Harvard Varsity Club NEWS & VIEWS of Harvard Sports

Volume 48 Issue No. 11 www.varsityclub.harvard.edu June 27, 2006 Cromwell and McDavi� Honored As Top Senior Athletes Eight awards presented at 40th annual Senior Le�erwinners’ Dinner

by Chuck Sullivan ming League champion through his four years. He was the top Director of Athletic Communications scorer at the annual EISL Championships two times and accepted the Ulen Award in 2006 as the career scoring leader at that event. All-America swimmer He took fourth in the 100- David Cromwell (Missoula, and 200-yard backstrokes at MT) and All-America field the 2006 NCAA Champion- hockey player Jen McDavi� ships, leading Harvard to a (Walpole, MA) were hon- 20th-place finish in the team ored as Harvard’s top senior dspics.com www. standings. athletes at the annual Har- McDavi� was a four- vard Varsity Club Senior time All- Le�erwinners Dinner held selection in field hockey, June 7th in the Murr Center including a first team pick in Tennis Courts. each of the last two seasons. Cromwell was present- She helped Harvard to two ed with the William J. Bing- NCAA tournament appear- ham Award as the top male ances and was chosen as athlete, while McDavi� ac- a third team All-America cepted the Radcliffe Prize as selection in 2004, as she the top female athlete. Eight led the Crimson to the Ivy awards were presented at League championship. She the annual dinner held the finished her senior year as night before the university’s the program’s career leader Commencement exercises 2006 Harvard Athletics Award Winners - Front (L-R): Jennifer McDavi�, in assists (23) and fi�h in in Harvard Yard. In front Michael Baria, Sloan Devlin, Nicole Gavel, Laura Maludzinski. Back (L-R): career points (63). of a crowd of more than 600 Morgan Brown, David Cromwell, William Broadbent and Kevin Duffy. William Broadbent student-athletes, coaches, (Greenwich, CT) of the parents and supporters of Harvard Athletics each award winner men’s squash team accepted the John P. Reardon Award in rec- got the chance to thank those who have helped them along the ognition of scholarship, character, leadership and athletic ability. way. Broadbent was a four-time first team All-America for the Crimson, Cromwell established himself as one of the top swimmers in which has won three straight Ivy League titles. He reached the the storied history of the sport at Harvard. He was a seven-time national championship match of the 2004 College Squash Associa- All-America selection and a 17-time Eastern Intercollegiate Swim- Continued on page 3 Men’s Heavyweight Crew Ends Season With Win Over Yale Lightweights Conclude Impressive Season As Well

by Heather Palmer were first delayed for two hours a�er the freshman race went off, Assistant Director of Athletic Communications but the water conditions continued to worsen. Coaches and of- ficials deemed the conditions too dangerous and for the first time Senior Adam Kosmicki (Marblehead, MA) threw his hands since 1963, head coach Harry Parker’s first year at the helm of the up in the air and rejoiced a�er helping his varsity eight beat Yale Crimson, the Race was postponed. in the season finale. For Kosmicki and his fellow boat members But Saturday was not lost as the freshmen did compete. In there is no be�er way to go out than on top. The Crimson did the second closest finish since the two crews tied in 1902, Yale just that, recording open-water victories in both the varsity and finished ahead of Harvard by 0.05 seconds or approximately two second varsity races at the 141st Harvard-Yale Rega�a. feet. It was the first time in three tries that Yale be�ered the Crim- The 2006 Harvard-Yale Rega�a will be a memorable one for son this season. both competitors and spectators. Extremely windy conditions The Bulldogs started the freshman race strong, taking the forced the postponement of the varsity and JV races from Sat- early lead at the start of the two-mile race and cruised to a boat urday evening to Sunday length advantage. Harvard made a move just a�er the mile mark morning. The two races and came even with the Bulldogs with less than a mile to go. The two crews rowed even for over 100m with one team having no more than a seat advantage. The Crimson were just

Jon Crispin Photos one seat behind in the last 50m and pushed to the finish, but in the end the Bulldogs were able to fend off the chal- lenge, winning in 11:05.0, to Harvard’s 11:04.5. On Sunday morning, both crews set out on the Thames River in New London, Conn. with several different faces in the boats since the two teams met at the IRAs the previous week. For the Crimson, Kos- micki and sophomore O�o Stegmaier (Be�erdorf, IA) returned to the varsity boat, while Yale made adjustments due The Harvard men’s heavyweight crew completed the to an illness. At the IRAs, Yale finished Adam Kosmicki ‘06 celebrating the 2005-06 season with a win at the 2006 H-Y Rega�a, Continued on page 3 H-Y win. retaining the Sexton Cup for the seventh straight year. Crimson Well Represented at National Championships by Casey Hart MEN’S LACROSSE Assistant Director of