Friday, March 31, 2006

Clean and Green

What were all those big guys with plastic bags doing around the Dartmouth campus Wednesday afternoon? Explained football coach Buddy Teevens:
"We're making spring cleaning an annual thing. There are kind of multiple purposes. One is to clean up around here and have the guys appreciate the fact that people don't think twice about the trash they leave behind or see on the ground. It's appalling the amount of cigarette butts people toss without thinking. This is our domain, our place, and I want the guys to have great pride in it. It's been interesting to hear their comments: 'I can't believe how much stuff is around.' It's also a little unifying opportunity saying we're happy and proud to be here. Hopefully it's a good message to the community about our team and to people about thinking more before they leave trash behind."


Harvard Free for Under-$60,000 Families

Harvard will now waive tuition, room and board for students whose families earn less than $60,000 a year according to this story in the Crimson. ... A piece in the Yale Daily cites an all-time low 5.8 percent acceptance rate this spring in New Haven. The story quotes these rates at other schools that have released their figures (strike>(Dartmouth hasn't yet): Harvard, 9.3 percent; Columbia 9.6 percent; Cornell 24.7 percent. LATE NOTE: Today's Daily Dartmouth has a story saying 15.4 percent of applicants were admitted, but it's not clear if that includes the early admits. If so, comparing Dartmouth's numbers to the others is, as a Dartmouth administrator memorably said to me during an interview, "Like comparing apples and hubcaps."
... A story in Virginia's Daily Press is built around the salutatorian at Hampton's Kecoughtan High School, who very much wants to attend Dartmouth and is on pins and needles waiting to find out if he got in. Therein lies one of the advantages of being a recruited athlete. Although they may not have received the final paperwork yet, recruited athletes already know their fate. ... Look for the next edition of "10 Questions" Monday on the Green Alert home page. ... The temperature in the Upper Valley could hit the mid 70's today. Maybe, just maybe, those last patches of snow in my yard will melt today. Pretty amazing if they are all gone by April Fool's.

Thursday, March 30, 2006

Princeton, Yale, Columbia Football News

Although Dartmouth spring football is still about two weeks away from starting, several other schools have already kicked off drills. Among them is Princeton, where old friend Roger Hughes (the former Big Green offensive coordinator) has his work cut out for him in 2006 according to a story in the Trenton Times. Craig Haley writes:
"Princeton football coach Roger Hughes has his TV tuned to The Game Show Network, searching for reruns of "What's My Line?"

He faces such a predicament this offseason after the Tigers graduated all of their starters on the offensive line plus All-Ivy League tight end Jon Dekker."

Staff changes at Yale have a columnist for the student daily taking a bit of a shot at coach Jack Siedlecki:
One must wonder if the earth is falling out from under Coach Sid. In almost any other football organization, the head coach is held accountable and his staff suffers the consequences of that accountability. Is Yale moving in the wrong direction? Are the departures of two of three coordinators indicative of something inherently backward in the program? I would say so.

At Columbia, new coach Norries Wilson explains how he went about building his coaching staff in this Spectator article.

Check back later today for photos from yesterday's Dartmouth football community service project.

Wednesday, March 29, 2006

The Old and the New (Or Soon to be New)

This is a look at the east stands and the venue of the new varsity house as seen through a window in Davis, the old varsity house.

Ogbonna Runs Dartmouth's Second-Best Hurdles Time

Thanks to a subscriber for reminding me to post this:

Senior tailback/track standout Ikechi Ogbonna ran the second-fastest 110-meter hurdles time in Dartmouth history Monday at the Arizona State Invitational. Ogbonna's clocking of 14.18 surpassed the NCAA regional qualifying time of 14.30. Ogbonna was just off the school record of 14.16 held by Greg Johnston '99.

To read a story I wrote last fall about Ogbonna, who has enjoyed two-sport success despite being barely recruited for either football or track, click here.

Recognize this Guy?

True confession time: Men's Fitness isn't exactly my choice of reading material. Still, I'd heard former Dartmouth corner back/returner Brian White '95 was featured in the April edition of the magazine and so I checked it out yesterday (without buying it, thank you) at the Dartmouth Bookstore. Sure enough, Brian is briefly profiled in a story entitled, "5 Star; Life Lessons From Five Rising Stars Who'll Soon Be Lighting Up The Screen At A Cineplex Near You."

Brian is pictured in the contents area of the magazine with a hooded sweat shirt over his head with the headline: Coolest Cat in the Hood.

Now an actor/model/dancer, Brian, 33, can be seen in current films Dirty and Brick. He previously co-starred with Bernie Mac in the baseball flick, Mr. 3000. He appeared in the movie The Family Stone and on FX TV's The Shield.

The son of former Boston Celtics great Jo Jo White, Brian plays hoops in the NBA Entertainment League along with stars like Snoop Dogg and Jamie Fox.

At Dartmouth, Brian made the 1994 All-Ivy first team as a senior with 74 tackles and four interceptions. He tied a school record with a 98-yard kickoff return for a touchdown against Harvard. He also played lacrosse for the Big Green.

After graduation, White went to camp with the New England Patriots and also signed a major league lacrosse contract. To learn more about Brian, visit his web site.

By the way, driving my kids to school this morning, we passed a couple of their in-town friends riding bicycles to school. In shorts. And I saw the father of one of their friends driving his red Saab with the top down. Sure, the temperature might hit the high 50's today. But IT WAS 29 DEGREES when we left the house. Ah, spring in Northern New England!

Tuesday, March 28, 2006

Scholarships Done Right

Today's Daily Pennsylvanian offers a look at what being able to give scholarships has done for the Bucknell men's basketball program, which advanced to the second round of the NCAA Tournament two consecutive years on the strength of wins over Kansas and Bucknell oops, Arkansas. What the Patriot League school in Lewisburg, Pa., has discovered is that scholarships not only bring in better athletes, but better student-athletes according to Bucknell athletic director John Hardt:
"What we've found with scholarships in the mix is that we're able to recruit a higher quality student both as a basketball player and in the classroom."
The story suggests the addition of limited athletic scholarships is in line with Bucknell's overall scholarship policy:

"Unlike the Ivy League, whose institutions officially do not offer any merit-based aid, Bucknell offers this kind of aid in 'music, dance, the arts and also high academic achievement,' Hardt said.
According to Bucknell men's basketball coach Pat Flannery, the addition of scholarships levels the playing field with a couple of his better-known recruiting rivals:
"For years, Penn and Princeton have taken kids that we tried to recruit, and we've never been able to beat them out on kids that we've recruited. But now we have a situation where we're able to go into those same homes and recruit with them.

The NFL meetings begin today in Orlando, where Dartmouth alum Reggie Williams heads to work at Disney headquarters each morning. Expect the former Big Green and Cincinnati Bengals linebacker to get even more attention as a possible candidate for NFL commissioner.

It's basketball, but it's interesting stuff if your NCAA bracket is in the kind of tatters mind would have been if I'd filled one out ;-): There have been four perfect Final Four predictions out of about 3 million attempts in the ESPN.com pool according to this New York Times story. That's compared to 4,172 who turned the trick a year ago. Blame George Mason. The story reports the cbs.sportsline.com pool was zero for 2 million!

A sure sign of spring: Our 1984 Volkswagen Westfalia camper bus (with 91,000 miles on it) came out of dry dock yesterday. I usually pull the battery for the winter but I didn't bother this time and it started on the first crank. Amazing. We plan on using the ancient VW for our cross country/national parks tour with the kids this summer. Be sure to enter the pool for where it will break down and when!

Monday, March 27, 2006

Construction Photos - 3/27

I tried to copy the angle of the photo at right to give a sense of the the changes at Memorial Field (above). Below, a view of the footprint of the former stands. This is where the new varsity house will be built. (Click on the photos to make them larger.)

Monday Ramblings

John Lyons' defense played well for the NFL Europe's Cologne Centurions, but four missed field goals including one returned for a TD led to a 20-15 loss to the Amsterdam Admirals yesterday. ... In surfing for more Centurion information, I came up with a German link to a bio of Lyons, the former Dartmouth coach. For kicks, I translated it on the web. Here's the word-for-word translation, which makes a lot more sense than I expected:

John Lyons returns as defensive Coordinator to the Cologne Centurions, after he had trained the defensive Backs of the Cologne NFL Europe team in the past season. Lyons is not an unknown quantity in the professional football. From 1992 2004 he as Head coach worked on the Dartmouth college. During its time in Dartmouth Lyons booked 60 victories and won the Ivy league 1992 and 1996. 1993 and 1997 its team second became. By 1995 1997 Lyons team remained in 22 plays ungeschlagen about which it 15 plays in consequence won. Dartmouth remained ungeschlagen 1996 with a balance of 10-0 and Lyons became new England of sport Writers coach of the yearly. In addition it was selected of the metropolitan New York football Writers Association to division the 1-AA coach of the yearly. 1991 and 1992 Lyons the Ivy league with Dartmouth already won, at that time still as defensive Coordinator/Defensive Backs coach. From 1985 1987 he worked to the Boston University as defensive Coordinator/Defensive Backs coach. Its coach career already began 1974 as Assistant Freshman coach at the university to Pennsylvania before it of 1980-1983 as defensive Backs coach the university team cared for. One year later it ascended to defensive the Coordinator. With Pennsylvania Lyons won the Ivy league in the years 1982 and 1983. Its active career ended at the university to Pennsylvania after three successful years.
Brian Mann, Lyons' former quarterback at Dartmouth, watched from the sidelines again late Friday as the Los Angeles Avengers fell to the Arizona Rattlers, 58-45. Mann's successor as starting quarterback for the Arena League team, Sonny Cumbie, went 23-for-43 for 257 yards and four touchdowns, but was ineffective in the second half. Mann started at QB when the Avengers beat the Rattlers earlier this season. ...

The Cincinnati Bengals' web site has a full story on Reggie Williams and the talk that he could be a candidate for NFL commissioner. Here's an interesting quote from former Cincy teammate David Fulcher:

He would always wave at people or shake their hands. A smart guy, a smart player. He was like Peyton Manning on defense. Always getting people lined up. I say, ‘Wow,’ but when you think about it, it’s not surprising when you think back to what he’s done. You come out of Dartmouth and, well, that’s no fly-by-night school.

Sunday, March 26, 2006

Story on Reggie for Commish Reminds Me of a Story ...

Now it's the Orlando Sentinel stepping to the plate with a piece about former Dartmouth and Cincinnati Bengals linebacker Reggie Williams being mentioned as a possible candidate for NFL commissioner. Somewhere there is a Philadelphia Daily news reporter quietly laughing to himself or herself about how this story has taken off. Which reminds me ...

The first time Buddy Teevens was hired as Dartmouth coach, a reporter from a big-city newspaper called our local paper to fish for names in the candidate pool. Aghast that a competing paper expected any "scoops" to be shared, the local reporter (not me, by the way) casually dropped the name of a relatively well-known western coach who wasn't involved and probably would never consider an Ivy League job. The idea was that once the caller heard the name, he'd say something like, "Yeah, right," and hang up the phone knowing he certainly wasn't going to get any inside information from a competitor. Lo and behold, the name appeared in the big-city paper the next day. And several times thereafter, much to the amusement -- and amazement -- of the sports staff of the local paper. The moral of the story: Don't believe everything you read.

The Holy Cross spring prospectus is out (in PDF format). To get an early look at one of Dartmouth's nonconference opponents for 2006, click here. The Crusaders list three starters back on offense and eight on defense. They are coming off a 6-5 season that included a 28-16 win over Dartmouth on soggy Fitton Field.

The Dartmouth rugby team had a difficult go against the under-22 team from Uruguay at the end of its South America trip, but former Big Green cornerback Mike Ribero scored the first try of his rugby career.

Saturday, March 25, 2006

The Memorial Field visiting stands as they look in the final week of March, 2006 ... ... and the Memorial Field visiting stands as they looked before the project began. (Photo courtesy of Dartmouth)

More on Reggie Williams for Commissioner

Sometimes it is the media reporting on the media that makes a story. (Believe me, I've been there.) ... Whether Reggie Williams is, or will be a candidate for NFL commissioner is less important than the fact that the former Dartmouth and Cincinnati Bengals linebacker is being mentioned for the post. Today's mention (found here) traces back to yesterday's story in the Philadelphia Daily News. (Apparently I'm not the only one crawling the 'Net looking for this stuff.) ... I've interviewed Reggie several times (he played in Hanover before I arrived) and I found him a somewhat challenging interview. But here's a pretty good quote he gave in today's story regarding his qualifications: “I have a body of work. It’s not just arbitrary. There is a body of work out there that has facts that have happened."

I meant to bring this up earlier. When the Big Green's spring practice begins early next month, Dartmouth coach Buddy Teevens hopes to hold the sessions on Memorial Field. His thinking: Unlike in previous years, he doesn't have to save the field for next fall because it is being replaced by FieldTurf beginning May 15. And having spring ball on Memorial Field would give the Blackman Fields longer to recover. If you were at preseason practice last season you saw the very nice Blackman Fields chewed up like a polo field by the end of every session. A little more time to put down roots couldn't hurt.

After a 14-10 win over Hamburg and quarterback Brock Berlin, former Dartmouth coach John Lyons, now defensive coordinator for the Cologne Centurions, will be scheming a way to stop Amsterdam tomorrow in NFL Europe action. By the way, I traded emails with JL last week and he sounds great. Neat the way things have worked out for him.

