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1980

1980 Team Guide, Football

State University of College at Cortland

Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalcommons.cortland.edu/football_documents FOOTBALL CoSUNYr t—l and— FALL 1980 FOOTBALL M EDIA G UIDE 198 0

Contents

1980 Sched ule, 1979 R esults... .2 Ed Decker, Head Co ach .3 Assistant Coaches .4 Football Outlook .7 Series Record with Opponents.. .9 1979 S tatistics 10 Football Records 12 Red Dra gon Coaches and R ecords 16 1980 Roster 17 The College 20

CORTLAND I NFORMATION

Founded: 1868 Enrollment: 5,600 Nickname: Red Dra gons Colors: Red and White President: James M. Clark Men's Athletic Director: Vincent Gonino (607/753-4963) Women's A thletic Director: Carole Mushier (607/753-4953) Head Fo otball Coach: Edwin J. Decker (607/753-4944) College Relations Office: Norbert Haley (607/753-2518) (Home T el. 756-2323)

The 198 0 Football Guide is published by the Office of College Relations and Devel opment, State University College at Cortland, Cortland, New Yor k 13045 CORTLAND ST ATE 1980 VARSITY FOOTBALL SCHEDULE

September 13 Buffalo H 1 30 20 Hobart A 1 30 27 New York Tech. A 1 30 October 4 *Hofstra H 1 30 11 Brockport A 1 30 18 AT bany A 1 30 25 AT fred A 1 30 November 1 **Canisius H 1 30 8 Ithaca H 1 30 15 Marist A 1 30

*Homecoming **Parents Weekend

CORTLAND STATE VA RSITY FOOTBALL RESULTS 1979

1 Win, 9 Losses

Cortland Opponent

13 Buffalo 17 14 Springfield 27 7 Ithaca 42 3 East Stroudsburg 24 23 Central Conn. 29 13 Brockport 25 7 Alfred 34 16 Hobart 17 7 Southern Conn. 21 27 New York Tech. 0

2 ED D ECKER - HEAD C OACH

"It is my goal to restore Cortland to the ranks of the perennial winners, that list of teams which annually win more than they lose. We mu st create a renewed feeling of enthusiasm among the players, staff, faculty and alumni for our pro­ gram."

These were Ed D ecker's words as he took charge of Cortland's football program when he was appointed head coach. He was "elated" at being picked for the job at his alma mater. He is a 1957 graduate of Cortland and pla yed halfback under the late Carl "Chugger" Davis. Decker also has a master's degree in physical education from Cortland.

The new head coach comes to the Cortland cam­ pus from rival Ithaca College where he was a defensive coach for three years. Previously, he was offensive line coach and recruiting coordina­ tor for Columbia University's football team. The 46-year-old Decker had h is first coaching job guiding the freshman team a t Union-Endicott High School where he also played. He is a native of Johnson City. His U-E clubs were 15-2-1 and wo n two STAC t itles.

Decker later was head football coach at Carthage C entral, Henninger High School in Syra­ cuse, and Penfield High School. His 1966 Car­ thage team wo n eight straight and he was named "Coach o f the Year" of the Northern District by the NYS F ootball Coaches Association. Decker's total high school coaching record stands at 62-27-3.

A U.S. Army veteran, Decker also has lectured at football camps and clinics in central New York and has been invited to speak at athletic din­ ners in New York and N ew Je rsey.

3 ASSISTANT COACHES

JERRY CASCIANI - Inside Linebackers

A m ember of the Cortland faculty since 1970, Jerry Casciani played college football at Spring­ field where he earned a B .S. degree in physical education. He has a m aster's degree from Penn State. Before coming to Cortland, he was dis­ trict chairman of health and physical education of the Northeastern School District of York County, Pa. Casciani has extensive experience in athletic conditioning programs and has handled numerous.scouting assignments in football. He also serves as assistant coach for the Red Dragons, having been head lacrosse coach at Baltimore Junior College where he was for three years. In addition, Casciani.has coached JV wrestling at Cortland and served as head coach on an acting basis.