Athletic Communications A�ackman Greg Cohen (Syosset, NY) wrapped up his junior season with a selection as a United States Intercollegiate Lacrosse COED AND WOMEN’S SAILING Association honorable mention All-American. A�er missing last Harvard again asserted itself as one of the nation’s best sailing season with a hand injury, Cohen came back to net 23 goals and programs, placing in the top half of the field in all three of the Inter- hand out seven assists. He was one of four Crimson selections to the Collegiate Sailing Association spring championships, including a New England Intercollegiate Lacrosse Association All-New England third-place showing among 18 teams at the ICSA/Gill Coed Dinghy team. Senior defenseman Tom Mikula (Annapolis, MD) and fresh- National Championship. Although it missed out for the first time man goalie Joe Pike (Phonix, MD) were first-team selections, while in six years on the Fowle Trophy as college sailing’s top team, the Cohen and senior Tom Boylan (Bethesda, MD) were chosen for the Crimson had another outstanding all-around performance, placing second team. fi�h of 14 schools in the ICSA/Layline Team Race National Cham- pionship and eighth of 18 in the ICSA Women’s Dinghy National MEN’S TENNIS Championship. Six Harvard sailors were named All-Americans and The two-Texan doubles team of Ashwin Kumar (Round Rock, another received honorable mention following the competitions, TX) and Sasha Ermakov (Dallas, TX) represented Harvard in the hosted May 24-June 2 by College of Charleston. NCAA Championships. The 55th-ranked pair fell, 6-3, 7-6 (4), May Juniors Clay Johnson (Toms River, NJ) and Emily Simon (Oak 25 to No. 19 Pramod Dabir and Ryler DeHeart of Illinois in the Brook, IL) won three races, including their last of the season, to place tournament’s first round. The duo finished the season with an overall second in the A division and lead Harvard to third place overall in the record of 10-6. coed dinghy championship. Both sailors earned All-America honors, Johnson for the third time and Simon the second. The Crimson B WOMEN’S TENNIS division team of seniors Vincent Porter (Winnetka, IL) and Ruth Senior Melissa Anderson (Sydney, Australia) and junior Elsa Schlitz (Woods Hole, MA) earned All-America recognition for the O’Riain (Cork, Ireland) became the second All-America doubles third and second times, respectively, while sophomore skipper Kyle pair in Harvard history Kovacs (Pennington, NJ)was an honorable mention All-America. and the first since Eliza- Senior Sloan Devlin (Mystic, CT) and junior Christina Dahlman beth Evans ’85 and Robin (Chevy Chase, MD) placed third in the A division of the women’s Boss ’87 in 1984. The championship, with Devlin taking her third All-America honor and duo finished the season www.dspics.com Dahlman garnering her second. The duo did not finish outside the 31-8 and ranked sev- top five in the final nine of its 18 races at nationals, placing second enth in the nation. They three times. earned the No. 5 seed in the NCAA Champion- BASEBALL ships, where they fell to Two-time All-Ivy League selection Lance Salsgiver (Davison, Florida’s Whitney Benik MI) was selected by the San Francisco Giants in the 37th round and Alexis Gordon. An- (1,106th overall) of the 2006 Major League Baseball Amateur Dra� derson, a government June 9. Two other players for the Red Rolfe Division-winning Crim- concentrator, graduated son, senior Josh Klimkiewicz (Lexington, MA) and sophomore as the winningest player Steffan Wilson (State College, PA), played in the New England in school history with 192 College Baseball All-Star Game May 28 at Fenway Park. Both played combined career victo- the entire game, helping their University Division team defeat the ries and was named to College Division, 2-1. the ESPN The Magazine Academic All-America Melissa Anderson ‘06 WOMEN’S LIGHTWEIGHT CREW women’s at-large third Radcliffe medaled for the sixth straight year at the Intercolle- team. She and O’Riain were ranked in the top 10 all spring by the giate Rowing Association Championships, taking the bronze at this Intercollegiate Tennis Association, reaching as high as No. 2. season’s national championship rega�a, June 3 in Camden, NJ. The Ivy League Player of the Year Eva Wang (Haverford, PA) also Black and White topped rival Princeton for the third time in four tries advanced to the NCAA Championships. The Crimson senior, ranked this season with its finish in 6:54.25, but was beaten to the line by 117th, suffered a 6-1, 6-3 defeat to No. 20. Robin Stephenson of Ala- repeat champion Wisconsin (6:46.51) and Georgetown (6:50.12). bama in the first round. Wang went 7-0 in Ivy play at No. 1 singles in 2006, finishing her career with a 79-42 record. WOMEN’S FENCING Sophomore Emily Cross (New York, NY) was named to the WOMEN’S TRACK & FIELD ESPN The Magazine Academic All-America women’s at-large third Lindsey Scherf (Scarsdale, NY) has completed each of her first team. The honor caps a hugely successful season for the biology two seasons in a Harvard uniform with a top-10 finish in the 10,000- concentrator. She placed third in the meter run at the NCAA Outdoor Track and foil at the NCAA Championships, Field Championships. She grabbed 10th place helping Harvard win the national with a time of 34:18.80 in the 2006 meet June 7 title as a team, and won her second in Sacramento, Calif., following up her fourth- straight gold at the Junior World place performance as a freshman. Freshman

