r Recalling • names of past year
Transcription
r Recalling • names of past year
CAHJWLL January r • Recalling names of past year So, it's another New Year! Big deal. I'm not Quite ready to get rid of my 1988 calendar just yet. There are so many scribbled names and phone numbers on it that symbolize the county's yearly athletic accomplishments, J think I'll hold on to the calendar for a few more days. Most of the names, however, I can no longer read because they've aged seven or eight months. Others • were not legible the minute I wrote them down, and a few others have been washed out from soft drink stains. There are a few names that are smudge-free, though. Jim Lay and Dic'k Brewer are two of the easily legible names. These two guys were the guiding force behind Carroll hosting the 16-18 Middle Atlantic Babe Ruth Regionals Iest summer. Lay, Brewer and a small group of , boosters I =,:~nt, • CUUNTY TIMES 1, 11:)<:10 helped save the whichwasalmost The tournament enabled many county youths to take center stage. Wade Smith, Carroll's 18-year-old pitching ace, was one of those. He guided the local team to a 3·2 record in the tournament. He pitched 24% innings, striking out 32 : with an earned run average of 1.42. i Probably the most impressive individual perfonnance by a county athlete during 1989 . Bobby Briggs, South Carroll's standoutbasketball player, would probably dtsegree. Few will ever lorget what Briggs and the Cavaliers accomplished last spring - a 24·2 record, a 23·game winning streak and a second-place showing in the state Class 3·A tournament: Neither the Ruth team nor the South Carroll basketball team did quite as well as the Westminster Little League team. Remember these guys? , Manager Dick Dickensheets' club , won the district, sectional and state titles and advanced tor the second year in a row - to the regional tournament. They played the most memorable game, too. They were leading Hag. erstown West End 13-11 in the sixth inning, when the game was called I because of darkness. The game's I score reverted back to the fifth inning and Hagerstown, was ruled an 11·9 winner. Dave Brown's name is scribbled in a comer 01 my desk calendar . David AmmenheuseT Times'sports editor. is the Brown coaches the Westminster High School goll team, perennially the county's most successful team _ and the least known. This year the Owls went unbeaten during the regular season and finished seventh in the states. I can't even read Scott Deitch's name or phone number anymore. [ spilled fruit punch on it in June. It realty doesn't matter, though. I know his Western Maryland College Sports Intonnation Director's office number better than my wile's work number. I know I talk to him on the phone more. And, most likely, I will in 1990, too. ClII{HOLL COUNT'i TH1t::S te nua ry 1. 1Y90 • EDITORIAL Times' amateur forecasters make .predictions for the upcoming year For the third year in a row, we've asked our news staff to make predictions on events of the coming year. As before. forecasts range from the localto the international and from the dead serious to the tongue-incheek. All are absolutely unguaranteed. Copy Editor Wilson Ramsey deserves credit for a prediction that doesn't appear below, since it concerns something that's already happened. In a forecast submitted before last month's invasion of Panama, he wrote: "There will be a malor showdown with Panama, and the United States • will prevall, finally getting rid of Gen. Manuel Antonio Noriega." Next Dec. 31 we'll review our house prophets' performance. In the meantime, we invite our readers to send any predictions they care to make to Letters, Carroll County Times. P.O. Box 346, Westminster, Md. 21157-0346. Carmen Ainedori, Reporter (education, New Windsor) • Carroll County voters will not be apathetic during the 1990 elections. Voter turnout for the September primary and November general election will set county records for a gubernatorial election year. • New York state will experience a devastating blackout as a result of the pawer shortage that's expected to hit the East Coast, much of the Midwest and the Pacific Northwest by 1992. David Ammeniumser, Sports Editor • In 1990, unlike 1989, the Orioles will not contend for the American League Eastern Division championship. • The Western Maryland College foothall tearn will win more games in 1990 than in 1989, when it won two. • Steve Bosley, manager and pitcher for the Taneytown Cardinals in the South Penn League, will say he is retiring sometime this spring. By June, however, he will be back in unifonn . • GAHHULL January CUUNTY TIMES 1 YYO j, €ounty teams begin new decade of PREP ROUNDUP competition By DAVE AMMENHEUSER I SlBffWriler New Year's Eve ~arties, hol~day \~~~:d. and ~nter I I vacations It's time once agam to return to the basketball court and the wresmat for county high ·school tlins ~~n _'county :basketball teams of 1990 "The OWls (5-2) travel to Frederick to lace defending CMe and state Class 3·A champion Thomas Johnson (5-1). It is a strong test for both schools and could serve es . an indicator to the rest of the conference just how powerful the Owls and Patriots are. In boys' non-league games to- ~~~w~!~~~~ I ~I~d~~~~~:' ~ gfrls. will be playmg the firs~ Central ; Maryland Conference athletic 'event • night, Liberty (1-7) travels to Centennial, South Carrol! (6-2) visits Wilde Lake, North Carroll (6-1) visits Fallston and Westminster (52) travels to Quince Orchard. In girls' non-league games tonight. North Carroll (6-1) hosts Fallston and South Carroll (6~2) hosts Wilde Lake. It will be the last non-league games of the season lor many of these schools In wrestling, Liberty hosts Centennial and North Carroll visits Mt Hebron The Lions will be looking to , improve upon their 2-2 dual record Freshman Matt Cavicchio (103 pounds), Shane Harmon (112) and Eric Snyder (189) are unbeaten in dual matches this season. NOrth. Carroll wil! be looking to extend Its unbeaten streak in dual matches to 37, when they lace Mt. Hebron. The Panthers trounced Severna Park 72-0 and Meade 45-19 in their only non-tournament matches this season. The CMC gets into full Swing i Thursday and Friday. South Carroll • hosts Liberty and Westminster hosts Thomas Johnson in wrestling matches Thursday. Friday in the CMC, Westminster hosts Thomas Johnson and Linganore hosts Liberty. In college basketball, Mount St Mary's men's team finishes its twoday California visit. The Mountaineers (3·6) played at Santa Clara last night at 10:30 and face San Francisco tonight at the same time. The western Maryland College men's team (2·6) hosts Johns Hopkins Friday night at 8. BALTIMORE SUN EDUCATIONAL January 4, 1990 SUPPLEMENT • Westem,Maryland College .W•• t.m~Jbry"nd.:coll.g., 'Westminster,·Md ..21157. (301 ),857..2233, _sponsors·tne_Carroll.County Scholarships. ~Number~of.awards 'varies. wlth.each award worth.$1.500~Must be resident:of :Carroll.County~,for .et least two -years -preceding 'enroll· -ment. Awards not based 'on'financia! ;~eed. Applicationmay be made any· time. - • • • Henry H. Him.ier, 74, of Westminster Henry H. Himler. 74. 01 Westmm. ster, died Thursday, Jan. 4. 1990, at Carroll County General Hospital after an extended illness Born in Westminster, he was the son of the late Charles H. and Cora V. Harris Himler. He was the husband of Edith H. Himier of Westminster He was a graduate of Western Maryland COllege. Class of 1936, Veteran of World War lJ and retired from Westminster Loan, He was a member of the Grace Lutheran Church. chairman 01 the Board of Union National Bank, formerly served on the Democrat State Central Committee, member of Elks Club, Knights of Pythtas Post No. 1658, life member 01 Veterans of Foreign Wars Post No. 467, American Legion Post No.3!, life and charter member 01 the Westminster Lions Club. serving as a past president, and Cabinet secretary lor District 22W Army • SUrviving in addition to his wile are sons Hans H. Himler 01 Durham. N.C .. and Roger Himler of westmrn. ster. daughters Virginia Macungie 01 Pennsylvania. Susan Shaler 01 Rangely. Colo" and Carol Frock of El Paso. Texas, and seven grendchndren Funeral services will be held 1;30 p.m. Saturday at the Pritts Funeral Home and Chapel with the Rev. Dr. Frederick P. Eckhardt officiating. Interment wi!! be at Evergreen Memorial Gardens in Finksburg. Family wi!! receive friends at th: j . funeral home on Friday 2-4 p.m. and I 7-~:~~'riaJ contributions' may. be made in his name to the Amencan Lung Association of Maryland, I~OI i York Road, SUIte 705. Lutherville, ! Md. 21093 . I • Hanover Evening January • 6, Sun 1 qQO Terrors lose to Johns Hopkins WESTMINSTER. Md. - Evan 13 seconds left cut the margin to Jones sank a free throw with nine two. WMC then fouled the visitors' seconds left, forCiDLa missed 3· ~in~.ei/~~ I:~t~btb:'6~~,t~llftn3o'f: ~~~ki:~:~di8 • • one Ioul shot, but Jones' offensive Hopkins to a 75-72 'Don-league rebound forced the foul 'and free men's basketball vi~tory over the throw for the three-point margin. A a-point shot by WMC'g Eric Green Terrors on Fnday at WMC. Watkinson in the final second 33~3~h~~itbk~r:, ~~~~hl~~ missed. Dave Barnes and Mike Sherlock on Jay Gangemi's two free throws posted 17 and 15 points respectiveIy for WMC . ~r'a b~~~Oi~on:. ~~~iR~n!OI~h~lih Carroll • County Times 6, lOgO January Mistakes prove costly as Hopkins tops WMC By LISA FARBSTEIN to the Times Special Johns H.opkins University came from behmd to defeat Western Maryland College 75-72 in men's basketball action Friday. With Western Maryland leading 65-62, the Blue Jays called a time out with 5:14 remaining. When they returned to the court, the Blue Jays scored six unanswered points to take a 68-65 lead • The six-point burst was the key lor Hopkins as the Green Terrors could not make up the pomt spread. "It was an even game for both teams and what it boiled down to was a lew key plays at the end," said Western Maryland coach Alex' Ober. "The backbreaker for us was when we fouled David Eikenberg and he missed," Ober said. "The foul shot with 39 seconds to play and Hopkins holding onto a slim 72-70 lead." After the miss" the Terrors raced down court, but with good positioning under the net, a pass underneath was thrown out of bounds, giving Hopkins the ball with 24 seconds left and a twopoint lead Two Blue Jay foul shots gave them a 74·70 lead with 22 seconds remaining, but the Terrors Please see WMC, 83 WMC 'From _ 81 9O~&>t.--:-iD'--m.~me . ~d ~ .~ 'tli..pk,ins. ~c· 1000ght right' back .on -~: Rlfdolph la;w t~ make it '74·72. other play- -~:sco:~~o~~~r~~~ added 12 and Eric Hastings had Enfield, who W. high .18 points, ""They shot a good percentage missed em r/';e one-end-ere. but "om the Itoce considering they the Bhse Jays got the rebound, haven't .played in while," Obet were qwrld] Iouied, and scored said of the Blue Jays who hit 55.4 one mQI'\'! Irot! the- IKte to finlsb ~_rcent. o~ their field goals and the scoring to makt:!·'it75~1Z ~itt.::': falS~ their ~n record to,5.3. nine seconds remaining.:' _ "~bec:.te~.ot played smce HopIcins' Andy 'sc;ored a: game a " "Those • few, cruci,a1_.'mistakes, -,,1be: . Terrors, .wim N;OPped to e ..pecially at the end.cost us- the :2.7.~_,and, hadn't played since game," Qber said. _,., ~" O~~mbei~~O! hir.53.8 percent of :rhe last time these two _teams . ,then: neld 'gQ~!s.~ which pleased faced each other, last season.the Obcr. -c- .'" -: --:.'" -, ~ames also went down to- the Dave Barnes ,led, Yi~,Maty. fmal seconds with Johns Hopkins lan~, with .17, while MiKe S~lock winning both of them, 75.73 and added IS. Ed Krusinski had nine . Bal • t Irnor-e Jenuar-v _-., 1 qqO .f-, ,J1"u. "*'..~ EDUCAnON By Sun -;-, Dar1ene Frank E I • I • ducatron ought to be both religious as well as acanemtc. says Ira G. Zepp Jr .. professor of religious studies at Westem Maryland College. Mr. Zepp was named Maryland Professor. of the Year In 1989 and was one of 11 gold medalists in the annual competltion co-sponsored by the Council for Advancement and Support of Education [CASE) and the Carnegte Foundation. More than 500 professors competed for the honor. -I don't believe there should be a division between head and heart. There is no reason we can't think profoundly while feeltng deeply," Mr. Zepp says. -H Christians had united theory with practice. we wouldn't have had slaves or the holocaust," he sa~ his 26 years of teaching. Mr. Zepp has striven to humantze a "lIberal arts education - to make It not Just a "cerebral trtp," but an expansion of heart as well as rrund. "Dr. Zepp Is only the second Maryland professor to be named both state proCessor of the year and National Gold Medalist,· according to Anne MosIe. spokesperson at CASE in Washington. Curtis Wilson. a history of science tutor at St. John's College in Annapolls was the first In the state to Win this distinction, in 1987.ln 1988, Peter Wiggins, professor of nuclear and marine engineering at the U.S. Naval Academy. won a bronze medal In addition to being named Maryland Pro!essoroftheYear. In the 1989 compenuon. II gold. 7 sliver and 6·bronze awards were presented. The National Pro. IRAZEPP fessorofthe Year award went toJ. Dennis Huston of Rice University In Houston. Mr. Zepp JOined pr0fessors from the University ofMissouri, University of California _ Berkeley, Bryn Mawr College and seven other colleges In the gold category. Letters from students. colleagues and administrators supported WMC's nomlnatlon of Mr. _j.:::L.''\ . ,r' '\ SUNDAY, JANUARY7,'1'990'--"~:' Zepp. Sharon Head, a 1988 WMC graduate. told CASE. "lra is a teacher with a passion for learnIng. That passion Is contagious, and infects even the most apathetic student. He Is the catalyst which confronts. challenges and ultimately empowers the student allOwing her to be in the world and not of tt." WMC Presideni. Robert Chambers caIled Mr. Zepp. "someone who embodies what the IdeaJ professor should be." -Judging was a two-tiered process: Ms. Mosie SCUd. "Fifty education professionals selected the top 25 finalists, then the Carnegie Foundatlon for the Advancement of Teaching In Prtnceton. N.J. selected the gold, silver and bronze medal Winners and National Professor of the Year.Mr. Zepp has been singled out previously by WMC with msnngutshed teacher awards In 1973 and 1982, and faculty author awards in 1975.1977 and 1982. His teaching specialties are reugton and social Justice, contemporary re1Igtous thought and ccmparenve studies In religion, Courses such as -Ghandl and Tagore-: "Liberation Movements and Human Freedom": "Martin Luther King Jr.: Life and Thought-: '"Reli· gicn and Human Sexuality" and '"God. Human Suffering and the Holocaust" form the core of his cun1culum. . Mr. Zepp Is co-author of "Search for the Beloved Community: The Thinking of Martin Luther King Jr.-, and "Drum MaJor for a Dream: A Poetic Trtbute to Martin Luther King .Jr." He has also edited a book on the Hindu philosopher and poet Tagore. His most recent book, 'The Soclal Vision of Martin Luther King .Jr." was published last year, ':, c p n C b u A e 1 w W W C I i • •r B o r Bal t imor-e • • • January Sun 8, 19CJO Bal timore • January play nost to Sun E, lqqO wasruus ........ ----.~ Th.urs~ay, but. Pi'.Y seven of their next eight on the road. . • On the Division m level. Johns Hopkins had a profitable weekend, wmning at Western Maryland Friday and beating carnegie-Mellon r • • Ito be ~4 l ~=,~;:a~e:;:::ri;7;~~ :~~: n\ ~~~na~~o~~c~:=~a~:re~~~I~ lets Frostburg State was beaten by Ferrum, 69-65, lD the championship game of the Bobcats' Adventures In Travel Classic • • • Hanover Sun January 8, (!;M~~~~mmers II '::~ ::::!l::rviand Green Terror men's swimming team upped its record to 4-2 with a thrilhng 51-44win at home over Scranton With the score tied at 44-44 entering the final event, Matt Cook, Matt Gebhard, John Ehlman and Rob Newman combined for a five-second win in the 400-yard f~eestyle 'relay. Newman added first places In the 100 and 200 free, while Cook captured the 200 backstroke and Ehlman the 50 free. Western Maryland's women remained winless at 0-6 as Scranton won eight of 11 events on its way to a 62-33 triumph. Stacy Stauffer was the Green Terrors' ~~~i~n~i;~~~r:n~;J l';J~a~l~toThe Western Maryland wrestling team (1-2) defeated Johns Hopkins 25-21 WHO'S HOT 1. Delone Catholic's girls basketball Loses two l.000-point Hanover Evening Sun January 9, , ooo • iik~~~~t ~~~te~~eg;mo~e~~i~F.'just 2. South Western's wrestlers. Tops in District III Class AAA. Isn't that enough? 