify physical restrictions and uses the K-Vest system for 3D biomechanical assessment of movement dysfunction in the golf swing. From the Fairway F.I.T. findings a custom exercise program is developed to address physical limitations that lead to common swing faults. Real-time K-Vest 3D biofeedback exercises also give golfers a unique learning and training experience. The combination of orthopedic Physical Therapy knowledge and proper lifting and training techniques have enabled Dr. Sommer to create unique and creative programs for both rehabilitation and performance clients. Dr. Sommer has worked with athletes of all ability levels and is excited to bring a unique perspective and customized training programs for the Rutgers Women’s Golf Team.
SCARLET KNIGHTS Karen Cash
Senior • Allendale, N.J. Fourth-year senior…Has competed in 24 events “On the Banks,” playing 60 rounds...Transfer student-athlete from East Stroudsburg University who made an immediate impact in her first season “On the Banks” in 2010-11…Won the First Flight of the 2009 New Jersey State Women’s Amateur Championship. FALL 2012: Competed in all five events, playing in 12 rounds... Finished tied for 31st at the Bucknell Invitational with a 242 (82-79-81)...Tied for 38th out of 45 competitors at the Lehigh Invitational, carding a 168 (86-82)...Tied for 52nd out of 87 at the Yale Intercollegiate with a 241 (81-79-81) ... Tied for 58th out of 119 at the Rutgers Invitational with a 165 (62-83). SPRING 2012: Competed in all four events, playing 10 rounds... Had an 82.0 stroke average...Placed tied for 18th out of 48 competitors at the Siena College Homewood Suites Invitational...Finished 15th out of 75 entries at the Roar-ee Invitational, including an opening round 77. FALL 2011: Competed in all five events, playing 13 rounds… Had an 81.23 stroke average…Placed tied for 10th out of 41 competitors at the Lehigh Invitational. SPRING 2011: Competed in four events, playing 10 rounds… Had an 82.6 stroke average…Placed tied for 12th out of 48 players at the Siena College Homewood Suites Invitational. FALL 2010: Competed in six events, playing 15 rounds…Had an 82.5 stroke average…Carded an opening round 75 at the Bucknell Invitational in her first event as a Scarlet Knight. COLLEGIATE: Named the 2009-10 PSAC Golfer of the Year as a true freshman at ESU after claiming three medalist honors and tying for third at the PSAC Championships…Posted a 79.7 stroke average in 11 rounds and was the top finisher at the Clarion Invitational and Lancaster Intercollegiate Classic in the fall and the ESU Invitational in the spring.
and the world singles championship in Buenos Aires, Argentina in 1994…Has an older sister, Lauren, who was an all-state tennis player before competing collegiately at William & Mary and Boston College.
Melanie Chambers
Freshman • Henderson, Nev. True freshman from the silver state. FALL 2012: Competed in all five events, playing in 12 rounds... Placed 17th at the Bucknell Invitational with a 235 (7681-78) and totaled 30 pars... Finished tied for 19th out of 45 with a 159 (80-79) at the Lehigh Invitational...Tied for 21st out of 119 at the Rutgers Invitational with a 157 (7879)...Tied for 56th out of 87 at the Yale Intercollegiate with a 244 (83-75-86) HIGH SCHOOL: A 2012 graduate of Coronado High School in Henderson, NV…Four-year varsity golf letterwinner and threeyear captain under head coach Joe Sawaia…Had a 74.4 scoring average as a senior…Helped team qualify for Nevada 4A State Championship all four years…Four-time Coronado Golf Team MVP…Four-time First Team All State and First Team Sunrise Region selection…Three-time Coronado HS Scholar Athlete… Two-time CHS Athlete of the Month…Helped CHS cheerleading team win a National Championship… Placed 13th with a 313 (83-76-77-77) at the 2011 Trusted Choice Big “I” National Championship…A 2011 Nevada State Junior Champion 2011 with a 147 (72-75), also won in 2008…Seven-time Callaway Junior World Golf Championship (2005-11)…Finished in the top 20 at the 2010 First Tee Open at Pebble Beach…Competed for Team Southern Nevada in the Girls Junior Americas Cup (2009,2010) and the Mary Cave Cup (2008)…Finished in the top 10 of three AJGA out of the three tournaments played… Shot a 6-under 66 at the 2010 Black Mountain Golf & Country Club in Southeast Division High School Tournament. PERSONAL: Daughter of Mark and Hayley Chambers…Very talented musician attending the Mason Gross School of the Arts...