Championships. www.dspics.com Becky Christensen (Celina, TX) placed 27th in the NCAA high jump with a leap of 1.74 MEN’S meters. She also cleared 1.73 meters to place In the same week that Craig Ad- fourth at the USA Junior Nationals. Classmate ams ’99 hoisted the for Shannon Flahive (Li�leton, CO) was in eighth the Carolina Hurricanes, two incom- place in the 24-athlete field of the heptathlon, ing Crimson freshmen, Doug Rogers but was forced to pull out a�er one day with (Watertown, MA) and Alex Biega an injury. (Montreal, Quebec), got their intro- duction to professional hockey with WRESTLING the 2006 Freshman Louis Caputo (Blue Springs, Entry Dra�. Rogers, a forward from MO) won the championship in his weight class St. Sebastian’s School, was taken at the 2006 FILA Junior World Team Trials June by the New York Islanders in the 9 in Colorado Springs, CO. The win earned fourth round, with the 119th overall him the right to represent the United States in pick. Biega was a fi�h-round pick of the FILA Junior World Championships Aug. the Buffalo Sabres. The defenseman 29-Sept. 3 in Guatemala. He defeated Iowa’s from Salisbury School was the 147th Chad Bea�y in the 84-kilogram/185-pound overall selection. championship final. Caputo reached the final by winning the Challenge Tournament earlier in the day, going undefeated in three Louis Caputo ‘09 matches.

2 Senior Dinner, Continued from Page 1 tion tournament. The Harvard-Radcliffe Foundation for Women’s Athletics Prize went to heavyweight rower Nicole Gavel (Dracut, MA) and www.dspics.com sailor Sloan Devlin (Mystic, CT) .The award is presented to the female who best combines academic and athletic excellence. Gavel rows in the stroke seat for Radcliffe’s varsity boat that finished fi�h at the 2006 Eastern Sprints. She was chosen as a College Row- ing Coaches Association All-New England selection and National Scholar Athlete. Devlin, meanwhile, was a Rhodes Scholarship fi- nalist in 2005 who finished her career as a three-time All-America and two-time New England individual champion. Women’s cross country and track and field standout Laura Maludzinski (Barrie, ONT) was presented with the Mary G. Paget Prize for outstanding contribution to women’s athletics. Maludz- inski was a two-time Ivy League Heptagonal champion in the out- door 1,500-meter run and was twice recognized as an Academic All-Ivy League pick. The Francis H. Burr Scholarship, which is presented to the Over 600 family and friends were on hand at the 40th annual senior who best combines qualities of leadership, scholarship and Harvard Varsity Club Senior Le�erwinners’ Dinner on June 7th. athletic ability, was given to Morgan Brown (Alstead, NH) of the baseball team. Brown, who walked on to the Crimson nine as a freshman, was a first The John P. Fadden Award, given to a senior student-athlete team All-Ivy League (either intercollegiate or intramural) who has overcome physical selection as a senior adversity to make a contribution to his or her team, went to Kevin and was an ESPN The Duffy (Chatham, NJ) of the men’s track and field team. Duffy Magazine Academic All- returned to the Crimson lineup to become an NCAA regional www.dspics.com District pick. qualifier in the javelin throw this season. Mike Baria (Mason, The evening honored not only the senior award winners but OH) of the wrestling the entire class of 2006 major H student-athletes. During their team was presented with time in a Crimson uniform 23 athletes from the class of 2006 have the Francis J. Toland achieved All-America status, while 68 have been recognized for Community Service their academic achievements. Two seniors in particular, Will Award, which is named Johnson (Tustin, CA) from the football team and Ma� Stehle for the Crimson’s long- (Newton, MA) of the men’s basketball team, have been named na- time associate athletics tional Academic All-America selections, demonstrating the high- director who retired six est commitment to academic and athletic success in their sports. years ago. Baria served The class has found the time to distinguish themselves not David G. Bunning Head Coach for as one of Harvard’s three only on the playing field, but in the local community as well. Harvard Wrestling Jay Weiss presented captains in 2005-06 and There have been countless youth days, mentoring and tutoring the Francis J. Toland Award to wrestler coordinated the team’s sessions, and contributions to neighborhood initiatives. Mike Baria ‘06. weekly volunteer efforts It has certainly been an impressive four years for this class. at the St. Paul’s Church food pantry and the squad’s mentoring Each student-athlete has now become a part of the storied tradi- efforts at St. Anthony’s School. tion of Harvard athletics.