3. The winner of todav's junior varsity boys basketball showdown between South Western (7-2) and sPImfh~r~~~~i)Of Wednesda 's varsity wrestling showdown be- Area teams do offer variety Last weekend, one of. my colleagues spent several. mmutes on the telephone jousting with a scholastic coach whose gripe was that while his team had not won a game for some ,time, that fact should not be published. Right or wrong, it caused this writer to think just how much • ~~~~, °Fo~a~~i~n nCl~~~ap~r~rt~t covers enough situations that it can balance the stones of those teams which aren't winning with others that are. That, quite simply, th~~r~;:i~~uG~:~~s·boYS basketV ~~lst~~fgh~10~~e~eb~~:~ ::t ; lesson 10 tough luck when thev were outshot 48-9 from the foul line by Hanover last week. INDIVIDUALS TO WATCH • BOYS BASKETBALL - Our choice is Spring Grove's Jared Smith for one big reason. If you're a freshman, as he is, who averages double figures on the varsity level, as he does, 1,000 career points may is life And, when you consider the Hanover area, that. really is life. High school sports form the basis for DIne months of sports around here, although we're sure Gettysburg, Western Maryland and. Mount SL Mary's Colleges surely want a bigger piece of the sports fan's dollar. However" the colleges are the ~il~~~~~~dga~~~s~~~hlr~nJ't:l;~d players to fit their systems and their success in. that quest often determines their teams' records. But that is another column entirely, On the other hand, we have a great admiration for high-school coaches SImply because they have to ~md a way each year to J?Se • ~d~ig~e~il~~~~l} ~~~~~tlin~-~~ it should be 5. North Carroll's wrestlers. Ranked fifth in Maryland and the best 'scholastic program in Carroll County at the moment. HARD LUCK l. South Western's girls basketball. A perfect example of the team which has come so close. The Lady Mustangs have had setbacks of five, three and three points in ~~~~ed t~:s~o~~~I~t:S Wf?ew~e~~ chance to win. And even that doesn't always ensure success Immediately. So far, the variety of situations facing the area's high school winter teams IS great. Here's a look at who's hot and who's hoping tobehot: ?t~,~,! m',~,~" TImmins. two players have scored ble figures ;:~n.game The _ . who , .' douin . this''1'IMMINS • i WRESTL- a~~nsp~f~~~; ~~~nF~~~:~h~: Their pins in Saturday's meet against Milton Hershey proved they are the most SHAWN dangerous backFORSYTHE to-back tandem in a Hanover area lineup. t~.~ . Gr~ve~sWl~~~~:er -;ndS~~~ Lecrone. A swimmer and a diver who have broken school reCOrds) twice this season. sp~~gC:rj~~Jley is an Evening Sun • , New Windsor \ man killed in Md. 140 wreck By THOMAS stan A BARSTOW I • ~~~=~~%. ~;ea~~~e~b~as~~~~~it~:S:es~~~s The driver of the truck. Thomas .wavne Humm ~'~e~~:~S~~~ i2:;te~~~n~o~ne~~r:~H~~~~:1 i I Roa~~:~~n~~c~~~~J~~:dw~~~t oSna~:~u~; I Carroll County General Hospital a short time.tater. said Maryland State Police TIc. Timothy B Selby, who investigated the accident I Bill ,Yurdk of Ellicott City was one 01 two people who tried to revive Newman through CPR until emergency personnel arrived. Yurcik said he and an unidentified nurse attempted to revive the unconscious Newman 'You never know wh~n you're going to come across somethmg like this," said Yurcik. 28. "We Please if he had a pulse." ~n ~~~f~~~n,e:E;~; vacation time to attend a January economics class at Westem Maryland College. He did not see the accident but was ther~ soon after it happened: John Pickett, a truck driver with Thomas, Bennett & Hunter Inc.. of Westminster, said he was several car lengths behind the accident. Newman was going east on Md. J 40 when his car went out of control, crossed the grass median 15 ~d • From Al couldn.'t tel! ~~~~~ Writer A New Windsor man died Monday afternoon when his compact car slid into the path of a tractortrailer truck. Gregory Warren Newman, 21. Western Chapel Road, was killed when the truck hit his Ford Escort broadside on snow-laden Md. 140 about 12:55 p.m. i.. About 10 people pulled Newman from his r Accident see Accident, A3 using and was rammed in the driver's side by the truck, Pickett said. "He might have had a chance if he ~~ed~een buckled in," Pickett No charges are pending against Humm, who was driving a truck owned by Hahn Transportation Inc. of New Market, said Selby. The" truck carries cement powder but was empty at the time of the accident, Selby said. • Bill • (13.1'("01\ Januar-v vurcik. or Silicort City, tried to revive Gregory '('(I!1(,)+Y "J Warren 1'J:mt~ Il.JqO ,'IJ&wrn8.~ Wilh CPR . CARROLL January • COUNTY TIMES 10, 19YO Airborne Manchester resident Tony Collins and his sixyear-old daughter Brooke enjoy, the rewards of • Cynthia Shaw photo an unexpected snowfall at the Western Maryland College golf course Tuesday afternoon. HALTIMUi<E .l a n ua r y • SUN 11, 1990 W.Maryland endS~Imi"c04 . b'Y beatiling MuhIeiibeF''i j J,.,",.~.g!.,,WESTMINSTER - Ertc Watkin.! son (Parkville] hit three three-point i shots In a two-minute stretch Inside: the last three minutes and Western I i!~~~~: {g~~i ~~2~ h~~~~:!~~~ I ~~~i;~e~acs~-s~~~~e~~e ~~~~~~\ ended the Green Terrors' • four-game lOS~~~~~,s final basket with 1 minute. 19 seconds Left pushed the home team ahead. 78-75. but a Scott Boyd basket made It 78-77 With a minute to go. Each side missed a shot in the closing seconds. but the Mules' Frank Altmlre's mtss was rebounded by Western Maryland with four seconds left. Mike Sherlock led the winners": with 19 points and his season high of 12 rebounds. The team made eight of 14 three-point attempts. with Watkinson hitting five of eight. The 14 team attempts and eight Ind1v1dual attempts are school records, and the eight successes by the team equaled a school mark . Jimmy Smith had 28 points for Muhlenberg. 22 in the first half as his team took a 47-46 lead. MUHI,.£NBflRQ Aumrnel3-7 4-6 to. MeMI1I8n 1-20-<12. I ! 1 I ' I t i ' ,m -'- Soyd 7_10 0-<1 1•. Smitll 13-232-4 3-5 0-<19. Lutz 3-5 2-2 8. i:=::'~~~ :r.BoyIe W. MARYLAND (781_ Bam ... 3-8 0-<16. SIIerIOCk8-113-519.HOWIJI12-61-15.wal1<inson~!0·1 0-<115. Audolpn3-74-413.Lyon3-31-27.M_'·2I ~~:21(~~".::'.:~~~~B-20-<10.YIlllSlOn I M3~=~_~~u~~'::"~A= 0-1); WM 8-1.lWatkin~on5-9. Audolpll3-5). A .. _de: M 30 lSm,1I'I 61; WM 32lShenoclt 12) ...... ~r:::,~~J;:~~~~~'!.::8n:..~oIpn • 7). T_ I ' BAL TIMORE January • in- Area college ~~! - ';'d.·Ea,.~'Ati~~~tk SUN 11, 1990 basil...... good ~o~'-bo~, cha~ces._.md Cop~in with . ,N~_ Aggi~~'83'FLA;~82' M~:!d~a;ni:~~ti:~'~~, any chance~, IIi: Miami, Robert.-Spear bad 22 (1-8 and 0-3) points and Keith Williams hit two the Eagles (9-5 free throws for the final score to by .~=~:=:::3 trailing two POints' missed the front end of a were in a position to tie or :Win it in th~ last • That was before North CarcnaaA&T sophomore· center Colin Spady attempted to call a timeout When the :Aggies, didn't have any left, and they were-assessed a technical foul. .•. Given' a reprieve, Isaac didn't • • miss l!,!~ri!~~::~::al Con- State also 'gained joeseeston of the ')leih't..~. ~ning pointS',witli'-18"~.,,_,,~Dds"' North" CaroliDa.1' ball ilttejo'Isaac's points to seal the l'.1l one-and-one, :!k~n~_;; S"!~la~:,~~",!;u:;:I~:~: with six seconds left. He made ~~~~ =(i:~~:~o:rr:::~~ ty (2-12), which dropped straight. ou~=:! ~~:tp~~~e its seventh. l~~ in the first 5:11 of the second haH to take a 58-46 lead. But Florida International fought back and Diego Garcia hit a three-pointer, then scored the tying layup with 35 seconds left in regulation. In overtime, Robert Colon scored onds left, but hit only one ot~.free throws. W. MD. 78, MtlBLENBERG:'77 In Westminster;' Parkville-' ~d, Eric Watkinson scored three threepoint shots in the last three minutesof the game as the Green Terrors(3-7) beld off Muhlenberg (541) and snapped a four-game losing, streak. ALLENTOWN 100, SAUSBURY 82 In Allentown, Pa., Joe McCahon scored 28 points, but it wasn't enough for the'Sea Gulls; who fell to ~7. Allentown improved to 10-1. I I r'KEDERICK NEWS POST January 11, 1990 • The Colleg~ Report The following is a weekly update ot area athletes now playing college basket. ball. • Name Herbie Behan (Pace) Trevor Buckley (St. Mrys) Tim Butts (Shippensburg) Terry Connolly (Richmond) Dan Dutton (Wasbingtun) ,JetfEaves(WMDJ Erie Gerber (BridgewaterJ Mark Janney (Gettysburg) Mike Jennings (Penn State) Eddie Krusinski (WMD) Rob Leavitt (Shepherd) Donnie Mathews (Shnndh) Kevin Murphy (FSU) Tank Naylor (FairmontStJ Jon Prather (Lock Haven) Matt Ryan (Shepherd) Mike Smith (Monmouth) BUlyWeber (WashlngtonJ 2 8 11 s 4 12 8 11 · 12 11 io 8 8 11 6 4 o- 0 6·16 30-64 1_ 3_ a s 11.33 49.19 lZ·36 36-81 41.84 11·20 12·30 44.82 411·29 1- 7 4_ 7 e o, 2_ 0 s 18-29 ..- , 6 0 0_ 23.36 ·.- ·· . s. 7 626·39 .- 13·14 17.21 7_ e. 7 6 0 0 14 78 6 6 32 121 32 79 lOS ae 46 ice IS 30 9 8 0.0 48 7.1 1.2 1.' 2.7 15.1 2.' 8.8 '.0 2.4 '.6 13.3 49 2.7 LS 2.0 0 14 51 s 2 12 <1 ia '" sa 30 13 27 6 12 1 s AST 1 0 4 " · 1 0 17 3 17 ie s 14 32 e s 4 1 WOMI.. ,S .ASKIt.AU Name GP FGM·FGA FTM·FTA PTS AVG REB AST Wendy Barrett (Shepherd) 8 15·44 38.56 68 8.' Leslie Bartlett (FSU) 7 48.95 25:32 121 17.3 16 Diane Bickford (Salisbury), 34·75 13·24 71 7.8 rc Natalie Cleckley (Furman) ia 59·129 39.63 lS7 12.1 "7 s Anne Collins (HJC) 6.16 3- 4 IS ia 2.' Tracy Dean (Shepherd) 7·37 19-26 34 14 4.' Bohbl Jo Delphey (HJC) 6 25-76 18-34 68 11.3 42 s Lorraine DommeJ (Shphrd) 7 e. 8 28-61 63 7 '.0 6 KristiHart(HJC) 30.69 6 1.12 67 11.2 s Sandy Jankevicius (Slsbry) 23.39 63·152 163 18.1 sa 38 Kern Jolmston (FSU) 7 21·59 7.11 49 7.0 34 e Tammy Joy (Long Beach SI) 1_ 2 2 0- 0 2 1.0 1 Cheryl Kemmerer (HJC) 6 6.14 1- 2 ia 2.1 7 Sue Miller (HJC) 2_ e .,0 18 3.0 11 SteUa Roberts (HJC) 2_ 4 12 2_0 11 KeUyStull (Davis do ElkinsJ 32-78 42.61 106 17.1 56 17 Alice Smith (WMD) s 4.10 8 u 2A 14 4 Michele Summers (TSU) 7_ 6·28 21 2.3 11 1 Alyssa Tavernia (Shepherd) 3_ 8 10.29 23 2_' aa 1 Melanee Wagener (u.va.j 3_ U 18-38 39 3.3 27 Dawn Wenner (Shepherd) 0 o, 0 0 0.0 0 Cindy Yeager (U olCal, Pal a, 7 7 40 10 · · • · , • . MI,,'S SASKIT.AU GP FGM·FGA FTM.FTA PTS AVG REB 7 7 2·· 4 m 44 ia .." " " >1. .- , · · i • • • USA Jan. TODAY 11, 1990 HANOVER EVENING January • II, SUN 1990 i Weste~nM0!'Yland .: Eric. Watkinson's 3-rint basket i W:e-~ft~~ke~ a~W~t~~ I .~ary1and C~lege broke a four~id~ll~oSiAfl:~tick. :.~~~:~~: Section i C~~f:r~~~ . win over 1 -G;::::~~:SS~O~~:5V~e~~~~~ I b~~r!:~~~~~irto~Y ~~~ta~~rg~~ \ Muhlenberg .rebounded a missed paint attempts witn ~~rt~~ ~r~~~~~~~e~5 l~~, ~~~ footer' with four seconds left and Rich Vanston grabbed the ball.for the Green.Terrors. . Western- Maryland tied t~e school record for 3-point goals with eight-and set a.Il:ew mark for.3.- • MIDDLE ATLANTIC CONFERENCE MEN s~';~·~;~~u::~~~o~ ....W,,... ....... 3 Dlcklnson ..••••..•..••...••.....•.....••.. Q 10 I.el>anonV.llev ......•.....••...••.... IO Mo~"vian..•..•••..••••••••.•.••••.••.••• 1 2 Ge"V1I>ur~ •....••...••...••....•.....•.•. 1 3 MuhlenDer9••.•••••••..••...••.....••....0 1 WeSTern Maryland ...•....••....•.... 0 2 MIDDLE ATLANTIC CONFERENCE WOMEN • 14...''' I :lli~r::c~ Te~:S ~~~~Ig;~r~~~ 'tion) with 19 points and a seasonhigh 12rebounds. Watkinson had 15 ! points on five treys. .' Jimmy Smith led all scorers with 28points for-Muhlenberg (5-8; 0-2l. CAiU{OI.!., CUUNTY T L!1ES January L1, IYYO 3-pointers • helpWMC top Mules By ROSS G. BURBAGE special to·the Tlmes A trio of long range three-point shots down the stretch by uninhibited Western Maryland College marksman Eric Watkinson gunned down Muhlenberg on Wednesday as the Green Terrors won a 78-77 men's baSketball thriller at the Gill Learning Center. "If you're going to shoot from the perimeter you may as well shoot for three,"said Western Maryland coach Alex Ober. • • On this particular night the Green Terrors took that philosophy to heart and launched a team record 14 three·pointers to help snap the team's four-game losing streak. The last three minutes of the game saw fo~ of the distant sho~ go in. Watkinson popped one In with 3:01 to play to tie the score at 72.72. then lotted an NBA-distance shot with 2:20 left to put the Terrors ahead 75·72. Pat Boyle 01 Muhlenberg sent in a ttuee-pointer, his thi~ of the game, to tie the contest With 1 :54 to go. On Western Maryland's next ~ session, the Terrors. proved their willingness to stick With a hot hand. Watkinson sent the ball on an?ther lengthy journey and it swished through the net to put Western Maryland ahead 78-75 with 1:17 remaining. David Tillman photo WMC's Dave Barnes gets around Muhlenb~rgJs Jimmy Smith during Wednesday night's game at Gill Leammg Canter. Muhlenberg countered with an inside bank shot by Scott Boyd to pull within one point. Western Maryland held the ball out on offense until Watkinson could get his hands on the ball. On this possession Watkinson drove to the hoop and, apparently being too close to the basket, he missed. Muhlen~ rushed down court for Frank A1timore's field goal attempt but Terror Rich Vanston hugged the rebound and let time expire. "Watkinson is a good three-point shooter,"said Ober. "And he's a streak shooter. Muhlenberg sat back in a zone and we tried to move the ball around and get it inside. But after 35 seconds. if it's not in there, we've got to shoot it." Watkinson's 15 points in the game were the result 01 five three-point field goals. His backcourt teanunate Marc Rudolph scored 13 points, with three three-point scores. Western Maryland's Mike Sherlock scored 19 points and had six rebounds. The Green Terrors offense had its heroes, but a defensive adjustment may have been the key to victory. Muhlenberg picked apart' Western ' Maryland's man-to-man defense in the first half as the Terrors proved susceptable to any screen or roadblock the Mules set. . Jimmy Smith was the main beneficiary of the Muhlenberg pick:i~g and moving as he scored 22 of his 28 points in the first hall. Western Maryland went to a three-two zone in the second half and Smith wound up shooting three-for-nine in the last 20 minutes with a defender in his face. "Man-to-man is what Western Maryland teams' know and love," said Ober. "But we're not loaded with quickness so we had to go to the zone. It changed the tempo of the game, slowed them down." The Green Terrors improved their overall record to 3-7 and upped their Middle Atlantic Conference Southwest League record to 1-2. Muhlenberg falls to 5-8 and is 0-2 in the league . FREDERICK January • , ,'JC:'.JS PUST 12. tYYU Mrs. Emily Brown • Mrs. Emily Pickett Brown. 85, of Poplar Springs, died Monday, Jan. 8, at Frederick Memorial HospitaL She was the wife of the late Dewey O.Brown. Born Nov. 15, 1904, at Mullinix, she: was a daughter of the late Matthew' and Bessie Mullinix Pickett. Mrs. Brown was a graduate of Western Maryland College and taught school in Crisfield and at Calvin Coolidge Hlgh School in washington, D.C. She was guidance i counselor at Mount Airy Higb School' and South Carron High School tora i number of years. I E;~t~r~ait:r,~a;~r:~~t~s~eartr~:a;~ ~~:b::.as~~ng:~~, ~';~t Sh~a~:~n~ I i I Association in the District of Columbia. -She was a life·time.i member of the Poplar Springs United Methodist ·Church. Surviving are one sister, Selena McMahan of Bel Air; two brothers, Leland Pickett and Merhle P. Pickett, both of Poplar Springs; one stepson, James R. Brown of Birmingham. Ala.: and nine foster daughters. Sandra Hood. Nahid Meriewether, Joanne Bradley, Rose Marie Bryan. Martha Ketchum. Pat Greisz, Eileen Hose, Wendy Petree and Alice nestacs. There will be no hours of visitation at the funeral home. Friends may call 12:30.2:30 p.m. Thursday. Jan. 11, at Poplar Springs United Metho· dist Church, where services will be . conducted at 2:30 p.m. by the Rev Mary Jane Coleman. Interment will be in the church cemetery. In lieu of flowers memorial donations may be made to Poplar Springs Uoited Methodist Church. c/o Joan Snow, 16205 Frederick Road. Lisbon. Md. 21765. Arrangements were made by the Olin L. Molesworth Funeral Home, Damascus. .' CARRULL COUNTY TIMES January l2, 1990 • • • _ . ;.~:..;", . .--"-,"",!,, cetsed- the 1989.Prize;' history: . foft-_thi$:-compilation':Re-l pwf~ loi =~r~,=:~~~ more Chlonicle:l'8nd"'BaJtiiltont'Rel view. Book review series _-~._;: .1 o The noontime book review series, . Books Sandwiched In, continues in Western Maryland College's Mc- Daniel Lounge. On Feb. 15, Dr. Ira Zepp will review "Destructive -Generation: , .