HIGH SCHOOL: A 2009 graduate of Northern Highlands Regional HS in Allendale, N.J…As a senior under Head Coach Tom Walsh, tied for seventh in the girls state tournament, helped the boys team tie for second at states and finished fifth in the Bergen County girls championship…Was named to the Bergen Record All-Decade Girls Golf Team…A four-year varsity letterwinner in both golf and tennis…On the tennis court, was secondteam all-league as a junior and senior. PERSONAL: Is the daughter of Louise Cash, a former nationallyranked professional tennis player, two-time world champion and a member of the Eastern Tennis Hall of Fame…Mother won the world doubles title with Barbara Mueller in Yugoslavia in 1990
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SCARLET KNIGHTS Samantha Moyal
Gabrielle Sacheli
True freshman from the west coast…The 2010 Northern California Girls Junior Amateur Champion.
True freshman from the empire state.
Freshman • Alameda, Calif.
FALL 2012: Competed in five events, playing in 12 rounds...Placed 27th at the Bucknell Invitational with a 240 (82-8078)...Finished tied for 33rd out of 45 competitors at the Lehigh Invitational with a 165 (75-90)...Tied for 68th out of 87 competitors at the Yale Intercollegiate, carding a 252 (83-77-92). HIGH SCHOOL: A 2012 graduate of Alameda (Calif.) HS…A fouryear varsity letter winner and team captain as a senior under head coach Stephen Burnett…Shot a career-best 66 to win the 2010 ACCAL Championship and was named ACCAL Player of the Year…Won the 2010 NCGA Championship at Spyglass Hill over former RU teammate Kortnie Maxoutopoulis with rounds of 75 and 74…Shot 72 at the sectional championship, helping Alameda to the Northern California championship…Has placed in the top 10 in several Northern California Junior Tour events… Finished fourth at Castlewood, where she shot 73-78, and seventh at the Nor-Cal Junior Championship, where she carded 78-73….As a senior had a scoring differential on junior golf scoreboard of 2.94. PERSONAL: Daughter of Raphy and Linda Moyal…Interested in international business…Started golfing in 8th grade with her father. Was also a very competitive swimmer…and a black belt in Karate
Jacquelyn Mullens
Freshman • Brookside, N.J. True freshman…Garden State Product HIGH SCHOOL: A 2012 graduate of West Morris Mendham HS in Brookside, N.J., where she was a four-year varsity golf letter winner...Helped the team win the 2010 Girls Conference Championship under head coach Rich Attonito... Also helped the boys’ team win the 2009 Conference Championship...Earned coaches award two years in a row...Had a 40.0 stroke average as a senior team captain...Also a two-year varsity volleyball letter winner and one-year varsity swimming letter winner...was the 2010 Women’s Club Championship RunnerUp and the 2011 Women’s Club Champion as a member of the Roxiticus Golf Club. PERSONAL: Daughter of Patty and Chuck Mullens...Intends on majoring in exercise science.
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Freshman • Pittsford, N.Y.
FALL 2012: Finished tied for 11th out of 119 competitors at the Rutgers Invitational, carding a 153 (77-76).