Crew, Continued from Page 1 second behind the Crimson in the second varsity race and in the varsity race was only one second behind Harvard. Sunday

morning’s races were definitely going to be something to watch. www.dspics.com Yale stormed out of the start in the varsity race, taking a seven-seat lead by the half-mile marker. Harvard countered with a strong push through the next half mile and pulled to within a seat. The two crews raced bow ball to bow ball for the next 100m or so before Harvard continued their push and created a lead they would not relinquish. By the two-mile mark, the Crimson held open water over their long-time rival and increased their lead throughout the race to at least two lengths. Yale made a push at the end, but could not catch Harvard, who finished the four-mile course in 23:22.6. Yale crossed the line in 23:30.4. “It was an awesome performance,” Parker said. “It was an unbelievably challenging race due to the conditions, but our guys were able to prevail. The race was a terrific ba�le by both crews under what I would consider the most challenging conditions. And I would say the same went for the JVs.” The 2006 lightweight crew ended its season just .08 seconds away Much like in the varsity race, Yale pulled out in front early, from an IRA title. but the Crimson fought the Bulldogs off and their lead contin- ued to grow as they raced down the three-mile course. Harvard The four without cox won the gold in the Grand Final as well, maintained open water throughout the last mile and a half and beating out Wisconsin and Georgia Tech. The Crimson clocked opened up to a two length lead before the finish line. The Crimson in at 6:23.35, besting the Badgers by 2.6 seconds. Members of the completed the three-mile course in 16:22, while the Elis finished lightweight crew roster — Alex Phillips (Arlington, VA), Dan in 16:30. It was the ninth win in 10 years for the junior varsity. The Reid (Brockville, ONT), Dan Ke�ler (Whitefishbay, WI) and Ma� crew capped off an undefeated campaign including a perfect 5-0 Kilbridge (Buffalo, NY)— made it the Crimson boat. dual race record. The Crimson also won gold at the Sprints and Speaking of lightweights, the Harvard lightweights took a IRAs and will compete at the Henley Rega�a in late June/early silver medal in the varsity eight at the IRA Championships to July. conclude the 2006 season. Just a week before the Race, the Crimson competed at the Just 0.08 seconds and inches separated the Crimson from 2006 IRA Championships in Camden, N.J. The varsity eight, who winner Big Red. The two were neck and neck the entire race, but reigned atop the IRA podium for the last three years, fell short of a difference in stroke cycles proved to be the difference in the race the medal stand, taking fourth in a very competitive Grand Final. as the Cornell inched ahead of the Crimson at the finish. Cornell The second varsity brought home a gold medal in the their Grand finished in 5:42.71, while Harvard was clocked in at 5:42.79. Final (5:44.11), beating out Yale (5:47.79) and Wisconsin (5:52.21). “It was a wonderful race out there today,” said Head Coach The freshman placed fi�h in the Grand Final. Charley Bu�. “It was our best effort and there is no be�er way to As a team the heavyweights finished second in the Ten Ecyk close out the season than with an effort like that. We are disap- Cup race. California, winners of the varsity eight Grand Final, pointed that we did not get the win, but I am extremely proud of edged Harvard by one point in the standings. the effort that went into the race.” 3 CRIMSON COMMENTARY The Crimson women’s tennis team accounted for two of the by Michele McLaughlin 10 honorees as senior Eva Wang - the 2006 Ivy League player of Assistant Director of the Harvard Varsity Club the year - was chosen along with classmate Melissa Anderson. t the June 8th graduation ceremony Chet Stone was Two-time New England champion sailor Sloan Devlin - a honored with the Harvard Medal. As many of you know, Rhodes Scholar finalist in 2005 - was named to the squad, as was Chet ran the equipment room in Dillon Field House all-conference water polo standout Arin Keyser and all-region A for more than 30 years in a manner that was outgoing, heavyweight rower Nicky Gavel. helpful, and vital to the athletic experience at Harvard. He started The five men honored included two rowers as senior Brodie the annual Chet Stone Dillon Open Golf Buckland of the heavyweight crew joins senior Alexander Phil- Tournament to raise money for Children’s lips of the lightweight crew on the squad. Hospital and St. Elizabeth’s Hospital First team All-Ivy League shortstop Morgan Brown, who in Brighton, MA. The tournament, held this earlier was named an ESPN The Magazine Academic All-District past May, has become a Harvard tradition. selection, makes the team, along with All-Ivy tennis player Sco� Since his retirement in 2005, Stone has Denenberg and senior Sean Kane, who was a four-year starter for continued to support and advance the goals the men’s lacrosse team. of Harvard Athletics. He is working with ***** the Athletic Department to supply tickets Harvard women’s volleyball Head Coach Jen Weiss an- to area youth groups for Harvard sport- nounced the hiring of Christi Kelsey as assistant coach. Kelsey ing events, as well as arranging the use of comes to Cambridge a�er serving as a volunteer assistant at University athletic facilities for the city of Chet Stone Wellesley College for the last four years. Boston and Allston-Brighton communi- dspics.com “We are excited to have Christi join our staff in July,” Weiss ties. He was an inaugural recipient of the “33” Touchdown Club said. “Christi has such a passion for the sport of volleyball and Award for distinguishing himself both on and off the football coaching. Christi‘s playing experience in the Big Ten Conference field and for his consistent support of Harvard’s athletes and the and her coaching experience over the past five years will be a per- University’s athletic programs. He also won the Harvard Varsity fect combination for our program.