Former Union College Hockey players Jason Ralph ('01) and Nathan Gillies ('03) have signed United Hockey League contracts for the 2004-2005 season with the Rockford IceHogs and the Elmira Jackals respectively. Ralph will be playing his first season in the UHL following three seasons with the Bakersfield Condors of the East Coast Hockey League (ECHL), while Gillies will look to build on his 39 point effort for the Jackals last season. Gillies also played nine games in the AHL during his 2003-2004 campaign.
Ralph was third on the Condors in scoring last season (26-29-55) after tallying 64 and 25 points respectively during his first two seasons with Bakersfield. “The thing that attracted me to him is that he is a complete player,” said Rockford's Head Coach and Director of Hockey Operations Steve Martinson. “He is a gritty competitor who can score, hit and he plays sound defense. He's a skilled player yet he's very physical,” continued Martinson.
Last Season Gillies scored 23 goals with 16 assists for 39 points in 63 games. He chipped in with 6 goals and 6 assists during the Jackals playoff run to the Eastern Conference Championship. “Nathan was our Rookie of the Year last season,” stated Jackals Head Coach Todd Brost. “He has an unbelievable work ethic and competes every shift. Nathan brings great leadership, character and grit to the team.”
During his four seasons with the Dutchmen (1997-2001), Ralph tallied 18 goals and notched 22 assists in 122 games. Gillies, who served as team captain during his senior season (2002-2003), played 117 games for the garnet and white, scoring 33 goals and posting 46 assists.
Alison Kolakowski, left, a Colonie High senior, and Diane Basirico, a Shenedehowa High senior, with their “talkbox.”
Molly Gardner and Maddie Ruggiero were hard at work in an Olin Center computer lab. The room was full of circuit boards, lights,
wires, and computers. The place would be nightmare to the technically
challenged, but the two young women were obviously in their element, engrossed
in their work.
“Watch this,” Molly said as she typed a series of rapid
commands into the computer while Maddie pressed a button on the circuit board.
As lights on the circuit board begin to flash under a
cartoon picture of a television, an electronic voice began to speak: “I'd like
to watch some television, but no soap operas or talk shows please.”
They went on to demonstrate several other phrases which were
controlled by buttons and LED lights on the circuit board and convey basic
human needs (using the restroom, feeling hungry, feeling tired, etc.). Gardner and Ruggiero then explained that
their creation, called a talkbox, is designed to help severely disabled
children communicate.
This talkbox is exactly the type of project one would
expect to find Union's professors toiling over in an engineering laboratory,
but Gardner and Ruggiero are only high school juniors.
The two young women along with 17 others from Capital
Region high schools participated in the two-week EDGE Program (Educating Girls
for Engineering) from July 19-30. For the two weeks of the program, students
work with professors on a number of engineering-related projects. Students were
chosen for the Northrop Grumman Corp.-sponsored event through a rigorous
application process.
The major project had to do with electronic communication
devices and re-engineered toys to be used by severely disabled children. At the
start of the camp, the girls visited patients at Schenectady's Northwoods at Hilltop Brain Injury Rehabilitation Center to see first-hand the daily challenges disabled children
face. After the two-week educational camp, all toys and devices designed and
built by the students will be donated to the center. The toys were supplied by toy manufacturer Hasbro. Photos of the redesigned toys will be displayed at Hasbro's Pawtucket, R.I. offices.
“Young women are naturally service oriented, and we knew that
they would immediately take to the idea of helping disabled children,” said
Karen Williams, an associate professor of biology, and the program's
director.
Joanne Zagorda, a physics teacher at Shenendehowa High
School in Clifton Park, who spent her second year as an EDGE classroom assistant,
shared Williams' sentiment: “Meeting
the disabled children was important. It drew the girls into the camp and gave
them a motivating factor. They could specifically say 'I really want to help
that child' and then step into the classroom and do just that.”
While the task of creating the toys tested the girls'
knowledge of computer programming and electronics, their task to re-engineer
toys for the disabled children at Northwoods called for a different style of
engineering along with a fair share of creativity. On the final day of the
program the girls presented their toys to interested onlookers in the Old
Chapel.
A stuffed animal, re-engineered by EDGE participants for use by a disabled child.