~~~dc~~~g~/toa~dth~~~:~ ~~~~~s;r:~'85T-22Blo~ Zepp, professor of religious srudtes s-; at Western Maryland CoJlege, was Maryland's 1989 Professor of the Year. "The Good Times" by Russell Baker will be reviewed on March 14 by Harold Williams. A longtime associate of Baker, Williams is the fonner editor of the Sunday Balti- more Sun. Two books will be reviewed in April including "Nice Work" by David Lodge. Dr. Raymond Phillips, professor of English at Western Maryland and Andree Phillips. President of Radiant Steel Products Co. 01 Williamsport, Pa. will jointly review the book. This special evening session of Books Sandwiched In will take place at 8 p.m. on April 5. On April 12, Richard W. Dillman, assistant professor of communication, will review "What Am I Doing Here?" by the late Bruce Cbatwin. The final session of Books Sandwiched In will take place on -May 7. Alice Cherbonnier, WMe Class of '67, will review "Parting the Waters: America During the King Years, _!954-63." Author Taylor Branch re- - IIALTHtOH.E SUN 12, 1990 January • Changing coaches, :"-changing fortunes? D OES A COACH really make that much difference in sports? And if so, how long does- it take for the difference to show? The answers to those questions were evident to ~ , anyone who 'watched Maryland's basketball team :, beat North Carolina the night before IG: t. ~ Gary Williams, the Tet'pS' first-year coecn, bas the . same team Maryland had a year ago - Walt· L< Williams, Jerrod Mustaf, Tony Massenburg & Co. Last year, under Bob Wade, Maryland was 1-13 in the Atlantic Coast Conference and lost to Carolina three times - by six, 11 end 30 points. :, . ". But Wednesday night, the first time Williams, a Maryland grad, had ever coached against Dean Smith, the Terps scored a convincing 98-88 victory :;. over Carolina. Maryland is already 2-1 in the ACe. :: .. • Playing with a new intensity, the Terps outhustled the Tar Heels and showed 14,500 Cole Field House spectators and an ESPN-TV audience that they are once again a force. The cloud that has hovered over Maryland athletics since Len Bias' death lifted perceptibly. And all that happened because of a coaching change . College sports administrators know things like this are possible. That's why they are quick to make a change when their program is down. Two colleges in the state hired new football coaches this week. Navy picked George Chaump and JohnS Hopkins chose a recent alumnus, Jim Margraff '82, to restore its moribund program. There's a world of difference between Division I-A Navy, which plays Notre Dame. and Division llI, no athletic scholarship Hopkins. which competes against the Swarthmore! and Dickinsons. Still, Chaump and Margraff have at least one thing in common: Both are going to schools where people wonder whether any coach can win. Navy hasn't had a winning season since 1982. Hopkins has won two games in the last two seasons, both over Western Maryland. . Is Navy kidding itself in thinking a 53-year-Old coach from Marshall will do any better than Elliot Uzelac, from Bo Schembechler's Michigan staff, did over the past three years (3-25)? After all. blue-chip talent doesn't go to Navy in this day of the huge NFL salary. And does Hopkins have any j-eason to expect improvement with zs-year-old Margraif in his first head coaching job? • Three things determine a coach's success . One, can be coach - and that iricludes perhaps the most important aspect of the job, can be recruit? Two, is he in a good situation? Is he at a school where success is possible, and does be have the administration behind him? And three, is he lucky? .i In Chaump's case, the answer to the first question ' appears obvious. He has won 74 percent of his games." Is Navy behind Chaump? Yes. I He is the first football coach hired by athletic director Jack Lengyel, who came to Annapolis two years ago. He's Lengyel's guy. Uzelac wasn't. That makes a difference. Navy's schedule has been "adjusted, ~ as the Middies like to say. That means Syracuse and Pitt are; off, and Akron, Villanova and Toledo.are on. That willi help Chaump. As for luck, only time will tell Do not sell short the importance of luck, by the way. People at Navy will tell you that Gary Tranquill, Uzelac's predecessor (,82·'85, 20-34-1), was an excellent coach who had horrendous luck. Tranquill's key players were always getting hurt. He lost All-America Nap McCallum for a year. One season (1984, 4-6-1) he could have won five more "games with 12 more points. Chaump is known, correctly so. as an outstanding offensive coach. Towson State's Phil Albert coached against him wben Chaump was at Indiana (Pa.). Albert believes Chaump will do an outstanding job at . Navy. With,any kind of luck, he should. Jim Margraff, at Hopkins, played under Denny Cox, Howdy Myers and Jerry Pfeifer. He was the quarterback. who set school passing records throwing to Bill Stromberg a decade ago. Since graduating, Margraff has spent a year coaching at Hopkins and has been on the staffs at Albany State, Penn, Rocbester and Columbia. ~Al Paul [fonner Forest Park and Western Maryland athlete. now Columbia's athletic director] told me at the NCAA convention in Dallas this week." said Hopkins A.D. Bob Scott, ~tbat Margraif is the best recruiter Columbia bas. Here he'll be trying to recruit the same kind of kid. 'Jimmy has so much =-~y and entbusiasm. We're excited about getting coa~~~ ~:V~~:i:~~s~~r::~; !~~Sy:~~:: ~at he understands fully the difficulty of winning at Hopkins_ ~I think the administration and the dean have a bigger commitment to football new," said Margraif, who will be full-time in football and will have the benefit of the Blue Jays' first professional strength coach (Bill Starr). Like Chaump, Margraff is in a good situation. Through these two coaches, better times may be ahead for Navy and Hopkins. Gary Williams' example proves that, with the right coach, improvement can come fast. I CAR1WLL January • COUNTY TIMES t4, 1990 College wrestling WMC finishes sixth The Western Maryland College wrestling team finished sixth out _of, eight teams at the Pennsylvania Duals at Franklin & Marshall College Saturday. . Western Maryland lost to Division [ Bucknell 33-10 in the first round, beore coming back in the consolation bracket semifinals to defeat Gettysburg 18-13. The Green Terrors were defeated in the fifth-place match by Elizabethtown 29-18. Senior Joe Bakewell (142 pounds) was victorious in all three matches, while sophomore Gerard Johnson (126), junior Jim Jakub (134)and freshman Brad Rogers (190) each won twice. College swimming • • Gettysburg tops WMC The Western Maryland College swimming teams were defeated by Gettysburg Saturday at the Harlow Natatorium. Gettysburg'!'! men were 60-31 winners. while the Bullet women captured a 58-23 victory. Event winners for the Green Terror men, now 4-3, were John Ehlman in the 50-yard. freestyle, Rob Newman in the 100 free, Matt Gebhard in the 500 free and Mark Burroughs in the 200 breaststroke. JJ. Boggs in the 200 breast was the lone women's first-place finisher as Western Maryland feU to 0-7 . "i\KfWI,I. ruouar • CUUNTY y 14, TI~'II'.~ I<:!Yll • After passes • grabbing a rebound, to a teammate . Western Maryland's George Weltypl'lolO Barb Wolf (MOWLL January .Western Md. women: overcome their jet lag By BILL GATES Staff Writer For a team that claimed to be suffering from jet lag, the Western Maryland women di~ not play like a team that was sutfenng from Jet Jag. "I wouldn't say that," said Green Terror coach Becky Martin after Western Maryland had pounded visiting Lebanon Valley College 67-45. "You should have seen us yester- ~~~e~~ :~evi~;e~i:r" WOMEN'S BASKETBALL e • I practice, ! i Western Maryland had just ~turned from a two-week trip I through Iceland and France as part of a January Term course. Along with the 22 other students in the group, the players went skiing in I the Alps. swimming in the Mediter-' ranean. toured the beaches of Normandy and spent New Year's Eve in: Paris. The players also found the time. to get in a pair of exhibition games in France. although basketball was - I not the main priority of what was: more of a study trip, Martin said. Everyone received course credits for this trip. So, obviously, the first game back was a matter of concem for Martin and the Green Terrors, who were CUUNTY TIt11::5 14, t990 wondering if they might need a game or two to get back in synch'l Apparently not. Leading 20·14 with eight minutes remaining in the first half. Westem Maryland outscored Lebanon Valley 13·2 the rest of the way and went into halftime with a 33·16 lead. Caitlin Monroe scored the first five points of the streak, getting a free throw, a jumper in a the key and a layup. The last four baskets were scored by Claire Thevenoux. Came Alwine, Jill Evans and Barb ~~g ~~~~~~let:reO~IYp~i~~! free throws by Jen Leitao. ! Martin kept players running on I and off the court in a steady i rotation. "J wanted to keep the i players fresh; I didn't want any' injuries," Martin said. "I didn't want to wear anyone out "I think the team was concerned about the game, about what effect the trip would have on us. But there's no question. we came out: and played a nice game. It took some pressure off the team, as to I how well they'd be able to play," Martin said. At the hall the Green Terrors had a 27-13 edge in rebounds and were' 14-lor·31 (452 percent) from the' floor - not the' work of a team with tired arms and legs. Lebanon VaHey came not closer than 12 points in the second half. and, that was at 39·27 with 15:05 remaining in the game. Over the next five minutes those "tired" Green Terrors outscored the Flying, Dutchmen 13-4 to build a 52-30 lead and the margin stayed around 20 points for the remainder of the game. Monroe buried three jumpers from just inside the three-point line in the second half and linished with a teem-high 15 points. Angie Alfano put in a couple of layups off the break and finished With 10 points. Thevenoux, getting most of her points inside. scored 12 and pulled in nine rebounds. Woll got into foul trouble and only scored six points but had a, game-high II rebounds. Jonelle Leith was a perfect three-for-three from the floor coming off the bench! and Alwine filled in for Wolf and made three steals to go along with' eight rebounds . It was only after the game that it became obvious how physically drained were most of the Green: Terrors. Tbevencux joked ofl.,the effect of jet lag, saying "we're tough women," but Jill Evans, Rhonda Small and Alfano,. among others, were ready for a good rest . . Unfolttplatety the gauntlet has Just begun for Western Maryland. The G~n Terrors play four games in six days next week, including . back-to-beck trips to Dickinson and Franklin and Marshall on wednesday and Thursday. On Monday the Terrors host Susquehanna and on Saturday Messiah visits the Gill I Center. , I l I I The concern is, will the Green Terra;.> have anything besides ad. renahn remaining by Thursday r ~:~w:( a!~Pi:~fe;~in ~~ I Marshall. the team that handed Western Maryland three of its five losses last season. "I can't think about that right now," Martin said. "Although there's n~ question it's in the back of my ~ll1nd. It's a difficult schedule. We'll Just have to assume we'll still have our legs by then." I • • • BALTIMORE Jan, 14, SUN 1990 COLLEGES Navy men defeat Navy's men's swimming team ended a siX-meet losing streak yesterday by defeating Brown University. 71-39. at the Naval Academy. The Midshipmen's Victory, was anchored by the divtng team that swept all three places In the oneand three-meter events. Junior Steve Rutherford captured I the one-meter dive with 293.55 points and plebe Brad Baell won the three-meter diving with an overall score of 306.30. They were.followed In each event by Paul Feduchak and James Blanton. who finished second and third, respectively. Navy captured first place In eight of 13 events. The Middies are 2-7 and Brown Is 1-5. The Midshipmen return to action Wednesday at 6 p.m. at Lejeune Hall against Johns Hopkins. • At Hamsoqburg. Va .• diver Stacia Johnson and back-stroker Debbie Williams each won two events. but It took a vtctory by the Browns\VinUn~rs ----""'R""o-u-n""'d-up......;--400-freestyle relay unit to give Navy's,women's team a 151-149 vtctory over James MadiSon.: The win for the Midshipmen. their seventh In eight meets this Winter, was capped when Kelly Hoeft, Kelly Kinsella. Heidi Savage and Amy Lynn Schmidt won the 400 freestvle relav in 3 minutes. 40.61 seconds. Johnson, a sophomore from Gainesvtlle. FIa" won the one-meter diving With a pool-record 269,025 points. and also set a. pool record In \vtnning the three-meter dlVlng With 251.55 points. Williams, a three-time All-American. won the 100 backstroke In 1 :00,24, then took the zoo-yard backstroke in a National Collegiate Athletic Association DiVision II qualifying time of 2:11.13. Senior Heidi Savage also qualified for the Division II championships with her second- Results . place time of :58.78 In the 100 butterfly. Johnson bas.wen the one-meter ~~~ ~~e~~~I~~~;! this winter. tt::s sev.~:;!u.t~ . ,~ J~bns i 1 i' . , • Maryland swept Hop" ldns. WInning the men'aand women's competition. :. ' " The Maryland men won, 138-91. and the women's team triumphed: 120-86. • The Towson State men, won . nine events, ·as the Tlgeni. ddeated Rider, 148-79', In an East Coast Conference meet. In .women'e competition. Rider defeated Towson State. 146-88. • Gettysburg (3-2) won seven events In the men's competition to defeat Western Maryland (4-3), 60-31. In the women's competition, Gettysburg (5-O) won all but two events en route to a 58-23 Win over the Green Terrors (0-7J. BALTIMORE Jan. 14, SUN 1990 • ,i \ Valley (2..6 •.0-2) me Middle Atlantic Cdnfe,reilce~Southwesf~~ Section .\ game'~'."."':'Y::.!~ Jj \. _i].._.~_ft:"iJ~ .•-;.:.s~),4:-" ,., Monroe- made.six of. 'eight shots ffomtlie-fleld:and:three-of;fourfrom the- [ouliine' C18Jre-THevenOUX' had 1'2 points: and- nlnc-'rebounds!, for , western Maryland and Angi~A1fano1 (Oakiand-Mllls)'added 1O.~"j''''--'-The- Green_-::error-s •. p~ytngifor .1 ,,! i "th:n~~~' I;1~900.juniiXdouftO, i 1 an: H -2. lead and. were' never seri~_ 9uslY<!!l~ten~' __ -~i ,.._~l·'_~-·' • • HANOVER January • EVENING SUN 14, 19(,lO WMC wrestlers sixth at duals LANCASTER - The I westernl N~~n~iX~I~~~eofci~fre~= ~hr~n~r:nlYl~~~~bal?U~~~le:!1 I Saturday, Si!e~t~~~~t:3~to l~~t~~ ~~t~ ~~:~ia~i~~rbr~~ki~~e~ff~~s ~~ \ defeat Gettysburg 18-13. The i Green Terrors were defeated. in I the fifth-place match by I Elizabethtown 29-18. I In other WMC sports on Saturday, Western Maryland's swimmers were defeated by Gettrsburg ~~~~~~tns~~e~tgs~ur&:i~:~" cord to 3-2and to drop WMCto 4-3, ~E~:~~ ~~e v~~o~:tr~::ig ~~ 5-0. Western Marylandfell to 0- • • : Also at the Franklin and Mar- . shall tournament, John Pizzo and Steve Barley won' all three of their encounters, but Gettpibnrg C~Ilege had to settle for a ssngre WIll. Gettysburg also lost to Penn 31-10 and defeated Widener, 43-12. I HANOVER January • EVENING SUN 14, 1990 ~~reyfiou;;if5:-71~:Tei~rs: 58·": ::J{C"arLClevenstlDeJedJout Mora- ,I ~:nJ~fla~~ W~fe~~~a~d~s" i : Neif Fromm added 13~Jeff Hoke l2 and Rob Martin 10 as-Moravian extended' a -37-25"halftime lead' by! ~~:!h~rt~~~uWolpgl~ m~ Green.Terrqt:S.with 10points; while Mike -Sherlock was the game's Ie~ding re~un_der ~_gQ l2 .. '_"" • • CAHIWLL January • COUNTY SUN 14, t940 CARROLL January • • • COUNTY SUN 14, 199U I IOn stage uo.-:~ Bowdoin Trio at WMC rst and the winner of the Maurtce Hinson Award at the 1988 WU- The Bowdoin Trio. known particularly for their sensmve interpretations of Mozart. Brahms and the great Russian composers, wtll perfcrm tn Western Maryland College's Alumni Hall at 3 p.m. Sunday, Feb. II. This event Is the third of four this year In the Sundays of Note concert series. In 1984, the 010 won the first prize In the Concert Artists Guild Internatlonal Compet1tion In New York, "They then were- presented by the guild In a series of New York debut performances at Carnegie Recital HalL Since then. the- trto has won numerous awards- including the Concert Artists Guild Award. Pianist Jon Klloonoff Is the seventh Gina Bachauer international ptano Competition's Sliver Medal- llam~~ll~~t~~~~~lst I Semyon Fridman won the 1987 Concert Artists Guild Competltlon and gave his New York recital debut In February 1988. , Violinist Alexander Simionescu won the Sliver Medal at the 1987 Montreal Competition-as well as the prize for best Interpretation of the commissioned work. Mr. Slmtonescu was born In Bucharest, Romania. se~~: JOj~ye :~,!~o~~o~e Activities Office at Western Maryland College and the peggy and Yale Gordon Trust. which was established prtmartly to provide support for various cultural and educational Institutions In and around the Baltimore area. General admission cost Is $5 per!~=~tlon: 857-2265 876-2055. Ext. 265. CAaROLL January • g.- VoDeybaDsuccessOIl .: j The HDI: Jfthe HIndman:--, ."1 aifafrwasadarkmoment'" .;~; for the college. the cons1stc:nt I performance of the WMC volleyball team provided many -grear moments. The team won just one MIddle Atlantic Conference title during the decade. but managed to advance to the NCAA Divtskm m tournament six times. More important the squad did It without year-round volleyball players. Many of the women were two- and three-sport athletes who d1dn't spend all year" going from one power volleyball league to another. 1m • Wbata role """"'" efatherofa Brunswfck Hlgh field hockey player phys1cally attacked an offldal after his daughter's team dropped a 1~ vttdfct to " Francis Scott Key In the Class C Region I hockey champtonship game In I 986. can me old-fashioned. but the sight of a man attack1ng-a woman over a disputed call in COUNTY SUN t4, l YlJU an athletic event was as classless a move as I've ever seen. So tbereyou have It. My 10. most vivid memories of the decade. Oh. other thoughts flash thro~mymmdlna~ some good. some not so good. On the down side, we had some good football players. wrestlers and basketball players mtss slgnJflcant portions of their senior seasons due to suepensicne. We've seen the gymnastics and indoor . track programs fold. And we haven't seen much in the way of top-quallty football or boys basketball. We're still waiting for a girls soccer or girls lacrosse team to pull offa btgupset In post.