Former Dartmouth All-American Mike Remlinger threw a scoreless inning yesterday as he tries to make it back to the Atlanta Braves as a non-roster player. Here's what manager Bobby Cox had to say after the 40-year-old southpaw's appearance: "Everybody in the bullpen is throwing good right now. Remlinger has been unhittable ..."

Finally, thanks to our new friends at The 13 Yard Line, a Colgate football blog, for a link on their site. See you in Hamilton in September. (For the record: I'm probably the only person who enjoys making the drive over there, but it's my favorite trip of the year.) Former Colgate standout Jamaal Branch and Lyons may be getting reacquainted soon, by the way.

Friday, March 24, 2006

Reggie Williams for NFL Commissioner?

According to the Philadelphia Daily News, former Dartmouth and Cincinnati Bengals linebacker Reggie Williams is among the early names being bandied about as a potential replacement for Paul Tagliabue as NFL Commissioner. Williams, currently vice president of planning and new development for Disney's Wide World of Sports Complex, told the newspaper:
"I'm pretty bullish about a lot of things. Certainly, if anyone in the NFL wants to further delve into my qualifications, I would be open to dialogue."

The New York Giants have spoken to Brian Levy, agent for Jay Fiedler, about possibly bringing the former Dartmouth QB and Miami Dolphins starter back to the Meadowlands as Peyton Eli Manning's backup according to this story. (You know how map companies insert little errors to see if anyone is copying them? I do the same thing to see if anybody is reading the blog. Right.)

The University of Pennsylvania is making it easier for students whose families would struggle to afford an Ivy League education. Students whose family income is less than $50,000 will be able to attend the Philadelphia school without taking out a loan.

Among the Dartmouth rugby players on a South America tour right now are Mike Ribero and Anthony Gargiulo, a couple of members of the All-Ivy League football team last fall.

Because there's enough work keeping up on recruiting for football I don't chase after recruiting info for other sports. Sometimes, however, it falls in my lap and deserves a nod. Such is the case with men's basketball recruit Elgin Fitgerald. When a big man coming to Dartmouth is honored as one of the five best players in his state, as Fitzgerald was in Colorado, it deserves a mention. Read about it and see a picture here.

Thursday, March 23, 2006

Ivy League Intrigue

Here's the "lede" for an opinion piece on the Wall Street Journal editorial page:

Something is very wrong at our elite universities. Last month Larry Summers resigned as president of Harvard; today Libyan dictator Moammar Gadhafi will speak by video to a conference at Columbia University that his regime is cosponsoring. (Columbia won't answer questions about how much funding it got from Libya or what implied strings were attached.) Then there's Yale, which for three weeks has refused to make any comment or defense beyond a vague 144-word statement about its decision to admit Sayed Rahmatullah Hashemi--a former ambassador-at-large of the murderous Afghan Taliban--as a special student.

To read more, click here.

Construction Photos - 3/23

(For earlier Memorial Field renovation photos click here, here and here.)

Click on the above photo to enlarge it and get a sense of how Memorial Field looks today. This was the first time the dramatic difference in the field (and how it is going to look) really hit me. Perhaps not coincidentally, one of the first things my kids said to me when they got home today was, "Have you seen the football stands?" Their school bus goes by the field and they, too, were struck by the change. I know it's for the best, but there's something about saying goodbye to the towering east stands that is a little sad.

More Discussion on Playoff Ban; Columbia Spectator Story Correction

(For a series of Memorial Field renovation photos click here, here and here.)

That sound you hear could be the initiative to allow Ivy League football teams to go on to the national playoffs grinding into another gear. Student government organizations from Harvard and Princeton have already supported the initiative. Next on tap is Penn according to this story in the Daily Pennsylvanian. (Wonder if Dartmouth will join the effort?) The question is, what will happen next? If/when the Ivy presidents publicly respond that nothing is changing, will those pushing for change quietly go away? If they do, the initiative is doomed. If that only causes them to redouble their efforts, the foundation under the ban could begin to crack. Time will tell. ...

The Columbia Spectator has a story about Norries Wilson (the first black head coach in Ivy football) and what it calls a lack of diversity among Ivy League coaches. Unfortunately, what is arguably one of the best school newspapers in the Ivy League has repeated a couple of serious factual errors with regard to Dartmouth and diversity. The Spectator writes:
In 2004, an internal investigation at Dartmouth found that while 30 percent of the student body was classified as minority, only ten percent of athletes were minorities and the school had only one black football or basketball coach in its history.

The reality is that Terry Dunn was actually the third black head basketball coach at Dartmouth after Marcus Jackson and Reggie Minton. Jackson, by the way, came to Hanover as head coach way back in 1974. As for football, black or minority assistants between 1981 and 2004 (date of the cited study) included Curtis Jones, Bill Harris, Craig Cason, Des Robinson, Gary Emmanuel, Jim Webster, Rob Talley and KiJuan Ware. ...

The Spectator is on more solid ground with this story on Wilson gearing up for the start of practice.

From the Los Angeles Avengers' game notes regarding former Dartmouth quarterback Brian Mann:
UNLIKELY TACKLERS: Among their other duties, Avenger kicker Remy Hamilton and backup QB Brian Mann have been busy making tackles on kickoff coverage this season. Hamilton, who leads the AFL in scoring by kickers with 95 points, also ranks at No. 8 in the league in special-teams tackles with 7.5. Mann, who started three of the first four games of the season at quarterback, has made 5.5 special-teams tackles in three games of action on the kickoff coverage unit (tied for No. 27 in the AFL).

Wednesday, March 22, 2006

The True Meaning of Team

I read this story yesterday and should have linked to it then. ... Although the Dartmouth men's hockey didn't win the ECACHL tournament championship the Big Green can teach us all a little something about what it means to be on a TEAM. Don't miss this story.

More on Former President Freedman's Passing

The Daily Dartmouth does a nice job telling the story of former Dartmouth president James Freedman, who has died at the age of 70. I'll have some thoughts about President Freedman and Dartmouth sports in a few days, but this is not the time. ... Tom Gilmore, the Ivy player of the year when he was at Penn and a well-regarded assistant under John Lyons at Dartmouth, continues to have extensive turnover on his staff at Holy Cross . ... Green Alert has linked to several iterations of the story about a Harvard football recruit playing basketball for Minnesota. Now Sports Illlustrated on Campus catches up to the story with Dartmouth grad Jacob Osterhout pulling the piece together. Zach Puchtel, by the way, intends to return to Harvard to graduate. As interesting as the story is, and it's neat that Puchtel got a chance to play college sports at a high level, does it strike anyone else that he not only "used" the system, but also "used" the University of Minnesota? The more I think about this story the more uncomfortable it makes me.

The NCAA has released its list of what it bills as the "100 most influential student-athletes." According to the NCAA release, "The NCAA defines the 100 Most Influential Student-Athletes as those who have made a significant impact or major contributions to society." Lists like these are always open to debate and this one is no different. Althought five of the 10 names associated with I-AA football are Ivy Leaguers, there isn't a Dartmouth name on the list, football or otherwise. Here are football players and coaches on the list who are associated with what are now I-AA schools (courtesy of I-AA.org):
William "Bill" Campbell V, Columbia
Calvin Hill, Yale
Jerome "Bud" Holland, Cornell
Rev. Jesse L. Jackson Sr., NC A&T
Robert Kraft, Columbia
Vince Lombardi, Fordham
Joseph P. Paterno, Brown
Walter Jerry Payton, Jackson State
Jerry Rice, Miss. Valley State
Edward G. Robinson, Grambling State

Tuesday, March 21, 2006

Ex-Dartmouth President James Freedman Dies

Former Dartmouth President James Freedman has died in his Cambridge, Mass., home at age 70 of non-Hodgkins lymphoma. Freedman was the Dartmouth president from 1987-98. To read the New York Times report click here. For the Boston Globe story click here.
Freedman came to Dartmouth from the University of Iowa. To read the Des Moines Register story click here. For a report from The Dartmouth click here.

Another Initiative to End Playoff Ban

From yesterday's Harvard Crimson:
"The Undergraduate Council (UC) last night called upon University President Lawrence H. Summers to press the Council of Ivy Group Presidents, the governing body of the Ivy League athletic conference, to end a rule that prevents Harvard’s football squad from playing in the postseason."

Now Princeton and Harvard have both brought the issue of the playoff ban to the front burner. (See this earlier post to read about the Princeton iniative.) It will be interesting to see if Dartmouth and other schools follow their lead. I believe at some point the presidents will have no choice but to explain and attempt to justify the exclusionary policy (which they have never done even remotely to the satisfaction of those involved) or to change it. I also believe the more people know about the policy, the better chance it will be changed. Princeton and Harvard, to their credit, have started to shine the light on the issue.

Several times in the fall I mentioned former offensive lineman Mike McCune '91 is a sports anchor for WCAX TV in Burlington, Vt.. The station must have updated his bio or something because a link popped up on my computer this morning so I figured I'd share it. To catch up with Mike, click here.

I just saw a story in the New York Times about some high school seniors applying to 20 or more colleges. The story says times have changed. I guess they have.

Monday, March 20, 2006

Monday, May (Oops - March ) 20 Photos


This view shows how much of the original structure has been cut away and that there's more to be done.
The arrival of the crane made for interesting viewing.
Every team needs a spark.
It's all about teamwork.


Blogger is apparently having an issue with loading photos. I'm going to head over to Flickr and load the pictures there. Once they are up over there I'll put a link here. Then when Blogger is fully operational I'll post the pictures back here. UPDATE: Apparently Blogger has resolved the issue. For now, at least. The question I have is, Why am I doing this? I'm not really sure, because once again I'm putting way too much time into this 'freebie' part of the Big Green Alert service. Glutton for punishment, I guess.

10 Questions Posted

To learn a little more about incoming freshman Chris Burns, check out the latest edition of 10 Questions, posted Monday on the Big Green Alert main site.

Burns is a speedy, 5-10ish tailback from Texas who weighs somewhere in the 175-pound range. A team captain at The Woodlands, which sent freshman wide receiver Eric Paul to Dartmouth, Burns ran for 585 yards and had eight touchdowns as a senior, earning All-District and All-County honors. His speed in the 40 varies according to who is on the stopwatch or at the keyboard, but one point remains constant: He's awfully fast.

In this edition of "10 Questions," Chris says he models his game after a college player who might be headed to Texas in the June draft and cites a quote from one of the most underrated baseball movies of all time as his favorite saying. ...

Incoming quarterback/defensive back/athlete Jordan Kling continues to live up to the "athlete" label. At the Charleston High School Boys Indoor Invitational track meet, an Illinois track meet that had 64 schools involved, Kling won the triple jump with a measure of 41 feet, 11 and one-quarter inches.

UPDATE: That was just Kling's second triple-jump competition ever. His mark qualified him for states.

The Big Dance and a Guy Named Cha-Cha

We're back from something-less-than glorious Trenton, N.J., after watching the underdog Dartmouth women's basketball team take No. 9 Rutgers to the final 13 seconds of their opening-round NCAA Tournament game last night before a debatable offensive foul call essentially ended the Big Green's chances of being the first No. 14 or 15 seed in tournament history to win a game. Playing before what amounted to a home crowd, Rutgers used the two foul shots it was awarded on a "charge" well outside the arc to seal a 63-58 win. Rutgers coach Vivian Stringer freely admitted in the postgame press conference that if not for the help of the crowd that spurred her team on when Dartmouth came back from 13-0 and 26-10 deficits, the Ivy Leaguers would have pulled off the upset that would have shocked the women's college basketball world.

Time for the mandatory football content: Volunteering in media relations for host school Rider was former Dartmouth placekicker Carl Romero '89. After being tipped off that he was there and spotting him walking ahead of me in the bowels of Sovereign Arena, I had some fun by calling out, "Hey, Cha-Cha." When Carl turned with a curious smile, I reintroduced myself to someone I hadn't seen in a decade and a half and we laughed about how I remembered his nickname all these years later. Turns out he's the defensive coordinator for a high school football team in New Jersey where he teaches history. Don't ask me why this stuff sticks in your brain, but I said to him, "Englishtown, N.J., right?" He smiled and confirmed that I'd not only remembered his nickname, but also nailed down his hometown. ...

Among those who made the trip to Trenton to support the coaches who share their work space in Hanover were Dartmouth men's head basketball coach Terry Dunn and assistant Shay Berry. That's class. ... While the LA Avengers were posting a 60-57 win over the Colorado Crush of the Arena League yesterday, Brian Mann's successor as the starting quarterback had a second so-so game in a row. According to the team web site: "After blazing his way into L.A.’s record books the last few weeks, including the most touchdowns for an Avenger in his first three starts (17) and most TDs in a first start (7), QB Sonny Cumbie only managed 216 yards and three scores on 20-37 passing. "

The next installment of "10 Questions" will go up on the main Green Alert site later today.