Brittany Weddell
Senior • Buzzards Bay, Mass. Fourth-year senior…A 2011-12 BIG EAST All-Academic selection…Entered the fall with a 240 Regional Golfstat rank…Has played in all 35 events since arriving at RU, playing 82 rounds…Led the team in stroke average as a true freshman in 2009-10. FALL 2012: Competed in all five events, playing in 12 rounds, averaging 76.58... Finished tied for fifth at the Bucknell Invitational, posting a 229 (76-76-77) and had 32 pars....Tied for seventh out of 45 at the Lehigh Invitational, carding a 152 (74-78)....Tied for 30th out of 87 competitors at the Yale Intercollegiate, carding a 219 (78-76-76)... Tied for 2nd in the 119-player field with a 150 (73-77) at the Rutgers Invitational...Had a tournament best 28 pars and was plus one in par three scoring. SPRING 2012: Competed in all four events, playing 10 rounds… Had a 77.1 stroke average…Placed tied for seventh out of 48 competitors at the Homewood Suites Invitational with a 157 (76-81)…Finished fifth out of 102 entries at the Cincinnati Invitational with a 221 (75-74-72)…Placed tied for 12th out of 75 players at the Roar-ee Invitational with a 154 (82-72). FALL 2011: Competed in all five events, playing 13 rounds…Had a 77.15 stroke average…Had four top 20 finishes…Placed tied for 11th out of 80 competitors with a 227 (77-74-76) at the Bucknell Invitational…Placed tied for 20th out of 62 entries with a 232 (80-75-77) at the Princeton Invitational…Finished tied for 2nd out of 97 players with a 152 (75-77) at the Rutgers Invitational..Placed 12th out of 41 entries at the Lehigh Invitational… Carded a season-low 73 in the second round of the Rainbow Wahine Invitational. SPRING 2011: Competed in four events, playing 10 rounds… Had a team-best 79.1 stroke average…Placed fifth out of 48 players at the Siena College Homewood Suites Invitational with a 154 (77-77)…Finished tied for ninth out of 40 players at the BIG EAST Championships with a 232 (74-78-80).
SCARLET KNIGHTS FALL 2010: Competed in six events, playing 15 rounds…Had an 82.1 stroke average…Shot a second round 77 at the Nittany Lion Invitational. SPRING 2010: Competed in five events, playing 11 rounds… Had a 79.45 stroke average with nine birdies…Won the 64-player Hartford Invitational with a 150, which included an opening-round 74. FALL 2009: Competed in five tournaments as a first-semester freshman, playing 11 rounds…Had a team-best 79.55 stroke average with 15 birdies…Had two rounds of 75 to finish tied for 13th at the Nittany Lion Invitational…Finished tied for ninth in the Rutgers Invitational and tied for fifth at the Knights Invitational. HIGH SCHOOL: A 2009 graduate of Bourne HS…Carded a 68 to win her second consecutive New England Interscholastic Golf Championship as a senior…Won the event by five strokes… Finished third overall at the Championships as both a freshman and sophomore…Was team captain and only female on BHS roster under Head Coach Rod Weston…Has been a multiple all-scholastic selection by both the Boston Globe and Boston Herald…Won the 2008 Rutgers Girls Junior Open…Is a twotime national finalist for both the US Women’s Amateur Public Links and the US Girls Junior tournaments…Took home the prize of top amateur at the Massachusetts Women’s Open in 2008, where she placed third out of 90 players and shot a 74… Home course is Sandwich Hollows.
Racquel Zurick
Freshman • West Trenton, N.J. True freshman from the Garden State. HIGH SCHOOL: A 2012 graduate of Notre Dame HS…A three-time Mercer County Golf Champion, winning the event sophomore through senior seasons… Captured the 2012 Central Jersey High School Golf League Championship in 2012…Was a four-year varsity golf letter winner under head coaches Joe Caggiano and Joan Pilkington…Also a three-year varsity field hockey letter winner and team captain as a senior… Home club is Mountain View Golf Course…Won the New Jersey Women’s Golf Association Girls Junior Championship at Hawk Point shooting 74. PERSONAL: Daughter of John and Sherrie Zurick.
PERSONAL: Majoring in psychology…Daughter of Alan and Shay Weddell…Started playing golf as a five year old…Made her first hole in one at age seven.
