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Top-Seeded Moravian defeats Union, 5-2, in NCAA Eastern Regional Softball Game

Posted on May 7, 2004

MAHWAH, NJ-Top-seeded Moravian College used a four-run
fourth inning to back the six-hit pitching of ace Meagan Hennessy and the
Greyhounds went on to defeat Union, 5-2, in a second-round game of the NCAA
Division III Eastern Regional Softball Tournament at Ramapo
College.  Union
had won its morning opener, 4-3, in 10 innings against Staten Island.

 

The 24-4 Dutchwomen fall into the loser's bracket of this
double elimination event and will play Saturday (May 8) at 1 p.m.  If it wins,
the Garnet would play again at 3 p.m.

 

Moravian, which is playing in its seventh consecutive NCAA
tournament, went into the game with a record of 34-4 and was ranked seventh in
the country.  Among the Greyhounds' wins
are four victories over teams that had been ranked first in the nation at some
point during the recently concluded regular-season.  Despite the success of 11th-year
head coach John Byrne, who has a career record of 328-116, he has never gotten
his Greyhounds into the World Series.

 

The fans turned out, as they have all year long, to show their support for the Dutchwomen. The Garnet gave the crowd plenty to cheer about, and be proud of, by defeating Staten Island, 4-3, in 10 innings, and then battling 35-4 Moravian before dropping a

Trailing 2-1, Moravian sent nine batters to the plate in the
last of the seventh to score four runs on six hits, including the last five in
a row.  Senior third basewoman Janelle Brey, the Greyhounds' all-time home run leader with 29, had
a two-run single while senior centerfielder Melissa Soroka
and sophomore first basewoman Richelle McWilliams
each singled in a run.

 

The Greyhounds, who went into the game having outscored
their previous 38 opponents by a margin of 196-57, got on the board in the last
of the first when junior shortstop Heather Bortz, who
entered the contest with a batting average of .500, was hit by a pitch, went to
second on a passed ball, and scored on a sacrifice fly by Brey.  Earlier this year Bortz
had established an NCAA all-division record by hitting in 44 consecutive
games.  That streak was stopped 12 games
ago, but her base hit in the fourth extended her current string of 11
consecutive games with at least one hit and left her having hit safely in 55 of
the last 56 games.

 

Union tied the game in the top of the second when leadoff
hitter Colleen White singled and advanced to third on singles by Julie Gawronski, whose hit went to right field, and Katie Ratner, who beat out her sacrifice bunt attempt.  Hennessy got the first out of the inning when
Brey caught a foul ball by her team's dugout.
Stephanie Rubino then plated White with a sacrifice
fly before Hennessy got out of trouble by inducing a fly ball to center.

 

The Dutchwomen gave the top-seeded Greyhounds all they could handle before dropping a 5-2 decision to the nation's seventh-ranked team. Union drops to the loser's bracket and must win both its 1:00 and 3:00 games in order to compete for the Eastern Regio

The Dutchwomen took their lead in the fourth as White again
led off with a single and moved to second as Gawronski
beat out a hit on a ball that went in front of the plate and eluded both
Hennessy and catcher Danielle Carrione.  Hennessy picked up her first out via the
strikeout route before a walk to Elise Nichols loaded the bases.  Rubino came through
with a base hit to pick up her second RBI of the game while advancing the
runners.  Unfortunately for Union,
Alicia Gifford, who drove in the winning run with a base hit in the last of the
10th in the morning contest, saw her fly ball to center turned into
an inning-ending double play.

 

Hennessy settled down following Union's
fourth and, including the double play ball, retired 10 in a row before pinch
hitter Jessica Lawton walked with two out in the seventh.

 

“That is a very good team,” said Union head coach Peter
Brown, who had expressed concern following the morning
contest that length of the first game and the heat and humidity of the day
would take a toll on his players midway through the
second contest.