Sunday, March 19, 2006

Hockey Rebounds; Strong Start for Lyons' Team

Kudos to the Dartmouth men's ice hockey team for bouncing back from Friday's disaster against Harvard in the ECACHL semifinals to post a 3-2 win over Colgate in the consolation game. I've covered the tournament in Albany just one time and never had the opportunity to ask the coaches and players how they feel about participating in a consolation game. I'd think after a 10-1 loss to your archrival in the opener, opinions on hitting the ice again would run the gamut. Some people might simply want to get out of Dodge as quickly as possible. Others might want to do something -- anything -- to erase the taste of the humiliation the evening before. ... Former Dartmouth coach John Lyons enjoyed a successful debut as defensive coordinator for the NFL Europe's Cologne Centurions. Lyons' defense stymied a Hamburg offense quarterbacked by Brock Berlin, holding the Sea Devils to 235 total yards and 10-for-32 passing with four interceptions in a 14-10 win before 15,243 in Hamburg. ... The Jay Fiedler Celebrity Golf Classic fund-raiser is set for April 3 in Florida. Read a little bit about it here. ... It happens more often than you'd imagine. A solid high school athlete goes through the recruiting process, gets a little extra help from admissions to get through the door and presently quits the team that recruited him or her. To get an ethicist's read on that scenario, click here. Or if you are signed up for a free New York Times subscription, click here. ... I'll be staffing the Dartmouth-Rutgers NCAA women's basketball tournament game in beautiful downtown Trenton, N.J., tonight. If 6-foot-4 Elise Morrison hadn't been lost for the season, the Big Green would probably have gotten a higher seed and had a better chance to spring an upset. But this is a well-coached, veteran team with terrific guard play, always a key at tournament time, so stay tuned. ... The next edition of "10 Questions" will be posted Monday.

Saturday, March 18, 2006

Saturday's Notes

Dartmouth senior Ryan Danehy, a longsnapper on the football team and an attackman on the lacrosse team, has been recognized as a local Coca-Cola Community honoree. According to the soft drink company, "The Coca-Cola Community All-Americans program recognizes student-athletes who are making a difference in their community." Senior cross country All-American Melanie Schorr is Dartmouth's nominee for the national recognition award. ... The NFL Europe season kicks off today and the league's official preview has a mention of former Dartmouth coach John Lyons as well as views on how the season could play out. ... He was let go in the final round of NFL Europe cuts, but until then former lineman Derham Cato was a shining example for the North American Football League combine. ... The Ithaca Journal has a byline story on Dartmouth's 10-1 meltdown against Harvard in the ECACHL semifinals in Albany. ... Off to Trenton, N.J., later today to staff tomorrow's NCAA women's basketball game between Dartmouth and Albany. ... Look for the latest "10 Questions" with an incoming recruit Monday on the Green Alert home page.

Friday, March 17, 2006

Harvard Humbles Hockey

ECACHL Semifinals at Albany: Harvard 10, Dartmouth 1. The Big Green probably needed to win the tournament to have a chance at the NCAA Tournament. Dartmouth will be in the consolation game Saturday. Here's a link to the AP story. The final score represented the second-worst loss in ECACHL semifinal history. For the Dartmouth recap, click here.

JL's Excellent Adventure

I learned a little of the back story this morning about how former Dartmouth coach John Lyons ended up back in NFL Europe this spring as defensive coordinator of the Cologne Centurions. As it turns out, he has Oakland Raiders coach Art Shell to thank.

It went down like this: First the Raiders hired Shell. Shell, in turn, spirited newly appointed Centurions coach Darryl Sims away from Cologne to serve on his staff in Oakland. The void in Germany was filled with the promotion of Dave Duggan from defensive coordinator to head coach on Feb. 21.

Duggan then put in a call to Lyons, who has known the former UNH, Brown and Holy Cross assistant for years and coached with him last spring in NFL Europe. Kimball Union Academy, where Lyons coached last fall and has been working in the athletic department, graciously gave him a leave to coach in Europe.

Lyons and Cologne open the season Saturday against the Hamburg Sea Devils. 

Construction Photos - 3/17

(Note: Click on photos to get a closer look)

Here's the first glimpse at what lower stands will look like from the home stands. Keep in mind, the visiting stands will be only about half this high when work is done, and they will have a building behind them when the project is finished. The stands will stretch in front of Leverone Fieldhouse.
It's not a high-wire act, but if you are afraid of heights, you might not want to do this for a living.
Until I took a good look at this photo, I didn't realize the guys are wearing harnesses and are tethered for safety. Nor did I realize they had propane tanks for cutting away the stands.

Are you ready for some ... basketball?

It's only my opinion, but I think the first two days of the NCAA Tournament are the best two sports days of the year. I'm not terribly interested in games pitting major conference teams against each other, but when Winthrop is taking Tennessee to the wire, it's riveting stuff. (I was lucky enough to staff Vermont's win over Syracuse last year in Worcester and I don't think I've ever enjoyed an event I covered as much.) After the last of the true Cinderellas is eliminated this weekend, my interest in the tournament wanes until it's down to eight teams playing for the Final Four. ...

The Dartmouth women's team has a tough road ahead Sunday with Rutgers, perhaps the best defensive team in the country. Still, the Big Green will enjoy the weekend. The players are wearing shirts bearing this message on the back:
1 ticket to Leede Arena - $6
1 slice of pizza postgame - $1.25
1 pre-game meal - $12.50
1 Dartmouth degree - $120,000
Back-to-back trips to the Big Dance - Priceless

All of which is bringing on another rant. About the only thing as annoying as the Ivy presidents' ban on going to the playoffs is the Ivy League's lack of a postseason basketball tournament. While opinion is divided on the issue (Penn and Princeton fans abhor the idea that someone might sneak through and disrupt their hegemony) players, fans and coaches from six other schools would like nothing more than a chance to get a taste of the postseason. I've written about this many times and won't rehash all the reasons why I think it's a good idea. For someone else's perspective, check out what the Syracuse Daily Orange has to say, with quotes from Penn coach Fran Dunphy essentially supporting the tournament idea. (The DO requires signing up to read more than the first "take" but it's a quick and painless process.) Today's Cornell Sun has a column supporting the idea as well.

Thursday, March 16, 2006

Shhh! NCAA Basketball Graduation Rates

From an Associated Press story today about the graduation rate of schools with teams in the NCAA basketball tournament:
"The study looked at 63 women's teams and 64 men's teams in the NCAA Tournament -- Dartmouth (women) and Penn (men) did not report graduation rates."

I've always found it surprising that the Ivy League refuses to share those numbers. A conference that aspires to be the paragon of college athletics only encourages people to wonder, "Um, do they have something to hide?" I've spoken with a number of coaches and administrators around the league over the years who feel strongly the policy should change. ...

Brian Mann isn't starting at quarterback for the Los Angeles Avengers of the Arena League right now, but he's still contributing to the team. According to the LA game notes, he's made 4.5 tackles on kickoff coverage in recent weeks. ... One of the authors of the new book about Barry Bonds, Game of Shadows, is a Brown graduate according to this story in the school paper. If you haven't read the excerpt in last week's Sports Illustrated, by all means check it out.

Wednesday, March 15, 2006

Alumni Gym Update

I've been spending so much time updating you on the work at Memorial
Field I've forgotten to share a link for information on the Alumni
Gym project. To check up on the gym, click here.

Story on President Wright

A subscriber just sent me this link to a PDF file that was made of the Chronicles story with President Wright that I referred to earlier today. It's a relatively large file (4.4 mb I believe) but a pretty good read. There's background about the president that I did not know.

March 15 Construction Pix



Demolition work continues on Memorial Field. At top is a view under the stands. Notice the stairways leading to the upper portion of the visiting stands have been removed. The second photo is taken looking over Red Rolfe Field.

Postseason Playoff Resolution Stirs Talk

Ivy League presidents have been notoriously mum on exactly why football is the only conference sport prohibited from postseason play. (See recent Princeton resolution encouraging an end from the ban.) There's a good reason why they are quiet: They can't rationally justify the fairness of the ban. Check out what Princeton President Shirley M. Tilghman told the Daily Princetonian:
"The logic was not completely dependent on the exams schedule, but rather on the very special rivalry that has been our tradition of Ivy football."

The Harvard Crimson has an interesting story today about athletes changing sports after arriving on campus including a placekicker who left the football team before classes began and now plays volleyball. Explained former kicker Jordan Wietzen:
“I got here and I realized that I got really caught up in the recruiting aspect of Harvard and playing Division I football. I really didn’t listen to what the coaches had to say, what was involved, and what your obligations were. As the first week of football started, I realized that I didn’t really want to be part of that. I had made the wrong decision for myself."

There is what appears to be an interesting story about Dartmouth President Jim Wright in the latest Chronicle of Higher Ed. I can't access it because I don't have a subscription, but at least part of the "lede"is intriguing. It describes Wright's desk and goes like this:
"Amid fairly standard desk fare, such as autographed baseballs and a bust of Beethoven, are four curious items: a glass model of a human skull, a dinged-up little knife, a hefty chunk of lead, and a brass door handle."
For more on the NCAA's Academic Progress Rate program, click here. Scroll through this lengthy document to see how Dartmouth fared. At the very bottom, Dartmouth is listed as one of the top overall performers according to the APR scale.

Tuesday, March 14, 2006

"Visions of idealism go up in smoke"

When news broke last week that Lafayette was going to begin offering basketball scholarships, I wrote a little about the history between the Patriot League and the Ivy League. The Express-Times goes into more detail with Alan Childs, a psychology professor at Lafayette and the first director of the Colonial League, which would be renamed the Patriot League. In the Express-Times story he rues the changes that have come across the league and says:

"We believed the way of the Ivy and Colonial Leagues would be the wave of the future and we were going to convince people of that. Unfortunately, time has shown that wasn't going to happen."

With all the renovation pictures I've been posting maybe it's time to take another look at the architectural renderings of what the new varsity house and visiting side of Memorial Field will look like in the fall of '07. To see both the front and the rear of the new building, click here. ... To see the footprint of the new building and stands, click here. ... The earlier pictures I posted of work on the stadium can be found if you scroll down this page.


Monday, March 13, 2006

Dartmouth Women's Basketball Draws Rutgers

As expected, the Big Green (23-6) was given a 14 seed in the NCAA Division I women's basketball tournament. As feared, Dartmouth won the honor of (probably) busing to glorious Trenton, N.J., instead of a plane ride to Denver or Tucson or Nashville.
The Big Green will face a talented-but-erratic Rutgers (25-4) team that had a tussle with neighboring Princeton earlier this season. The Tigers were within four points of the Scarlet Knights inside of the final two minutes before losing, 65-56.

Monday 3/13 Construction Photos



While crews were removing the bench seating at the top of the visiting stands at Memorial Field it was hard to see any progress being made. Now it's a lot easier to see that work is progressing.


A Call for the End of the Ban on Football Playoffs

To read the text from a "Resolution to End Ivy League ban on Football Postseason," click here. This is a well-researched, impressive argument for why the ban is unfair. Do be sure to read it to the end.

The proposal by Harvard senior Jordan Jones was mentioned briefly at the end of this Daily Princetonian story in which the paper notes the school's student government endorsed the resolution. Opinions anyone?

Monday Ramblings

Brian Mann's challenge to win back the starting quarterback position with the Los Angeles Avengers got a little tougher when new starter Sonny Cumbie threw six touchdown passes and completed 23-of-34 throws overall while leading LA to a 75-61 win over San Jose yesterday. ... The pairings are set for the ECACHL men's semifinals in Albany this weekend. The Dartmouth skaters will face off against Harvard at 4:30 Friday and Cornell and Colgate will battle at 8. The winners play Saturday night at 8. The Dartmouth men (14-11-2 overall, 12-6-2 ECACHL) dropped a 6-2 decision to Harvard in late October but turned that around with a 5-1 win over the Crimson in the second meeting, still way back in December. Some pundits believe the ECACHL co-champion Big Green has to win the title to earn its way into the NCAA field for the first time since 1980. ... The Dartmouth women's basketball team, meanwhile, learns its NCAA dance partner at 7 tonight. The Big Green (23-6) could garner a 14 seed. ... Look for the latest "10 Questions" with an incoming recruit in a little bit over on the Green Alert main site at biggreenalert.com.

Sunday, March 12, 2006

Dartmouth Women Going Dancing

The Dartmouth women's basketball team advanced to the NCAA Tournament Sunday with a 63-48 win over Princeton in the Ivy League playoff at Yale. To make its second visit to the dance in as many years, all the Big Green had to do was defeat both fellow tri-champions -- Brown and Princeton -- who had beaten them the last time they met, in a span of less than 48 hours. Dartmouth (23-6) finds out who it is playing and where on Monday evening. For the AP story on today's game, click here. Dartmouth, by the way, made it this far despite losing 6-foot-4 junior center and scoring leader Elise Morrison November. ... Mandatory football content: Steelers coach Bill Cowher sat near midcourt as he watched daughter Meagan play for the Tigers.

Green Icers Advance to Albany

Thanks to a 3-1 win over Yale before a crowd of 4,232 at Thompson Arena, the Dartmouth men's ice hockey team has moved on to the ECACHL semifinal at Albany Friday night against an opponent to be determined. The Big Green is bidding for its first NCAA Tournament appearance since 1980. ... Former All-Ivy League defensive back Jack Manning '72 traveled to Hanover last fall from his Montana home to see nephew John Manning '08 in a Big Green football uniform and apparently doesn't mind traveling to see basketball, either. He gets a mention in this story in the Great Falls Tribune. ... James Perry, brother of former Dartmouth offensive coordinator James Perry and the Ivy League Player of the Year when he was a quarterback at Brown, has joined the staff at Delaware. James spent one season coaching with the Big Green. ... Off to Yale for the Dartmouth-Princeton women's playoff to determine the Ivy League's NCAA Tournament bid.