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RUTGERS GOLF HISTORY
RUTGERS WOMEN’S GOLF HISTORY
Rutgers University Golf Course
The Rutgers women’s golf team has enjoyed its share of success in the BIG EAST and ECAC. The team has competed in the prestigious BIG EAST Conference since 1995.Women’s golf became an intercollegiate sport at Rutgers in 1977 led by 17-year head coach Jan Unger. Unger’s dedication to the women’s program in those early years laid the solid foundation for the program’s current success. The women’s program has produced a plethora of top-flight players. Rutgers’ current head coach Maura Ballard, the first coach to head both the RU men’s and women’s golf programs, was a top player for RU from 1984-1987. Cheri Rice, who starred at Rutgers from 19931997, was a four-time MVP and a holder of seven individual school records. Rice is currently a Class A, LPGA Teaching and Club Professional. Cheryl Simmeth Anderson (‘91), LPGA teaching pro at Wykagyl Country Club in New Rochelle, NY, has been named one of the top 50 LPGA teachers in the nation. Other top players who have joined the professional ranks are Michelle Melia (’96), Gia Bocra (’98) and Rita Arora (’97).
The Rutgers University Golf Course was founded in 1961 with the construction of the present day 18-hole layout that was expertly designed by Hal Purdy, a noted golf architect. The course was officially opened May 29, 1963. Today, the par-71 Rutgers Golf Course (par-72 for women) can be stretched to 6,337 yards and features a course rating of 70.5 and a slope of 130. Over the past decade, the Rutgers Golf Course has undergone extensive renovations and updates, which include a modern irrigation system, the addition of several bunkers and the planting of many trees, including a host of impressive evergreens. Once a rather wide-open tract, today’s Rutgers Golf Course features a host of tree-lined holes, featuring undulating greens and water that comes into play on five holes. A round of golf at the Rutgers Golf Course offers a panoramic view of a plethora of academic buildings, including the world famous Waksman Institute of Microbiology, a stately structure that rests to the left of the first fairway. Every golfer who enjoys the Rutgers Golf Course can also gaze at several athleticrelated complexes. To the left of the fifth and sixth hole offers a view of the Indoor Bubble, in which the Rutgers football team trains during inclement weather. Rising majestically to the left of the sixth green is Rutgers Stadium, the home of the Scarlet Knight football team. The Rutgers Golf Course features a newly-expanded driving range, and a 12,000 square foot short game practice facility and putting green. Jill Jerauld, a former Futures Tour and European Tour player, joined the Rutgers University Golf Course as the Course Pro/Manager in November 2001. She is the only female Professional Golf Association (PGA) - certified head pro in the state of New Jersey. For 10 years prior to joining Rutgers University Golf Course, she was the head pro at Blueberry Hill Golf Course in Russell, PA. Since Jerauld took over management of the Rutgers University Golf Course, she has successfully implemented a pace-of-play system that has decreased the time of an average round of golf by as much as one hour. DID YOU KNOW? Every hole at the Rutgers Golf Course is named for a tree that can be found on the course and that the par-3 11th hole, named Sour Gum, is home to the oldest Japanese sour gum tree in the state. Contact Information Rutgers University Golf Course 777 Hoes Lane West Piscataway, NJ 08854-8022 732/445-2637 (pro shop)
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D r . R obert L . B archi President of the University Robert L. Barchi is the 20th president of Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey, a position he assumed on September 1, 2012. From 2004 to 2012, Dr. Barchi served as president of Thomas Jefferson University, nationally regarded as a top university dedicated to health sciences education and research. Previously, he was provost and chief academic officer of the University of Pennsylvania, where he had responsibility for Penn’s 12 schools, their academic programs, athletics, students, and faculty. Dr. Barchi began his academic career in 1972 on the Penn faculty. He founded the university’s Department of Neuroscience, was chair of Penn’s Department of Neurology, and for more than a decade was director of its Mahoney Institute of Neurological Sciences. Appointed provost and chief academic officer in 1999, he recruited new leadership for nine of the twelve schools at Penn and established a number of university-wide interdisciplinary educational and research institutes. Dr. Barchi assumed the presidency of Thomas Jefferson University in 2004. Under his leadership, the university grew from three to six schools, including the establishment of the Jefferson School of Pharmacy. During his eight-year presidency, enrollment across Jefferson increased more than 50%, fundraising doubled in spite of the economic downturn, and 22 new endowed professorships and 50 endowed scholarships were established. He also oversaw the transformation of the institution’s urban environment into a vibrant university campus. Throughout his career, Dr. Barchi has been active as a clinical neurologist and as researcher in the fields of neuroscience and neurology. In 1993, he was elected to the Institute of Medicine of the National Academy of Sciences for his work on the structure and function of voltage-gated ion channels. He is also a member of the American Society for Clinical Investigation and the Association of American Physicians, and is a Fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science. Barchi received his B.S. and M.S. degrees from Georgetown University, and Ph.D. and M.D. degrees from the University of Pennsylvania.