-sea.son play. And we'd like to see western Maryland wtn Its first NCAA DiViston ill team title. Still, we had a few treats, too, like some excellent indiVidual and team showings In track. cross country and wrestung. The Westminster gcu teeme rose from the ashes of budget cuts to become one of the best teams In the state. The WMC women's lacrosse team made It to the NCAA Division m semifinals In 1987. And we had some wonderful swnmer memories. Jncluding a top-flight bicycle race. a regional Babe Ruth tournament and a one-shot VIsit by the Untted States Tennis Association satellite tour. Thanks for the memories. Carroll. l,hope the 1990s are Just as enjoyable. What's your opinion? Readers of The Carroll County Sun are urged to submU"letters and guest columns on topics of local interest to county residents. Letters and guest colwnns should be typewritten and dDuble-spaced. wUh letters no more than 250 words and guest columnsno more than 500 words. Your full name. address and telephone numbers (homllland ojff.ceJmust be included. (for uertjlcatton purposes only). Please send your comments to Letters or Guest colwnns. The Carroll . County Sun. 15 East MatTI St., Westminster. Md. 21157. You also may FAX your comments to us at 876-0233. • . -- Ci\l{IWLL January COUNTY SUN 14, 11190 7 The,Yearly battle for park fadlities: This also became the most repeated story of the decade. For years, members of the Recreation and Parks Board have submJtted capital requests to help keep pace with the growtng population. Each year. the Planning Commission and the county commissioners perfonn a hatchet job on the Projects. The problems are exacerbated by school planners. who often fall to include adequate land for recreation facilities at school sites. S Hindman quits as WMC football coach.: After building the Green Terrors Into one of the strongest small-college teams In the East dw1ng the late 19705. Jim Hindman quit after the 1980 season. The football program still has not recovered. He didn't think the school provided enough support for the program: the school was uncomfortable because Hindman was telUng people he was spending his own money to heJp upgrade the program . • ! CARROLL COUNTY TIMES Januar-y 15, 1990 • Greyhounds down WMC 78-.58 Brnn.EHF.M. Pa.Carl Clevenstine led four, Moravian· players in double figures with-14 points as the Greyhounds (6-7, 2,2) romped past Western Maryland (3-8, 1-3) 78-58 In a Middle Atlantic Conference.Southwest Section game Saturday. . Neil Fromm added 13; Jeff Hoke 12' and Rob Martin 10 as Moravian extended a 37-25 halftime lead by scoring the nrst six points of ·the second. half. Marc Rudolph led the Green-Terrors with 10 points, while Mike Sherlock was tae gaame's leading rebounder with, 12: Wl'Sl'ERN MARYIAND (58)-Wat-· kinson 0-7 Q-O O. Barnes 2-4 2·2 6. Rudolph 5·9 0-0 10. Sherlock 3-10 006; Howell 0-3 0-2 O•.Lyon 1·52-24. Vanston 0-0 2·2-2. Pearce 3-5 0-0 6. Miller 2-4 5·5. 9. Krusinski Q.6 4-4 4. • • Pawlowski 2·2 3·3 1-, Ea'{eS 1-1·0-0 2. Wieczerak 1-1 0-0 2. SuIzman· 0-1 0- o I O. Totals 20-58 18-20 58. . MORAVIAN (78)-MartIn 2-8 5-710, CIevenstine- &.1'2-3 14. Fromm 3·5 7-8 13. Hoke 6-11 0-0 12. Burke- 0-3 0-0 O. Burrell 3-5 0-17, MitcheU'I4 0-1.2. S. Q'BoyIe 2·2 2-3 6,'Witalec 2-21-2 S, SaybeO-12-5 2,.Yod..-I-2 2.24. Turco 0-0 1-2 I, Jost 0-10-00, J.O'Boyte 1·1 0-0 2. Totals 27·52'22· 34 78. Halftlme·Moravian 37. Western Maryland 25. 3-point field goals-WM 0:-7 '(Watkinson 0·2, Rudolph 0-2. Kzusinsld 0-2, Lyon- 0-1); M· 2-9 (Burrell 1-1. Martin 1-3. Hoke 0-3. Burke 0-1. Jost 0-1). ReboWlds-WM 34 (Sherlock 12~ M 41 (Fromm 10). Assists-WM (Clevenstine 5 (Howell 2); M' 19 4). Total fouls-WM 26; M 22. Fouled out-None . I CARROLL January COUNTY TIMES 15, 1990 • ,Simple misunderstanding cancels marathon game I Carpenter to discuss the money issue. Rich wanted to lind out how much money was needed. and if . something could be worked out They wouldn't work with him." Carpenter said "there was no secret about the dollar amount," and that the Irat should have talked with Carol Fritz. who is responsible lor events in the Gill Center. Adderly said the first person he dealt with was Fritz, who told him the person he would have to talk to about the money was Carpenter. Fritz couldn't be reached lor comment. "It wasn't for our lack of trying," Adderly said. Fortunately, if the communications breakdown can be resolved. there's still hope. The Sig Eps are still working on holding the marathon and hope to reschedule it lor either the end 01 this semester or next Iall semester. And, by the way, it's not going to" be easy. For the record to be recognized, The Guinnes8 Book of World Records states that there be no substitutions; the same 10 players must go all 118 hours. There must be two independent observers, score must be kept and a scoresheet submitted to Gumness. And players are only allowed a five minute break for every hour. • • be postponed; It would have been kind of neat for it to happen and we I were looking forward to it. i "But everyone operated under budget ramifications. We are budgeted to keep the building open from 8 a.m. to 11 p.m. After that. the' people who want to have the building open would have to pay," Carpenter said. This. of course, is where the conflict pops up. Sigma Phi Epsilon knew back in December they would have to pay for the building. But the: frat said it didn't get any cooperation in trying to work out the problem. "We couldn't pay any money up front," said Mike Adderly, the fraternity brother who organized the· event. ''We didn't have the funds. Our president (Rich Edwards) tried. to talk with them and see if we could pay afterwards. but couldn't get an appointment with "We planned to play six hours and then rest for hall-an-hour." Adderly said. "We've had a couple of guys working out, getting ready. The guys at Old Dominion averaged 40 points an hour, and we want to beat that. too." Ironically, had the marathon been' held as planned. the six or seven Sig Ep brothers who are members 01 the Western Maryland mens' basketball team could not have participated. They have other commitments. BALTIMORE SUN January 15, 1990 w._ .......,.~ ,-_0_ L~,:,,: -- Mt.SI-M.ry'. TowaonSt. ueac ~ 2 13 _A_ -"""W L F&t.I DidcinlOl1 ~VaL MUhl8lltlefg GeftysDUr<] W.MarytanCI • • ~w L P<:ll ~ ::~, 301.000121.923 301.00094.692: ~ ~ :~ : 2 ,333 6 13,25031.300' 3 .250 3 1 6 429' 1 6 2731 '.,01.(00511) tt'I.~_!_6_,571·1 11.50031023"11 0-0.000210.167{ 02.00064867] ,"0 3331 CARRULL January COUNTY TINES 16, 1990 _ ~eneral gives history I~~son on VietnWJj;:j ·"n ______ WMC students get i with Westmoreland AMEDOAI I __ Most of them were born ,during the Vietnam War. Some had fath'''' who f~~t. On .; Mon. r , day, they got chance to talk to the ~ man who led ,J a the American troops [ into A four-star general, Westmoreland was at the core of debate over the war as troops moved into Westm~reland, however, said he wouldn't change anything he did during the conflict. Leaming about Vietnam during this term has had a positive effect on the students in the class, Ciquino said. e~~eno~'st was very great and j not only in casualties. We are now I far enough away from the event! that emotions are not getting I involved." wesonoreland reminded the .stu-. dents that most of the percepuonsr of the contlict were delivered bYI news media. umalists were very careless, the facts," said Westmore-. land. who in 1~85 d~opped a $120 million libel SUIt agamst CBS for a documentary the network did on his career. Journalists "had to meet a deadline and were quite biased." said avaiator in Danang ~~6.an "He doesn't ~~:! talk about ~~~~:o~a:~.l had _~eard stories I ! being in: - jun~r~ that the "United States fought a war ~n~,?ntairunent and didn't fight to . Jennif::r Brocato, 21, of said her i~erest in ville, Cockeys~~!l0's class . developed after she took a "Recent American History" class at Towson State. University during the: summer; .... •.,...1 his. fath~'~: ~ during element "I bed.quesnons J it a lot ~eou~~d~~ ot how some soldiers were traumatized by the war, and that kept him from initiating discussions with his father. Dave Heritage, 19, a sophomore battles. ''! don't believe you or your counterparts blame the soldiers," the g~neral said i~ response to a question about Vl.e~~, veterans getting due recognruon .. People of your generation see the war differ- N~w Jersey, of their land." 19, a WMC junior Rich Edwards, from ~e:~.!. :~~~~i~-O~~~ I American troops were withdrawn in 1973, more than 57,000 young Americans had died. -.,-.-.'.. "I didn't even know 'who General Westmoreland was," he said. 'The public opinion was the war was a mistake and 1 have always had questions about that Our troops . ~~~O~:;d o~:n~~~ a~~~~ the situation and did' a poor job of! keeping Washington abreast of 1 what was going on. By the time \ _~;~~~e~:~ . perhaps the most centroWESTMORELAND verstal figure . to grow out of the Vietnam era. _ Forty Western Maryland College students placed a long-distance terence call to retired Gen. iam C. Westmoreland as part of Lt. Col. Joesph Ciquino's class on the Vietnam War. The c,pnversation from MacDaniel's Lounge on the Westminster campus reached the general's South Carolina office about 10:30 a.m. and lasted about 30 minutes. Westmoreland complimented the students lor their interest, saying they are part of a generation which is learning not to blame the soldiers who fought the » __ i earful in phone talk ~~fI~EN .c__. . Wes.tmoreland was described by I historian Arthur M. Schlesinger Jr. il:S "the worst American general I since Custer." Asked about that I label, the general said "it is easy for someone not in that pOSitionrl ~~~ponsibility to criticize. strare- at WMe, said his father was a d~or in the Anny during the war. Like. most students, Heritage said the vtetnam War was "skinuned ~~~unng his high school history ~d Brocato, about Westmorea senior. com. munications major. She read the general's book "A Soldier Reports;" she said, and "I learned a lot about him and his life. I admire him as a general and a person. He is the best person they could have had over ' there." --• Qj • • \(enKoonspnolO Western Gollege student Rich Edwares. :, -ruestion to retiree Gen. wtllinrn westmcra.ono nrouqna conterence teleohone call lege during a from "''-:::3,2;-), ,v,arylaild '-['-.",01 Cal. HANOVER January • • • EVENING SUN 16, 1990 BAL TIt10R£ SUN January 16, 1990 USA Jan. • • TODAY 16, 1990 errors ~I¥"ive oul game ;~~::~. Terrors not only used ~ uehanna'S abundance of fouls uSQ ore 22 points from tJ:te tree o r:~ line. but WMC [eopardized its d late in the game when Its two lea ebounders Barb Wolf and ,..,~\: Thevenoux fouled out.~ had been in foul trouble since ~~rs~~~~. Terrors only. hit ope ~ield ~~th~~:e~~~t~~~:;er:~: ed .lt~ their lead by hitting foul ~n ts. They hit 22 of 34 free throws nO the night while Susquehanna as ,12 ~:o~· winning the battle at ~ line, Western Maryland's .~ ~er edge over Susquehanna ~ its ~:~~~~nd([6 thr~~~~j l~r~arb Wolf (9 rebounds) dormd roth the ottensrve and the :~:nsive boards throughout the '~~ile'S aggressive r~boundin.g I d her collect 16 pom,ts, but It e ~ helped her ~ollect five fouls ~th 2-17 still left In the game when e o;een Terrors held the lead at l'S:venoux fouled -out with 18 Th cis left to play and SusqueeCon,s Laurie. Pankuck, who was ann~arne's high scorer with 22 e ts hit both free throws to In o~ Western Maryland's lead te .63. After the Green Terrors inded the ball, Susquehanna's McCord fouled Angie Alfano to } the dock. The referee,. howtop charged McCord with an mtener~ Ioul _ giving Alfano two on (which she made) and West!1°Maryiand possession 01 the ball. C)_uently, Susquehanna was o take advantage of the ~George Susquehanna's Liz Nlcodemas and Jennifer Winter reach in on Western Maryland's Jill U? a. absence of Wolle and Thevenoux. Point guard Caitlin Monroe hit outside shots to lead Western Maryland scorers with 20 points. Green Terror coach Becky Martin said. "She's an integral part 01 our of- tense." Since both Wolle and Thevenoux both had three louIs in the first half and force to sit down, Martin had to rely on her bench for offensive punch as well Forward Carrie Alwine hi! three quick Iayups in the second half to put the Green Terrors in the lead to stay Western improved Maryland's to 8-1 Wel~ Evans as shs drives to tile basket. Winter called for a foul on tile play. overall retard HANOVER • January EVENING SUN 17, 1990 ~~;~t:~.s~t;1~~L\ sociate 'professor; of_",education,'; Western ···Maryland College, re-I ~~r~'JJ ~~o~~~r.::t~~'~:~1 estate'selementary teachers. teach·1 ~math," Hi~,.project; ','Reaching_! : Higher II - -A Project to Raise-the: ~~~:~~~~~~~ei~r:~j and Measurement" will be two i videotapes of-exemplary elemen-t tary math teachers. It will, show: teachers ,in'grades'K-5' developing I ~rade-Iever' appropriate mcdell ~~~b~~~~Otr:: ;:~h~~~~l s~oo~district: • • i I. HANOVER January WMe EVENING SUN 17, 1990 grads honored Three Western Maryland College; graduates were honored by Gover: nor William Donald Schaefer for' '~:~e~uc{oe:s t~neth6e~~J~~r;~\ Schartner, class of 1972 was the wrestling coach for the team which son 11 medals at the January Christchurch New Zealand i ~6~~artheisri;;~nn~ &h~rfo~ the Deaf. His assistant coach was Westminster resident H._Samuel ;:~~n aa~r~t,r ~~~~~~~ 1 coach and a 1963graduate of"the' ~ school. The other honoree was Neil Gwinn, .rr-, of Westminster, who g:~n~1~:iIT.s.W~c~lr a~e;:ew~ has a -1986B.A. In physical education and a M.S. in counselor education in 1989 from WMC. Pictured, from left: Schartner, Case, Schaefer and Gwinn . • • TOWSON TIMES Jan. 17, 1990 • ~~~~1~~~ ?-players_SC:J:8 'QJl the. -~iimpUs:·"6.£j k~estem.Maryland College-June;-l ~:~,f2~~~~:';~:~.-"ri~_~\;Y-~.~ ... :>h~.,tI::J· . kin teammates. at the" ~I;am~i;"~~,:b.:~~fa-. ._. 1.~••• 421:·1365 orwrite'AMFC, Box' .5.8. Burtonsville, 20866. • • I I -ovemighrsray .. : _For-, Informarion ; _cait._! P.O. MD' I 1 CARROLL January • COUNTY T 11'H::::i L8, I':lYU ,WMC women top Dickinson 64-56 Staff Report The Western Maryland men and women were the only other local basketball teams in action Wednes- day. The Green Terror women past Dickinson in a tuneup for their showdown with Franklin struggled and Marshall tonight while the men had a late rally run out of gas in a loss to Lebanon Valley. College Basketball • • WMC Women 64, Dickinson 56 The Green Terrors rallied from a halftime deficit and then held off the stubborn Red Devils to move into a second-place tie with Johns Hopkins in the Middle Atlantic Con- COLLEGE ROUNDUP, rei ~ and Barb Walt (21 points, 2S bounds) added a free throw onds later. :; Dickinson (1-9, 1-2) came back;~ with eight straight points to make it'", 38-32, but Western Maryland re-~~ sponded with runs of 14-3 and 12-2:: to open up a 58-45 lead with 5:04:remaining. The Red Devils scored nine unanswered points to close to within 58-54 with 1:19 remaining but Thevenoux, Wolf and Angie Alfano all converted one-and-ones in the final minute. sec-> Western Maryland will travel to lancaster, Pa., tonight to tackle division-leading franklin and Marshall, which was ranked 14th in the latest Division [If poll. Western Maryland (9·1. 2-1) trailed 28.17 at one point in the first halt and with 3:16 remaining the Green Terrors. were behind by 3021. But Western Maryland scored the final four points of the first half and the first seven points of the second half to take a 32-30 lead, Lebanoo Valley Meo 77. western Maryland S9 A late Green Terror rally fell short as Western Maryland dropped to 3-9 overall and 1-4 in the Middle Atlantic Conference-Southwest Division. Lebanon Valley (8·5, 2-2) led by as many as 15 points (37·22) in the first half and went into halftime with a 39·27 edge. Western Maly_ land cut the deficit to 56'-53 with 6:15 remaining in the game but Lebanon Valley responded with 14 unanswered points to clinch the game. Claire Tbevenoux (21 points, 20 rebounds) scored on a follow-up to give Western Maryland a 31-30 lead Ed Krusinski led the Green Terrors with 20 points. Scott Richards scored 19 lor Lebanon Valley. ference-Southwest Division. HANOVf-:1-1. C:Vl::~! lNG SUN January L8, I':1YU • • Westminster High School students look over the 1990.91 financial aid form before the annual +tocnctcl oid meeting set for Monday at grade 12; Cathi Myers, counselor: Brandy Reese, grade 10: James Cashdollar, counselor; Tiffany Myers, grade 12; and Erin Pond, grade the school. Pictured (from left) ore Jock Franks, 12. Financial aid meeting planned WESTMINSTER. Md. - As the cost of higher education increases each year. many parents and students arawondering how to pay the bills. The Westminster High School Guidance Department is ~~f~~~' ih~~~g~~~~. workshop to help answer The workshop will be held Monday at 7:30 p.m. in the auditorium of the school featunng a look at what college really costs, why those costs should not scare students away from the colleges th~y want to attend and how to complete a financial aid form. Featured during the program will be Larry Riordan, director of admissions at Mt. St. Mary's College, who will present the concept-of financial f~~Ose~~~a~g~:;t~/ye~~si-a~~~ts, scholarships, Major ~ichael Fitzgera1d of Western Maryland College will also be present to discuss financial aid i~~~:at~~lt~l~~ifnt ~~1fJr~faa~~i~~~g who are considering this option. According to Cathi Myers, coordinator of the financial aid meeting, the workshop will benefit all students and parents. but focuses on nth and 12th grade students .. BALTWORE Jan. 18, • . . LimANON_V ALLEY 77 ,WESTERN-MARYLAND 59 , The visiting Green'. Terrors (3-9, 1-4) trailed the entire ni~t, including. 