LARRY CZARNECKI - Defensive Coordinator

In his third year as a me mber of the Cortland football staff, Larry Czarnecki has B.A. and M.A. degrees from Ithaca College. While an under­ graduate at Ithaca, Czarnecki played four years of football.and was named 1976 P layer of the Year for ECAC D ivision III teams. He was a first team p ick for the Associated Press1 Little All- American team and the Kodak College Division All- American team. In addition, he was an all-league selection for four years in the Independent Col­ lege Athletic Conference. Before joining the Cortland staff, Czarnecki was an assistant foot­ ball coach with the IC Bombers and served one year as freshman defensive coordinator for Dart­ mouth's football program.

4 MARK K ACZANDWICZ - Offensive Line

Joining the Cortland physical education.fac­ ulty this year is Mar-k Kaczanowicz, a native of Oneida, N.Y. He has B.S. and M.S. degrees from Brockport State. For the past two y ears, he has been offensive line coach with the Brockport football program. As a Brockport undergraduate, Kaczanowicz had four years of varsity football experience and was elected team c aptain in his junior and s enior years. In 1975-76, he was assistant wrestling coach at Brockport Junior High School and then joined the staff at Oneida High School.where he was a crisis classroom tea­ cher and developed and implemented an off-season conditioning program.

LARRY M ARTIN - "B" Team Co ach

A na tive of Cortland, Larry Martin has B.S. and M.S. degrees from Cortland and earned a doc­ torate at Springfield College where he studied with the aid of an N DEA d octoral fellowship. While studying at Springfield, he also served as an assistant with the football coaching staff. He p layed football at Cortland under the late "Chugger" Davis and started at an end position, playing offense and defense. Martin also has coached the men's varsity team for the Red Dragons. Before joining the Cortland faculty, Martin served as coach of football, and baseball at Gouverneur and Ma ssena H igh Schools and was director of physical education and athletics as well as a coach at Canton H igh School.

R. SCOTT R OBINSON - Receivers

After earning an AAS degree from Nassau Com­ munity College in 1971, Scott Robinson went on to obtain.a B.A. from Syracuse U niversity in 1973

5 arrt3 received a n M .A. degree from Cortland i n 1975. He played varsity football at Nassau and at Syracuse and was a member of two junior col­ lege bowl teams while at the Long Island college. Robinson is a former head football coach at Moravia High School where his teams had a record of 19-5-4.

JACK RADZAVICZ - Outside Linebackers Another part-time member of the staff this fall will be Jack Radzavicz who recently stepped down as head gridiron coach at Cortland High Schoool where he continues to teach physical education. As a freshman and J.V. football coach for CHS, Radzavicz had a six year record of 39-4. In the varsity ranks, his teams over 13 campaigns were 69-40-2. He has B.S. and M.S. degrees from Cortland State. As an assistant to Coach Decker, Rad­ zavicz will work with outside linebackers. JIM BORABABY - Defensive Secondary Additional coaching help on a volunteer basis is being provided by Jim Borababy who recently located in the Cortland area. He played as a wide receiver and defensive back while at Boston College. For the past seven years, he has been head football coach at Notre Dame High School in Utica where he also taught physical education.

6 RED D RAGON F OOTBALL OUTLOOK

A ne w era begins for the Cortland State foot­ ball program this season, with the fresh coach­ ing regime of Ed Decker hitching up with a r e­ vised schedule to take the Red Dra gons into the 1980's on the upswing.after experiencing hard times in recent years.

Decker is the cornerstone of Cortland hopes to return to respectability. The chief architect in the plan is familiar with the winning Cortland tradition of yesteryear as a player under the late Carl "Chugger" Davis, a legend at Cortland.

Enthusiasm and hard work are two of the prime ingredients in his hopes to turn around Re d D ra­ gon fortunes. "Hard work -.there's just no success without it. You fiave to spend time on the practice field learning your skills," he stresses. A win ning attitude is another neces­ sity in Decker's gameplan. "You have to tell the kids you expect to win."