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TIM PERNETTI DIRECTOR OF INTERCOLLEGIATE ATHLETICS A 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. Pernetti’s influence on Rutgers Athletics has been immediate – from the key coaching hires of Mike Rice (men’s basketball), Dan Donigan (men’s soccer) and Brian Brecht (men’s lacrosse) – to securing the first two naming rights partnerships in Rutgers Athletics history. Under his leadership, Rutgers inked a 10-year naming rights deal with High Point Solutions to acquire the naming rights for Rutgers Stadium, along with a 10-year contract with Audi for the Audi Rutgers Club at High Point Solutions Stadium. Both deals have netted the Department of Athletics nearly one million dollars in new revenue to the annual budget. Two other key objectives on Pernetti’s watch were to secure a new food vendor for Rutgers Athletics and secure an all-sports shoe and apparel deal for the department. Pernetti led the charge to bring Sodexo to Rutgers as the exclusive concessionaire and caterer for the Athletics Department. The 10-year agreement will enhance the gameday experience, significantly increase revenues to Athletics, and fund future capital improvements at High Point Solutions Stadium and the RAC. He further directed negotiations with Nike to execute the first-ever all-sports shoe and apparel deal for all 24 sports at Rutgers. The five-year agreement worth approximately $5.2M in equipment and apparel will provide state-ofthe-art apparel for all Rutgers student-athletes. During his introductory press conference, Pernetti spoke about his vision to build a broadband network to deliver hundreds of live events. That promise has blossomed into RVision, powered by ScarletKnights.com, as RVision has streamed hundreds of live events per year, including unprecedented live game coverage for
many of the Scarlet Knights Olympic Sports. 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 distribution platforms 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 multi-media 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 multi-platform original programming for the first ever 24-hour sports college sports network, Pernetti successfully navigatedthrough a complicated web of media rights deals to come up with new ways toserve college sports fans. Pernetti worked closely with the NCAA and hundreds of schools in every major conference, securing over 2,500 hours ofevent pro
13 gramming 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 under-served 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 ABC-TV 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. In his spare time Pernetti is the Commissioner of Oakland (N.J.) Recreation Youth football program, serves on the Board of Directors of the Reed Academy (a school in Oakland serving children with autistic spectrum disorder), and has been named a member of the NY/NJ Super Bowl Host Committee for Community Engagement.