37~21. with 1:50 remammg. In the first· half of the Middle Atlantic Conference· Southwest 'Section game. Boweverca basket by freshman Paul Pawiowski.with,6:15 left-in the game HANOVER January • • SUN L990 pulled the Green Tem;"is·tJ'-, 56-53. The . . 2·2) then' quick with a a-o run. Junior Ed Maryland with a points. _ EVENING SUN 18, 1990 Western Maryland The Western Maryland College' basketball teams split in their MAC-Southwest games as the women won 64-56 at Dickinson College and the men lost 77-59 at Lebanon Valley College. .-.?j J BALTI t1URE SUN Jan. 18, t990 • Freshman guard Debbie Lynn accounted for 10 straight Drexel points. as the Dragons (8-5. 3-0) broke away from Towson State (5-8. l-Illate In the first half-en route to a 66-56 East Coast Conference Victory at the Towson Center last night. Drexel led. 34-25. 'at halftime. and led by at least eight through the rest of the game, Lynn finished wtth a career-high 24 points; For Towson State. which shot 29 percent from the field and was called for 26 personal fouls. Maureen Breslin had 16 and Amy Green had 15 before fouling out In the final minute. DAEXEL(61I-Keatingt.9~"(6,CareyO-ll.31, Fi~P8!n"" •• 71.29,PcnistS.96-1!)t6,LynnT'!1 ~2:~~~3.tt2-3a,B",ry0-52.22.TOIale: TOWSONSTATE(SSI_8~!ln7.t20-(l16, McQuigganl.t03-45,K'8nick·I..(I.23.RotIat4.17 2·311,Ci'~lao-s2.22,oan"0-10-(lO,Gtaens.11 4-415,.Gonar2'$G·04. N<>e! 0-3 0-0 O. TOlllle: 12·15M. 1t.1fII .... ,o,".8I34-25.", .......... goa.., 02.2 (Lynn2.2\;TS4-10I8reslin2.2,G,aent.1.Aotte1 l-ii. DanI8l0.11. A._,,·D 45 (Pcnist 121: TS4<l (Ci'~911a6,Go...... 61.A.. i.t" 14 (PQ'''SI81;TS 14 (Roltet 61. TOtBI10UI.: tS:TS26.Foulad 0111: G,aen_Tee-''''nOt1e. 20--$' ° ° W. Maryland 64, Dickinson 56 • CARLISLE. Pa. Barb Wolg (Glenelg) had 21 potnte and 25 rebounds. and Claire Theveneaux had 21 points and 20 rebounds to lead Western Maryland (9-1. 2-1) over DickInson (1-9. 1-2) In a Middle Atlantic Conference Southwest Section __ -=-:=c..:.::=:::.:._~~.~: State women it7il;~;:,1'2 . ] 0-0 2, Monroe HI 1·2 3. Tote ... _,~ OICKINSON(5CI_Ma,zo8-193-319,Muaey_ J 1·30-02. Willon4-10 1-69, Ral""ond3.10 1.27,.:, G'aY8II-30-02,Snaed6-113-415.Coxl-30-02. ; :;~=!:~~~~7~.:r:.,j 251:039(~131,"''''''WM1!)(Monroe31:D9:j ~~~~:~:~'::':::=:~.Ii.;~-~···1 Co~~!'!t~lFl~a.:_ ~~ri~~:n :j scored 23 and Regrna Nolan had 20; . ! points and 12 rebounds. as Coppin .: State (2·9) held on to defeat Florida- : Jf~~J' ,i Me:?6~~~ <&11 _ c. Scott 3, Mltchetll, .. Slmp.on23. Nolan 2G,RUS&al7, Yrkin.5, T.Scott .., 2.Tatal,,24112·28U. I FLORID" MEMORIAL IIKlI - Smith 7, Thorn» son 2. D'\fia4. 88lOm.3. Brown IS, LemotII9, Miller' 1 2.St ..... 8,TotaI"'.I .. :J311C1. 'J H.lffI .... -CoppinSlBt.33·27.",~I.J g.... I.-CoopinSlBhI1 (S"'P9onl.FloridaMMTIOIi .. 3(Brown2.Slarka,.FouIe<I01l1_CoPPtnSlata-'''-' Mitcnell, Simpson. Fk)rlda Memorlal·8aJom. ToUl. ., IOUI.- COPPinSlale 30, FloM8 Memori8l2S."_ tea 60, Harford 54 Adrienne Boatwnqht scored 19. as the Community College of Baltlmore (6-5) defeated Halford Commu- 1 ~~g~~b~-;J'NITY nj~ .. COLLEGE (5<1, _ DYe'Dr G 0-(1 G. Dorsey 10'6-3 28. lUCIle4 2~2 la, s;m.. • mon.32-48. WMtsronOO-Go. 8'I"PII 0-0 O. ruc~"'40-28.T_"211o.1'IW, . . COLL.EGE OF a"lnMOIIE(SOl_ Smilh21.15. TODi8s42·310, Royshlr20-0~.N0m8 ° COMMUNITY ~t~!:~rzr.!g;.'iO~:~~4 ~;:'1~~2. 44-5 _. go.. ~·~t1::'a~,,";d ~~~~·krC~. ~~.!dT':::'~j ! L;Wc" g~imAN M .. RYLAND(141_ SI ),1.31-43, Allano2·1t 3·67,lalth 1·1 O-{)2,e.a<!!l 1.5 I.t 3. Smith I·S 0-0 2. WOII6-209--H'21. Th....enaalJJl 9.2(J • '-, Drexel beats Towson, 66-56 fo,o·Simrnons,CCB·Tobies. 17,CCS17 Tot.' lou"_H,rlord ! CARROLL January • COUNTY TIMES 19, 1990 g~~~;;~~~~ Matt_G,ebhard and Rob ~ewman and sop~m~ore_ ..Ma~ Cook .each WO~ two- events . to- ~ead ~est~m !h~- _ teamed with Cook, Gebhard end, Newman to win the 400 freestyle", relay and clinch the Green Terrors":" =~~~,;1~~~;2~~~~-aG~!! victory eight tries. fifth ~~~=!t~~~{ ;fu'iili~:~ and'I,OD,D.yard freestyle -evente, N~.:~~tured the- 100 ~d 200 freestyle, and Cook -won the-'200.," individual. medley and',200 back• ~ -. ~,-,,,:..;;...,-.-."- '--'-.~+- _.". S~squehanna'5 \'{0'.l;l~~ _~ise.<!: ~ their recorcl..to'.2-2;.. wlhle-.~_e'~C'ru,..':,j sader men, fell to 1-3. Botlr'Green.; : . ": in ~:T';_~:uads host :-.The Weste~' Maryland wome~ f -vdropped to 0-8, losing 112-65 to the I Crusadersl, Sophomores Shearer (100 freestyle) Boggs (200 breaststroke) vaterte l and J.J.! and fresh-' ><~,.•<- • HANOVER January EVENING SUN 19, 1990 WMC swimmers top Susquehanna SELINSGROVE - Freshmen Gebhard and Rob Newman 'and sopbomore Matt Cook each won two events to lead the Western ' Maryland College men's swimming team to a 112-92 win at SusUniversity on wednes-. i Matt &ehanna =i: ~bhard finished Ill'S! in thesroand 1,OOO-yardfreestyle events, ~S~ ~~nl:ea: ~ I dividual medley and the 200 backstroke. Senior captio John Ehlman won for the seventh time- in seven meets in the 50 freestyle and' teamed with Cook, Gebhard and i Newman to win the 400 freestyle' relay, • clinching the Green TeITOrS' flf¥b:~~::i=i:n~' dropped tc <HI by women' Icsing 112-<5.tc I I ~~eri~r~=sao~ol~~~,1 and freshman Stacy Stauffer were winners in the 100 freestyle, 200 breaststroke and 200 backstroke respectively for the Terrors. LoYOla.Saturd~~_:. '! CUUNTY I Y. I LJYU • • Unda Van Hart hammers out a bracelet the institutions that educated me." Van Hart said, adding that "it was very nice to be noticed by my peers • in her studio ior mv excellence Being an artist else." Van Han near Uniontown. of education.' is "like anything said. "You can't slack oil and coast if you intend to be really good at what you choose to do" Ci\!UWLL January COUNTY TIMES 19, 1990 • Her art is jewelry for all seasons Van Hart's craft captures character of each season By HILLARY speeial10 • • TOLLETIE theTirnes Many things' in life fascinate us, but few keep us in awe. Art often keeps us awestruck. So does Linda Van Hart, one 01 Carroll County's most flamboyant artists. At age 5 she Informed her family that she was going to be an artist. Van Hart says her grandmother Florence Brandenburg Grimm was a poet by hobby. Her brother Frank wrote the lyrics to several hymns in the Methodist Hymnal and her father Joseph was a musician and music teacher near Berrett. But for Van Hart, "Art has always been a main focus in my life. I grew up as a performer in all of the arts _ drama, dance, piano and voice. But I specialized in watercolor and painting." Now Van Hart. who also teaches art at South Carroll High School, is a metalsmith who specializes in sterling and gold sculptured jewelry. She creates different seasonal items by forging precious metal wire and shaping sheet metal. In the spring she creates dogwood blossoms. She has picked out ivy as the most representative for the summer season. In the fall she uses grape designs to create the vision of autumn. She sells these items. But Van Hart finds another facet of her work much more personal. Mixed-media better known as collage is her most emotional and, she says. ''visual personal diary." Each of her collages is a reposttory lor relics. a memento 01 a search. revelation and celebration. Van Hart. says. She rarely offers these for sale, maintaining them for her own collection. Van Hart says she has been "inspired by many people. more than one specific artist. However these people are the visual artists. the philosophers of life - they are the genuine. honest artists." The two artists she says have had the biggest influence on her work are Louise Nevelson and Albert Paley. Nevelson influenced her work because she was the first environmental artist. and Van Hart's work is directly related to nature and the composition 01 objects in the environment. Paley's influence stems from his consciousness of quality and. craftmanship. She admires his ability to put his stamp on of all his work. As an advocate fighting for the rights of artists. Van Hart claims that she is opposed to current "ripoff" artists who create without feeling merely for the monetary gam. Van Hart's artwork has been exhibited mainly at Uniquely Crafted in Westminster, which she used to co-own. Yet she also travels as far as Memphis, Tenn., where her work is observed in the main gallery at Metal Works. Van Hart does local shows such as at the Maryland Wine Festival and the Friends School in November, and says she now enjoys doing fewer but longer 'shows. Van Hart now is working on a spring show at the Maryland Art Place. a Baltimore gallery for Maryland artists. In the show. she will be joined by other artists including locally-known artists Terry Whye. Kevin Dayhoff and John Sosnowsky. Van Hart is a graduate of Western Maryland College and recieved a masters 01 art education at Towson State University. Van Hart teaches grades nine through 12 in the three-person art department at South Carroll High School. She has also worked parttime since 1980 in jewelry and lapidary in Western Maryland College's art department. The artist was awarded "Best in Show" at Towson State University for jewelry and sculpture. Western Maryland College also awarded her "Best in Show" at its art gallery. In 1984 she was named Maryland Art Educator of the Year. "It was great to be honored. by J I j I HALTIMUR£ SUN 1/19/90 At-lest, cultural diversity ... From time to time over the next few weeks. Other Voices una look back at the '80s andfonoard. in this case to the '2Os. College Town, Md.,· June 8, 2020 tural diversity of this country. The college's administration knew that the 21st century was pot going to be a European century; it was going to be an African and Asian century, said Lakota. "It was a provocative and visionarY conference," sbe recalled. "There was a candid admission that, as sincere as they were, our cosmetic changes in the latter quarter of the 20th century - a minority person here and there .in faculty and staff positions, Dot to mention the 3 percent non-white student body -. simply would not work any longer," Lakota remembered. The college also acknowledged, with some reluctance, that what human ingenuity could devise, namely affinnative action, human ingenuity could evade. "With unassailable logic we bad kept the college faculty predominantly white and male, n. Lakota said. "It dawned on us that our future as an institution was at stake. "The conferees decided, morality aside (the moral argument had not been a compelling one), it was in their professional and educational interests to reflect more accurately the: non-white majority population of tbeworld." "What we now have in 2020 is a result of bold initiatives and thoughtful planning produced by that 1992· conference," claimed Alicia Joyner, the college's first non-white president. She summartaed the five major changes at Maryland College: First, the faculty devised an excellent semester-long fresllman orientation seminar dealing with racism, sexism, prejudice and other fonns of discrimination. "We feel we need to continue this seminar for the foreseeable future. Word is out about this crucial alteration in the campus climate, and it has helped our recruitment immensely/ Joyner explained. N=;=~~=!C;:;n:o~~ This small, traditionally conservative, once ::=o:s~:Shi~:uur:i=::: almost unheard of among former- elusiveness ly. -;: reporter asked ::::ppen?".a ===== :::ce Ira G. _Zepp Jr. ===== e Am~ Department, American, =~ c:rdi: k na uve Lakota to the college in "Weu." she said, "we've been working at this for some time now. It began when we beld a very significant conference back in 1992 on the SOOth anniversary of Columbus' invasion of the western hemispbere. loni~:~~;~ 7:~=iP~e:~: _ .amination of the implications of the European conquest of America. The theme of the conference was 'Recoloring Education in the 21st Century'." Lakota continued: "Those of us who planned the conference were motivated by two unavoidable demographic realities. One, by the year ·2000, one-third· of all school-age children in the U.S. would be members of minorit.y groups - black. Hispanic, native Amenca.n and Asian American. And two. appronmately one-third of our faculty planned to retire by 2000." The logo of the conference was the Statue of Liberty turned toward the United States to symbolize affirmation of the cut- • Two, all students must be fluent in Spanish before they graduate .. "We should be: able to. speak the language of our nearest ! neighbor south of the border .and the largest \ minority in our country," said Joyner. The third change involves de-Europeanizing the curriculum, she added. "Since most Americans are incomplete Europeans any-· .\' way, we insist on a strong curncular and extracurricular cross-cuIturai program. In- =~;t~~::" have majors in African and Part of the 1992 capital campaign included $S· million, which funded the fourth change the creation of six endowed chairs in various ethnic studies. Said the president. "It seemed natural for a progressive liberal arts college to make this move. This was in place by 2004." At the same time, faculty replacements made in the 1990s as a result of thorough affirmative action searches and institutional commitment produced a rich diversity of men .and women of color - providing the fifth change. "Finally, in the classroom, where it uIUmately matters. minorities see themselves reflected in their instructors," Joyner said. "In short, around the turn of the millennium. the college itseU made a right-angie turn," she added. "I know all of this sounds like the quest for the Holy Grail, but we promised ourselves in 1992 never to rest in our determination to realize this dream. Our first black students. who came bere 60 years ago, remain our conscience. ~ Ira G. Zepp Jr. is a professor of ret~ gious studies at Western Marytand College. He was named Maryland Professor of the Year in 1989 btl the Council for the Advancement tion. and Support oj educa- I 'I i BALTIMORE Jan. 19, • F&M75; SUN 1990 WestemMmytiinct45! LANCASTER. Pa,' - Cathy Belser and came Bowen each' had' 12': points In the first seven minutes as Franklin and Marshall (12-2. 5-0) raced to a 30-7 lead and rolled to a Middle· Atlantic Conference-Southwest Section win over Western Maryland (9:2. 2-21. C1aJreThevennux led Western Maryland. whose four-game wtnning streak was broken. With 14 points and etgh.t. rebounds. WEIlTERH MARYLAND (45) - WO# 2·5 0-0 4. ~1-90-02,TlMM>noult3-l!ia.-1D14.AltMa2.7 0-04. e...... u0'06. Small 0-40.0 a. SmI1II ().1 0.0 0.A .... ne2-30-04.~I.,0-02./oJ!IriQMH2·24. ToaJHH3,catIsbIenol.l().I~HIcII<c:Qr().I0-0 D.T-':17.-11-M4&. 1'JtAHIWN. MARSHALL (7Il- Kopcza 3-42·2 8.eoro.kyD-30-00.~140.02.KrtZIII4 0.02.KQI)IItZl-30-02.~I.'1.23.8owen 1·102.217.F1111C11bMq14-1'·'ID.a.mton:ID-30.0 D,gelsw1-91·215,Shewltey:I-32·24,KnInIrIne e-ll0.012.T"""ZI .. ~n1S. i'WIIIIM: F'-&_38. w-..MrtlInd15, 3-poMtfllllolv-ee: WM ().I (_~ F&M 2·5(eow.nl.2,~1·2.BoI'o.ICyo:.lj. __ -..: WW 25 (n-..cu. 8); F&Iot 32 (KrumrInot 6). ~ WM 9 (SInd. AlIano. WO# 2t. F&M 21 (Sowen6j.T __ WM 12:FIM 16. FOIIiM_ none.T~none.A:l00. COUEGES ~m~::~II2.Su 92 1.000 Fr&e-GeDIlMd.Western Maryland. I 11:10.4(1.200 Fr_Newman. W"'tem.1 t:!:=~.,!,;.!~~22~102.~=~1 rFr:'!r~~~\~~!~J::}~~.~~ : Ma,,"and.:50.06.2ooBac~oCook.WM1. emM.ryland.2:15.34.500Fr~. W•• tem Maryland. 5:21.51. 200 Breaal_ BI.nCI18rd.Su~ufthanna.2:24.39.400 Free RelaV'Weslem MarylaM (El1lman., ~=n.G_.r<!.CooI<).3:32.60 SIIIQueIuonNlI12.W"_~6Ii. 400 M8(lJeyRel.v.susquell.nna(Rc~~~~. M~;~.;.T~nuSr~~·v~r'7.:;te4~~.~; • • j (Ree!.~s~;;'~'~:n~~:~:~1~::?:t,n: j ~~~r6~~' ~~:::::"n:: ;goF~;:'G~a8~~~. 28.10.200 InoividLWM8(lIey-Glark.so .. : qUManna. 2:25.12. 200 Fly.Tin,."Y. Sus • quen.nna.2:J8.71,IooF.--Sne.r .... WeStern Maryland. 1:00.43. 200 8ac~. Slautf"',WestemMaryland,2;32.13.5oo Free-Tinslay.Su&Quenanna.5:57.!l5.200 Breut_Boggs. WeSl"rn Marvl.no, 2:59.02 .• 00F'H FlelaV·W"a,...nMary_ ~~~_~~~,sn. Vodr8$U. Lowe. 118It~~: HANOVER January • • • EVENING SUN 19, 1990 • • • USA Jan. TODAY 19, 1<:1<:10 CARRULL COUNTY TU1ES Je nua r y 19, t990 • Diplomats rout Green Terrors Special to the Times lANCASTER. Pa. Cathy Belser and Carrie Bowen each had 12 points in the first seven minutes as Franklin & Marshall roared to a 30-7 lead and rolled to a 75-45 Middle Atlantic Conference Southwest Section women's basketball win over Western Maryland. WOMEN'S BASKETBAU • Bowen finished with 17 points and Belser added 15 for the Diplomats. ranked 14th in NCAA Division III and winner of four straight games. Claire Thevenoux led Western Maryland with 14 points and eight rebounds. Western Maryland. which had its four-game winning streak broken. fell to 9-2 overall and 2·2 in the MAC Southwest Franklin & Marshall is now 12-2 overall. The Green Terrors host Messiah Saturday at 2 p.m . • USA TODAY 1I1Y/90 • HANOVER • January EVENING SUN 19, 1990 Dips 75, Terrors 45 Cathy Belser and Carrie Bowen' each had 12 points in the- first seven minutes as host Franklin &; Marshall raced to a 30-1 lead and, rolled to a Middle Atlantic Conference-Soutbwest Section wim over Western _Maryland in Lancaster. Bowen finished with IT and; Belser 15 for the Diplomats, who I ace 12-2 overall and 5-{1 in the section, and ranked 14th in NCAA Division III. Claire Thevenoux led Western I Mo. (.9-2. 