Kaitlyn Driggs, a junior at Maple Hill High School in
Schodack; Kaitlin Gallup, a senior at Scotia-Glenville High School; Natalie
Krumdieck, a senior at Albany Academy for Girls; and Dianne Basirico, a senior
at Shenendehowa High School, re-designed a stuffed animal to make it appeal to
a 7-year-old autistic child at Northwoods.
The fluffy stuffed fish was overhauled with extra-soft sewn patches, a
squeaking nose, several lights, and a vibrating device that made the fish much
more interactive.
The girls in the group all agreed that designing the toy
with a specific child in mind made the task both meaningful and fulfilling and
are all planning to pursue engineering when they attend college.
“We did our best to make the toy really stimulate his
senses,” said Krumdieck. “Even though he has limited vision, we knew he loved
lights and tried to create something bright and fun. We were careful to create
something that was very safe and soft to the touch that could really play to
his sense of touch as well.”
In addition to the engineering projects, participants
received instruction on communication and public speaking to assist in their presentations.
They also had dinner with practicing women engineers from the area and an on-campus
sleepover.
Alison Kolakowski, a senior at Colonie High School, was drawn to the program because of the female
perspective it provided: “Here it is all girls and we get a much different
experience from our high school technology classrooms where it is mostly guys.”
Women constitute 51 percent of the U.S. population and 46 percent of the U.S. labor force. However, among recent graduates (1990 and
later), women represent only 8 to 9 percent of the engineering labor force. While
women constitute a high percentage of some science occupations — more than
half of all psychologists (63 percent) and sociologists (55 percent) are women
— their participation in physics and engineering remains small.
“The climate for women in engineering has
improved markedly in the past 25 years, especially the last five years, and we
want young girls to realize that a career in a technological field is both
viable and rewarding” said Williams.
The participants also learned that a career in engineering
has its share of good times “I was really surprised by how fast the time went
by. We had such a blast doing the computer programming,” said Krumdieck. “The
whole experience was so much fun.”
“Accolades,” Union's magazine dedicated to showcasing the achievements of alumni, won an award of excellence in the APEX 2004 Award competition.
It was entered into the “Custom-Published Magazines and Journals” category by Sawchuk, Brown Associates in Albany, which consults with the College on this publication and is working on the upcoming campaign kick-off and associated communications. Sawchuk Brown's Assistant Vice President Tina L. First edits and coordinates the magazine with Union College Campaign Director Julie R. Solomon and Assistant to the Vice President of College Relations Kathryn Quinn.
APEX 2004 – The 16th Annual Awards for Publication Excellence – is an international competition that honors outstanding publications by business and nonprofit communicators. Covering publications produced in 2003, the APEX competition selected its winners from some 5,500 entries, with awards presented in 11 major categories. It is sponsored by Communications Concepts, Inc., publishers of numerous business communication reports.
SCHENECTADY,
N.Y.–Bill Carmody ('75), Craig Jeffries ('76), Dan Stewart ('85), Courtney
Lynch ('89) and former head football coach Al Bagnoli will be inducted along
with posthumous member Joe Milano ('36) on Saturday, September 18, 2004, at the
third annual Union College Athletics Hall of Fame ceremonies.
The event will
begin with a welcome reception and induction luncheon in Alumni Gym starting at
3:00 p.m., and will conclude with medallion presentations during a halftime
ceremony at the Dutchmen's home opening football game versus Muhlenberg; game
time 7:00 p.m.
Union's
inaugural Athletics Hall of Fame class in 2002 included Sigmund “Sig” Makofski
('26), Ken Whalen ('49), Jim Tedisco ('72), Rich Romer ('88), and Robin
Romer-Chudy ('92). Last year's
ceremonies saw the inductions of George Daley (1892), Ralph Semerad ('35),
Samuel Hammerstrom ('40), Gregory Olson ('67), Robert Moffat, Jr. ('78), and
Julie Benker-O'Brien ('93).
Tickets for the
Hall of Fame Induction ceremony, which will cost $60.00 per person, are still
available by calling the Union College Department of Athletics at 518-388-6284.
BILL CARMODY
Bill Carmody
Bill Carmody, Class of 1975, led the Dutchmen to a
three-year record of 59-11, including back-to-back 20-4 seasons during his
junior and senior campaigns, while starting at point guard. In 1972-73, Carmody's first year as a
starter, he helped the Dutchmen win the first-ever Eastern College Upstate New
York basketball championship. While his
junior team finished second in the event, he helped lead his 1974-75 squad to
the program's only other ECAC tournament title.