ATHLETIC ADMINISTRATION
Jason Baum Sr. Associate Director of Athletics/ Communications
Brian Colvin Associate Director of Athletics/ Finance & Administration
Doug Fillis Senior Associate Athletic Director Administration
Kathleen Hickey Sr. Associate Director of Athletics/SWA
Douglas Kokoskie Sr. Associate Director of Athletics/ Operations
Dr. Robert Monaco Associate Director of Athletics/ Sports Medicine
Nick Ojea Associate Director of Athletics/ Compliance
Janine Purcaro Chief Financial Officer for Intercollegiate Athletics
John Ternyila Sr. Associate Director of Athletics/Finance
Shawn Tucker Assistant Director of Athletics/ Student-Athlete Development
14 A BRIEF HISTORY Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey, is one of the leading universities in the nation. The university is comprised of 28 degree-granting divisions; 10 undergraduate colleges, 10 graduate schools, and eight schools offering both undergraduate and graduate degrees. Six 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 co-educational 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 61 research universities in North America. Today, professors and students work in more than 200 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 28 schools and colleges, Rutgers offers more than 100 undergraduate majors and more than 180 graduate and professional degree programs. The university graduated more than 13,000 students last year, and has more than 400,000 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.
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 61 leading research universities in North America.
15 • There are 28 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 (full- and part-time). • 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 58,000 students, including more than 43,000 undergraduates and 14,000 graduate students. • More than 13,000 students earned a degree from Rutgers in the 2011-2012 academic year. • The university has more than 400,000 living alumni; 200,000 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 an Abel Prize winner, Fulbright Scholars, Guggenheim Fellows, members of the American Academy of Arts and Science, fellows of the American Association for the Advancement of Science, a National Endowment for the Arts “Jazz Master” 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 third 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 24th 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 30th 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. 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 third 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 82,500 proteins and other macromolecules for scientists working to design more effective treatments for disease. • Rutgers’ Institute of Marine and Coastal Sciences ranks fourth among the top oceanographic research institutions in the world, according to a recent poll conducted by Thomson Reuters. • The Ernest Mario School of Pharmacy, the only public pharmacy school in New Jersey and one of the top institutions of its kind in the nation, ranks in the top 15 percent among pharmacy schools nationwide in research dollars awarded by the National Institutes of Health with $7.6 million of funding awarded to the school in 2009. • Rutgers holds more than 600 United States patents, half of which have been issued in the last decade. To date over 80 start-up companies have been created based on Rutgers technologies; three-quarters of these are New Jersey - based. • Rutgers is a partner in the Southern African Large Telescope, one of the world’s largest optical telescopes and the southern hemisphere’s newest eyeon-the-sky.
SERVICE TO NEW JERSEY • Rutgers’ Center for Government Services trains New Jersey’s municipal employees to better serve their constituents and trains approximately 20,000 annually through 16 separate programs and 600 courses. • Rutgers Continuing Education offers more than 4,000 course sections with 120,000 annual enrollments. 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 on a single Saturday in the spring, Rutgers opens its doors to the world for “Rutgers Day.” More than 250,000 people have visited the five New Brunswick campuses during the event the last four years to celebrate the institution’s three-part mission of teaching, research and service. “Rutgers Day,” which made its debut in 2009, is an expansion of the successful annual New Jersey Folk Festival and Ag Field Day programs.
16 SERVICE TO THE NATION • 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, including the National Transit Institute, the National Institute for Early Education Research and the Institute for Health, Health Care Policy and Aging 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 comprise a 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.