 

“I thought we were a little sluggish at the plate, but I
also thought we stayed with them,” he explained.  “They came into the game hitting .309 as a
team and they used some solid base hits to earn the runs they got.  They came out on top this time.  Hopefully we'll hve
the opportunity to meet them again this weekend.”

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Gifford’s single lifts Union over Staten Island, 4-3, in NCAA regional opener

Posted on May 7, 2004

     MAHWAH,
NJ-Sophomore catcher Alicia Gifford (Guilderland, NY) singled home Katie Ratner (Smithtown, NY) with one out in the bottom of the 10th
to give Union a thrilling 4-3 victory over Staten Island College in the opening
game of the 2004 NCAA Division III softball East Regional Championship
Tournament. 

 

   The victory made a
winner of sophomore pitcher Jackie Coffey (Boston,
MA), who tossed a complete-game
seven-hitter that included six strike outs. 
Coffey improved her season record to 12-2.

 

Sophomore catcher Alicia Gifford (14) is mobbed by her teammates after her single in the last of the 10th plated Katie Ratner with the run that gave Union a 4-3 victory over Staten Island.

    Union
will play top-seeded Moravian this afternoon (May 7) at roughly 3 p.m .  A win would put
the Dutchwomen into Saturday's 11 a.m.
game while a loss would have them playing at 3
p.m.  Win or lose on
Saturday, Union will play on Sunday in this double
elimination event.  The regional champion
will move on to the NCAA Softball World Series next weekend.

 

    Ratner, a sophomore who was batting sixth in the order as
the Dutchwomen's designated hitter, opened the 10th with an infield
single to third.  Caitlin DelZotto's sacrifice bunt was thrown into centerfield where
the ball was overrun allowing Ratner to advance to
third with DelZotto stopping at second. One out
later, Gifford laced a single over the outstretched glove of Dolphin first
basewoman Julie Lowe.

 

    “This is very
exciting,” said Gifford to a local reporter when asked how she felt about
picking up the game-winning hit (and earning the game ball from her coaches and
teammates).  However, she quickly put
things into perspective when she said, “But we've still got a lot of work ahead
of us as we look to improve upon our NCAA finish of a year ago.”

 

Sophomore Katie Ratner crosses the plate in the last of the 10th to give Union a 4-3 win over Staten Island in the opening game of the NCAA Eastern Regional Tournament at Ramapo College

    The Dutchwomen,
now 24-3, advanced to the regional championship game of last year's NCAA event
at Cortland.  The 2003 Garnet, who were playing in the then
28-year old program's first national tournament, lost its opening game to
Ithaca, 5-4, then beat William Paterson (3-1), Elms
(8-0) and Ithaca (7-3) before losing to Cortland (3-1) in the regional title
showdown.

 

   
Staten Island, which entered the game with a record of 18-15 and was the
region's No. 5 seed, got the first run given up by Coffey in almost a month in
the top of the second.  Coffey, who
allowed her last run in the seventh inning against St. Lawrence on April 10,
went into the game having pitched 26 scoreless innings.  However, two walks, a hit, and an error
allowed the Dolphins to break that string.

 

      Theresa Tepedino
opened the inning with a walk and advanced to second when Andrea Meise's sacrifice bunt was thrown away for an error.  Julie Lowe walked on a three-ball, two-strike
pitch before Kristina Samaritano, the No. 8 hitter,
fisted a bloop single over the head of second
basewoman Colleen White and just in front of a charging DelZotto,
who was playing right.  The hit allowed Tepedino to cross the plate with the event's first
run.  Coffey got out of further damage by
striking out the No. 9 batter and getting the leadoff hitter to fly out to
Erika Eisenhut in left.

 

     Coffey helped her own cause in the last of
the second when she lined a one-out single to center.  Gifford then singled down the right field
line moving Coffey to second and both runners advanced when leadoff hitter Beth
Carcone walked on four pitches.  Coffey tied the game when Dolphin pitcher
Christina DArpa uncorked a wild pitch, and Union took
a 2-1 advantage when head coach Pete Brown sent Gifford home after DArpa turned her back on the Union base runner outside the
pitching circle.