“ Kelsey was an outside hi�er Club Award in 2000. and defensive specialist for the Purdue women’s volleyball team Outside of Stone’s successful career at Harvard, he is also a and was a two-time Academic All-Big Ten first team selection. member of the Boston Park League Hall of Fame a�er spending ***** 15 years in its baseball league and another ten playing football. He Four Harvard student-athletes have been voted to the ESPN was MVP of both in 1967. He is currently lending his considerable The Magazine Academic All-District at-large first teams, tying for experience to a company that is developing the Weymouth Naval the most selections of any school in any division and district in Air Station. the country. Senior tennis player Melissa Anderson, junior swim- The principal objective of the awarding of the Harvard Medal mer Noelle Bassi and sophomore fencer Emily Cross were voted is to recognize extraordinary service to . to the District 1 University Division women’s team by members Extraordinary service can come in as many different areas of Uni- of the College Sports Information Directors of America. Senior versity life as can be imagined. swimmer David Cromwell represented Harvard on the men’s ***** team. All four student-athletes advance to the ESPN The Maga- Former Crimson hockey captain Peter Chiarelli ‘87 was zine Academic All-America ballot. Harvard’s three selections to named general manager of the of the National the women’s team also matches the national high for any school. Hockey League in mid-May. Chiarelli served as captain in his ***** senior season of 1986-87 when Harvard posted a 28-6 record and NBC has announced that three-time Olympian and Har- advanced to the national semifinals, where the Crimson lost to vard graduate Angela Ruggiero ‘04 will join 17 other candidates North Dakota, 5-2. In Chiarelli’s junior season of 1985-86, Harvard selected to ‘interview’ for the title of “The Apprentice” during went 25-8-1 under Head Coach Billy Cleary ‘56 and advanced to season six of the hit show. NBC’s “The Apprentice,” hosted by the national championship game but lost 6-5 to Michigan State. Donald Trump, returns in January on Sundays with new twists, “I know from my college days the passion that the fans in this new geography -- shot exclusively in Southern California -- new area have for hockey and the Bruins and I share that excitement,” boardrooms and 18 new candidates. Chiarelli said in a release. “The Bruins have an exciting core of tal- Last February, Mark Burne�, creator and executive producer, ent to build around and I am looking forward to ge�ing started on opened “Apprentice” casting to the viewers to choose one of 12 that process as soon as possible.” U.S. Olympic athletes competing in the 2006 Winter Games. In late June, Chiarelli hired former All-American defenseman ***** and 16-year NHL veteran Donald Sweeney ‘88 as Bruins’ Director Water polo le�erman and captain Michael Graff ‘73 was of Player Development. elected Chairman of the newly installed USA Water Polo Board of ***** Directors. Graff has served as a Board Director for many non- Three members of Radcliffe heavyweight crew were named profit organizations in sports, the arts, education and health care. to the Collegiate Rowing Coaches Association (CRCA) list of Na- He has a Bachelors degree in Economics from Harvard and a Mas- tional Scholar Athletes. Senior captain Nicky Gavel, junior Katie ters in Management from Massachuse�s Institute of Technology. Golden and senior Laura Martin were among the 135 student-ath- ***** letes awarded for their athletic and academic success. Craig Adams ‘99, the Crimson hockey captain in the 1998- Gavel, a psychology major, is a member of the first varsity 99 season, can now add Stanley Cup champion to his resume. boat and sits at the stroke position. Golden, who has sat in the Adams, a 6-0/200-pound right winger, helped the Carolina sixth and seventh seats this spring, is a biology major, and Martin, Hurricanes defeat the Edmonton Oilers, 3-1, in game seven of a sociology major, has seen action in the third and fourth seats. the Stanley Cup Final in The award recognizes student-athletes with a 3.5 cumula- Raleigh, NC. Adams joined tive GPA or higher that competed in 75 percent of her team’s 2006 Carolina this past October spring races. A total of 135 student-athletes from 50 schools were in a trade and he is in his honored for their efforts. fi�h NHL season. In his All three were members of the varsity eight that finished fi�h four-year Harvard career, he at Sprints, besting their sixth-place seed. totaled 86 points (41g, 45a) Gavel and Martin were named to the CRCA All-Region team and 281 penalty minutes for New England. Gavel earned first-team honors, while Martin in 182 games. He was also was a second-team honoree. a Harvard Hockey team- ***** mate of Hurricanes Vice Ten Harvard student-athletes have earned Academic All-Ivy President/Assistant General League distinction as the league announced the names of 80 play- Manager Jason Karmanos ers on spring rosters who joined the elite list of achievers at the ‘96 and Hurricanes TV Ana- highest levels of athletic and academic competition. lyst Tripp Tracy ‘96. Adams Ten student-athletes were chosen from each of the eight Ivy is just the second Harvard League institutions. To be considered, a student-athlete must be alum to win a Stanley Cup, Craig Adams ‘99 hoisting the either a starter or key reserve on an officially recognized varsity following George Owen ‘28 2006 Stanley Cup. team and have a cumulative grade-point average of at least 3.0. who won the coveted prize Five men and five women were selected from each institution. in 1929 with the Boston Bruins.