Carmody, who graduated with all of the Dutchmen's assist
records (single game-13, single season-146 and career-326), was captain during
his senior season and earned first-team All-ECAC recognition. He capped his outstanding career by being
awarded the William B. Jaffe Medal, which is presented to the senior
male athlete voted by the athletic department to be the outstanding athlete of
the year, while taking into account the character and motivation of the
individual in addition to athletic excellence.
A native of Spring Lake, N.J., Carmody served as the head
coach of Fulton-Montgomery Community College and led the team to a 17-10 record
and conference title in his only season there. He returned to Union the
following year as an assistant coach before joining the Princeton staff as an
assistant coach in 1982. While he was an assistant under the legendary Pete
Carril, the Tigers made seven trips to the NCAA Tournament, which included
their memorable win over defending national champion UCLA in 1996.
Carmody became head coach at Princeton prior to the 1996-97
season and guided the Tigers to an overall record of 92-25 (.786) and an Ivy
League mark of 50-6 (.893) during his four-year tenure; leading them to the
postseason each year. Included in his
record at Princeton is an 81-48 victory over Union in 1999.
Carmody led the Tigers to a 24-4 record in his first season,
the third-best first year mark for a Division I head coach in 30 years. He followed that up with an even better
sophomore campaign when he directed Princeton to a 27-2 record, a Top 10 national
ranking and the second round of the 1998 NCAA Tournament.
Princeton had winning streaks of 20 games and 19 games under
Carmody, the two longest streaks in school history, and his teams set 31 school
records during his tenure. Carmody was named the United States Basketball
Writers' Association District II Coach of the Year and the New Jersey Coach of
the Year each of his first two years.
Carmody is one of four men to coach a team to a perfect Ivy League
record; he is also the only coach to do so in his first year.
Most recently, Carmody was voted by a panel of media as the
Big Ten 2003-04 Coach of the Year — the first time a Northwestern mentor has
been honored in the 31-year history of the award.
Playing with just one senior on the roster, and picked to
finish near the bottom of the Big Ten standings, the Wildcats finished
conference play at 8-8, the best mark by an NU team since the 1967-68 team went
8-6. Those eight wins came against seven different Big Ten teams, the second
time the program has pulled off the feat in Carmody's four years. As a result,
the 'Cats tied for fifth place in the conference standings, their highest
finish since the 1968-69 team also tied for fifth. Overall, the Wildcats
compiled a 14-15 record, which left them just shy of postseason eligibility.
As a team, the 2003-04 Wildcats led the Big Ten in steals
per conference game (7.81) and turnover margin in conference games (+5.12), and
also led the conference in three-pointers made per game overall (7.07). The
team set a school record with 238 steals and drained 205 treys, which is second
on the school's all-time list. The Wildcats' 1.32 assist-to-turnover ratio is
also a school best in the time that both statistics have been kept.
Sports Illustrated has called him the best offensive
coach in college basketball, and during the 2001-02 season SI's college
basketball writer voted him one of the 15 best coaches in the college game.
That list included only one other Big Ten coach-Michigan State's Tom Izzo.
CRAIG JEFFRIES
Craig Jeffries
Craig Jeffries, Class of 1976, is the soccer program's
all-time leading scorer in both points (105) and goals (45). He holds a 15-point advantage over
second-place David Tewksbury (Class of 1988) in overall points and a 10-point
margin over Tewksbury in goals scored.
His standard of 17 goals in a season, accomplished during his senior
campaign of 1975, stood until 2001, and his record of 38 points in a campaign
held up until it was tied, also in 2001.
A regional “Most Valuable Player” selection while in high
school, Jeffries passed up numerous college athletic scholarship offers to
merit academic acceptance at Union and joined the soccer team as a “walk-on” (a
player who was not recruited). With
Jeffries in the lineup, the Dutchmen produced a four-year record of 31-13-2,
including a standard of 22-4-0 during his junior and senior campaign. The '74 Garnet finished with a 10-2-0 record
and finished second in the Eastern College Athletic Association Upstate New
York championship tournament.
Co-captain during both his junior and senior seasons, Jeffries led the
Dutchmen to a 12-2-0 record and the ECAC championship. The dozen wins established a single-season
record, a mark that stood until the 1986 Dutchmen won 13 games.