The schedule, meanwhile, offers relief from the backbreaking grind outmanned Cortland teams had be come accustomed to playing, albeit grud­ gingly because of the physical whippings in­ flicted by larger Division II opponents. New York Tech, the Dragons' only conquest a year ago, is the lone Division II foe remaining on a Cort­ land chart that for the first time since pre- World War I I days has the Dragons playing strict­ ly New York State teams.

For certain, the 1980 Red Drag ons will be a well-conditioned club from the season's start. "I think one of the problems last year was no­ body worked in the off-season."

One plus emerging from last season's tribula­ tions (W-l, L-9) was the experience gained by a

7 flock of underclassmen who were baptized in collegiate grid wars. Several freshmen saw ex­ tensive duty, including.regular quarterback Jay Cieply. "Well rely heavily on him," according to Decker.

Cieply and Jude Francois carried the brunt of the Dragons' offense last season, with the quar­ terback passing for nearly 1,500 yards and Francois running on a school-record course until his campaign was curtailed by a knee injury which hasn't adequately healed and will cause his ab­ sence from football this fall. "He's a heckuva loss. We'll have to change some things as a result. We would' ve run from an 'I' formation with him," Decker said.

A div erse attack is in Decker's plans al­ though they'll include a basic option operated by Cieply» "It'll limit the defense and w e'll take what they give us. I think Cieply can run. And with our receivers we can generate the big play."

Leading the running back returnees are Greg Grazen, Mike Bowe and Tim Ge iger. The receiving corps features Gene Gl eeson, Jack Garrity and Pete Schwan, a trio who grabbed 67 passes among them last season, and Mike H illiard.

Another receiver is Rob Ba rber, although he's become better known for his foot. He.led 1979 Cortland scorers with 34 points on seven field goals from the 32 to 42 yard range, and 13 points-after-touchdown.

Interior linemen back in the fold from a steady diet of action last season include senior Ed Q uirk, a 230-pounder wh o has drawn profession­ al inquiries, Jack Graham, two-year starting center Nick Rama, Rich Ryan, Paul Alexander, and Joe Theret.

8 Holdovers are just as plentiful defensively where Decker will basically use a 4-4 alignment. "And we'll simplify assignments," Coach Decker declared. "Last year, there seemed t o be a lot of missed assignments and that hurts."

Defensive forwards expected to form a nucleus of the regular cast are Dana Dobson, Lamar Lee, Jim Hintze, Mark VanDerkarr, Ron Allen and John Martens. Veteran linebackers include Steve Kazmark, Brian Mooney, Bob Bateso n, while Mike Tracy shifts from end t o strong linebacker.

Pat Goodell and Jim Macklin have experience in the defensive backfield. And ne wcomer Steve Arm­ strong, one of the nation's top Division III de­ cathlon performers last spring, definitely figures.

SERIES RECORD W ITH 1980 FO OTBALL OPPONENTS

Cortland Wins and Scores Listed First

Opponent W-L-T Last Meeting

SUNY B uffalo 5-6-1 1979 13-17 Hobart 2-1-0 1979 16-17 New York Tech 1-0-0 1979 27-0 Hofstra 2-5-0 1958 8-0 Brockport 26-3-2 1979 13-25 Albany 0-3-0 1978 31-41 Alfred 10-20-1 1979 7-34 Canisius 1-2-0 1942 0-27 Ithaca 16-18-3 1979 7-42 Marist 0-0-0 1st Meeting

9 CORTLAND ST ATE'S INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS - 1979

PASSING Att. Comp. Yds. Ave. Int. TPs Pet. • Jay Cieply 730 97 1416 14.5 14 4 .42

RUSHING Att. Yds. Ave. Long. TDs Jude Francois 158 761 4.8 45 T Perry Lyon 84 375 4 42 4 Greg Grazen 44 157 3.5 14 1 Jay Cieply 90 124 1.3 0 Gene Gleeson 4 18 4.5 8 0 Mike Bowe 42 112 2.6 12 0