4 SPRING SCOREBOARD Baseball Sat. 29 Smith Cup 1st So�ball Women’s Tennis 21-20-1 Overall, 14-6 Ivy League vs. Northeastern 20-24 Overall, 6-8 Ivy League January March May March Sat. 28 BOSTON UNIV. W 7-0 Fri.10 at Florida L 12-6 Sun. 21 EARC Sprints 2nd Sat. 4 vs. Toledo L 8-5 February Sat. 11 at Florida L 10-2 June vs. Temple W 8-2 2-4 USTA/ITA Nat.Team Indoors Sun. 12 at Florida L 17-6 1-3 IRA National Champ 4th Sun. 5 vs. Buffalo L 4-3 vs. Georgia W 4-3 Sat. 18 at NYIT L 9-6 Sat. 10 141st H-Y Rega�a vs. Michigan State L 5-0 vs. Texas Christian W 4-3 at NYIT L 3-2 (9) Fri. 10 vs. Rhode Island W 8-2 vs. Stanford L 5-0 Sun. 19 at NYIT W 3-2 Women’s Heavyweight Crew vs. FL International W 3-0 Sat. 11 SO. ALABAMA W 5-2 Fri. 24 at Jacksonville L 14-3 March Sat. 11 vs. Manha�an L 5-4 Sun. 12 SACRAMENTO W 4-3 Sat. 25 at Jacksonville L 16-4 Sat. 25 Rowlands Cup 1st vs. Rhode Island L 1-0 Fri. 17 at Northwestern L 4-3 Sun. 26 at Jacksonville W 7-5 vs. Northeastern/BC Sun. 12 vs. Manha�an W 1-0 Sun. 19 at Notre Dame L 5-2 Mon. 27 vs. Lynn Univ. W 11-9 April Sat. 18 at Villanova W 11-10 Sun. 26 SO. CAROLINA W 4-3 vs. Barry Univ. T 6-6 (11) Sat. 1 at Brown W 7:11.31 at Villanova L 5-0 March Tue. 28 at Florida Atlantic L 11-1 Sat. 8 Class of ‘75 Cup 2nd Sun. 19 at Iona L 9-1 Sat. 4 CLEMSON W 4-3 Wed. 29 at Florida Inter. L 10-1 at Princeton with Cornell at Iona W 9-4 Sun. 12 TULSA W 6-1 Thu. 30 at St. Thomas W 8-5 Sat. 15 O’Leary Cup 2nd Fri. 24 vs. Utah State W 6-5 Sat. 18 at TCU L 5-2 April at Dartmouth w/ Syracuse vs. Portland State L 2-1 Sun. 19 at William & Mary L 4-3 Sat. 1 at Princeton W 4-1 Sat. 22 Case Cup at Yale 2nd Sat. 25 vs. Utah Valley W 4-1 Mon. 27 at Fresno State W 4-3 at Princeton W 8-2 Sat. 29 Allen-DeWolfe Trophy vs. Utah L 3-0 Wed. 29 at San Diego State W 4-3 Sun. 2 at Cornell W 14-3 vs. BU/MIT 2nd Mon. 27 vs. Utah Valley L 3-2 April at Cornell W 12-6 Sat. 14 EAWRC Sprints 5th vs. Utah Valley W 12-4 Sat. 1 at Pepperdine L 5-2 Thu. 6 at Holy Cross W 3-2 (11) April Fri. 7 CORNELL W 6-1 Sat. 8 PENN L 1-0 Women’s Lightweight Crew Sat. 1 at Quinnipiac L 5-3 Sat. 8 COLUMBIA W 7-0 PENN W 7-0 March at Quinnipiac W 3-1 Sun. 9 RICE W 5-2 Sun. 9 COLUMBIA W 13-5 25-26 Windemere Cup 1st Thu. 6 BOSTON UNIV. L 3-1 Fri. 14 at Penn W 5-2 COLUMBIA W 8-1 April BOSTON UNIV. W 3-2 Sat. 15 at Princeton W 7-0 Tue. 11 at Boston College L 10-0 Sat. 1 GEORGETOWN W 7:35 Sun. 9 at Cornell L 3-0 Fri. 21 at Yale W 6-1 Sat. 15 at Yale L 3-1 Class of 2004 Cup at Cornell L 8-5 Sun. 23 BROWN W 7-0 at Yale W 8-7 8-9 Knecht Cup 1st Mon. 10 at Columbia W 2-1 Tue. 25 at Dartmouth W 6-1 Sun. 16 at Yale W 12-2 Sat. 15 URI 1st at Columbia W 1-0 May at Yale L 10-8 Sat. 29 Class of 1999 Cup 2nd Sat. 15 at Brown W 6-2 Fri. 12 NCAA Regionals Tue. 18 Beanpot Rd. I at Princeton at Brown L 11-10 vs. Purdue L 4-2 vs. Northeastern W 8-5 May Sun. 16 at Yale L 7-4 Sat. 22 BROWN W 1-0 Sat. 14 EAWRC Sprints 2nd at Yale W 2-0 Women’s Outdoor Track BROWN W 8-4 June Thu. 20 at UMass L 3-0 April Mon. 