rutgers administrative officers Robert L. Barchi, Ph.D., President Richard Edwards, Ph.D., Interim Executive Vice President for Academic Affairs Jonathan R. Alger, J.D., Senior Vice President and General Counsel Bruce C. Fehn, B.S., C.P.A., Senior Vice President for Finance and Administration David L. Finegold, Ph.D., Senior Vice President for Lifelong Learning and Strategic Growth Initiatives Gregory S. Blimling, Ph.D., Vice President for Student Affairs Leslie A. Fehrenbach, B.S., Secretary of the University Carol P. Herring, B.A., President for Rutgers University Foundation; Executive Vice President for Development and Alumni Relations Peter J. McDonough Jr., B.A., Vice President for Public Affairs Kim Manning, M.B.A., Vice President for University Relations Courtney O. McAnuff, M.P.A., Vice President for Enrollment Management Michael J. Pazzani, Ph.D., Vice President for Research and Economic Development Tim Pernetti, M.C.I.S., Director of Intercollegiate Athletics Wendell E. Pritchett, Ph.D., J.D., Chancellor, Rutgers–Camden Barry V. Qualls, Ph.D., Vice President for Undergraduate Education Donna Thornton, M.P.A., Vice President for Alumni Relations Nancy S. Winterbauer, Ed.D., Vice President for University Budgeting Philip L. Yeagle, Ph.D., Interim Chancellor, Rutgers–Newark
BOARD OF GOVERNORS 2012-13 Ralph Izzo, Chair Gerald C. Harvey, Vice Chair Robert L. Barchi, ex officio Anthony J. DePetris Mark P. Hershhorn M. William Howard, Jr. Gordon A. MacInnes Joseph J. Roberts, Jr. John F. Russo, Sr. Kenneth M. Schmidt Daniel H. Schulman Candace L. Straight
Paul Panayotatos, Faculty Representative Samuel Rabinowitz, Faculty Representative Joseph T. Cashin, Student Representative OFFICERS OF THE BOARD Bruce C. Fehn, Treasurer Leslie A. Fehrenbach, Secretary Mary Claire Brennan, Assistant Secretary
BOARD OF TRUSTEES 2012-13 Dudley H. Rivers, Jr., Chair Margaret T. Derrick, Vice Chair Dorothy W. Cantor, Vice Chair Robert L. Barchi, ex officio Sol J. Barer Felix M. Beck, Emeritus Gregory Bender Andrew S. Berns William E. Best Joan L. Bildner, Emerita Michael A. Bogdonoff Floyd H. Bragg, Emeritus Gregory Q. Brown Dominick J. Burzichelli John Herbert Carman, Emeritus Peter Cartmell, Emeritus Kevin J. Collins, Emeritus Hollis A. Copeland Steven M. Darien Marisa A. Dietrich Carleton C. Dilatush, Emeritus James F. Dougherty Robert P. Eichert, Emeritus Evelyn S. Field, Emerita Lora L. Fong Jeanne M. Fox, Emerita John R. Futey Albert R. Gamper, Jr. Ronald J. Garutti Ronald W. Giaconia, Emeritus Rochelle Gizinski, Emerita Evangeline Gomez
Leslie E. Goodman, Emeritus Joyce W. Harley M. Wilma Harris John A. Hendricks Robert A. Hering Mark P. Hershhorn Carleton A. Holstrom, Emeritus M. William Howard, Jr. John D. Hugelmeyer Frank B. Hundley Ralph Izzo Paul B. Jennings, Emeritus Nimesh S. Jhaveri Roberta Kanarick Tilak Lal Walter L. Leib, Emeritus Richard A. Levao, Emeritus Jennifer Lewis-Hall Christine M. Lomiguen Debra Ann Lynch Gordon A. MacInnes Duncan L. MacMillan Rashida Y. V. MacMurray Iris Martinez-Campbell Carol Ann Monroe Robert E. Mortensen Patricia Nachtigal, Emerita Gene O’Hara, Emeritus John A. O’Malley Dean J. Paranicas, Emeritus Jose A. Piazza Sidney Rabinowitz
George A. Rears Norman Reitman, Emeritus Joseph J. Roberts, Jr. Alejandro Roman John F. Russo, Sr. Louis A. Sapirman Kenneth M. Schmidt Richard H. Shindell Susan Stabile Dorothy M. Stanaitis, Emerita Robert L. Stevenson Sandy J. Stewart Candace L. Straight Heather C. Taylor Anne M. Thomas, Emerita Michael R. Tuosto, Emeritus Laurel A. Van Leer Lucas J. Visconti Martha A. Cotter, Faculty Representative Menahem Spiegel, Faculty Representative Katherine Rose E. Yabut, Student Representative OFFICERS OF THE BOARD Bruce C. Fehn, Treasurer Leslie A. Fehrenbach, Secretary Mary Claire Brennan, Assistant Secretary
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