RECEIVING No. Yds Ave. TDs Gene Gleeson 29 460 16 0 Jack Garrity 25 337 13 1 Pete Schwan 13 252 19 2 Kevin Fleming 12 139 11. 5 1 Jude Francois 12 114 9.5 0 Mike Bowe 6 61 10 0 Tim Gr eiger 2 13 6 0 Tim Will iams 1 2 2 0 Perry Lyon 1 0 0 0

INTERCEPTIONS No. Yds Ave. TDs Pat Goodell 3 ~r T76~ ~TT Tim Pe ndergast 2 10 5 0 Bob Bateson 1 13 13 0 Jim Mack!in 1 8 8 0 Marc Feeko 1 5 5 0

PUNT R ETURNS No. Yds. Ave. Long TDs Greg Grazen 14 6T 4.3 10 0 Ron Ross 6 7 1.2 5 0 Mike Bowe . 2 24 12 21 0

PUNTING No. Ave. Long Kevin Sherlock 7T 34 49 Gene Gle eson 18 35 52 Perry Lyon 8 33 51

10 KICKOFF RETURNS No. Yds. Ave. Long TDs Mike Bowe IT 175 15 o 9 _T Greg Grazen 10 165 16.6 42 0 Pete Schwan 5 83 16.6 27 0 Jude Francois 4 43 10.7 16 0 John Obermeyer 2 21 10.5 21 0

CORTLAND TEAM STATISTICS - 1979 FOOTBALL SEASON TOTAL 1st DOWNS Cort. OPP^ Total 136 159 Rushing 77 100 Passing 51 39 Penalty 10 19 Game Ave. 13.6 15.9 TEAM RUSHING Cort. Qpp- Att. 441 SIT Yds. Gain 1821 2496 Yds. Lost 266 325 Net Yds. 1555 2171 Yds. Per Att. 3.5 4.1 Yds. Per Game 155 217 TDs 8 19 TEAM PASSING Cort. Att. 242 189 Comp 100 78 Percentage 41% 46% Had Int. 14 8 Yds. Gain 1436 1055 Yds. Per Catch " 14.4 13.50 Yds. Per Game 144 105.5 TDs 6 12 TOTAL OFFENSE Cort. Opp. Run-Pass Plays 683 698 Net Yds. 2991 3226 Yds. Per Play 4.37 4.6 Yds. Per Game 299 322 TDs Rush 8 19 TDs Pass 6 12

11 RED D RAGON S CORING - 1979 TD PAT(1 Pt) Rob Barber* 0 13 Perry Lyon 4 Jude Francois** 3 Peter Schwan* 2 Jack Garrity* 2 Kevin Fleming 1 Gene I ozzino 1 Greg Grazen* 1 Pat Goodell* 1 Mike Hilliard* 1 * Returning **Injured - Will Miss 1980 Season CORTLAND S TATE FOOTBALL RECORDS TEAM R ECORDS Most Points Scored in a Game 73, vs. Brockport, 1969 Most Points Scored in a Season 229, ten games, 1978 Most Points Allowed, One Season 332, 10 Games, 1977 Highest Points Per Game Average 27.4, eight games, 1969 Fewest Points Scored in a Season 13, seven games, 1927 Most Points Allowed in One Game 68, vs. U. of Buffalo, 1959 Fewest Points Allowed, One Season 16, seven games, 1933 Yards Rushing, One Season 1,794, eight games, 1969 Yards Passing, One Season 2,199, ten games, 1978 Total Offense, One Season 3,357, ten games, 1978 Most Passes Intercepted, One Seas on 19, nine games, 1975, 8-1-0 19, 10 games, 1978, 5-5-0 12 Most Games Wo n, One Season 8, 1964 (8-1) Fewest Games Wo n, One Season 0-6-1, 1927; 0-5-1, 1928

CAREER R ECORDS Most Pass Attempts 654, Ralph Boettger, 1973-76 331, John Anselmo, 1968-70 Most Pass Completions 313 Ralph Boettger, 1973-76 150 John Anselmo, 1968-70 Most Passing Yardage 3,762, Ralph Boettger, 1973-76 2,338, John Anselmo, 1968-70 Most ID Passes 20, Ralph Boettger, 1973-76 16, John Anselmo, 1963-70 Most TD R eceptions 14, Earl Rogers, 1968-70 11, Rod Verkey, 1966-68 Most Receptions 91, Tim Arden, 1973-76 85, Earl Rogers, 1968-70 Most Reception Yardage 1,554, Earl Rogers, 1968-70 1,223, Frank Goroleski, 1977-78 1,210, Tim Arden, 1973-76