 

     Eisenhut then
hit a ground ball to third and was safe when she knocked the ball out of the
first basewoman's glove allowing Carcone to move to
third.  Abby Arceneaux,
who earlier in the week was named the UCAA “Player of the Year” (and was an All-Conference first-team selection at pitcher and an
All-Conference second-team selection at first base) hit a sacrifice fly
to center.

 

Sophomore pitcher Jackie Coffey went the distance to pick up her 12th win of the year as the Dutchwomen won their NCAA Eastern Regional opener by defeating Staten Island, 4-3, in 10 innings. Coffey allowed seven hits, fanned six and walked two.

     Coffey retired nine in a row from the
second out of the third inning until the first out of the sixth before Staten Island
collected back-to-back singles.  Coffey
got out of further trouble in the sixth as Gifford made a nice play on a foul
ball and Eisenhut caught a fly ball in left.

 

   
Coffey wasn't as fortunate in the ninth as the
Dolphins scored twice to send the game into extra innings.

 

     Danna Glennerster
opened the frame with a pinch-hit single to right as the ball just went over
the glove of Arceneaux at first.  Coffey picked up a fielder's choice for the
first out, but leadoff hitter Jennifer Doscher laced
a double into the left-centerfield gap plating Glennerster.  Donna Przybyszewski
just missed beating out a bunt with Doscher moving to
third.  With two outs, DApra was called safe on a bang-bang play at first allowing
Doscher to score the tying run.  Coffey fanned Tepedino,
the Dolphins' cleanup hitter, to end the inning.

 

   
While Coffey regained her dominance after the seventh, retiring all nine
batters she faced in innings eight through 10, the Dutchwomen wasted several
golden opportunities.

 

   
“I was getting concerned that we were leaving way too many runners in
scoring position in the extra innings and that it was going to come back to
haunt us,” explained Brown.  “But Jackie
did a tremendous job and our players never hung their heads after Staten Island
scored those two runs in the seventh.”

 

   
Union missed a chance to end the game in the last of the seventh
after Arceneaux reached on a one-out bunt and
sophomore centerfielder Julie Gawronski walked with
two outs.  Both runners advanced on a
wild pitch, but Ratner's screaming line drive was
caught by Dolphin shortstop Doscher.  Freshman Elise Nichols opened the eighth with
a pinch-hit single, moved to second on Coffey's sacrifice bunt, but was
stranded at third.  The heart of Union's order
went quietly in the ninth before the Dutchwomen won it with the bottom of their
order in the 10th.

 

     “Two things about this team that have
brought us the tremendous success we've enjoyed the last two years,” said
Brown.  “First, we don't have a No. 2
pitcher.  Jackie and Abby or Abby and
Jackie…the coaches, and more importantly, the team has a tremendous amount of
confidence on whichever pitcher is on the mound.  Second, there is not a lot of pressure on any
one player, or any group of players for that matter.  Everyone on this team has the ability to
produce the big hit, come up with the big catch, or steal the big base.  The players are all dedicated to each other
and they all pick each other up. 

 

   
“Those are the two main reasons we have done as well as we have the last
two seasons.”

 

     Besides throwing a great game, Coffey
picked up a pair of singles, scored a run and advanced a runner with a
sacrifice bunt.  Gifford also had two
hits and the big RBI.  In the field,
Gifford was credited with eight putouts, Arceneaux had six at first base, freshman Colleen White at
six at second (along with an assist) and Eisenhut
finished with four in left field.

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Exhibits

Posted on May 7, 2004

Friday, May 7, and Saturday, May 8
Arts Atrium Gallery
Steinmetz Symposium student art exhibition.