24 BROWN W 5-2 1-3 IRA National Champ 3rd at UMass L 8-0 Sat. 8 Hillside Relays BROWN L 16-2 Sat. 22 PRINCETON W 1-0 Sat. 15 Husky Invite Tue. 25 Beanpot Championship Men’s Lacrosse PRINCETON L 2-1 Sat. 22 YALE L 86-77 vs. Boston College L 10-2 6-7 Overall, 3-3 Ivy League Sun. 23 PENNSYLVANIA W 7-6 Sat. 29 Wildcat Invite Wed. 26 URI L 14-12 March PENNSYLVANIA L 8-0 May Sat. 29 DARTMOUTHW 2-1 (10) Sat. 4 at Stony Brook W 9-8 Tue. 25 RHODE ISLAND W 5-1 6-7 Hep. Champ 7th DARTMOUTH L 13-8 Sat. 11 at Massachuse�s L 12-7 RHODE ISLAND L 5-3 12-13 ECAC Champ. 16th Sun. 30 at Dartmouth L 4-0 Tue. 14 at Holy Cross W 11-4 Thu. 27 at Holy Cross W 5-1 26-27 NCAA East Reg. at Dartmouth W 23-9 Sat. 18 FAIRFIELD L 7-5 at Holy Cross W 6-1 June May Sat. 25 at Penn W 13-8 Sat. 29 at Dartmouth L 3-0 7-10 NCAA Champ. Wed. 3 at Northeastern W 7-5 April at Dartmouth L 3-2 Sat. 6 Ivy League Champ. Sat. 1 DENVER W 8-7 (3ot) May Women’s Water Polo PRINCETON L 9-3 Sat. 8 CORNELL L 10-3 Fri. 5 BOSTON COLL. L 6-0 12-18, 3-4 Northern Division PRINCETON L 8-2 Tue. 11 at Brown W 10-6 February Sat. 15 PRINCETON L 9-7 Coed & Women’s Sailing Sat. 18 vs. George Wash. W 8-2 Men’s Golf Sat. 22 at Yale W 12-4 February Sat. 18 vs. Villanova W 11-8 March Sat. 29 at Hofstra L 13-6 11-12 Charleston Wo. Inters. 4th Sun. 19 vs. Maryland W 8-7 Sun. 26 Jekyll Island Invite 16th May 18-19 Charleston Spring Int. 4th Sun. 19 vs. Indiana L 13-5 April Sat. 6 DARTMOUTHL 14-13 (3ot) March March Sun. 9 at Yale Spring 16th of 20 NCAA Tournament 4-5 Brown Invite. 1st Sun. 5 vs. Siena W 11-5 Sat. 15 at NE Division I Champ. Sun. 14 at Syracuse L 11-4 11-12 Navy Wo. Inters. 5th Sun. 5 at Marist L 5-3 11th of 16 Sat. 18 Metro Series One 4th Sat. 11 vs. Queens W 13-3 Sun. 23 Ivy League Champ. 6th/8 Women’s Lacrosse 18-19 St. Mary’s Wo. Inter. 9th Sat. 11 vs. Utica W 14-3 Sun. 30 URI Invitational 6th/12 5-11 Overall, 3-4 Ivy League 18-19 Truxtun Umstead 7th Sat. 11 at Hartwick L 12-3 February Sun. 19 Team Racing I 3rd Fri. 17 BROWN L 3-2 Women’s Golf Sat. 25 at Syracuse L 15-9 25-26 Owen Trophy 11th Sat. 25 at La Verne W 7-5 March March 25-26 So. NE Team Race 2nd Sun. 26 at Pomona-Pitzer L 8-5 Sun. 26 Jekyll Island Invite 2nd Thu. 2 HOLY CROSS W 17-9 25-26 Marchiando Trophy 3rd Mon. 27 vs. UC Davis L 7-1 April Sat. 4 at Massachuse�s L 12-8 Sat. 25 Emily Wick Trophy 5th Mon. 27 at Redlands L 7-6 Sun. 2 Hoya Invitational 7th/15 Thu. 9 at Quinnipiac L 16-15 (ot) Sun. 26 Women’s Sloop 4th Tue. 28 at California Bap. W 7-5 Sat. 15 Brown/Dartmouth 1st/3 Wed. 15 UCONN L 12-11 April April Sun. 23 Ivy League Champ. 