SEASON R ECORDS

Most Yards Rushing 857, Lyle Schuler, 1976 761, Jude Francois, 1979 739, Joe Bramante, 1969

Most Yards Passing 1,930, John Simek, 1978 1,416, Jay Cieply, 1979

13 1,177, Gred Didio, 1977 1,036, Ralph Boettger, 1976 1,030, Don Congdon, 1967 Most Total Offense 1,816, John Simek, 1978 1,540, Jay Cieply, 1979 1,373, John Anselmo, 1969 1,113, Greg Didio, 1977 1,049, Ralph Boettger, 1976 Most Passes Attempted 243, John Simek, 1978 230, Jay Cieply, 1979 211, Greg Didio, 1977 197, Ralph Boettger, 1974 190, Pat Olson, 1971 Most Passes Completed 136, John Simek, 1978 97, Jay Cieply, 1979 94, John Anselmo, 1969 94, Pat Olson, 1971 94, Mark Hinsch, 1972 90, Ralph Boettger, 1976 Most Receptions 47, Frank Goroleski, 1978 36, Tim Arden, 1976 34, Rod Verkey, 1967 Most TD Re ceptions 9, Rod V erkey, 1968 7, Gary Theobald, 1971 Most Reception Yardage 784, Frank Goroleski, 1978 583, Earl Rogers, 1970 560, Earl Rogers, 1969 523, Mark Jenks, 1973 514, Rod Verkey, 1967

SINGLE GAME R ECORDS

Most Yards Rushing 231, Jude Francois, vs. Cent. Conn. 1979 174, Jack Radzavicz, vs. Brockport, 1958

14 Most Yards Passing 436, John Simek, vs. Albany, 1978 320, Ralph Boettger, vs., Cent. Conn., 1976 Most Total Offense 447, John Simek, Vs. Albany, 1978 319, Ralph Boettger, Vs., Cent. Conn., 1976 Most TD Passes 3, John Simek, Vs., So. Conn., 1978 3, Greg D idio, Vs., AIC, 1977 3, Mark Hinsch, vs. Alfred, 1972 3, John Anselmo, vs. Ithaca, 1969 3, Don Congdon, vs. Brockport, 1967 3, David Kane, vs. Hofstra, 1955 Most Passes Attempted 67, John Simek, vs. Albany, 1978 35, Greg D idio, Vs. Albany, 1977 35, Ralph Boettger, vs. Central Conn., 1975 35, Pat Olson, vs. Indiana, 1971 Most Passes Completed 34, John Simek, vs. Albany, 1978 25, Ralph Boettger, vs. Cent. Conn., 1976 Most Pass Receptions 16, Frank Goroleski, vs. Albany, 1978 11, Tom Cumings, vs. Cent. Conn., 1976 9, Earl Rogers, vs. Springfield, 1970 9, Rod Verkey, vs. C.W. Post, 1967 Most Reception Yardage 230, Frank Goroleski, vs. Albany, 1978 158, Mark Jenks, vs. Ithaca, 1973 152, Tom Cumings, vs. Cent. Conn., 1976 119, Rod Verkey, vs. C.W. Post, 1967 Longest Pass Reception 81 yards, Earl Rogers, vs. Indiana, 1970 Most TD Pass Receptions 3, John Devendorf, vs. So. Conn., 1978 Most Points Scored 24, John Devendorf, vs. So. Conn., 1978 24, Paul Duda, vs. Bridgeport, 1964 Most TD's Scored 4, Paul Duda, vs. Bridgeport, 1964

15 Longest Kickoff Return 93 yards, Bruce Layman, vs. Bridgeport, 1973 Longest Field Goal 61 yards, Bill Shear, vs. Hobart, 1966 Longest Punt 75 yards, Ed Louiz, vs. Montclair, 1975