Named to the All-New York State team in his final three
seasons, Jeffries became the first Dutchman ever to earn All-American status
following a senior campaign that saw him score in all but one game (he was one
of just 55 players in the country to be named as an All-American as there was
no distinction between Divisions I, II, and III). His final career goal came in
the Dutchmen's 8-0 romp over Plattsburgh State in the ECAC championship, which
was played on Daley Field. Schenectady
Gazette sportswriter Rich Stellrecht, who covered Union throughout Jeffries
career, described the goal as follows:
“Craig Jeffries bowed out (of his career)
with the most picturesque Dutchmen goal of the year. Jumping high to meet Jim Manning's short free kick, talented
Jeffries coiled himself in mid-air and flicked the ball, then five feet off the
ground, past (Plattsburgh goaltender) Ellman.”
The New York Cosmos, who a year earlier had landed Pele,
then considered the world's greatest soccer player, selected Jeffries in the
North American Soccer League draft in the summer of 1976. The Arlington, Virginia, native, who
graduated with a double major of biology and psychology, was in England, doing
graduate work in biology, at the time of his selection.
DAN STEWART
Dan Stewart
Dan Stewart, Class
of 1985, was a four-year starter at quarterback, graduating with six of the
Dutchmen's all-time passing records.
The career leader in wins with a record of 31-9-1 (which currently ranks
third), Stewart led Union to its first non-losing season in over a decade when
his freshman team of 1981 compiled a record of 4-4-1. Among those wins was a 10-7 victory over Albany State, a
preseason NCAA tournament participant selection, which is generally regarded as
“THE” game that turned Union's program around.
Since that season, the Dutchmen head into 2004 with a streak of 23 consecutive
non-losing seasons and an overall record of 181-53-1, a winning percentage of
.773.
As a junior, Stewart led the 1983 Dutchmen to their
first-ever NCAA invitation and to the Amos Alonzo Stagg Bowl, the Division III
National Championship game. Despite
Union's 21-17 loss to Augustana in the final three minutes of the contest,
Stewart was recognized by the media as the Dutchmen's “Outstanding Player of
the Game.”
Stewart completed his outstanding career by leading the 1984
Garnet to the semi-final round of the NCAA tournament where the Dutchmen lost
to homestanding Augustana.
Stewart was voted as the Dutchmen's “Most Valuable Player”
by his teammates following both his junior and senior seasons. Captain as a junior and senior, Stewart was
awarded the William B. Jaffe Medal, which is presented to
the senior male athlete voted by the athletic department to be the outstanding
athlete of the year, while taking into account the character and motivation of
the individual in addition to athletic excellence, and the William A. Pike
Memorial Trophy, which is presented to a junior male athlete for attitude,
ability, participation, and achievement in intercollegiate sports.
Named as the Albany Times Union's “Player
of the Year” in 1983, Stewart was voted as an All-American by the Associated
Press following both his junior and season campaign. Sports Illustrated recognized him in their “Faces in a
Crowd” column after he threw touchdown passes in 30 consecutive games, breaking Steve Young's (of Brigham Young and the San Francisco 49ers) all-division NCAA record in that category.
At the time of his graduation, Stewart held
Union records in career attempts (835), career completions (307), yards in a
career (5,547), and touchdown passes in a career (55). He currently ranks third, third, third, and
second all-time in those categories respectively. Stewart's 1,846 yards in 1983, which is sixth all-time, ranked
second at the time of his graduation.
COURTNEY LYNCH
Courtney Lynch
Courtney Lynch, Class of 1989, was a four-year starter for
both the field hockey and lacrosse teams.
Selected to the New York State All-Tournament team in field hockey
following her freshman and senior seasons, Lynch became the first woman at
Union to be voted as an All-American when she was selected to the Mid-Atlantic
First-Team. An All-State First-Team
selection, Lynch was voted to the National All-American second-team. She led the 1988 field hockey team to a Union
record, 17-1 season, and to the Eastern College Athletic Conference's Mid-Atlantic
Region championship. Lynch, who helped
the Dutchwomen qualify for the New York State Women's Collegiate Athletic
Association Tournament during each of her four seasons in a Garnet uniform, led
Union in scoring in 1988 with 16 points on 10 goals and six assists. She finished her outstanding career with 22
goals, 10 assists, and 54 points, which left her second on Union's all-time
scoring list at the time of her graduation (she currently ranks fifth in all-time
scoring and is tied for fourth in goal-scoring).