Saturday, March 11, 2006

Green Finishes Third in NCAA Skiing

A strong finished allowed Dartmouth to close out the NCAA Men's and Women's Skiing Championships in third place, the shool's best showing since 1982. To learn more, click here.

Dartmouth is King of the Hill ... Again

With so many older, international students competing for Western schools, it's hard for the Dartmouth ski team to challenge for the national team championship. Individually, however, the Big Green has quite a streak going and it continued last night at Steamboat as this story from Ski Racing News reports:
Dartmouth College should be allowed to retire the NCAA slalom trophy. Karl Johnson gave the Big Green its fifth straight men’s slalom title under the lights on Howelsen Hill Friday.
The ECACHL co-champion Dartmouth men's ice hockey team dispatched Yale last night 5-1 before another crowd of 4,000-plus at Thompson Arena. With a win tonight the Big Green will punch its ticket to Albany. ... The Ivy League tri-champion women's basketball team, meanwhile, is a game away from another trip to the NCAA Tournament after defeating Brown last night, 73-62 in the first round of the Ivy League tiebreaker. Dartmouth plays Princeton tomorrow afternoon for the league's automatic bid. (My family and I were at the game in New Haven last night and we'll head down against tomorrow. Having covered the team for almost 20 years, I enjoy watching them play, know the kids and consider coach Chris Wielgus a friend.) ... The Mobile Register writes about Dartmouth alum Mike Slive's '62 ascendancy in 2002 to SEC commissioner and notes he'll be in Indianapolis this weekend as a member of the NCAA Men's Basketball Tournament Selection Committee. The Register story notes:
The commissioner of Conference USA, with his Ivy League pedigree (Dartmouth) and his cerebral approach to problem solving, was not given much of a chance of taking over the most prestigious commissioner's post in collegiate athletics.

I try to limit how much I "bug" Dartmouth's pro athletes during their season. Hence, I touched base with Casey Cramer after the playoffs and Jay Fiedler before the season. Shortly before the Arena League kicked off this year I left a message with Brian Mann, always a good one at getting back to me. When I didn't hear from BMann, I figured he had a lot on his plate in the run up to his first season as the Los Angeles Avengers' starter. Well, I got a quick note from Brian last night apologizing for not responding (not to worry, Brian ;-). Brian reports that the "slight" ankle issue I reported he's been battling since the opening game is more than slight. He actually tore a ligament. Still, he sounded good and a little feisty about winning back the starting position. Brian didn't share this next nugget; I got it elsewhere. You know when he got hurt? The final play of the opening game, the Avengers' only win. The Arena League won't allow quarterbacks to drop back and kneel on the final plays, like every other league in existence. So with the game in hand and seconds remaining, Brian had to run the play in which he was hurt.

Friday, March 10, 2006

Lafayette Adding Hoop Scholarships

A story in the Allentown Morning Call reports that Lafayette, which had been the Patriot League's last holdout against basketball scholarships (not counting Army and Navy), will begin awarding them in the 2006-07 school year. The story is interesting for the insights it offers on the difficulty Lafayette had recruiting without scholarships against schools in its own conference. (The Patriot League does not offer merit-based football scholarhips.)

A little background: When the Patriot League was founded in 1986 (as the Colonial League), it was considered the "sister conference" of the Ivy League and eschewed athletic scholarships. (That was the basis for the unofficial scheduling arrangement between the two leagues that to this day has Dartmouth football hamstrung.) What the Patriot League schools came to realize soon enough is that, everything else being equal, fishing in the same small pool with the Ivy League for elite student-athletes was a losing proposition. Adjustments in the football financial aid policy at some member schools helped the league regain its competitive footing against the Ivies in football and the reintroduction of scholarships has done, and should do, the same in basketball, as a quote from Lafayette athletic director Bruce McCutcheon in this Express-Times story suggests:
"This allows these coaches to go after the kids everyone else has been going after. When we go head-to-head with (Patriot League member) American, with their scholarships, or the Ivy League for a student-athlete we have an opportunity to get them. Before this, we didn't have a shot."

A Real Heavyweight Wide Receiver

Zack Cable didn't want to wonder. Didn't want to graduate from college with an itch he never scratched.
That's why Cable, a freshman heavyweight rower at Dartmouth, has taken a different kind of plunge and is giving college football a try.
The 6-foot-7ish, 205-pound Cable played football as a freshman at Buckingham Browne and Nichols in Cambridge, Mass., but then saw his gridiron career sidetracked for the next two years by a broken ankle and a partially torn ligament in his elbow. Although he enjoyed success in basketball (he was all-league on the hardwood as a sophomore and captain as a senior) and crew (varsity second boat as a junior, first boat and captain as a senior), he never got football out of his blood. And so two games into his senior year, he decided to give the game another shot. But after a couple of weeks of practice and with the realization there were just a few games left, he consulted with the school athletic director and chose to hang up his cleats to be ready (and healthy) for the basketball season.
Now, with the blessing of crew coach Buzz Congram, Cable is finally going to give football a shot. Explained Cable in an email: "I want to play football here because I regret not playing in high school for whatever reason ... and because I never got the opportunity to see if I could be good."
Teevens is intrigued by Cable, who played varsity lacrosse at BBN as a freshman and sophomore.
"He's a real good athlete," the coach said. "He's kind of like (freshman wide receiver) Eric Paul but taller. He looked good off the drills. I know the guys are talking about him.
"With Paul (6-4), Ryan Fuselier (6-5) and (Cable), we could have some very tall receivers that would be hard to deal with." ...

Nick Hartigan may be done carrying the football for Brown, but he's still making news. The former Rhodes Scholarship finalist has earned an NCAA Postgraduate Scholarship. ... The latest to express some interest in signing free agent quarterback Jay Fiedler according to published reports: the Philadelphia Eagles. ... All-Ivy defensive end Anthony Gargiulo said at the women's lacrosse game earlier this week that he got a call from the Indianapolis Colts about an upcoming pro day at the University of New Hampshire. Gargiulo was flattered by the invitation, but because he hasn't been training for football and is playing rugby this spring, he declined the offer to participate.

Thursday, March 09, 2006

Reggie Williams on Ballot

Former Dartmouth and Cincinnati Bengals standout Reggie Williams is on the ballot released Thursday for the College Football Hall of Fame. He's joined on the 77-man I-A ballot by former Yale running back Rich Diana, Princeton kicker Charley Gogolak, Yale running back Dick Jauron and Harvard tight end/punter Pat McInally. The Hall of Fame Class will be announced on May 16.

The 2006 Division I-A Player Candidates:

Billy Ray Adams, Mississippi, Fullback, 1959-61
Troy Aikman, Oklahoma / UCLA, Quarterback, 1984-85, 1987-88
Trev Alberts, Nebraska, Linebacker, 1990-93
Bobby C. Anderson, Colorado, Running Back, 1967-69
Otis Armstrong, Purdue, Running Back, 1970-72
Steve Bartkowski, California, Quarterback, 1972-74
Bob Berry, Oregon, Quarterback, 1962-64
Benny Blades, Miami (Fla.), Defensive Back, 1985-87
Tom Brahaney, Oklahoma, Center, 1970-72
Dave Brown, Michigan, Defensive Back, 1972-74
Ronnie Caveness, Arkansas, Center, 1962-64
Jim Crawford, Wyoming, Running Back, 1954-56
Randall Cunningham, UNLV, Punter/Quarterback, 1982-84
Jeff Davis, Clemson, Linebacker, 1978-81
Rich Diana, Yale, Running Back, 1979-81
Eric Dickerson, Southern Methodist, Running Back, 1979-82
Don Dufek, Michigan, Defensive Back, 1973-75
Ed Dyas, Auburn, Fullback, 1958-60
Carl Eller, Minnesota, Tackle, 1961-63
Steve Emtman, Washington, Defensive Lineman, 1989-91
Bill Enyart, Oregon State, Fullback, 1966-68
Thomas Everett, Baylor, Free Safety, 1983-86
Dave Gallagher, Michigan, Defensive Tackle, 1970-73
Kirk Gibson, Michigan State, Wide Receiver, 1975-78
Charley Gogolak, Princeton, Place Kicker, 1963-65
Bob Golic, Notre Dame, Linebacker, 1976-78
Terrence Hanratty, Notre Dame, Quarterback, 1966-68
Al Harris, Arizona State, Defensive End, 1975-78
Major Harris, West Virginia, Quarterback, 1987-89
Chad Hennings, Air Force, Defensive Tackle, 1984-87
Mark Herrmann, Purdue, Quarterback, 1977-80
Dick Jauron, Yale, Running Back, 1970-72
Johnnie Johnson, Texas, Safety, 1976-79
Chip Kell, Tennessee, Offensive Guard, 1968-70
Rex Kern, Ohio State, Quarterback, 1968-70
Jess Lewis, Oregon State, Defensive Tackle, 1966-67, 1969
Robert Lytle, Michigan, Running Back, 1974-76
Rueben Mayes, Washington State, Running Back, 1982-85
Pat McInally, Harvard, Tight End, 1972-74
Marlin McKeever, Southern California, End, 1958-60
Art Monk, Syracuse, Wide Receiver, 1976-79
Paul Naumoff, Tennessee, Linebacker, 1964-66
Bob Novogratz, Army, Guard, 1957-58
Tom Nowatzke, Indiana, Fullback, 1961-64
Phillip Olsen, Utah State, Defensive End, 1967-69
Jim Otis, Ohio State, Fullback, 1967-69
Dave Parks, Texas Tech, End, 1961-63
Mike Phipps, Purdue, Quarterback, 1967-69
Ahmad Rashad (Bobby Moore), Oregon, Running Back, 1969-71
Ron Rivera, California, Linebacker, 1980-83
Mike Rozier, Nebraska, Running Back, 1981-83
Lucius Sanford, Georgia Tech, Linebacker, 1974-77
Jim Seymour, Notre Dame, End, 1966-68
Sterling Sharpe, South Carolina, Wide Receiver, 1984-87
Jeff Siemon, Stanford, Linebacker, 1968-71
Ron Simmons, Florida State, Nose Guard, 1977-80
Bruce Smith, Virginia Tech, Defensive Tackle, 1981-84
Emmitt Smith, Florida, Running Back, 1987-89
Chris Spielman, Ohio State, Linebacker, 1984-87
Larry Station, Iowa, Linebacker, 1982-85
Don Stephenson, Georgia Tech, Center, 1955-57
Pat Swilling, Georgia Tech, Defensive End, 1982-85
Darryl Talley, West Virginia, Linebacker, 1979-82
Jim Taylor, Louisiana State, Fullback, 1956-57
Lawrence Taylor, North Carolina, Linebacker, 1977-80
Clendon Thomas, Oklahoma, Running Back, 1955-57
Thurman Thomas, Oklahoma State, Running Back, 1984-87
Anthony Thompson, Indiana, Running Back, 1986-89
Gino Torretta, Miami (Fla.), Quarterback, 1989-92
Don Trull, Baylor, Quarterback, 1961-63
Charlie Ward, Florida State, Quarterback, 1989, 1991-93
Wilson Whitley, Houston, Defensive Tackle, 1973-76
Clarence Williams, Washington State, Running Back, 1972-74
Reggie Williams, Dartmouth, Linebacker, 1973-75
Scott Woerner, Georgia, Defensive Back, 1977-80
Richard Wood, Southern California, Linebacker, 1972-74
Chris Zorich, Notre Dame, Defensive Tackle, 1987-90