RED DRAGON FOOTBALL COACHES AND RECORDS

WILLARD P. ASHBROOK Won 9, Lost 8, Tied 4 1925 5-1-1 / 1926 4-1-2 / 1927 0-6-1

GEORGE HENDRICKS Won 0, Lost 5, Tied 1 1928 0-5-1

HOWARD HOBSON Won 3, Lost 4, Tied 0 1929 3-4-0

HENRY KUMPH Won 6, Lost 6, Tied 1 1930 4-3-0 / 1931 2-3-1

CARL "CHUGGER" DAVIS Won 105, Lost 67, Tied 17 1932 4-0-3 1941 2-3-1 1953 2-3-1 1933 5-0-2 1942 4-1-0 1954 2-3-2 1934 4-1-1 1946 4-3-0 1955 6-1-0 1935 6-0-1 1947 5-3-0 1956 4-3-0 1936 5-1-0 1948 5-1-1 1957 4-1-2 1937 4-2-0 1949 4-3-0 1958 5-2-0 1938 2-4-0 1950 3-4-0 1959 2-3-2 1939 5-2-0 1951 3-4-0 1960 2-5-0 1940 2-5-0 1952 4-2-1 1961 4-3-0 1962 3-4-0

ROGER ROBINSON Won 70, Lost 77, Tied 3 1963 4-3-0 1969 4-4-0 1975 2-6-1 1964 8-1-0 1970 5-4-0 1976 4-5-0 1965 7-2-0 1971 4-5-0 1977 2-8-0 1966 6-2-0 1972 6-3-0 1978 5-5-0 1967 4-4-0 1973 1-7-1 1979 1-9-0 1968 5-3-0 1974 2-6-1