Lynch, who graduated with a double major of English and
political science, finished as the college's all-time leading scorer in women's
lacrosse with 167 points on 139 goals and 28 assists. Currently fifth on the all-time list, Lynch's goal output left
her second to Holly Howard's total of 147 in what was then the 14-year history
of the sport (she is currently fifth).
She led the Dutchwomen in both goal and overall scoring during each of
her final three seasons after finishing second as a freshman. As a junior, the Pelham, New York, native
scored 43 goals, one shy of what was then the single-season record of 44, set
by Howard.
Voted the “Most Valuable Player” in both sports, Lynch was
named the Collegiate Female Athlete of the Year by the Albany Chamber of
Commerce in February of 1989, the first Union student-athlete ever to be so
honored. She was also awarded the
Robert B. Ridings Prize as Union's top senior female student-athlete for
attitude, ability, participation, and achievement in intercollegiate athletics.
AL BAGNOLI
Al Bagnoli
Hired in 1977 as the football team's defensive coordinator,
Bagnoli took over the Dutchmen's head coaching duties prior to the 1982 season
and went on to guide the Garnet to a 10-year record of 86-19-0. During his tenure
Union advanced to the Amos Alonzo Stagg Bowl, the Division III national
championship game, twice (1983 and 1989), was invited to the NCAA national
championship tournament six times (1983, '84, '85, '86, '89, and '91), won the
Eastern College Athletic Association North Championship in 1990 (the program's
first ECAC title), captured two Lambert Bowls as the best Division III team in
the northern part of the country (1984 and 1989), and helped earn the Dutchmen
the ECAC's “Team of the Year” award in 1983, and '89). He guided the Garnet to four perfect
regular-seasons (1985, '86, '89, and '91), and set a program record for wins in
a season (13 in 1989).
Bagnoli's rookie season was foretelling of things to come
as he coached the Dutchmen to their first winning campaign in 12 years while
tying the program record for wins in a season, which had been a standard since
it was set in 1914 (8-0-0). He was named the New England Football
Newsletter's “Coach of the Year,” the first of several coaching
awards. Eastman Kodak named Bagnoli the
Region I “Coach of the Year” following the 1983 season and honored him with the
same award following both the 1989 and 1991 campaigns.
Team records that were established under Bagnoli's tenure
include consecutive wins (18 from third game of 1990 to 10th game of
1991), consecutive home wins (20 from last game of 1981 to last game of 1985),
points scored in a season (493 in 1991), caused turnovers in a season (53 in
1989), interceptions in a season (32 in 1984), fumble recoveries (25 in 1989),
quarterback sacks in a game (13 in 1982), quarterbacks sacks in a season (61 in
1983), consecutive quarters without allowing a rushing touchdown (61 from
October 23 1982 until September 28, 1984-an NCAA record), least number of
quarterback sacks allowed by Union in a season (7 in 1991). Bagnoli's 1984 Dutchmen led the country in
scoring defense (allowing 4.5 points a game) and his 1991 squad led the nation
in scoring offense (averaging 46.1 points in 1991).
Bagnoli, who, when he left Union on January 2, 1992 to
take the head coaching position at the University of Pennsylvania, had taken
the No. 1 position on the program's 105-year old coaching victory list. Bagnoli recruited and coached most of
Union's modern era All-Americans, Academic All-Americans, and program record
holders including Dan Stewart, Rich Romer (a two-year All-American and Academic
All-American who became the only Union player ever to be drafted by the NFL),
Brett Russ, Rich Kellaher, Anthony Valente, Alex Rita, Tim Howell and Greg
Hallas, to name a few.
Bagnoli,
who enters his 13th season at the University of Pennsylvania in
2004, is second on the Quakers' 127-year old all-time coaching list with 86
wins. His 63 Ivy League victories rank
him first among active Ancient Eight head coaches and fourth all-time in League
history. In addition, Bagnoli's career
record of 172-51 (.771) ranks him second among all active I-AA head
coaches. Last season was Bagnoli's second 10-win campaign at Penn, fourth
nine-win and eighth seven-win year. The 2003 campaign also marked the
eighth first or second-place Ivy League finish for one of his Red and Blue
teams. He possesses a winning record
against all seven Ivy League teams, and 13 of the 17 teams his Quakers have
faced during his tenure. Another number that shouts for attention is 12,
where Penn finished in the 2003 I-AA polls.