Through May 23
Mandeville Gallery, Nott Memorial
“China/Cuba/Vietnam: Recent Photographs by Martin Benjamin.”

Through end of term
Social Sciences gallery
Drawings by Fatima Mahmood '06

Through June
Arts Atrium Gallery
Senior exhibitions

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Events

Posted on May 7, 2004

Friday, May 7, and Saturday, May 8
Throughout campus
The 14th
annual Steinmetz Symposium.
For information and schedule, visit: http://www.union.edu/Steinmetz/

Friday, May 7
10 a.m. to 4 p.m.

– Social Sciences 016 — “Roundtable: Baseball in Asia.”

Saturday and Sunday, May 8 & 9
Spring Family Weekend

Saturday, May 8 to Monday, May 10
8 & 10:30
p.m.
– Reamer Campus Center Auditorium – Movie: Cold
Mountain (155 min.)

Saturday, May 8
9 a.m. – Field trip to the Baseball Hall of
Fame in Cooperstown and “Roundtable: Baseball in Asia.” Free bus trip for symposium
participants. Contact Prof. Theodore Gilman.
11 a.m.
– Memorial Chapel — Prize
Day convocation
9 p.m. – Old Chapel – Jazz and Java Lounge.

Tuesday, May 11
4 p.m. – Reamer Campus Center Auditorium – Minerva speaker David Cole,
attorney and author, will present “Enemy Aliens and American Freedoms: Double
Standards and Civil Liberties in the War on Terror.” A reception will be in
Hale House Dining Room. (Co-sponsored by American Studies program).
7:30 p.m. – Old Chapel – “Emerging Writers: An
Evening of Poetry and Prose with Barbara DeCesare, Elena Georgiou and Selah
Saterstrom.” To explore the words and careers of three rising writers. Free and
open to the public. Sponsored by the English Department, Women's Studies, the
Dean of Students Office and Schaffer Library.

Wednesday, May 12
8 p.m. – Memorial Chapel – “Catwalk for a Cause,” The Fashion Show
of Support for the benefit of Camp Miracles & Magic, a camp for children
infected with or affected by HIV/AIDS. Tickets $5.
8 p.m. – South College, Green Living Room – The Latin American
film series continues with How Nice to
See You Alive
(Brazil, Lucia Murat, 1989). Plot: In March 1964, the
military overthrew the Brazilian government. Subsequently, civil rights were
suspended and torture was systematic. Murat, herself a political prisoner and
torture survivor, combines documentary and fiction to record those events.

Thursday, May 13
11 a.m. – 3 p.m. – Old Chapel – Health Fair.
6:30 p.m. – Everest Lounge – Philosophy Talks –
Guest speaker Christine Korsgaard of Harvard University. Her topic will be “Identity and
Interaction.”
7:30 p.m. – Reamer Campus Center Auditorium – In conjunction with the
Health Fair, a speaker's program about eating disorders.

Thursday, May 13 to Saturday, May 15
8 p.m. – Yulman Theater – The Montebanks
present The Complete Works of Shakespeare

Friday, May 14
5 p.m. – Reamer Campus Center – Lobster Bake

Friday, May 14 to Monday, May 17
8 & 10 p.m. – Reamer Campus Center Auditorium – Movie: 50 First Dates

Saturday, May 15
West Beach – Spring Fest
3:30 p.m. – Arts 215 – A lecture featuring
Anthony Bannon, director of the George Eastman House International Museum of
Photography & Film in Rochester, N.Y.

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Review committee set

Posted on May 7, 2004

A committee has been formed to review the professional
performance of Lorie Wies, acquisitions and periodicals librarian at Schaffer
Library.  Committee members are Cara
Molyneaux (chair), Donna Burton and Annette LeClair.
Members of the College community who wish to provide written comments about her
performance, development, scholarship or service should contact a member of the
committee, care of Schaffer Library, by May 14. Interviews may be arranged by
contacting the chair at ext. 6279.

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