16 CORTLAND S TATE FOOTBALL 1980 ROSTER

P1ayer Pos. Yr. Ht. Wt. Hometown High School

Alexander, Paul CT Jr 6-1 230 Rochester Cardinal Mooney Allen, Ron DT Jr 6-4 216 Oswego Oswego Barber, Rob WR-K Jr 5-8 165 Fort Edward Hudson F alls Bateson, Bob LB So 6-1 205 Eden- Eden C entral Battaglia, Chris S Jr 5-11 165 Rochester Aquinas Inst .Tech. Beck, Lenny LB Fr 6-0 195 W. Hurley Kingston Berent, Mark LB Jr 5-10 185 Ballston Spa BaTlston Spa Bertero, Jeff LB So 6-0 180 Vernon, CT Rockvi1le Bitka, Terry OT Fr 6-3 218 W. Seneca West Seneca Bowe, Mike RB So 5-11 180 Macedon Victory Central Bower, Don DB So 6-0 175 Erin Spencer-Van Etten Bradshaw, Milt OG Fr 6-0 205 Lewiston Lewiston-Porter Burm, Frank WR So 6-2 177 Newark Newark Central Cachia, Tony DT So 5-10 228 Newark Lindenhurst Cieply, Jay QB So 5-11 175 Johnston Johnstown Colern, Mike OG So 5-9 195 Lakeview St. Francis Cowell, Chris RB Jr 6-0 210 Schenectady Bishop Gibbons Daly, Tom LB So 6-0 185 Levittown Levittown Memorial Dobson, Dana DT So 5-11 250 Peru Peru Central Elassar, Mike DE Fr 6-0 198 Rochelie Park,NJ Garfield Falasca, Rich RB Jr 5-7 185 Highland Mills Monroe Woodbury Garrity, Jack TE Sr 6-3 200 Pittsford Pittsford Mendon Geiger, Tim RB So 5-11 182 Newark Valley Newark Valley Glagolev, John OG Fr 6-1 220 East Meadow East Meadow Gleeson, Gene WR Sr 6-0 185 N. Syracuse Cicero Goodell, Pat DB Sr 6-0 185 Staten Island Curtis w Graham, Jack OG Sr 6-0 220 - Seneca East Seneca Grazen, Greg RB So 6-0 180 DePew Lancaster Greco, Mike LB So 5-9 195 Pearl River Pearl River Gruschow, Dan OG Fr 5-11 218 Henrietta Rush H enrietta Hagen, Mike OT Fr 6-1 230 Sparrow Bush Port JerviS Hilliard, Mike TE Jr 6-1 185 E. Setauket Ward M elville Hintze, Jim DT Jr 6-2 220 Central Valley Central Valley Hungerford, Frank LB Fr 5-10 190 Elmira Heights Thomas Edison Irion, John OG Jr 6-2 228 Glens Falls Queensbury Kattell, Steve C Jr 6-2 210 Vestal Vestal Kazmark, Steve LB Sr 5-11 190 Endicott Union-Endicott Kernan, Tom DE Fr 5-11 180 Rome Rome Catholic Ladka, Mike OT Fr 6-2 250 Monroe Monroe-Woodbury Larose, Don DB So 5-10 162 Webster R.L. Thomas Lee, LaMar DE So 6-2 205 Syracuse Corcoran Lee, Tom WR Fr 5-8 157 Rockville Ctr. St. Agnes Cathedral Le Mere, Bob LB So 5-9 185 Lackawanna Lackawanna Mackin, Jim S Sr 6-2 190 Nanuet Nanuet Martens, John DE So 6-0 197 Fairport Fairport Mayone, Vince QB Fr 5-10 180 Kingston Kingston McGuigan, Joe LB Jr 5-11 185 Painted Post Corning West Mooney, Brian LB Jr 6-1 203 Hauppauge Hauppauge Moran, Brian DE So 6-1 190 Livonia R.J. Davis Mott, George OG Sr 6-2 230 Moravia Moravia Mozzi, Bob WR Sn 6-2 182 Schenectady Mohonasen Mucha, Steve C Fr 6-0 200 Garfield, NJ Garfield Quirk, Ed OT Sr 6-3 255 Orangeburg Tappan Zee Rama, Nick C Sr 5-10 210 Kerhonkson Rondout Valley Ryan, Rich OT Jr 6-3 250 Saugerties Saugerties Schwan, Pete WR Jr 5-11 170 Ithaca Ithaca Serafen, Andy RB Fr 5-10 175 Norwich Norwich Shaw, Pete DB Sr 5-10 170 Yonkers Roosevelt Snyder, Bill QB Fr 6-3 185 Jordan Jordan-Elbridge Strain, Mitch DB So 5-9 170 Endicott Union Springs Sumner, Eric DB So 5-9 165 Fairport Fairport Tomblin, Ralph LB So 5-10 180 Salamanca Salamanca Tracy, Mike LB Jr 5-9 180 Morris Morris Vairo, Greg C Fr 6-0 225 Elmont Elmont Memorial VanDerKarr, Mark DT So 5-10 215 Brockport Brockport Wood, Jeff DB So 6-1 193 Endicott Owego Fre e Co-Captains: Pat Goodell, Mick Rama Grad Assts: Steve Norris, Demitri LoPuchin Trainers: John Sciera, Mike Aitken Student Trainers: Rich Ferguson, Dan Gorman, Donna Jensen, Marc Meadows, Betsy Shillito Manager: Karen Sanders STATE U NIVERSITY COLLEGE A T C ORTLAND

Founded in 1868, Cortland has bee n p art of State University of New Yor k since 1948 and has evolved as a college of arts and sciences with a c oeducational enrollment of approximately 5,600 undergraduate s tudents.

The C ollege offers undergraduate programs with more than 40 different majors in pro­ fessional areas and in liberal arts and sciences. Provision is made for specialization within many o f the majors which cover a broad range of interests.

Teacher preparation programs provide a range of opportunities from elementary through secondary education. Health, physical education and r ecreation programs are nationally recog­ nized. Outdoor education and e nvironmentally related offerings are expanding.

Students have wide selection in off campus field experiences for almost every major. Study abroad opportunities in five European countries are available. New fi ve-year science- engineering majors are now o ffered in coopera­ tion with SUNY B uffalo, SUNY Stony B rook, Alfred University and Cl arkson College of Tech­ nology.

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