All-Time Letterwinners

Mark Abel '97 .
Neil Abramson '89 .
Clay Adams '93 .
Joe Adams '70 .
Russell Adams '71 .
Chris Adamson '97 .
Robert Adelizzi '57 .
Peter Agnes '99 .
Joan Ai '98 (M)
James Aieta '35 .
Mark Akey '81
Robert Albrecht '47 .
Rhonda Albright '84 (M)
Fritz Alexander '47 .
Stanley Alger '48 .
Jon Aljancic '97 .
George Allen '26 .
John Allen '23 .
Walter Allen '93 .
Benjamin Alling '02 .
Donald Alvarez '47 .
Nathaniel Ambrose '13 .
Griffin Anderson '90
Byron Anderson '76 .
Daniel Anderson '02 .
David Anderson '89 .
Herbert Anderson '91 .
Jon Anderson '55 .
Lee Anderson '43 .
Walter Anderson '54 .
William Anderson '45 .
Joseph Andrejco USMC
Harold Andres '31 .
Geoffrey Andrews '83 .
Roger Antaya '44 .
John Appleford '60 .
Philip Arant '77
Joseph Arico '42 .
Joseph Armanini '40 .
Dale Armstrong '46 .
Ellsworth Armstrong '30
Roger Arnold '44 .
Devon Arsenault '93 .
Oscar Arslanian '61(M)
Earl Arthurs '35 .
Abraham Artz '88
Cyril Aschenbach '23
John Asher '83 .
Alex Athanas '52 .
Frederick Atkin '86 .
Todd Audsley '82 .
Jared Augello '97 .
Noel Augustyn '68 .
Damon Austin '01 .
Mario Avila '04 .
Ernest Babcock '70 .
Brian Bachelder '76 .
Tony Badalato '91 .
Albert Baehr '90 .
Robert Bagdasarian '55 .
Richard Bagley '80 .
Charles Bailey '50 .
John Baird '60 .
Spencer Baird '44 .
Brian Bajari '95 .
John Bajus '94 .
George Balchunas '87 .
Albert Baldwin '34 .
James Baldwin '10 .
Christopher Balish '88
George Bankart '06 .
Henry Bankart '09 .
Lawrence Bankart '10 .
Norman Bankart '29 .
Wayne Bantner '92 .
Jason Barabas '93 .
Benjamin Barber '95 .
Henry Barber '32 .
Kevin Barber '78 .
Howard Barends '13 .
Jay Barnard '04 .
David Barr '48 .
John Barr '49 (M)
Dale Bartholomew '42 .
Charles Bartlett '27 (M)
Richard Bartlett '89 .
Lawrence Bartnick '46 .
Jesse Barton '92 .
Jason Bash '06 .
John Bassett '69 (M)
David Bathrick '59 .
William Batt '60 (M)
Matthew Battipaglia '05 .
James Bauman '41 .
Raymont Baxter '17 .
Richard Bayless '84 .
Matthew Bazala '99 .
Minot Beacham '90 .
William Beagle '56 .
Richard Beams '65 .
John Beard '95 .
Mickey Beard '67
Lee Beattie '57 .
Richard Beattie '61 .
Walter Beatty '85 .
Thomas Bechler '56
Ray Becker '59 (M)
Roland Becker '49 .
David Beeman '50 .
Joseph Beer '14 .
Clark Beier '70
Gregg Bekelja '84 .
Reginald Belhomme '00
John Belknap '04
Bruce Bell '76 .
David Bell '59 .
Ernest Bell '94
Davies Beller '83 .
Gordon Bennett '37 .
Jay Bennett '71 .
Ray Bennett '13
Richard Bennett '48 .
Robert Bennett '34 .
William Bennett USMC .
Peter Benzian '64 .
William Bergman '97 .
Kenneth Bevan '19 .
Robert Bialas '72 .
Arunas Bielinis '73 .
Daniel Bierwagen '73 .
James Biggie '47 .
Henry Billings '36 .
Matthew Birdseye '03 .
Robert Birge '92 .
George Bixby '57 .
Christian Bjelland '76 .
Eric Bjorkman '93 .
Henry Bjorkman '25 .
Richard Black '29 .
Jeffrey Blackburn '91 .
Gary Blackman '68 .
Melissa Blackman '94
Henry Blair '89 (M)
Henry Blake '07 .
Maurice Blake '10 (M)
James Blatherwick '06 .
Damon Blechen '98 .
Josh Bloom '95
James Bloomer '83 .
Thomas Bloomer '53 .
William Blossom '87 .
William Blumenschein '63
Donald Bly '07 .
Jason Blydell '08 .
Michael Bobo '92 .
Charles Bodley '46 .
Edwin Bodwell '88 .
Price Boeye '90 .
Willie Bogan '71 .
Peter Bogardus '51 .
John Bohn '87 .
Edward Boies '63 .
Kenneth Bollens '98 .
Chester Bolles '25 .
Harry Bonk USN .
Terrence Bonus '81
Harold Booma '30 .
Thomas Booth '54 .
Christopher Boran '95 .
Shawn Borgeson '83 .
Byron Boston '81 .
Harold Bourque '85 .
Murry Bowden '71 .
Chase Bower '06 .
Philip Bower '21
Kenneth Bower '94 .
Trey Bowers '97 .
Samuel Bowlby '60 .
Edward Bowles '96 .
George Bowles '84 .
Harold Bowman '46 .
Walter Bowman '67 .
Thomas Boyan '66 .
Robert Boye '60 .
Stephen Boylan '12 .
Charles Boyle '01
David Boyle '69 .
Edward Boyle '53 .
Ryan Boyle '99 (M)
John Boynton '39 (M)
Darrell Braatz USMC .
Lance Brackee '93 .
Theodore Bracken '65 .
David Bradley '58 .
Francis Brady '10 .
Michael Brait '76 .
Forrest Branch '33 .
William Brandt '67 .
Fred Breithut '29 .
Scott Brewster '79 .
Benjamin Bridges '74 .
Steven Briggs '86 .
Barry Brink '71 .
William Brister '32 .
Tom Brodhead '84 .
Mark Brogna '08 .
Gabriel Bromberg '31 .
Eugene Brooks '07 .
John Brooks '85 .
Aaron Brown '05 .
Carl Brown '86 .
Charles Brown '83 .
Gregg Brown '73
David Brown '79 .
David Brown '83 .
Frederick Brown '05 .
Julius Brown '02 .
Michael Brown '57 .
Norman Brown '45 .
Richard Brown '52 .
Robert Brown '04 .
Robert Brown '71 .
Robert Brown '86 .
Thomas Bruno '84 .
Joseph Brusse '09 .
Stephen Bryan '66 .
Matthew Brzica '93 .
Louis Bucklin '50 .
Hunter Buckner '94 .
Matthew Bullock '04 .
Robert Bunn '01 .
Charles Burke '23`
James Burke '59 .
James Burke '70 .
Matthew Burke '86 .
Matthew Burke '98 .
Ervin Burkholder '66 .
Matthew Burkholder '94 .
Edward Burley '92 .
Eugene Burnkrant '35 .
Aisha Burrell '99 (M)
John Burroughs '45 .
Christian Buschmann '70
Jonathan Butler '86 .
Claude Butterfield '01 .
Casey Bynum '00
Collins Byrd '79 .
Tyrone Byrd '73 .
C
Rocco Caivano '66 .
Charles Calder '23 .
Bobby Calderwood '05 .
William Calhoun '67 .
Richard Calkins '53 .
David Camerer '37 .
Charles Camp '42 .
Elbert Camp '36 .
Anthony Campagna '69 (M)
Michael Campanale '89
Donald Campbell '47 .
Gregory Campbell '85
John Campbell '03 .
Lyle Campbell '04 .
Robert Campbell '40 .
Charles Canfield '22 .
Jackson Cannell '19 .
Harold Cannon '44 .
Peter Cannon '15 .
John Canty '90 .
Michael Caraviello '85
Arthur Carey '45 .
Frederick Carey '43 .
Herbert Carey '50 .
Elmer Carleton '97
Stephen Carlson '91
Christopher Carney '00 .
John Carney '78 .
Joseph Carolan '18 .
Kevin Carpenter '81 .
Richard Carpenter '35 .
Russell Carpenter '23 .
William Carpenter '50 .
William Carpenter '74 .
Charles Carr '98 .
George Carr '74 .
Robert Carroll '82 .
Daniel Carson '85 .
Paul Carson '91
Robert Cary '86 .
Kevin Case '76
David Casper '78 .
Donald Castle '79 (M)
Christian Casturo '90 .
Frederick Caswell '54 .
Lucas Catenacci '04 .
Todd Catlin '02 .
Derham Cato '05 .
Mark Caulkins '79 .
Frank Cavanaugh '99 .
Kyle Cavanaugh '09 .
Charles Caverly '97 .
JT Cecchini '98
Michael Cepuran '75 .
Victor Chaltain '69 .
Edward Chamberlain '36 .
Miceal Chamberlain '93 .
Stephen Chamberlain '78 .
Lorenzo Chambers '85 .
George Champion '26 .
Joseph Chandler '82 (M)
Charles Chapman '61 .
John Chapman '50 .
Peter Chapman '91 .
Richard Charlock '20 .
Robert Charman '57 .
Frederick Chase '05 (M)
James Chasey '71 .
Richard Chebookjian '75 .
Frank Chellis '85
Fred Child '15 .
Andrew Chodos '81 .
Herbert Christiansen '38 .
Norman Christianson '65 .
Douglas Church '08 .
James Churchill '52 .
James Clamage '76
David Clark '90 .
Gordon Clark '39 .
John Clark '08 (M)
John Clark '80 .
Jon Clark '96 .
Leonard Clark '31 .
Philip Clark '60 .
Stanley Clark '54 .
William Clark '35 .
Malcolm Clarke '22 .
Thomas Clarke '66 .
Harold Clayton '47 .
John Clayton '51
Mark Clayton '82 .
John Clifford '95 .
William Clough '05 .
Charles Clucas '44 .
Walter Cmaylo '75 .
Charles Cobb '88 .
Harry Coburn '06 .
Kevin Coen '02 .
Michael Coffey '99 .
Samuel Coffey '78 .
Ford Coffman '42 (M)
Christopher Cogguillo '84 .
Kimberly Coghill '94 (M)
Guy Cogswell '19 .
Arthur Cohen '37 .
Joshua Cohen '09 .
Edward Coker '93
Edward Coker '93
Donald Colacchio '76 .
John Colangelo '71 .
John Colby '16 .
Jonathan Colby '66 .
Adna Cole '30 .
George Cole '28 .
Gregory Cole '85 .
William Cole '37 .
William Colehower '59 .
William Coles '29 (M)
Christopher Collado '08 .
Julian Collins '08 .
Richard Collins '53 .
Stephen Collins '80 .
Thomas Collins '52 .
George Colton '35 (M)
Robert Combi '88 .
Charles Comiskey '15 .
Philip Conathan '35 .
Edward Condon '82 .
Ryan Conger '05 .
Walter Conley '05 .
Arthur Connelly '33 .
William Connolly '84 .
Brian Conroy '86 .
Peter Conroy '56 .
James Conterato '75 .
Philip Conti '37 .
Chadwick Cook '95 .
Daniel Cook '07 .
Kenneth Cook '81 .
Nathaniel Cook '94 .
Gregory Cooke '63 .
Frederick Coombs '83 .
Kent Cooper '82 .
Kevin Cooper '89 .
Kier Cooper '86 .
Daniel Cooperman '69 .
Preston Copley '07 .
Timothy Copper '72 .
John Corbett '84 .
Robert Cordy '71 .
Stephen Cordy '77 .
Colin Corgan '95 .
Robert Corso '98 .
Freeman Corson '00 .
JJ Coslet '97
John Costello '48
Thomas Cotton '17 .
Joseph Cottone '39 .
James Cottrell '12 .
Justin Cottrell '08
Clifford Couch '23 (M)
David Coughlin '66
Sanford Couter '41 .
Richard Couturier '62 .
John Cowan '40 (M)
Michael Coyne '97 .
Willis Craig '03 .
Casey Cramer '04
Bruce Crawford '49 (M)
Scott Creelman '64 .
Remsen Crego '43 .
Paul Crehan '31 .
Herman Crisp '21 .
Christopher Croker '94 .
Frederick Crolius '99
Brenton Crombie '99 .
Timothy Cross '96 .
John Crouthamel '60 .
Brian Crowell '96 .
Warner Crowell '01
Weymoth Crowell '73` .
Joseph Crowley '43 .
Thomas Csatari '74 .
Alexander Csizinszky '00 .
Daniel Cullen '86 .
Daniel Cummings '75 .
Robert Cummins '76 .
William Cunningham '19
James Cunningham '88 .
Terry Cunningham '06
Thomas Cunningham '13 (M)
Kevin Curley '77 .
William Curran '64 .
Clifford Currie '90 .
Richard Currier '85 .
Alvah Curtis '94 .
Charles Curtis '52 .
Edgar Curtis '15 .
William Cushman '83 .
Eric Cutter '80 .
Bryan Cygnarowicz '87
D
Jack D'Angelo '08 .
Daniel Dacey '41 .
Edward Daley '12 .
William Daley '54 .
John Daly '84 .
William Daly '86 .
Maurice Dampier '43 .
Lowell Dana '12 .
Matthew Dancewicz '97
Ryan Danehy '06 .
Thomas Danes '42 .
Andrew Danver '67
James Darnell '77 .
William Dartt '87 .
John Daukas '49 .
Nicholas Daukas '44 .
Ilana Davadi '96 (M)
Phillip Davey '67 .
Thomas Davidson '20 .
Cantey Davis '65 .
Eric Davis '99 .
Joshua Davis '27 .
Matthew Davis '03
Merrill Davis '38 .
Norman Davis '68 .
Robert Davis '03 .
Tracy Davis '01 .
Brendan Day '05 .
Charles DeAngelis '08 .
David DeCalesta '64 .
Harry Deckert '35 .
Matthew DeGutes '03 .
Kenneth DeHaven '61 .
John Delaney '81 .
Ryan Delaney '05 .
Matthew DeLellis '02
John Dell '55
Robert Dell '83
Steven DeMarco '05
Michael DeMelis '93 .
Carl Demeree '91 .
Joseph DeMerit '93
Craig Denekas '87 .
Charles Denison '78 .
AJ Dennison '91
Jan Dephouse '64 .
Ryan DeRose '01 .
Andrew Dete '09 .
Charles Deutsch '06 .
Jack Deutsch USMC .
Charles Dey '52 .
William Dey '50
John Dickason '53 .
Carl Diehl '26 .
Gregory Dietrick '99 .
Todd Dietrick '94 .
Loren Dilkes '39 .
Walter Dillon '05 .
John Dingle '10 .
Herman Dinsmore '96 .
Paul DiSilvestro '85 .
Christopher Dodds '05 .
Cecil Dodge '12 .
Frank Dodge '95 .
George Dodge '93 .
James Donnelly '05 .
John Donnelly '57 .
Ward Donner '33 .
James Donohue '55 .
John Donovan '33 .
John Donovan '66 .
Patrick Donovan '86 .
Peter Donovan '70 .
Thomas Donovan USMC .
William Donovan '70 .
Edwin Dooley '26 .
Joshua Dooley '06 .
Robinson Doring '91 .
Charles Dorkey '70
John Dorney '21 .
Burt Dorsett '53 .
Philander Dostal '40 .
Thomas Douglas '44
David Dowd '79 .
Jared Dowdakin '08 .
Melvin Downey USMC .
Kevin Downing '76 .
Francis Doyle '87 .
William Draznik '03 .
Holman Drew '83 .
Harry Driver '10 .
Peter Dromeshauser '55 .
Matthew Drury '88 .
Timothy Duax '86 .
Roy Duckworth '38 .
Chester Dudley '13 .
William Dudley '12 .
Jeffrey Dufresne '81 .
Ronald Dufresne '87 .
Arthur Duhamel '17 .
Harold Dunbar '14 .
Richard Dunham '90 .
Jonathan Dunn '93 .
Matthew Dunning '01
Matthew Dunning '91 .
Richard Durante '84 .
Henry Durgin '33 .
William Durkee '20 .
Dennis Durkin '93 .
Florimund Dusossoit '18
E
Harry Eaton '90 .
Andrew Ebbott '78 .
Theodore Eberle '51 .
Theodor Eck '59 .
John Eckstrom '98 .
James Eden '79 .
Robert Edgar '28 .
Everett Edwards '19 .
Joseph Edwards '99 .
Richard Efem '03 .
William Eggeling '67 .
Brad Eissler '01 .
Bert Ekberg '21 .
Nigel Ekern '87 .
Walter Elcock '12 .
James Eldridge '67 .
Zachary Elliott '04 .
Benjamin Ellis '89 .
Ross Ellis '55 .
Samuel Ellis '24 .
Zachary Ellis '98 .
Harold Ellms '15 .
William Embry '34 .
Milton Emerson '25 .
Joseph Emery '17 .
Wesley Englehorn '14 .
Jeffrey English '96 .
Andrew Erickson '00 .
David Erikson '96 .
Donald Erion '36 .
Peter Erwin '60 .
Phillip Essig '93 .
Arthur Estep '14 .
Simon Etzel '74 .
Brian Evans '08 .
David Evans '62 .
Donald Evans USN .
George Evans USN .
James Evans '75 .
F
Samuel Faber '69
Trent Falke '02 .
Norman Falkin '47 .
Timothy Faller '03 .
Jason Fanuele '96 .
Allen Farmer '03 .
Ralph Farnum '12 .
Albert Farrier '07 .
James Fassett '90 .
Martin Fay USMC .
Michael Feasel '76 .
Paul Fechtelkotter '83 .
Frederick Fedeli '53 .
Frank Fee '91 .
James Feeley '39 .
Matthew Feeley '94
Gillian Feldman '94 (M)
Joel Feldman '65 .
Jason Fell '94 .
William Felton '48
Edward Fernandes '80 .
Joseph Fernandes '82 .
Damen Ferrara '98 .
Steven Ferraris '78 .
Wayne Ferree '83 .
Maugo Ferrini '29 .
Wilbur Ferry '32 .
Jay Fiedler '94 .
Elwyn Fields '85 .
Jordan Fields '06 .
JP Fifield '92
Ian Filep '92 .
Gary Finerty '58 .
Thomas Finnigan '04 .
Frank Finsthwait '63 .
Horace Fishback '16 .
Samuel Fishman '34 .
Harold Fitkin '50 .
Michael Fitzgerald '76 .
Richard Flagg '55 .
Edward Fleming USMC .
Rahn Fleming '81 .
Thomas Fleming '76 .
George Fletcher '86 .
Josiah Flint '84 .
Raleigh Floyd '86 .
John Fogarty '34 .
Walter Fogarty '58 .
Gifford Foley '69 .
Fred Folsom '95 .
Henry Folsom '92 .
Leonard Fontes '86 .
Steven Foote '83 .
Robert Ford '82 .
Amos Foster '04 .
Frank Foster '29 .
John Foster '23 .
John Foster '52 .
John Fowler '99 .
Marc Fragge '87 .
Michael Francis '80 .
Moe Frankel '34 .
Joseph Frankhouse '85 .
Malik Franklin '94 .
John Franzen '68 .
Ronald Fraser '57 .
Darrel Frear '82 .
Timothy Fredel '81 .
Jennifer Frederick '92 (M)
Peter Frederick '65 .
Anthony Fredette '84 .
Morris Freedberg '19 .
Charles Freeman '21 (M)
Brent Frei '88 .
Robert Friedl '76 .
Randel Friedman '91 .
Aarne Frigard '32 .
Herbert Fritts USN .
Peter Fritz '00 .
Milton Fromson USN .
Gordon Frost '04 .
Meryll Frost '44 .
Philip Frost '04 .
Henry Fry '53 .
David Fuhrman '84 .
John Fuhrman '87 .
Bernard Fulton '55 .
Robert Funk '74 .
Carl Funke '62
Scott Funke '04 .
Ryan Fuselier '06 .
Nicholas Fusili USMC .
Albert Fusonie '28 .
Douglas Fusonie '58 .
G
David Gabianelli '87 .
Eugene Gabianelli '53 .
Romuald Gac '79 .
Darren Gaffney '97 .
Jesse Gage '06 .
Chad Gallentine '91 .
Charles Ganske '06 .
Ambrose Garcia '97 .
William Gardiner '06 .
Donald Gardner '27 .
Russell Gardner '87 .
Anthony Gargiulo '06 .
Anthony Garippo '80
Jeffrey Garrett '02 .
Harrington Gates '39 .
Chad Gaudet '08 .
Darrell Gavle '71
Robert Gawlas '83 .
Clinton Gaylord '54 .
Alan Gazzaniga '58 .
David Gazzaniga '89 .
Thomas Gedge '25 (M)