Bagnoli
is just the 45th Division I head coach to record 170 victories and just the
12th Ivy League head coach to record 80 wins at an Ancient Eight school.
Ten of the previous 11 Ivy head coaches to win 80 games have been elected to
the College Football Hall of Fame.
JOSEPH MILANO
Joe Milano
Joe Milano, Class of 1936, had a love affair with Union
College that lasted until his death on August 23, 2003.
A member of the basketball, football and outdoor track
teams, Milano turned down an opportunity to letter in four different sports
when he declined an invitation to join the lacrosse team in order to complete
his senior outdoor track seasons. “That
is one of my fondest memories and one of my biggest regrets,” Milano told
sports information director George Cuttita two weeks before his passing.
While records and statistics are usually the standard for
which most people are enshrined, Milano's outstanding athletic accomplishments
pale when compared to his total contributions to Union, both as an
undergraduate and as an alumnus.
Captain of the varsity basketball, football and track teams,
Milano was also captain of the freshman gridiron squad. He was a member of Delta Upsilon,
participated in student government, was secretary of the student council his
senior year, was on the Sophomore Discipline Committee and was treasurer of the
Terrace Council as a sophomore.
An obviously active and involved student, Milano, who was a
life-long Schenectady resident, became even more involved with his alma mater
as an alumnus. A long-time member of
the Alumni Council, Milano served both as vice president and then president. He was a Class President, a member of
“Friends of Union Athletics,” an Associate Agent and a member of the Ramee
Circle. A member of the Terrace
Council, he was a member of the council's membership committee, a ReUnion Gift
Committee member and a phonathon participant.
He and his wife, Betty, donated funds for what is known as “Milano
Lounge” in Hale House. The pair frequently attended Schenectady
Alumni Club events and was often seen at various campus events including many
men and women's athletic contests right up until the time of his death.
Milano graduated in 1936 with a Bachelor of Science degree
in social science and earned his masters from the State University of New York
at Albany in 1940 and his Ph.D. from Cornell in 1954. He began his career as a teacher and coach before returning for
his advanced degrees and accepting a position at General Electric, in 1954, and
at IBM, where he was hired as manager of research education in 1958. He retired from IBM in 1978 before going
into real estate prior to his retirement from professional life.
A veteran of World War II, Milano served in the Navy from
1943 through 1946. He was a member of
several professional organizations and was involved in numerous community
service activities, including serving as the Director of the Schenectady Boys
Club and co-Chairman of the 1962 North Westchester United Fund. He was an avid golfer and curler and had a
collection of curling pins from around the world.
Milano was presented with Union's “Distinguished Service
Award” for his “exceptional commitment and loyalty to his alma mater, and for
his significant and diverse contributions to the College over his lifetime” in
2003.
The 3rd Annual Garnet Blades Golf Tournament proved once again to be a great success by raising over $10,000 to support the men's hockey program. Great weather and a great turnout combined to make this a very enjoyable day for all involved. With each year's event, we continue to see increasing numbers of both participants and sponsors helping us to exceed our fundraising goals. This year's tournament consisted of more than 80 golfers and several new hole and event sponsors.
As with every golf tournament, the objective is to have fun and we were certainly successful on that front. Whether is was the long drives or the Par-3 raffle contest for Red Sox tickets and a round of golf, everyone seemed to find some way to have a shot at winning.
The post-golf festivities included the banquet, raffle and silent auction. In total, there were over 40 prizes raffled or auctioned off throughout the event. Some of the “prized” items included a round of golf at Baltusrol in New Jersey, an autographed Jarome Iginla Calgary Flames jersey, and two tickets on Northwest Airlines.
We would once again like to thank everyone involved with this year's tournament; the volunteers, players, coaches, and most importantly, the golfers. Your continued support will help to ensure that this tournament continues to grow in numbers of golfers participating and the funds generated. The proceeds for this event continue to have a tangible impact on the Union Hockey program, and will help propel Union hockey forward in the upcoming season.
Please mark Friday, June 3rd, 2005 on your calendars for the 4th Annual Garnet Blades Golf Tournament.