2-2), which had four-game winning streak broken, _ WIth 14 points and eight rebounds . ryland • ali CA1UWLL COUNTY TIMES .Ja nua r y 20, ll,iYU • College basketball tops local sports schedule Staff Report Four college basketball games and two high school wrestling matches top the area's weekend I sports schedule. The Western Maryland College and Mount men's and St. Mary's College women's basketball teams will be - in action today. The WMe women (9-2) host Messiah (7.0) at 2 p.m., while the • men (3-9) face Philadelphia Pharmacy (13-2) in the seventh annual White Rose City Classic at York CPa.) College at 9 pm. The Green Terror women will be attempting to rebound from Thursday's 75-45 Middle Atlantic Conference-Southwest , I Section loss at Franklin & Marshall. and the men will be aiming to avenge a 78-77 loss to Pharmacy in the championship game of the WMC/ Westminster Rotary Club Tip-Off Tournament Nov. 18. The Mount basketbaH teams will host St. Francs today in a Northeast Contererrce double- • header. The Mount women (7-4) play st. Francis (N.Y.) College at 2 pm. in the Knott ARCC. The Lady Mountaineers art; coming off a 68-56 win over Long Island University on Thursday, The Mount men (8-8) will host the St. Francis men (4-8) at 7:30 pm. The Mountaineers have won two straight and seven of last nine. They are 3-2 in NEC play, In a county high school wrestling match today, Westminster will host Uberty, Both teams are looking lor their first county. win 01 the season. The Owls are 2-5 overall in dual matches and 0-1 in county play. Liberty is 3-5 overall and 0-2 in the county. The WMC wrestlers will also be at York today for an eight-team tournament, along with Albright, Gallaudet. Gettysburg, Johns Hopkins, Messiah, Muhlenberg and the host school. In college swimming, the Green Terrors host Division [ Loyola for a 2 pm. meet CAlUWLL CUUNTY TIMES January 20, 199u • named] in USA Today roster WMC student Staff dent and Is-year-old junior at Western Maryland College. got honorable mention in USA Today's list 01 outstanding college students. According to her' mother, Jill Lowe. Helen is majoring in commu- • • . Report Helen Lowe, a Westminster resi- 1 . . </ ~~~':_. th~~OI~ea ~mrd?:~i ~~ works at the campus newspa:i ~I She won a national 4-H award for a demonstration on how to I 1985 ~~e~~r:::n:;i~:~~1 ~~r a Soroptimist scholarship.,! nications. and has a minor in For the- USA TOday salute tot English. She was recommended for outstanding college students. a-' the nationaJ newspaper's All-USA panel of educators picked 20 top ~ Academic Team by LeRoy Panek, students' from around the country.' professor of English at the Westmindesignated as the "first team," Forty-: ster liberal arts college. more students were on the secondAlong with her parents, Helen and third teams; .61 students got, Lowe came to the United States honorable mention .. The names of: from England in 1983, her mother those selected were published in said. She was an honor student at Friday's edition of the national, Westminster High School, from newspaper. which she graduated two weeks First-team members will get.a belore ber 17th birthday. $2,500 scholarship. There is no . An honor student in college as financial recognition for those whol well, Helen Lowe is attending Westrated honorable mention, Jill Lowe' ern Marviand College on a Dean's said . CARIWLI. January • . Ertstti(feii€~treatedindividually :"~··~:~;Fi·~:·~:"·;;::~t~:·· AA")::;f~o.~~,,:> f\:' . ~'.'Of~ih~:~Proxima~"22.000< ,,~students"~ in,< the:..:'.CarroJl~ ~schools,~onJy 40 are, Q.earing~ impaired", and .0nJy .two,. of " those',are' deat::, ' _. ' , That is'a very small 'minority and why the school system . deals- with. hearing.-impaired students case by case, rather than establishing one. all-encompassing 'program. Remy Tikhonoff said it "seddens" her that there is. no such program in the -county, and that the family may need to move, partly' because' they need to' be closer' to ~ertain services. "It is a- paradox in Carroll County," says WMC grad student Catherine· Robards; "be- • • = ~e CUUNTY TIMES 21, 1990 ~~rt ,! ::~!t~n: ~:~r;;;;t~~~' T~~~d~~c~lf~~ 'services, but parents have to go out of the way," The hearing-impaired are one of. 12 categories of special education in the Carroll schools. Judy Makolin is supervisor of special education. "The hearing-impaired student, as much as possible, should be with the regular education kids," Makolin says. ''We attempt to give him everything he needs to make it in that program. "It a child is deaf, he is provided with a sign language interpreter from the school system. In pre-school where ! I there is a limited vocabulary, our teachers can do basic Signing with ~ the child. For a 3-year-old. for example, the teacher can learn the ' signs the child knows, and learn, others from the hearing resource: teacher." ! The Carroll system provides serv-. ices in the "least restrictive environment in which the student's needs can be met," Makolin says, "It a high school student can make it without an interpreter, he can have help from the speech and language person. or the heari!lg person who goes trom school to school." _ MaJcolin says she is finding that more young hearing_Impaired' dents are coming straight into ·1i stuthe 1 _I iI ~i~crn:~~ier"~g:b~s~ ing program that we have In the state is much Improved," she says. "Some parents· elect to have their child go to the- Maryland School for the Deaf. and we leave that up to the parent. They may feel they want a more intensive program for their child with other deaf children." The. Maryland SchOOl for the Deaf was founded' in 1868 as a state: school. It serves students aged 4 to 20 with a mainly residential program. and has campuses in Freder-. ick and Columbia. " The Frederick campus has about 225 students, including nine Carroll County, The Columbia pus has about 100 students only one or two from Carroll. Bazzrea. ,I i I i I from I camand' Helene secretary to the' campus director, says most MSD students spend Sunday through Friday at the school. I ! i i CAH.kOLI~ COUNTY TIMES january 21, lYYO 'Interpreters, .other resources available in-i!r-~~ __ ""'I_~~.. Local support groupl--fO' the loss of' normal cnuo. : "When you have a - child," Tik-I forming for parents: honoll says. "you always think Of\ -of . . : your child as perfect. hearing-impaired By STUART is ~~~C!'''diagnOsis FAXON Staff Writer To a parent with a hearing-.I I ~a~:e~nec~:dthec~~~atoc~~7~~~ the country. , /' The public schools have SIgn language interpreters. W~stern Maryland College has a nationally I recognized . graduate program 10 deaf educatIOn. I The Maryland. School for ~e I Deaf is in Frederick Colum.bla .. Gallaude[ Univers~ty IS III weshing-. ton D.C. The N~tlonal Associanon for the Deaf is LO Silver Spring. These resources are within 50 miles of Carroll County. But to arents who, have !ust. learned: p err child IS hearing-impaired. ey may seem to be 1,000 miles i • away or not there at all. A support group for parents ot hearing-impaired children could only help. Remy Tikhonoff and Catherine Robards want to form I ~? had their' s;n Jonathan i~- three \ ye~~a~~~n was diagnosed I~st , yeJar as having profound hearmg , 10SS~bards is fr0":l Brem~rtan, R h and is living In Westmmster W~ .. doing graduate study at V:~' ~ern Maryland College. She ~. ~ ted in 1988 from the Univer~~ u~f Nevada at Reno wlth_ I bachelor ?f science degree in \ medica! sc~ence.. i Robards IS conducting a nation, I wide study of the quality of serv- I efdie~o~~edth~o ~a~;nI~ta~~sde~~ . diagnOSIs, _ • I Tikhonod as a parent and ROo' I' bards as a researcher have found the early stages critical far several ' reasons. Robards calls it "grieving But no child such as deaf-' ness or hearing loss is made, "it's hard for a parent to accept it." Tikhonoff says. "At fi!'"5t we were I very upset and we cned a lat." I But knowing of Western Mary- I land College, the Tikhonolfs sought out McCay Vernon, a osv-: chology professor who has taught: there 21 years. With Jean F. An-I drews, he authored "The Psychol-: ogy of Deafness - Understanding! Deaf and Hard-of-Hearing People," published last year by Longman. Vernon told the Tikhonofls that a support group would be helpfuL "At first we didn't see why," Remy Tikhonolf says. "Then more and more r got involved and read books about it. and I began to' accept my son, I wanted to help him and help others. [ wanted to contribute to the community and to society. 'There are a lot of deai children who have psychological problems because their parents don't accept them. Thev need to be accepted as deaf people in a hearing world." Vernon said, "When parents discover their child is deaf it's devastating. Most of them have never had any contact with dearness before." The questions seem overwhelming, vernon' says. How do you get \ services? What are the educational I options? Where do you learn Ameri- 1 can Sign Language? How do you manage discipnne with a hearing-. impaired child? "Some - even ask if ' deaf students can read Braille," Vernon says. "Many people can help, but the people who can- help the most are those who themselves have coped with this problem. They are able to share their feelings." There are two kinds of hearingimpaired people, Vernon says, The deaf are those who cannot hear at: atl, or who cannot hear speech well, enough to understand it The herdot-hearmg person hears and -par-, tially understands speech. Deafness is usually diagnosed at 18 to 24 months, around the time children start to talk. The diagnosis is usually made after a visit to an audiologist. The hard-of-hearing child may be school age before it is picked up, Vernon says. The Tikhonoffs son Jonathan "had some hearing," Vernon says, adding that what people sometimes do is get behind a child and make some kind of loud noise. If the child responds, they assume he can hear, ''With the best of intentions, parents may still do the wrong thing," Vernon says, "The ultimate criterion is whether he can understand speech." Robards said that in her research, she found out how. important the parents' role is, not just in accepting but in getting information and learning. "The more you know about it, the more you're learning and accepting, and you can lorm that bond earlier," so a hearing-impaired child can have the best support possible' in the teenage years. she says. i "From birth to age 6 is the most important for cognitive development. Early intervention has revolutionized the way professionals are approaching the way we educate children with special needs. But the big problem is backing up our knowledge - putting it to use." Tikhonoff and Robards say their group will welcome any parents interested in sharing their experte~ces and information. The group will have the cooperation of the ~ Western Maryland College Center' on Deafness so that a variety of resources will be aVailable. fnduding video and print Resources aJso include parents of older hearing-impaired children, deaf adults, aUd!0logists. language and speech spectensts. teachers of the hearing-impaired and counselors specializing in hearing impairment. Those interested may call Remy Tikhonoll at 857-9193, or leave their name and number for Catherine Robards at the WMC deafness center, TDDI857·2506. ~-'-<.j • • • e CAlmOLL COUNTY SUN - .I_a cy 2 I, e \ YI)O WMC students bounce through European courts New Year's Eve in Paris, heated baths in Iceland make for super trip By Steve Gron Btatt wrher "" Maryland Becky Martin, head coach of the Western bas~tbaU team. COllege women's College kids really have It hard these days. Just look at what a bunch of them from western Maryland C..ollege had to endure, simply for a mere twc crcdus. Fer Jan Term, 29 students. Including II members of the women's basketball team, had to suffer through a Iff-day trip to Europe And as u tnat wasn't enough. they had 10 take the subway a lot and carry their own luggage, which sophomore Angle Alfano, 19. of Columbia. Howard County, called 'the hardest part of lhe trtp." That II) Itself should he enough for the credits, right? But no, on top of that they had to keep a journal of the trip and then write a paper aboullI. Parents. before you take pen In hand to send a nasty leiter off to those Green Terrors officials. complatrung ebout thts rough treatmcnt. take some comfort In the fact that the faculty adviser who went along on the trip said the students were able to have a tiny bit of fun. Like New Year's Evc In Paris Becky Martin. women's basketball coach and raeult y adviser for the trtp. said many of those who went along said that was one of the highlights. ~Iplanned for us to be there for New Year's Eve," she said. "I'd heard that II was quJtc a fesuve City." It turns out the rumors she heard were true. "Once midnight struck It was very crazy and neeIIc out on the streets," Marlin said. adding the city was filled with celebrators from the rest of Europe and all over the globe. Everyonc knew when 11was lime to call II a night though - the riot police came oul. "Some students got tear-gaeeec by the riol ponce." Martin said. "When they decided 11[celebration] was all over, they tear-gassed the place." The New Year's Eve celebraUon was just one aspect ora trip that began. somewhat belatedly. Dec. 27 on the college campus. Marlin said thc bus she had chartered to lake the students and the four other adl~~t _~hapero?es ~~ ~:n_n~'y ~~rpot1- !!! ~~~ yq~~ was one hour late. arriving at 1: 15 p.m. They stut were able to make their Icelandic Air night. but Ihat, too. was delayed before takeoff when one of the engines had 10 be replaced and another had to be de-Iced. Between delays and lime changes. the plane didn't touch down In Reykjavik. Iceland. unlll 6:30 a.m. on the 28th. There, the big event was swimming In the outdoor steam-heated pools, whllc the temperature was below freezing. Martin said some "Students played basketteu m the pool. Jumping up and down in the water to take shots at the net, suspended overhead. "Their hair froze from being In and out of the water," she said, adding no one took lime to admtre the view between the pool and the locker room. From there, the group flew Into Luxembourg and then continued Into Parts. Most of their touring was done In France, and 11 was there thc II members of the basketball learn took a mtnor excursion to play two games against some foreign competlllon. Martin said she purposely kept the baskctball to a minimum on the hip. ~Iwanted the team to experience playing In a foreign country, but I didn't want II 10 be the top prtorny," she said. "There Is so much else there to do." She said that while the team played well, winning one game and losing the other. thc hardest part was get ling accustomed to playing under International rules. The women had to use the men's ball. a slightly larger version, and she said they also were caught Off-guard by the dead-ball ruJe. Under International rujes, when the ball Is dead, the team In possession does not have to wan for an official to hand the ball to a player before It Is Inbounded. Therefore. thc French players were able to In-bound qulckJy and score several easy buckets. "I liked all the sporting events. the athletic things we did." said sophomore Janelle Leith, 19. of Cumberland. Allegany County. "I swam In the Mediterranean and sklled In the AJ~. ~ All In all, Martin said everyone Involved had a geed time. "They did a lot of tourist things, ~ she said. "But they also got to spend more lime with real people. ,!,~~~~I~ more ofac~~!.~ experience." r",..."..."""."""". CARR!)I Ja(11,],I' Division III schools Ihul (o,dd ct fectWMC; • Student-athletes will I,,; .11 lowed to keep some <H:a,It;".il award money they had prcvioll",ly not been allowed to accept. If a student received the past for winning au to-related contest - Tit>:: County Sun's' Scholar At hicte Award, for example - Ihe sllIdent wou~ not have been alluwed to _:~'~Cli~l'~:~'(:;;l~::~'n!n~~~~~)~~:~~~~ bul Oller said coaches likdy will i nave double sessions and weekend prar.:lices 10 make up lor the talers1art. "Ijust think that from my expe- ~ ricnce. starting Oct. 15 for a Nov. 17 game is just enough urne. ~ he said. "The kids need that amount of time to prepare." The regulations apply to the women's team. too, but won't realIy affect the Green Terrors, who arc schedule to play JUSl23 games this year. -jtiey're not going to make any difference to us. - Coach Becky Martin said of the reduction In thenumber of games. Martin said she never has requested to play the maxt.num number of games because the reduced schedule makes It easier for her players to handle the academic workload. The shortened practice schedule ocesu 't bother Martin either, as long as aJl Drvrsicn III colleges adhere to the poucy. "If everybody follows the rule to the 'T', I think It's a fine rule." Martin said. '"The season has beAome sc dongated, we've lost Wl"ack of the fact that these are student athletes. We're almost rcrcrng them to specialize in one sport. [kleg£lles of Divi..;ion III schools ",1::;0 dedded lJgainsl a piau 10 disd",.,'- )-:r,ulu.,liull r,liu; 01 us "[H' ,h-"I ;11[,[d,-". ",,,,,,·II,i"gIJ.