Timothy Geibel '82 .
Guy George '91 .
Richard Gerardi '74 .
Harry Gerber '43 .
Henry Gerfen '61 .
Bernard Gerrish '17 .
Keith Getter '85 .
Milton Ghee '15 .
Joseph Gibalski '07 .
Jonathan Gibbs '99
Robert Gibson '39 .
William Gibson '13 .
Jerome Gilbert '92 .
Archie Gile '17 .
John Gile '16 (M)
Michael Giles '04 .
Joseph Gilman '05 .
Harry Gilmore '01 .
John Gingrich '48 .
Thomas Gladden '91 .
John Glaze '08 .
Ralph Glaze '06 .
Philip Glazer '34 .
James Gleason '74 .
Edwin Godfrey '54 .
Oscar Goedecke '44 .
Benjamin Goeke '08 .
Brooks Goff '06 .
John Goff '93 .
Joseph Golan '30 .
Jacob Goldberg '07 (M)
Allen Goldstein '26
Kenneth Gonsier '80
John Goodwillie '31 .
Charles Gordon '93 (M)
John Gordon '19 .
Kenneth Gordon '95 .
Norman Gordon '23 .
Sean Gordon '91 .
Bruce Gottschall '65 .
Albert Gould USMC .
Charles Gould '92 (M)
L. Gove D. DMC
Arthur Gow '28 .
Richard Gowen '50 .
James Grace '64 .
Charles Grad '68 .
James Graham '60 .
Joe Graham '59 .
Brian Graner '01 .
Andre Grant '95 .
Gordon Grant USMC .
Michael Gratch '02
Daniel Graves '68 .
Donald Gray '56 .
William Gray '04 .
Stanton Green '89
Christopher Green '06
Stanton Green '89 .
Ivan Greenwood '07 .
Walter Greenwood '11 .
Charles Greer '64 .
Wayne Gregg '73 .
James Griffin '06 .
John Griffin '02 .
Kevin Griffin '88 .
William Griffith '93 .
Roland Griggs '77 .
Louis Grimmelbein '82 .
Herbert Gross '86
Oliver Gross '41 .
Scott Gruchot '85 .
Walter Grudi '62 .
Valentine Grundman '21
Edward Grygiel USN .
Thomas Grzebien '78 .
Jack Guenther '41 .
Edward Gulick '83 .
William Gundy '60 .
Edsel Gustafson USN .
John Guynn '01 .
Scott Hacker '82 .
Kevin Hackett '75 .
John Hadlock '96 (M)
Vernon Hagenbuckle '24 .
Fred Hager '17 .
Donald Hagerman '35 .
Andrew Hall '05 .
Dwight Hall '94 .
Edward Hall '92 .
Martin Hall '73 .
Raymond Hall '41 .
Robert Hall '24 .
Thomas Hall '57 .
Frank Halliday '01 .
Harold Halstead '11 .
Thomas Hamilton '55 .
Harold Hamm '30 .
Norris Hammond USMC .
John Handrahan '37 .
Joseph Handrahan '36 .
Arthur Hanlon '03 .
John Hanlon '60 .
Judson Hannigan '46 .
Michael Hannigan '71 .
Scott Hapgood '97 .
Charles Hardy '27 .
William Harper '98 .
Michael Harriff '97 .
Neil Harrington '76 .
Robert Harris '29 .
Roger Harris '24 .
David Harrison '92 .
Guy Harrison '94 .
Jeremy Hart '93 .
Dwight Hartman '91 .
Robert Harvey USMC .
William Hatch '24 .
William Hatch '86 .
Charles Hathaway '07 .
Mathias Hauck '00 .
Samuel Hawken '68 .
Jess Hawley '09 .
Harvey Haws '24 .
William Hay '67 .
Buford Hayden '40 .
Warren Hazen '88 .
Edward Healey '18 .
David Hedges '34 .
Charles Hegeman '62 .
Thomas Heiden '77 .
Edward Heilbron '79 .
Kurt Heim '82 (M)
George Hellick '63 .
James Henander '59 .
Jason Hendricks '96 .
Harry Heneage '07 .
Bruce Henry '69 .
Gregory Henry '80 .
John Henry '61 .
Robert Henry '73 .
Robert Hensel '04 .
Brian Hepburn '59 .
Bruce Hepler '91 .
Kevin Herlihy '95 .
Edward Herr '06 .
Robert Herr '52 .
Theodore Heyn '00 .
Robert Hibbard '90 .
George Hibben '52 (M)
William Hibbs '60 .
Jeffrey Hickey '79 .
Robert Hickey '42 .
Orton Hicks '21 .
Robert Higgins '81 .
Lance High '88 .
Louis Highmark '39 .
George Hill '35 .
Richard Hill '88 .
Hazen Hinman '14 .
Steven Hinshaw '93 .
Erik Hinterbichler '06 .
George 'Bo' Hinton '99
Edgar Hoag '23 .
Bernard Hoban '12 .
George Hoban '12 .
Henry Hobbs '10 .
John Hodgdon '85 .
Willis Hodgkins '99 (M)
Robert Hoekelman '48 .
William Hoffman '33 .
Gregory Hoffmeister '93
Kevin Hogan '04 .
Robert Hogsett '14 .
Caryl Holbrook '20 .
Sidney Holbrook '18 .
John Holleran '27 .
Edgar Holley '66 .
Fred Hollingsworth '38 .
Joshua Holloway '73 .
Mark Holm '96 .
Stephen Holmes '44 .
Michael Holobetz '93 .
Charles Holt '45 .
Ray Holtorf '86 .
Brian Hood '02 .
Harvey Hood '18 (M)
Monica Hooks '92 (M)
Henry Hooper '07 .
Arthur Hoover '62 .
Herbert Hopkins '74 .
James Horne '84 .
Lowell Horschman '60 .
Newman Horton '27 .
Richard Horton '65 .
Robert Hotchkiss '97 .
Matthan Houser '04 .
David Howard '82
Eugene Howard '49 .
Colby Howe '39 .
Candace Howell '95 (M)
Clarence Howland '84
Bradley Howser '71
Joel Hubbard '82 .
Malcolm Hubert '23 .
Steven Hudak '65 .
George Huff '93
Gregory Hulbert '86 .
Homer Hulbert '84 .
Lawrence Hull '38 .
Raymond Hulsart '34
Franklin Humiston '82 .
Clifton Humphreys '90 .
Henry Hunnefeld '79 .
Steven Hunt '08 .
Jeffrey Hunter '75 .
Mark Hunter '95 .
Leslie Huntley '33 .
Thomas Huntsman USN
George Hurd '88 .
Kenneth Hurd '23 .
Daniel Hutchinson '01
William Hutchinson '40 .
James Hutchison '00 .
Marshall Hydzu '00 .
John Hyland '94 .
Craig Hyps '84 .
I
Henry Ide '93 .
John Idzik '82 .
William Immel '78
Jeffrey Immelt '78 .
Jonathan Ingersoll '11
Armanda Iorio '84 (M)
James Irwin '01 .
Edward Isbey '51 .
Scott Isherwood '86
Russell Isner '44 .
J
Mac Jackson '83 .
Seth Jacoby '90 .
Douglas Jaeger '73 .
Gregory Jaeger '81 .
John Jakiemiec '87 .
Ivars Janieks '65 .
Brian Janssen '88 .
David Janssen '90 .
Kenneth Jansson '79 .
Leonard Jardine '81 .
Joe Jarrett '71 .
William Jarrett '77 .
Bradley Jefferson '98 .
Todd Jelen '01 .
Gregory Jenkins '79 .
Jonathan Jenkins '49 .
Frederick Jennings '00 .
William Jennings '07 .
Richard Jennison '54 .
Steven Jensen '05 .
Edward Jeremiah '30 .
Brian Johnson '96 .
Bayard Johnson '54
Henry Johnson '31 .
Jeffrey Johnson '81 .
Kleatos Johnson '95 .
Mark Johnson '90 .
Robert Johnson '10 .
Robert Johnson '61 .
Robin Johnson '76 (M)
Roy Johnson '67 .
James Johnston '73 .
Benjamin Jones '44 (M)
Damon Jones '95 .
Daniel Jones '90 .
Edwin Jones '94
Leonard Jones '82 .
Matt Jones '94 .
Vincent Jones '52 .
John Jordan '20 .
Richard Joyce '91 .
Edward Judd '32 (M)
Stephen Judge '95 .
Edwin Junkins '14 (M)
Matthew Jurkoic '83 .
K
David Kadyk '48 (M)
Joseph Kagle '55 .
Wayne Kakela '57
Alexander Kandabarow '75
Adam Kane '99 .
John Kania '83 .
Larry Karacki '57 .
John Karafa '03 .
Dylan Karczewski '99
Robert Karin '75 (M)
Stephen Karol '84 .
Louis Karsonis '73 .
Donald Kasprzak USMC .
Brett Kassen '01 .
Edward Kast '43 .
Matthew Kastantin '92 .
James Katzman '89 .
Thomas Kavazanjian USN
John Keady '06 .
Douglas Keare '86 .
William Kearns '21 .
Christopher Keck '88 .
Robert Keeler '11 (M)
Scott Kehoe '85 .
Edward Keible '65 .
Taylor Keitt '04 .
Robert Kelcourse '71 .
John Kelley '41 .
John Kelley '88
LeRoy Kelley '26 .
Matthew Kelley '90 .
Michael Kelley '79 .
Dana Kelly '64 .
Todd Kelly '91
Walter Kelly '97 .
Preston Kelsey '58 (M)
Jeffrey Kemp '81 .
George Kennedy '09 .
Horton Kennedy '18 (M)
John Kenny '36 .
Daniel Kenslea '75 .
Jared Kesler '05 .
Nigel Key '79 .
Victor Kiarsis '36 .
Joseph Kiernan '37 .
Joseph Killefer '06 .
Lawrence Killgallon '70
John Killkelly '28 .
Robert Kilmarx '50 (M)
Sumner Kilmarx '22 (M)
Whitefield Kimball '33 .
Joseph Kinder '03 .
Jack Kinderdine '61 .
Thomas King '62 .
Warren King '38 .
William King '63 .
Eugene Kinney USN .
William Kinschner '69 .
Mark Kiosky '79 .
Jerome Kirkpatrick '68 .
Darius Kirksey '94 .
David Kitchen '87 .
Donald Klages '58 .
Stanford Klapper '56 .
Stuart Klapper '56 .
Brad Kliber '85 .
Paul Klungness '67 .
Michael Klupchak '73
Richard Klupchak '74 .
Gray Knapp '12 (M)
John Knapp '92 .
John Knibbs '05 .
Michael Knoll '98 .
John Knowlton '62 (M)
James Knox '71 .
Richard Knupp '05 .
Folkert Koch '80 .
John Koehring '56 .
William Koenig '70 .
Arthur Kola '61 .
Benjamin Koldyke '91 .
Robert Komives '65 .
Joseph Koniszewski '85
Peter Kortebein '86 .
Robert Koslowsky '45 .
Robert Koury '65 .
Todd Kovacevich '91 .
Louis Kozloff '93 .
Robert Krieger '41 .
Francis Krol '56 .
John Krol '43 .
George Krosnowski '56 .
Robert Krumm '43 .
John Krumme '63 .
John Krumpe '55 .
Alvin Krutsch '59 .
Thomas Kuchar '79
William Kuehn '92 .
Russell Kulp '66 (M)
L
James Lafferty '15 .
Brent Laffoon '98 .
Norman Laird '48 .
Frank Lakeman '92
Harry Lakeman '96 .
Christopher Lambert '91
Thomas Lamme '90 .
Gerald LaMontagne '66 .
Gerald LaMontagne '94
Richard Land '70 .
Matthew Landa '86 .
Santino Lando '36 .
James Landrigan USMC .
Myles Lane '28 .
Benjamin Lang '10 .
Ralph Langdell '28 .
Dominic Lanza '98 .
Robert Lapidus '34 .
Robert Larigan '51
Chester Larimer '85 .
Brian Larsen '97 .
Stephen Lasch '62 .
Susan Lasko '81 (M)
Jennifer Lasky '95 (M)
Samuel Laurin '82
Peter Lavery '83 .
Tyler Lavin '05 .
Peter Lawrence '69
Alvin Lawson '64
Taylor Layman '08 .
Steven Leake '92 .
Edward Learnard '24 (M)
Robert Lease '70 .
Laurence Leavitt '25 .
John Lee '23 .
Lloyd Lee '98 .
Robert Lee '31 .
Robert Lee '87 .
Robert Leggat '92 .
Theron Lehman '18 .
Zachary Lehman '95 .
John Leibert '73 .
Paul LeMarbre '70 .
James Lemen '62 .
Robert Lempke '41 .
Michael Lempres '81 .
Michael Lena '84 .
Richard Lena '83 .
Richard Lena '83 .
Taran Lent '96 .
Warren Leopold '44 .
Eric Lerch '02 .
Gregory Lesko '86 .
Joseph Leslie '72 .
Irving Levy '55 .
George Lewis '97 .
Jeffrey Lewis '92 (M)
Lazerous Lewis USN .
Morgon Lewis '45 .
Thomas Lewis '45 .
Jason Lichtenstein '90 .
Daniel Liebsch '98 .
Walter Lillard '05 .
Douglas Lind '74
Henry Lindsay '06 .
Ernest Lines '82 .
Jeffrey Link '98 .
Jeffrey Link '98
Wayne Linman '52 .
Charles Little '91 DMC
Christopher Little '05 .
Harry Litzenberger '32 .
Frank Llewellyn '14 .
Keith Lockwood '98 .
Edward Long '66 .
Thomas Longnecker '30 .
John Loomis '15 (M)
Robert Loomis '26 .
Kenneth Loos '79 .
Matthew Lopes '84 .
James Lothrop '57 (M)
Paul Loudon '14 .
Evan Love '05 .
Leon Lovejoy '11 .
Franklin Loveland '64 (M)
Brett Lowe '08 .
Frank Lowe '01 .
Dominic Lowery '78 .
Brandon Lucas '02 .
James Lucas '77 .
Kevin Luensmann '90 .
John Luisi '98 .
Jaan Lumi '65 .
Robert Lundquist '69 .
Steven Luxford '68 .
Robert Lyle '29 .
Christopher Lynch '78 .
Edward Lynch '23 .
Franklin Lynch '38 .
Franklin Lynch '72 .
Michael Lynch '80 .
Thomas Lynch '93 .
William Lyons '00 .
Richard Lytle '93 .
M
Winters Mabry '67
George MacDermott '23
Andrew MacDonald '93 .
Jerome MacDonald '07 .
John MacDonald '52 .
Frank Mace '45 USMC
Thomas Macejko '97 .
Michael Machan '68 .
William Mack '36 .
Jeffrey MacKay '00 .
Harold Mackey '33 .
Paul Mackey '54 .
James Macko '72 .
Duncan MacLean '94 .
Robert MacLeod '39 .
Robert MacLeod '67 .
Robert MacPhail '28 .
Broni Macy USMC .
Wilson Madden '64 .
Mark Mader '92 .
Gray Magee '31 .
Sean Maher '83 .
Brendan Mahoney '91 .
David Main '06 .
Thomas Malcolm '54 .
Gerald Maloney '24 .
Paul Maloney '92 .
Gerald Maloney '24 .
Paul Maloney '92 .
Robert Mangene USMC .
Brian Mann '02 .
Francis Manning '83 .
John Manning '08
John Manning '72 .
James Mannion '54 .
Ryan Mannix '02 .
Byron Mansfield '40
Jed Manton '01
Louis Maranzana '70 .
Dana Marble '87 .
John March '69 .
Thomas Marek '80 .
Lawrence Margerum '80 .
Todd Marker '93 .
Todd Markman '82 .
Alan Markman '75 .
John Marks '11 .
Marc Maroon '87 .
Donald Marriott '56 .
Robert Marriott '61 .
Vincent Marriott '51 .
Richard Marrone '61 .
Andrew Marshall '01 .
Benjamin Marshall '97 .
Harold Marshall '26 .
Alton Marsters '30 .
Robert Marston '83 .
Laura Martin '91 (M)
Lawrence Martin '28 (M)
Michael Martin '86 .
Neal Martin '93 .
John Martino '53 .
Charles Mathewson '82 .
Christopher Mathewson '04 .
Kent Mathewson '79
Christopher Matonis '87
Brett Matthews '88 .
Charles Matuszak '67 .
John Matzinger '36 .
Christopher Mawn '92 .
Arthur Maxwell '83 .
Stuart May '41 .
Ralph Maynard '31 .
Brendon McAdams '58 .
Mark McAleenan '75
G. McAleenan Mark '75
Charles McAllister '59 .
David McAndrews '98
John McAuliffe '16 .
John McAvoy '28 .
Gregory McBride '87 .
William McCall '32 .
Thomas McCallister '87 .
Lynn McCanse '64 .
William McCarter '19
Francis McCarthy '86 .
Robert McCarthy '78 .
Michael McClincy '06 .
Thomas McConnell '76
Walter McCornack '97 .
Robert McCraney '51 .
Taylor McCray '37 .
Michael McCune '92 .
Clarence McDavitt '00 (M)
Harry McDevitt '07 .
Joseph McDevitt '44 .
Charles McDonald '92 .
Donald Moore '23 .
George Moore '221918(SATC) 20
Jonathan Moore '54 (M)
Joseph Moore '83 .
Robert Moore '71 .
Sara Moorefield '86 (M)
Joseph Morelli '51 .
David Morey '13 .
Joseph Morgan '89 .
Wallace Morgus '78 .
James Morris '90 .
Robert Morris '36 (M)
Thomas Morrow '92 .
Henry Morse '04 .
LaRoy Morter USN .
Craig Morton '89 .
Eric Morton '97
Roald Morton '34 .
William Morton '32 .
William Morton '59 .
Justin Moscardelli '96 .
Donald Moss '58
Nicholas Mourlas '92 .
George Mudge '39 .
John Muehlheuser '87 .
Gilbert Mueller '51 .
James Mueller '59 .
Anthony Muello '36 .
John Mugglebee '77 .
Daniel Mulligan '92 .
Richard Mulroy '76 .
William Munich '71 .
Philip Murdock '15 .
Benjamin Murphy '95 .
D. Murphy Clark '54
Daniel Murphy '76 .
George Murphy '24 .
Gerald Murphy '95 .
I. Murphy Craig '51
Jay Murphy '78 .
John Murphy '58 .
Joseph Murphy '21 .
Joseph Murphy '78 .
Nicholas Murphy '02 .
Robert Murphy '05 .
W. Murphy David '91
William Murphy '52 .
Allen Myers '44 .
Donald Myers '52 .
Edwin Myers '20 .
N
Jeffrey Nadherny '78 .
Frank Nairne '36 .
Joseph Nastri '79 .
Eugene Nattie '66 .
Trevor Nealon '02 .
Thomas Nee '81 .
Edgar Needham '11
Eugene Neely '19 .
Lloyd Neidlinger '23 .
James Nelsen '55 (M)
Adam Nelson '97 .
Clay Nelson '03 .
D. Nelson Dirk '76
Donald Nelson '73 .
Edward Nelson '57 .
Oliver Nelson '46 .
Donald Nemcek '78 .
George Neos '93 .
David Neslund '83 .
George Nettleton '84 188
Bruce Nicholls '77 (M)
Leonard Nichols '76 .
John Nicolette '56 .
William Niles '83 (M)
Charles Nims '31 .
Robert Nissen '41 .
Jon Nistad '70 .
Peter Nistad '67 .
Brian Noel '00 .
Kevin Noone '03 .
Howard Nopper '39 .
Anson Norton '89 .
Donald Norton '41 .
Jeffrey Norton '69 .
Robert Norton '73 .
William Norton '90 .
Anson Norton '89 .
Royce Novosel-Johnson '05
Alfred Nutt '84 .
Robert Nycz '72 .
C. Nyquist Michael '63
O
O
Francis O'Brien '47 .
Robert O'Brien '41 .
Robert O'Brien '65 .
Stephen O'Brien '80 .
Edwin O'Connor '31 .
John O'Connor '021898 99
Timothy O'Connor '88 .
Michael O'Donnell '99 .
Michael O'Flynn '91 .
James O'Gara '87 .
Christopher O'Grady '95 .
John O'Kane '89 .
James O'Leary '03 .
Richard O'Leary '48 .
Sean O'Mara '02 .
Michael O'Marra '93 .
J. O'Neill Brendan '72
John O'Neill USN .
Kevin O'Shea '73 .
Charles Oakes '83 .
Luther Oakes '99 .
Curtis Oberg '78 .
Andrew Oberlander '26 .
Peter Oberle '96 .
William Odlin '90 .1886*
Ikechi Ogbonna '06
John Olejniczak '83 .
David Oliver '97 .
Richard Olmsted '69
John Olson '88 .
Philip Olson '79 .
Michael Oniskey '85 .
Patrick Orie '96 .
William Origel '78 .
'41 Orr
David Osharm '64 .
Brian Osimiri '06 .
Andrew Osman '85 .
Donald Otis '37 .
Richard Outzen '89 .
C. Overstreet Lee '88
John Owens '91 .
P