2nd Fri. 24 BC L 15-9 1-2 Wo. Joseph Dublin 7th 1-2 at ECAC Championship Mon. 27 at Saint Mary’s W 14-13 1-2 Boston Dinghy Club 1st vs. Maryland L 5-3 Men’s Lightweight Crew April Sun. 2 Team Racing II 2nd vs. George Wash. W 10-4 April Sat. 1 at Yale W 11-8 8-9 Ferrarone Team 3rd vs. Brown L 6-5 Sat. 8 @ Cornell w/Penn 1st Wed. 5 BU L 11-8 8-9 Wo. Pres. Trophy 3rd Fri. 7 HARTWICK L 16-7 Sun. 9 vs. Delaware, 1st Sun. 9 at Penn L 15-4 Sat. 8 Metro Series 3 4th Sat. 8 BROWN L 10-6 Georgetown & Rutgers Wed. 12 at NNH L 19-10 Sun. 9 Team Race 3rd Sat. 8 vs. L 12-9 Sat. 15 Biglin Bowl 2nd Sat. 15 PRINCETON L 14-8 15-16 Admiral’s Cup 3rd Sat. 15 at Conn. College W 17-6 vs. Dartmouth, MIT Wed. 19 DARTMOUTH L 11-5 15-16 BU Trophy 5th 22-23 Northern Championships Sat. 22 Haines Cup at Navy 2nd Sat. 22 at Columbia W 13-12 15-16 Wo. Dellenbaugh 8th UTICA W 14-4 Sat. 29 Goldthwait Cup @ Yale Wed. BROWN W 12-7 Sat. 15 Metro Series 4 1st HARTWICK L 12-2 w/Princeton 3rd Fri. 28 CORNELL L 17-8 Sun. 16 Oberg Trophy 10th BROWN W 6-5 May 22-23 George Morris 4th HARTWICK L 10-4 Sun. 21 EARC Sprints 4th Men’s Outdoor Track 22-23 Wo. NEISA Champ. 4th 29-30 Eastern Championships June April 22-23 Fresh. NEISA Cham. 4th vs. Hartwick L 13-2 1-3 IRA National Champ 2nd Sat. 8 Hillside Relays 22-23 Thompson Trophy 1st vs. Indiana L 7-6 Sat. 15 Husky Invite Sat. 22 Metro Series 5 6th vs. Maryland L 4-3 Men’s Heavyweight Crew Sat. 22 YALE L 114-48 Sun. 22 George Mason 4th April Sat. 29 Wildcat Invite 29-30 NEISA Team Champ 3rd Sat. 8 Stein Cup @ Brown May Sat. 29 Geiger Trophy 4th For the latest L 5:35.7-5:36.2 6-7 Hep. Champ 8th Sun. 30 Staake Trophy 4th scores and highlights visit Sat. 15 Compton Cup 2nd 12-13 IC4A Champ. 54th May the Crimson online at vs. Princeton, MIT 26-27 NCAA East Reg. 5-6 NEISA Dinghy Champ. 4th Sat. 22 Adams Cup 1st June 24-26 ICSA Wo. Champ. 8th www.gocrimson.com @ Navy w/Penn 7-10 NCAA Champ. 28-30 ICSA Team Champ. 5th 31-2 ICSA Dinghy Champ. 3rd 5 HARVARD VARSITY CLUB, INC. Murr Center FIRST CLASS 65 North Harvard Street U.S. POSTAGE Boston, MA PAID 02163-1012 BOSTON, MA (617) 495-3535 PERMIT NO. 53825 Fax: (617) 496-8296

FIRST CLASS

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(L-R): John Ignacio ‘69, Tom Stephenson ‘64, Alexander Stephenson and Collin Blackburn ‘03 at the Friends of Football dinner in Palo Alto, Alto, Palo in dinner Football of Friends the at ‘03 Blackburn Collin and Stephenson Alexander ‘64, Stephenson Tom ‘69, Ignacio John (L-R): Le�:

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(L-R): Kyle Cremarosa ‘03, Willie Alford ‘02, Larry Larsen ‘03, Stephen Venable ‘98, Grant Thompson ‘98 and Mike Armstrong ‘03 at the the at ‘03 Armstrong Mike and ‘98 Thompson Grant ‘98, Venable Stephen ‘03, Larsen Larry ‘02, Alford Willie ‘03, Cremarosa Kyle (L-R): Right:

Angeles on June 13th. Approximately 55 people were on hand to hear from Coach Murphy and Nichols Family Director of Athletics Bob Scalise. Bob Athletics of Director Family Nichols and Murphy Coach from hear to hand on were people 55 Approximately 13th. June on Angeles

(L-R): Paul Sablock ‘79, Bob Baggo� ‘78, Michael Faught ‘79, Dave Scheper ‘80 and David Kinney ‘79 at the Friends of Football dinner in Los Los in dinner Football of Friends the at ‘79 Kinney David and ‘80 Scheper Dave ‘79, Faught Michael ‘78, Baggo� Bob ‘79, Sablock Paul (L-R): Le�: CRIMSON PHOTO GALLERY PHOTO CRIMSON