<, IliI- •.,>i"" IlJl:-.liluliuIlS j)ivi::.iw. J 1'I" .• 'J(~Al\ w .!i..;du::;e face grwlu 01 peudiflg .. ucu accept the prize if. combrned with the financlai aid package. the totar amount exceeded the calculated "need" of the student. Now, me student may ask tile NCAA for a waiver of that limit If the award Is based on academic merit. • The NCAA established prac nee limits for volleyball teams Squads are allowed to have 2~ practice sessions before the first I"r).ie. ".~rcl:d 10.1.. S.:ll1}ub nnes ,col1!;l"e>isiunaJ v,,":cl III the leg· i::;lu liull Ihat would have mauc 11 lI.ul1tiaiory -I tbiilk. thc utvrsrou !II peuple:: essentially seut a message that thiS needs to be looked at further: Carpenter said .• At Division III schoolS In general. the graduation rate of athletes Is better than that ofnon·athletes.Carpenter said the proposition regarding graduallon-l"ate disclose for Division 111 schools never reached the Ilocr for a vote; Instead. It was defeated by a straw vote at a Division III business session, In other action related to NCAA • ',''''OIICOlJUI'(:'IJI~ Hor~AlSTON CARROLL January • 21, TIMES lS90 College Basketball Messiah Women 68, WMC 57 Paula Fritz scored seven of her 17 points in the last five minutes to lead Messiah ~ast Western Maryland 68·57 in a Middle Atlantic Confer- ,\ ence women's basketball interdivisiena! game Saturday in westmtn- I ' ster. Fritz hit two foul shots to put the ~~n~~~, ~ a~JeJ~i~; \ ~~o~~ points a minute later to give Messiah a 60-52 advantage. The Falcons, who made 16 of 28 shots from the field in the second half. outscored the Green Terrors 17-5 over the last five minutes. Kelley Uppert led Messiah with 20 points and tied Western Maryland's Clai~e Thevenoux for game-high sconng honors. Barb Wolf added 12 points and a game-high 18 rebounds for the Green Terrors. • COUNTY Messiah won its second game to up its record West~m Maryland dropped after Its second consecutive straight to 8-6. to 9-3 section loss. The Green Terrors are tied with Johns Hopkins at 2-2 after the Blue Jays lost at section-leading Franklin and Marshall in overtime, I College swimming Loyola Men 56. WMC 37' Loyola Women 53. WMC 27 Western Maryland's men's and women's swimming teams lost to their Loyola College counterparts yesterday in a dual meet at Westminster. The Greyhound men won 56-37, while the women cruised to a: 53~27 victory. for the Western Maryland men, senior captain John Ehlman remained unbeaten in eight meets in the 50-yard freestyle, winning, in 22.62 seconds. Matt Cook in the 100 butterfly and Mark Burroughs in the 100 breaststroke also won for the . Green Terrors. , Colleen Dolan was one 01 only two Green Terror women to win an event as she finished lirst in the 100 backstroke in 1:18.61. JJ. Boggs touched first in the 100 breaststroke in 1:2256. The Western Maryland men are now 54. while the women are 0-9. Both teams are at Franklin & Marshall lor a meet Wednesday. 69-67. Terrors take wrestling title Western Maryland won the York College. Spartan Invitational with 69lh points. The Terrors edged out York and Gallaudet, which each had 69 po~nts. WMC's only individual champion was Joe. Backwell at 142 pounds. HANOVER January Messiah Western EVENING 21, 68 Md. 57 ~~~ts • SUN 1990 17 f;~esl~o~1 sev~n of her lead Messtah S rve mmutes to Maryland in a ~ester:n' Conference interdiVlS'Idle Atlantic" IOnaigame. .. !li~t CI\!<\-(LJI,I. January • • • County. i and I spent ume nere wtlen I was growing up. lt~s,hard to leave a system where'Lhave-' worked so'iong and am weU--known:Once I get over that; I'll be OK. This new-job is an'opportunity to war+:: In a-ayetem-enere things are hap~ning. I thinkJ'II.make,a difference." CARROLL January • COUNTY SUN 21, 1990 Missionary appointed \ ! PatriciaJ.Pat:tersOIi.daughter of Lester and Hilda Patterson of Gamber. has been appointed coordinator of the Japan-North American Commission on Cooperative Missions. Ms. Patterson. who assumed her new duties on Thursday at the New York headquarters of JNAC. said their agenda Is In three areas: rellgIous cooperation In Japan. co- 1 I • • from A member of calvary Untted Methodist Church In Gamber. Ms. Patterson Joined the executive staff of the UMBGM in 1972 as executive secretary for missionary affaJrs and Indochina liaison. She has also served as North East Asia secretary. A laywoman. Ms. Patterson was educated at Western Maryland College In Westminster and earned a master's degree from Drew University, Madison. N.J. She has also done additional ~d- I age!~tn~~~;':m~~:~-j I uone In the U.S, and Canada and the United Church of Christ Jac'pan and the Korean Chrlstlan Church In Japan. ' It bt1ngs churches and church related agencies together tn.ChrtstIan witness. TIre number of cnrreuene- In; :-~-to-be ~~~=~are1 400,000 I ~:r!:I~~='~~=i ~r;~i~~gJ'rrs I In Japan " (Japan 18 '1.1- mO_' Uon. 675,()(X) of whom are Prctes-. secre-'/ She returned to Japan as a missionary tn 1965, servtng untfl 1972 as an associate professor at the Aoyom a Oakum Woman's Junior College In Tokyo, Japan. In addition. Ms. Patterson has taught at Westminster High School. Untverst. tn operation In canada. and the U.S~I and cooperation on International Issues of concern to both North American and Japan. _ She serves as executive tar}' for Japan and Korea of the World DiVision. United Methoolst uate study at Amerlcan ty.Washlngton. There are 215 rmseicnerres , rrem North America. Europe and othJ:r Asian countries SttVing in Japan. whOe 31 nueeicnanee- of ' the United Churdrof'Chr1st In Ja-. ~ the,~~:..~_.:_.p..Qa;~ • BAL THlORE Jan. 21, SUN 1990 w!:.w=~~~~~::~ The men (6-2) won. 56-37, whue the ~~en (6-31 cruised to a 53-27 vicFor the Western Maryland men (5-4). John Ehlman remained un- =~I~~~~:.~e~~ Colleen Dolan (Palottt) was one of only two women for the Green Terrors (o-g) to Win an event. as she finished ~1;7~.61~ the 100 backstroke In Results • • • BAL TIMORE SUN January 21, 1990 • -, • "' CARROLL January CUUNTY SUN 21, lYYO Go seek financial aid To help families prepare to pay for college, the Westminster High Guidance Department is offering a financial aid workshop at 7:30 ~ ~~~.72~5 ~~:~~~~d1to-\ • • The program Will Include: I • Larry Riordan, director of ad~ .nueeione at Mount SaInt Mary's Couege. who will present the concept of financial aid. educatIonall expenses. grants. scholarships,. loans and work study programs. • Michael Fitzgerald. Reserve' Officers Tra:lning corps Instructor at Western Maryland College, will discuss financial aid options available through ROTC programs. This Information Is specifically' geared to II th grade students. Cath! Myers. coordinator of the financial aid meeting said the workshop will benefit all students and parents. but is especially cused on juniors and seniors. In addition. she said the workshop will tnclude Information on . what college really costs. why those costs should not scare students away from the colleges they , want to attend and how to complete the Itnanctal aid form. The evening wtll. provide students and parents with the opportunity to gain valuable information about financing an education at two- and four-year colleges as well as vocationai/technical schools . fo- BAL TIMORE SUN January 22, 1990 • 'i eom..a..-_ ov..Il .W"L.,Pct;,W,'-L .~. F&104 50'.0001" I'I:t.I I .9331 St· ~·1!:·E-i-~ ~·I ~==·X~·t:~~:~~i!~1 ~· __ ·!6:167':9~3tJB . _ ..__ -W • • . L 1'I:t.' BAL TlMORE Jan. 22, SUN 1990 • BIts. aiId pi..... .. .. Mark Fiori took tWo firsts'and Navy-(3-O) won- ftYe'ofi the six events, in defeat1ng,SprtngDeld Collcge... 249.85~ In men's gymnast1C9".:~ , So~oIJlC)l"e'WCDdy _Weaver'wonthree, events and placed firstin~e all- I 26J:~4-_1 ~~d::~ ;~n'-;~;;'(3~'1;~1 a sco~. of 37.35: ;. defeated Massachusetts and Rhode Island"in'women's gymnasttcs Saturday ntghtat KJngston..R.J;.;. western.! Maryland. led by 142-pounder Joe Bakewell. won the! eight-teaInYork (Fa.) College_ wrestling tournament Sat- i urday. Bakewell was the-Green Terrors' only lndlvtduall champion. as.he:defeated Gallaudet.·s Chris Von In the QnaJ. 1 i-8. Western Maryland added Qve.secondl ptaces.cne third and one fourth·.(0r69Yl points to edge~ York and Gallauclet by a half-point. Among the runnets-up was sophomore' 126-pounder Gerard Johnson! (Owings _Mills). who "was pinned by tournament. Most! Outstanding Wrestler Bob Lenker.ofYork'In' the championship round. Garrel! • • Hanover January • Evening Sun 22, lYY() .WMC cagers fall to York (N.Y.) YORK - The Western Maryland College men's basketball team managed Just one point in three ~~~~! O~~dt~:ie:l ~ tht~la~~:~ (N.YJ College in the consolation l~~ee Crt;hcf:;s~~t~:~~~ fti~~ Classic Sunday. Jamal Hakim led all scorers , ~~~~n 1~dJeotlt6 ~i~~e an~o~rrelbounds for York. I \~fS?~1 ~Tngr:~~ Te~~~:s~~~[l~e five rebounds. The junior forward, a Central York High School graduate, scored rune straight points at • onp6i1~~~IPhla Pharmacy, which defeated the Green Terrors is-71 in Saturday's first round, won the ~~~~h~O~~~c~~t~.a 73-56 victory BALTIMORE SUN January 22, 1990 , .... The state's Division ill teams returned mixed results over the weekend. Salisbury-State, boosted by 45 points rrom- Joe McCahan. downed St. Joseph's of Maine, 106-90, Saturday in the opening round of tbe Castle Classic- at Manhattanville College in Purchase, N.Y. The' host team dropped. the Sea Gulls, 109-103, in the tournament final. In other; games. Saturday;. Johns Hopkins topped HaVerford, lOa.-71; Washington defeated Swarthmore; 71-65; and St. Mary's whipped Capttol,77-64. Western- Maryland dropped.. contests to Phil~delphia Pharmacy and York (N.Y.) In the White Rose Classic at York College in Pennsylvania. , • I USA TODAY 1/22/90 r ! ....aoama 70. L:xJ'Slilna $!ala 55 al.G.;urg,a T<>er>19(OT) '!};{_~"r.. Or!lQOl'a2.WasnongwnSI.68 ~~~~;:;korn .. 97 wrmeilQ ... CirtCJ.,..., 1'~ I'rto,o_ !-'tl.,macy 73. YOllC(Po,IS6 3tQ:. YO","IN,Y,j 41. 'NeSlIIm Marylan(l40 '5 CA!{ROLL January COUNTY 22, TIMES 1990 notjust Super Bowl Week, it's a supeFt~~fk for sports fans:"'~- It's Super Bowl Week in New Orleans as the National _Football [.eagUe'~ premiere event pits Denver d San Francisco.on Sunday. anln Carroll County, it's apretty i S=:~~~~~~~ start. In girls' action, South Carroll's rugged defense will try to slow down Toyah Houck and Westminster's high-powered offense .. The Cavaliers are 8-3 overall, while the Owls are 8-4. Both are 1-0 in county play. Uberty and North Carroll's girls meet in Wednesday's fourth intracounty battle. While the Uons (310) are improving, they'll have a hard time keeping pace with the Panthers 00-3). Thursday is Super Wrestling day. South Carroll (8-2 in dual matches) hosts Westminster (3-5), while Uberty (3-6) will try to halt unbeaten North Carroll (8-0). There are also some Super college basketball games on tao this week. ~gh school basketball.contests, a uple of terrific wrestltng matches :d some Interes~ng college. baSketball games. ~:: ~ ~!t~:t~::~late. Super Wednesday features. four intra-COunty battles. . Take your choice:' WestminsterSou.th cam>1I boys. Uberty-North DaV8.Am;ne:;v;eu:;er-is sporl8_ editor. Hill column each Munday. -, • • the Times' appears Carroll boys, Westminster-South Carroll girts, Liberty-North Carroll girls. Which game to see will be a tough decision lor prep basketball fans. The Westminster and South Carroll boys have stumbled a bit lately. The Owls are 6-6 overall, They are coming off ~ 83-56 win at Unganore, but lost four straight belore that big win. They do. however, have the best scoring corps in the county. Junior Hennan Costley leads an offense that includes five possible doublefigure scorers. Bernie Dorsey, Paul Dawson. Brad Ruby and Greg Sturgill are the others. South Carroll has dropped two in a row and is 8-5 overall. The Cavaliers' duo of-Geoff Rupert and Chuck McLean is the top scoring combination in the county. Uberty (4-8) will be looking for its !irst boys' Central Maryland Conference win when it visits North CaIToII (8-5). The Lions have lost four of their last live. The Panthers have cooled off a bit after a 6-1 They begin tonight. when Mount St. Mary's College's men host the U.s. Naval Academy. The Mount (98) has won eight of its last 10 and is the hottest college basketball team In the state. Navy (4-11) lost- to James Madison Saturday, but upset Richmond last week. The Western Maryland basketball teams will also be busy. The Terrors' women will be looking to break a two-game Ioemg streak when they face Dickinson Tuesday. 1 . The WMC men host Dickinson Wednesday. Alter a week of high school and college events, Carroll athletic fans can then releax S;.mday and watch the Super Bowl on television . CARROLL January • IWMC drops pair in York Special to the TImes YORK. Pa. - The Western Mary. land College men's basketball team dropped two games this weekend in the seventh annuaJ White City Classic at York College. Western Maryland, which is now 3·1I with four straight defeats, fell 75-71 to Philadelphia Pharmacy in Saturday night's tirst round" and lost 41-40 to York (N.Y.) College in the consolation game Sunday. Saturday, the Green Terrors rallied from a 63-53 deficit with 10:23 lett to tie the game at 70-70 on an Eric Miller basket with 2:03 remaining. Keith Amlson put the Blue Devils ahead for good with a lay-up at the I :50 mark, before Mike Sherlock brought Western Maryland to within one with a foul shot- with 34 seconds lett.· Philadelphia Pharmacy's Shawn Rose • • COUNTY TIMES 22, llJ90 Wheeler made it 73-71 by hitting l the front end of a one-end-one foul ,I situation with 16 seconds showing. I Western Maryland rebounded the i missed second shot, but the Blue', Devils' Larry Hill made a steal and I Mark Gillespie hit two free throws-,j with eight seconds left to eliminate! Western Maryland's chances. Sherj~k topped Western Maryland WIth 17 points and eight rebounds, while Dave Barnes added 13 and Ed Krusinski 12. Hill was Pharmacy's top scorer and rebounder with 17 points and eight boards. He also dished out a game-high six ass~:. Green Terrors heJ~ YOrk,:j scoreless over the last five minutes i i of yesterday'S contest, but managed ! just one point out of three potential scoring opportunities in the last 1,02. With York leading 41-39 at the 1:02 mark. Sherlock missed the front end of a one-and-one sttuation. The Green Terrors then forced a missed three-point shot bv the Cardinals' Godfrey Brown with 13 seconds lett. Alter a Western Marvland timeout. York's Jamal Hakim' fouled Scott Lyon, who made the first shot ot the one-and-one but missed the second. Lvon then forced a turnover. but Kent Pearce's 30·footer with lour seconds remaining was off the mark and Brown grabbed the rebound. Hakim led all scorers with 12 points. while Brown added 10 points and 10 rebounds. Pearce led the Green Terrors with 11 points and five rebounds. The junior forward scored nine straight Western Maryland points to help Dr. Alex Ober's team narrow a 36-28 York lead midway through the second hall. The 40 points scored was Western Maryland's fewest since a 71-39 loss at Widener Dec. 9, 1974. Philadelphia Pharmacy won the championship i3-56 over the host school. • CARROI_L January Green Terrors snap losing streak Caitiin . Monroe popped in a jumper from the corner 10 break the ' . Terror's scoring drought and Angle- I Alfano drove in for a' layup. A three- I $tatfWriter with 14 points in the first hall and finished with 16. Eleven of her points came off rebounds. Wolf scored 17 points and grabbed 20 rebounds. The Western Maryland women's basketball team regained. its beerings and some confidence Tuesday, snapping a two-game losing streak with a 65-49 victory over Dickinson in a Middle Atlantic ConferenceSouthwest Division game at The Gill Center. The win was a good indication that the Green Terrors have bounced back from last week's staggering losses to Franklin & Marshall and Messiah College. '" think we played. be~ter:," ~aid : Terror coach Becky Martin. It was i a much better performance than the , ~~etw~:n~!~:~r d~ff~~I;':~ \ :~v:ro~: =~~o ~ec=~~n~l,i the mixture ! of people on the fl?Or. th~~r~~o~:!a~~~~~O~:~ the i first for the Western Maryland women in almost two years, s,IRee the Green Terrors lost to Franklin & Marshall and Gettysburg on Feb. 9 an:ui~~;:!as • and, two freeburi~a.:ijnn~_ tftroWs.,.·and.'r.AJ,fanO·.: ,";;- ;;:t ~~~.".'" '; i r!a: ~~:~Il\ii~i~~:=~'~ i i~~~:'::~~!!