Benjamin Page '42 (M)
Shon Page '90 .
Victor Place '03 .
Paul Poehler '30 .
Robert Poet '46 .
Charles Pollard '95 (M)
Christopher Pollard '89 .
John Pollard '95 .
Leslie Pollard '12 .
C. Pollock William '72
Frank Polsinello '84 .
Donald Pomeroy '85 .
Michael Poncy '00 .
Dale Pope '73 .
Gregory Porter '93 .
Judson Porter '76 .
Olin Porter '32 .
Richard Portland '58
Charles Potts '76 .
Christopher Powers '94 .
Ralph Powers '47 .
Walter Powers '06 (M)
Wilbur Powers '34 .
David Pratt '02 .
David Pratt '58 .
Bradley Preble '91 .
Mark Preng '95 .
William Prescott '27 .
H. Press Cody '80
Harold Presson '21 .
George Price '35 .
Gilmore Price '92
Richard Price '51 .
Thomas Price '71 .
Reuben Prichard '07 .
Robert Primo '55 .
Walter Prince '21 .
Charles Proctor '00 .
Douglas Prouty '81 .
Pudrith Chester '16
Wesley Pugh '73 .
Jonathan Puk '05 .
John Pules '32 .
George Pulliam '45 .
Aaron Pumerantz '02 .
John Purcell '91 .
Matthew Puryear '95 .
John Putnam '00 .
Russell Putney '22 .
Thomas Pyles '67 .
Ludwig Pyrtek '39
Q
Alexander Quackenboss '87 .
Kevin Quinn '86 .
Stephen Quinn '83 .
Thomas Quinn '70 .
Gordon Quist '02 .
R
Michael Rabil '06 .
Gerald Raczka '63 .
Daniel Radakovich '71 .
William Radford '73 .
Frederick Radke '73
Jason Raiti '06 .
George Rambour '52 .
Thomas Ramsey '87 .
John Rand '83 .
Norman Rand '35 .
William Randall '96 .
John Randolph '87 .
Richard Ranger '74 (M)
Andrew Rankin '05 .
John Ransom '49 (M)
Thomas Rath '67 (M)
Joe Raver '88 .
Carl Ray '37 .
Robert Rech '86 .
Richard Redfield '15 .
Edward Reece '28 .
Curtis Reed '82 .
David Reed '02 .
John Reeder '25 .
Robert Reeves '03 1999
David Regula '98 .
Alan Reich '52 .
Peter Reich '53 .
John Reidy '76 .
John Reilly '54 .
John Reno '31 (M)
Robert Reno '38 (M)
Thomas Reusser '00 1996
Robert Rex '57 .
Chris Rhodes '97 .
Michael Ribero '06 .
Albert Rice '82 .
Edward Rich '09 .
Norman Richardson '201918(SATC)
Michael Rieder '69 .
Jeffrey Rieker '76 .
G. Rife Abram '96
James Riffle '58 .
Amy Riley '00 (M)
Francis Riley '02 .
Ronald Riley '65 .
Sean Riley '93 .
Warren Riley (Ren) '96
James Rill '81 .
Patrick Risha '05 .
Tim Risley '71 .
George Ritcheske '73 .
John Ritchie '70 .
Kevin Ritter '98 .
Myron Ritter '35 .
Charles Rittgers '06 .
Daniel Rivers '89 .
John Rix '06 .
Lee Roach '01 .
William Robb '67 .
John Roberts '44 .
John Roberts '70 .
Joshua Roberts '03
Michael Roberts '71 .
William Roberts '51 .
James Robertson '20 .
Gregory Robinson '78 .
Leonard Robinson '48 .
Leonard Robinson '80 .
Winfield Robinson '26 .
Raymond Rochester '07 .
Edward Roe '24 .
Charles Rogers '00 .
Dudley Rogers '15 .
Kyle Rogers '99
William Rogers '15 .
Robert Rolfe '84 .
Philip Rollins '57 .
Weld Rollins '97 (M)
Carl Romero '89 .
Curtiss Rooks '79 .
Mikel Rooks '91 .
Damien Roomets '02 1999
Christopher Rorke '89 .
Alcindor Rosier '91 .
Frank Ross '21 .
William Rossi '84 .
Berkeley Roth '56 .
Louis Rovero '57 .
Ellis Rowe '74 .
Thomas Rowe '50 .
Matthew Royer '93 .
Alan Rozycki '61 .
Herbert Rubin '27 .
Arthur Ruggles '01 (M)
Gordon Rule '68 .
Dennis Runck '82 .
Dale Runge '64 .
George Rusch '47 .
Scott Rusert '87 .
Gregory Rush '92 .
Allen Russell '45 .
Andrew Russell '87 .
Andrew Russell '88 .
Donald Rutishauser '78 .
James Ryan '73 .
John Ryan '10 .
Eugene Ryzewicz '68 .
S
Mitchell Sadar '74
Henry Sage '27 .
Richard Salchunas '80
Tracy Salmon '87 (M)
Craig Saltzgaber '86 .
Gerald Samuelson '55 .
Gerald Sanders '81 .
Paul Sanderson '21 .
Stephen Santucci '91 .
Peter Sapione '65 .
Joseph Sardella '50 .
William Sargent '84 .
Gerald Sarno '50 .
Joseph Sarno '50 .
Michael Sasso '05 .
Walter Saurack '91 .
John Savage '78 .
Christopher Sawch '80 .
Katrina Sawyer '01 .
Robert Saxton '11 .
John Sayers '46 .
Bruce Saylor '70 .
Robert Saylor '86
Timothy Schad '70 .
Adam Scheier '95 .
Francis Schildgen '38 .
George Schildmiller '09 .
Craig Schlapprizzi '06 .
Brian Schmidt '97 .
Jeffrey Schmitt '97 .
Robert Schnabel '71 (M)
Eric Schnack '88 .
Herman Schneebeli '30 (M)
Wayne Scholbohm '001996 97
Thomas Scholz '73 (M)
George Schreck '50 .
Kyle Schroeder '00 .
Matthew Schroeder '00 .
Cory Schubring '02 .
Herman Schulting '21 .
Donald Schultze '92 .
David Schumacher '95 .
David Schumacher '95 .
Iman Schurman '84 .
Slade Schuster '85 .
Salvatore Sciretto '92 .
Joseph Scola '07 .
Andrew Scott '93 .
Michael Scott '79 .
Leon Scruton '90 .
Walter Scruton '87 .
Edward Scully '47 (M)
'83 Sean
John Seavey '24 .
Leland Sedberry '82
Willard Segun '92 .
Samuel Seiberling '06 .
Peter Sellers '98 .
Mark Selvitelli '90 .
John Seni '98 .
Lawrence Serrano '81 .
Thomas Shakeshaft '89 .
Michael Shannon '06 .
David Sharkey '92 .
David Shearer '95 .
Denis Sheehan '85 .
John Shelburne '19 .
Gordon Shepard '21 .
Harold Sherman '29 .
Ralph Sherwin '11 .
Matthew Shevlin '99 .
W. Short John '71
Daniel Shula '06 .
David Shula '81 .
Mark Sidbury '80 .
Nehemiah Siegfried '22 .
Philip Sievers '73 .
Irving Silverman '34 .
Andrew Silvernail '94 .
B. Simmons Wyman '75
Maurice Simmons '79 .
Frank Simms '56 .
Stuart Simms '72 .
Edward Simpson '85 .
Paul Simpson '90 .
J. Sims Scott '89
Gerald Singleton '96
Harris Siskind '90 .
William Sjogren '67 .
Brian Skeffington '05 .
Earl Skibbie '59 .
Eugene Skibitsky '76 .
William Skibitsky '71 .
David Skinner '68 .
Vauughan Skinner '63 .
Daniel Skorich '75 .
John Slusher '90 .
Russell Smale '53 .
Leonard Small '68 .
Addison Smith '92 .
Arthur Smith '03 .
Arthur Smith '26 .
Brandon Smith '97 .
Bruce Smith '67 .
Chauncey Smith '07 .
Clayton Smith '05 .
Daniel Smith '79 .
Donald Smith '74 .
Edward Smith '70 .
Francis Smith '25 .
Gregory Smith '02 .
Gregory Smith '97 .
Irving Smith '41 (M)
Joseph Smith '06 .
Maurice Smith '17 .
Morris Smith '07 .
Richard Smith '57
Ronald Smith '74 .
Seth Smith '02
Silas Smith '29 .
Andrew Snell '93 .
Thomas Snickenberger '75 1973
Edward Snook '78 .
Winthrop Snow '14 .
W. Snyder Scott '72
Jimmie Solomon '78 .
Robert Soltess '73 .
Howard Sommers '40 .
Gustave Sonnenberg '20 .
Rollin Sontag '48 .
Paul Sorensen '89 .
Raymond Sosa '95 .
John Souba '75 .
Richard Southwick '45 (M)
Richard Southwick '20 (M)
William Spalding '81 .
Kenneth Spang '33 (M)
Thomas Spangenberg '64
Todd Spanish '99
Ryan Spayde '94 .
Clarence Spears '17 .
Peter Sperger '98 .
Gary Spiegelman '83 .
Gary Spiess '62 .
Peter Spingola '93 .
William Spoor '46 .
John Springer '53 .
Richard Stafford '83
Paul Staley '51 .
George Stangle '34 .
Nicholas Stanham '90 .
William Stanley '91
John Stanton '93 .
Charles Starrett '26
Charles Stearns '35 .
Malcolm Stearns '08 .
H. Steinhauser Milton '61
Milton Steinhauser '61 .
David Stenger '64 .
Jason Stephani '91
Thomas Stephens '86
Stephen Stetson '73
James Stevens '46
Mark Stevenson '71
Wayne Steward '10
William Stickney '00 .
Richard Stillman '62
Clinton Stinchcomb '89 .
Edward Stokes '31
Rueben Stokes '79
Arthur Stone '94 .
David Stone '79 .
James Stone '74 .
Nicholas Stork '06
Harry Storrs '07
Douglas Stowell '42
John Straight '26
George Streng '22
Brian Stretch '86 .
Colin Stretch '91 .
Timothy Stretch '88 .
Russell Torres '93
Joseph Tosone '93
Steven Toth '58
Wheelock Towle '85
James Townsend '94
Carll Tracy '49
William Tragakis '62
Thomas Trainor '57
Paul Trier '17
Michael Triplett '96
John Trost '33
George Troxell '44
Scott Truitt '86
George Trumbull '66
Raymond Truncellito '49
Leighton Tuck '15
Robert Tucker '63 (M)
John Tucker '86 (M) .
Robert Tufts '71
George Tully '26
Frank Turner '75
John Turner '48
Louis Turner '55
Alex Turner '73
John Turner '04
Marlin Twitty '98
Ralph Tyler '16
Richard Tyler '90
Robert Tyler '51
Michael Tyne '87
Jay Tyson '80
U

Christopher Umscheid '94 . 1992
Richard Upham '90
Jason Upshaw '98
Michael Urbanic '66
Thomas Urquidez '02 (M) .
David Usher '62
V

David Vaccaro '91 .
James Vailas '78
David Van Vliet '77
Christian Vancura '64 1961
Courtney Vanyo '99 (M) .
Christopher Varney '97
Laurence Varney '02
Steven Varney '00 .
Christopher Vasiliu '78
James Vaughan '05 . 1901
Albin Veazey '89
Brian Venerable '87
James Ventre '83
Bradley Verber '99
William Vesprini '52
Leon Viau '88
Michael Viccora '85
Joseph Vinci '02
William Vitalis '53
John Vogler '01
Andrew Von Kuhn '09
Arthur Vorys USMC
Loren Vulte '39 .
W

David Wachter '84
Peter Wade '85 .
Bruce Wagner '65
Grant Wagner '04
Edward Wainwright '01
Edmund Wakelin '39
Jimmel Williams '07 (M) .
John Williams '37
Jonathan Williams '86
Milan Williams '09
Reginald Williams '76
John Williamson '53 (M) .
John Williamson '90
Andrew Willis '93
Paul Willis '83
Geoffrey Willison '95
Charles Wilson '87
Frank Wilson '76 .
Gary Wilson '65
Harrison Wilson '77
Ian Wilson '08
John Wilson '80
William Wilson '93
John Wimsatt '70
Bradford Winans '48 .
Granville Winship '41
Roger Winship '15
Jonathan Winslow '87
Richard Winter '91
Myron Witham '04
Alexander Wizbicki USMC
Theodore Wolf '30
Raymond Wolfe '43 .
John Wolfe '85
Willard Wolff '31
Darryl Wong '82
Stewart Wood '56 (M)
Joshua Woods '03
Charles Woodworth '68
Arthur Worden '51 (M)
Joseph Workman '05
Joseph Worthen '09 .
Delwyn Worthington '26 (M) .
Harry Worthington '17
Adam Wright '01
Harry Wright '92
Brian Wroczynski '75
Scott Wu '89
Courtney Wuistinger '04 2001 2
Y
Anthony Yezer '66
Anthony Yim '84
Adam Young '99
Arthur Young '46
Stewart Young '50 1946
John Young '47
Kevin Young '77
Louis Young '41
Oglesby Young '96
Randolph Young '83
Wayne Young '72
Theodore Youngling USN
Adolf Youngstrom '18
Stanley Yudicky '32 .
Z
Katherine Zalios '94 (M) .
Andrew Zigelis '62
Gregory Zitrides '39