~= ~~nl Donna Marzo brought western Maryland's lead back to 10, 44-34. After Liz Massey sank two free throws. the Green Terrors re- I spondedwith eight unanswered points as Jill Evans sank one from outside. Barb Wolf put in a layup By BILL GATES • COUNTY TIMES 24, L9YO no dangerof having I to look up the last time Westem Maryland lost tnree in a row, as the I Green Terrors downed. the over- i matched Red Devils for the second ' time in less than a week. Last I Wednesday Western Maryland traveled to Dickinson and won, 64-56. That game was dose. This one wasn't. Trailing 37-27 at halftime, Dic~nson scored-uve unanswered pomts to start the second hall and slice Western Maryland's lead 10 37-32. Karen Wilson (Patapsco High) started off the half with a jumper and added a free throw a minute tater. Tanya Sneed followed with a short iumeee . Last week Wolf scored 21 points and has a school-record 25 rebounds against Dickinson. Woll currently has 203 rebounds an~ has 10 regular season games remaining in which 10 pass the current Western Maryland career mark of 292. If Wolf just keeps up her 15.6 per game average, she'll only need six games. ln two weeks the Green Terrors will face their rematches with Johns Hopkins and Franklin & Marshall. Both games are at The Gill Center. "We've been winning, but we' haven't been playing well as a team." Martin said. "Our big loss to F&M (75-45) may have had something to do with our being upset by Messiah. We were up against Messiah. but did not go for the putaway. Then the next thing we knew, it was a tie game. and we couldn't get our attack moving. Fouls at the end basically put it out of reach for us." was' thefirst-Red-Devil fieh:L goal in 10 mlnutes.: Western Maryland out~i scored'. Olckfuson.)S4 '·over _.!;hat span and: opened: up a SZ-36, lead =~' wi~~:n stumbled~a, bit. on offense itself:in .the 5eC?nd'hall;: turning- the' ball over 14 times (26 lor the game) and shooting 11 for 26 from the- Door. On several, occa-: sions the Green Terrors' spent a17 most the entire 4O-second shot clock moving the' ball around the' perimeter looking: lor; an open' shot. "That' was e problem:' Martin; said. "We around the were- ::~i~~~:::~nBut too ~oving· much i I I i J 1 i the- baa_ and~" not~1 there- w~': Once the Green Terrors-got inside·' there- was litue-problem. as the' Red-' Devils couldn't match up against Western .Maryland forwards- Wolf' and Claire Thevenoux. Thevenoux paced the Terrors I • HANOVER January :C;;"(fisburg EVENING 24, SUN 199U womeit EaU;;;,WMC wins In WestmitistEn-,-_;~Md:~ the:: Western Maryland; Coll'ege women'sbasketball team-defeated'i visiting Dickinson 65-49 in a Midille.,! Atlantic Conference' Southwest. :';:-'NlcOleSmith scored seven of her l1~points in- the first 7% minutes to 'r~~::a~:~~,,:rlaJ;~~~ ~~~; looked back en route to a 7&-59 over the Gettysburg College ~~~~;a~:;~~~,~~~"~' &;d(;~~-! women's basketball team Tuesday of ·and,20·reboun(i&.1 win highs at.Hen Bream Gym. . "-;LOnnie Rutman scored 20 of her :Jf:~r~ g2~)~c~~chha:wf~ away trom a,37-32halftime lead. " Krista Ellis and Sam Chereb each. had' 10 points for the Lady _Bullets· (2~1l) HANOVER January • • EVENING 25, 1Tpoints for Western .Marrland overall, 3-2 in the division). SUN 1990 MIDDLE ATLANTIC CONFERENCE WOMEN SOUTHWESTSECTIO", Thro",IIJall.21 L.~'1 00-3' ;;.. J • • His work cut out for him With a clip, clip here and a cut, cut there. Jtm Buell of Westminster, owner of Landscape Environments. trims the hedges at Western • Maryland College. Jim has owned his own business for eight years end subconTracts many jobs for the college . BAL TlMORE SUN Jan. 24, 1990 • 'w. Maryland ss:DIckI......r4ai .' WESTMINSTER Barb Wolfl (Glenelg) scored 17 points and ~ Thevenoux added. 16. as, the Greerrl Terrors (10-3. 3-2)_bun~ on a.37-27;-1 halftime lead to defeat Dickinson [ ~~~f~~e~~~==-'I Karen Wilson (P~taPSCOl and Tanya Sneed each bad' 12 to pace. ~~son_ .,' I i r+ DICKINSON COl.LEGE(U)_WIIeon4-11 .. 12: Rlymond 203 2-4 6. SnNd 6-13 o.G 12, Marzo i T-t55-67.Gra¥el103 2-4 •. M... .."1-24-66. CaxI 140-112.T_, .... '7_ftu.: Wl!STERN MARYl.AND (1&) - WgII7_14 3-4 17: Monroe3-92-28,TI'Ifiwnou>;1_132_5161J1_U 1-29,SmIIhlo3D-02.SmdG-tD-OO.uilthl_tl_13. TCoIIt_t 0-112. EYI"" 4-11 O-O&;.AIbrighI-G'1 0-00. __ O-tO-llO.Toc.Ie:2S-4tIl-WM. ' I ··"""_W.atemM~-g:;:~1 gcMIIr.OIdcIn....,0-4(Marzo0-4);W_~ O-GJ.F_out:DIcIUnaon-Gt_.-WIIIrIWn,....,..r Itnd-Monroe.R-.:DIddMotI-24(ReymoncI6. s.- 6), Westlm M..-yIancI 51 (Wolf 20). ....... DldclnsonljWI1son3,Gr8Y8l3).W.atemMaryIand I 12(1JIano3).Total'oull: OIdcIftaon14,W .. tem I MaryIInci 22. A:. 80. • • USA Jan. TODAY 24, 1990 • • • ~SA TODAY an. 25, 1990 HANOVER January r.:VE:-.l UH_; '::iJN 25, I SlY!) e· GC, WMC grapplers lose by I : ~fm~ei;!~a~refeJ~~~gr~AREA COlLEGIATE wrestling, victory over ev~Z~~?~te;~;~~~ l;:g~eSdaY WMC'srecord to 1-3. JO!1 ~t a SPORTS 21-20 Kimmel, one of four freshmen. got a takedewn and near fall in the first CeMOd to move in front 5-1 Th~~se~tf6~~~:~Sf~rh~~~~~mann. wif~eJ~r~~g~infe~dI~: afo-\~ ChrIS Blume. wrestling only his second match of the season, took a quick 8-2 lead. Huwevar , Dave Bundy of Jumata scored a takedown in the second period, added two more in ~~ ~~~~:r~~r~~iX:~i~~~~g time Steve Levine, John Pizzo Narin Sihavong, Steve Barley and Trip Scott also won for Gettysburg. • ROUNDUP ~f~~~o~Oi~~i:~dbho~ili~~nrh~hG~::~ ,T~~r:~~ akb~~otl~1ri~~f.tWe~ire~tri Maryland With 16 points, five and three steals. assists Weste;" Maryland The Green Terror. wrestling va~fri~~~t:S~o 53~~2~ ~;es1:~~ Jeff Ilaves, a Francis Scott Key High School graduate, had 10 i~fi:ga~_~~stt; ~!r.l~tr~:6~~~ points. At Lancaster, the Franklin ~~~la~Oi~e~~y fe~d~t ii-~~t;ftgMarshall College swimming teams & a first-period pin at 190 pounds, but a 14-4 major decision at ~~~~fu~~i~! vrcat~~ ~~d l~~~;~ CARRULL January defeated Western Maryland. The Diplomat men won 58-39 and women blew past the Green Terrors68-26. ' COiJNT'( 25, TIMES tY,9(} WMC wrestlers fall to York 22-21 Western Maryland lost the heavyweight match and fell to York 22-21 Wednesday. Despite forfeiting the 118- and 126-pound weight classes, the Terrors owned a 21·18 lead entering the final match. College swimming e , ! The Green Terror men's basket- .' ball team dropped its fifth game in ' a row, losing 71-63 at home. to Dickinson in a Middle Atlantic Conference-Southwest Section game. Western Maryland, now 3-12. overall and 1-5 in the MACSouthwest, trailed 30-22 at' halftime, but pulled into a 40-40 tie With 11, mmutes left on a 3-pointer by ErIC Watkinson. The Red Devils, 11-7 overall and 4-2 in the F&M sweeps WMC The F&M men won 57-38 to drop the Terrors to 5·5. The WMC women dropped to W. losing a 68-26 decision & Marshall. Franklin Oto l FREDERICK January • NE\.JS 25, POST 1990 Book review series continues this spring • • The noontime boos-review series. fessor: of English' at' Western MaryBooks Sandwiched In, continues this land and Andree Phillips, president. spring in Western Maryland Col. of Radiant: Steel; Products" Co. of. lege's McDaniel Lounge; at westWilliamsport, Pa. will jointly review minster. the book; A special evening edition, On Feb. 15, Dr. Ira Zepp will this session of Books Sandwicbed In I review "Destructive Generation: will take place on April 5 at 8 p.m; Second Thoughts About the 196Os" by On April 12. Richard W. Dillman, Peter' Collier and David Horowitz. assistant professor of commumeaDr. Zepp, professor of, religious tion, will review "What Am I Doing.. ,I studies at' Western Maryland"COI. Here?" by the late Bruce Chatwin. I lege. was, Maryland's 1989 Professor The final session will take place on: i of the' Year; May 7. Alice Cberbonnier WMC 'S7, . "The Good' rimes" by Russell will review "Parting the Waters: Baker will be, reviewed on Marctt 14 America During the King Years. by Harold Williams. A longtime-.;-.1954..63." Author Taylor Branch reassociate of Mr'. Baker. ,Mr .. ceived the 1989 Pulitzer- Prize for- I Williams is the former editor of. the biiitory, for this compilation. Ms. Sunday edition of The, (Baltimore) Cherbonnier is a writer, editor, and Sun. publisher of the Baltimore Chronicle Two books will be reviewed in April and Baltimore Review. including "Nice Work" by David For information about the book' Lodge. Dr. Raymond Pbillips, proreview series, call 857·2281. CAIHWLL January climax each' time 1h~r~lifth 'S'tTaight basketball contest, 71·63, to '-'-Te~is 'cr-oppe""d men's cojieg~ .put runs' 'ag~nst cted at. the ~ras" th'e "Green CUUNTY TIMES 25, t990 o.ne at 34-33. Then Dickinson scored -,I straight points, .'.... ,"' SIX critical errors. The only time Western Maryland was able to tie Dickinson in, the second half came when Eric Watkinson threw in a three-point shot from a distance that would sufficiently fill the requirements for a Boy Scouts hike. It evened the score at 40-40 with 11 :02 to play. Dickinson ran right back at the Terrors and within three seconds culminated a string of passes with a -,_. --~i The Green Terrors. dosed within •..1 ~ne w~en' the· score was 17-I&with~ 1 five minutes I,eft'in the. first haU-So. I Dickinson' outscored them -11-2"~ver' 1 ~e next three' minutes and built: its. '1 biggest" lead of the game, 29',18. " ·.t'ti!~i:~:~¥;~~~:Sedn=~ "game was. turnovers in key ti()Ils-;'lamE!Oted' WMC. coach ':::Ober.,?' .:,-frO;. - . • • sttuaAlex Lee' Copeland layup. Western Maryland threw the ball away so Duke Scott put in another hoop for the Red Devils. Alter a WMC miss. Dickinson hurried down the floor where Dave Peracchla would follow his own miss with a tap-in, Then Copeland stole the baJI and scored uncontested to make it 48-40 in favor of Dickinson with 8:50 to play. With I :-23 to go, Watkinson launched another successful long. distance toss for three points to pull WMC within three. 63·60. Peracchia countered with two free throws for Dickinson and the Green Terrors could mount no more rallies. Marc Rudolph and Watkinson both missed shots. in the final minute before Dickinson finally put the game away with six foul shots. Western Maryland trailed by eight a halftime but spurted to an 114 advantage in the first three minutes of the second half. closing to within The loss gives Western Maryland' a '·5 record' in the Middle Atlantic: Conference- Southwest Division- andoj ~-:-~ve~L a 3~I~ They ';';ere led-ji offensively by' Rudolph with- 1"6"' points and by Mike'Sherlock with 15" points.. Dickinson is 11-7 overall and in i second place in. the league. with a 4- , 2 record. I i i 1 BAL TIMORE Jan. 25, • SUN 1990 Dickinson· continues W. Maryland's. miseries Frornstaffreport Western Maryland. which is struggling this season with a 3-12 overall record, dropped to. 1-5 in the Middle Atlantic' Conference Southwest Section' with~ a 71"-53- loss to Dickinson. last night in Westminster. Dave Peracehia scored a gamehigh 18 points, and pulled down seven rebounds to lead the Red Devils. who improved to 11-7. 4-2 in the league. BALTIMORE Jan. 25, • SUN 1990 Peracchia scores 18 to help Dickinson beat W.Md.,71-63 WESTMINSTER - Dave Peracchla scored 18 points and grabbed seven rebounds to' lead Dickinson past Western Maryland.,71-63.ln Middle Atlantic' ccmeeence-soutnwest Section game last rught. Bill Callahan contributed 13 points for the Red Devils (11-7. 4-2). and Pat Brogan and Duke Scott each State men had 12_ The' Green Terrors (3-12 •. 1-5) were paced by Marc Rudolph's (Loyola) 16. Teammate Mike Sherlock !!:~~~~~~:~ \ I 81 I I I ~1~tk1n-1 Dickinson led most of first Western Maryland came back to tie I the game at 4O-4O'wtth 11 minutes I remaining In the game on 8 threepoint goal by Watkinson. DIckinson I then ran off the next elght points. The-closest the Green.Terrors could get after that was three points. on several occas1ons •.the last being another Watkinson three-potnter with 1:35 rematnlng. The Red DevUs. however. scored the next eight points from the foul line to put It away. DfCKlNIOH (711- D _toeChia 8-18-7 18. e.cau.1IaII3-77-ala. CopeiandO-Gl·21.P .. Bro;an5-62-512;oOuUScott5-132-212.C.Copelancl1-22_24.EngMoI1_12-24.Scn~"~10-00.L ~3-50-08 ': SmitflO-ll-21,~"24-44 Wl!8TERN MAIIYLANO(alBemee 4-8 0-0 8. 1'_iPi,:e3-80-38 I~.Sherlaek8-103-51S.KMlon-.z-eO-G5 reRudOIpII4-I70815(LoyoIaI.Eric Wa11dnSaf14-IO-011P~."'''''''0-60-00.Hoe11140-02.Toc.Ia::M-a'*"U HalttI ..... OIcIIi_30.WM22.'""-iIo!1I1 ~~C.:~..;;~=·,72.~ 1-3l.A I _ I 038IPatacchla.CAllahan7);WU28.! l)alf.1 ~~~~~.::~~;!:!~R= . • ~.RudOIpI1.TKllftlcalcW.uun.on.":'!.5. __ . HANOVER January • • • EVENING 25, SUN 1990 f· BALTlMOH.E Jan. 26. W. Md. 53, SUN 1990 Gettysburg 41 -:;: . WESTMINSlER --Cla1re Thev-i enoux and Barb Wolf combtned. fori 21 points and 30 rebounds. leadIng-] Western Maryland (1l-3~4-2)_past.i Gettysburg (2-12. 1-3) in' a' Middle i Atlantic Conference ~.~~~ ~;:124-1~"2.1 i tlo~~'iwAQ 141) _ A....etI3-51-27.~I..eO-02.EIbon3-n·0-08, Chereb~13o.tI2._0.30-0o.a.l"O-02. LalrdG-,O-OG.T 17_lI-l.4" WI!BTI!IIN MARYLAHD(U,'_ walt3-$'4-$ 10. Monroe3-120-0S,n..enowc4-I0!-61',"""_ Mo..o6,S!ntth2-6G-04.$mIII'-<4O.Q2,lAIItI0-2 ~ 1-21,ToaIl-30012.e_3-6f-27,N'_"00,1 O'OO.... ,brlght-t-22·24,AIwInIIQ.t 0.00. r.... · 21-11 11-17 U. "-'W_M...,._28.~ 13. ~.::.~2~=~"'wu~ _.WoIII61;....._G7(Elban3};WMll<-roe,AIfanoat·T GI6;WMI4,I' HANOVER January I · i, WcII.A:80.. I EVENING 26, SUN 1990 Western Md. 53 Gettysburg 41 Seniors Barb Wolf and Claire Thevenoux combined for 21 points and 30 rebounds to lead Western • ~~It~~~uf::!t ¥~trci~~fn:~ a~ Westminster. Md . 'Ihevenoux. scored 11 points and a~db~~~fn~b~~d~5a~~a;~f.ad-. sa~!~ili~U~~~sr~bo~~~eB~~r::~~~ leading scorers with 12 points each. USA TODAY Jan. 26, • 1990 CAH.ROLL • 19th century revisited in Ken Hankin's pottery By sTUART FAXON ~Wr'MJf Ken Hankins pots, That's is hooked not pot. on pots. ~~e~~-:: JU~~ ~~d ~~~ ~ potter, who has run Shilo!l Pottery since 1974. "Run" is an apt me~h?~ for the b craftsman's activities. He U~es manual arts full-time at 51. School for Boys near Lutl_Jerville. He teaches pottery part-~e at Western Maryland College m ~':'u1'S WN~n;~~~ident of ~he Carroll County Crafts Guild, he IS a membe.r f the Carroll County Arts Council a d has served on its board. anWhen not doing any of ~at, ~e ~und the region selhng his ~"ctions of 19th-century salt~ pottery and demonstrating gl the items were created wh~n de pottery was part 01 daily =dma lif~i tarted working in clay in 1966 s [ came to Carroll County" en gssex," Hankins said. That from he gJ3duated from the Mary~ Institute College of Art. In 19.12 Ian duated tram Alfred Umversity ~e ~ired. N.Y .• with a master. 01 ~ience degree i~ art education, wn 1to:: !~~r=~ in.g a Saturd.ay class, choos- was. expenmented lved into period work. reproducing lBOOs salt-glazed stoneware. it's a whole new type of "Fo~ ~:ruons says. "In the lSOOs work. Id throw salt into the kiln, ~d' '. i~~~mbined who were doing it and 1 got clues that way," Hankins says. "I knew how to build a kiln and make the shapes. But making the colors, getting the gray to come out right and getting the 'look' is the trick." For about five years Hankins did pottery demonstrations at special events at the Carroll County Farm Museum in Westminster. He did some research in the county and says he wanted to get as close to the source 01 his adopted pottery style as possible. "In Carroll County there used to be a potter in almost every small town," Hankins says. 'They were very important before there was refrigeration and canning jars. "I started to think like a period potter who didn't have materials as good 'as we have now. My salt-kiln is more expensive to fire and more hazardous to fire. I had to unlearn some of the techniques I learned. But you can't do that unless you know the fundamentals first." Hankins has done period pottery for 51. Mary's City and the National Colonial Fenn.He has also built and sold traditionaltype wheels. He sons in Kathy Drzewianowski helps with the shop and its wares. t~th ~1~W~c:a the clay in a deat, iiterature on the 'frou was hard to come by. techf1IQUde to talk to other potters th: ~~an~~~~i!~I~~i~~~~ :i~~~~' ~:p~:c:~r items . such as sugar and creamer sets for Ken Han~lns SI2 to $14, jars for SlO and mugs on at Shiloh for S7. "We do about a dozen shows a year, mostly in the region." Hankins says. Hankins says there are only about a dozen people in the country doing what he's doing. "I get to dress in period clothes and do demonstrations," he says. "I like the history part oj it. It got to be a challenge." ; -. ',~~.' pt 100 .George W~lty works on Pottery. some clay as Kathy Drzewlanowski CARROLL January r COUNTY 26, TIMES 1990 ·'~:~ott Key,area coll~ges prove viet •• >. "c"J'---'"" '. I ',I i ,~onege basketball ::WMC womeD 53, Gettysburg 41 Barb Wolf for 21 points and 3() to lead Western Maryland. I College past Gettysburg 53-41 in a'l Middle Atlantic Conference-South- 'I west Section .game at the Gill i.:Claire Thevenoux and Wrestling .Wmning nine of 13 matches. ClS Scott Key downed visiting Hagerstown, in a Monocacy Athletic League match. ----. .-" r~~ ~~to~2 ~~ :~ i;ombined rebounds FreinNorth Valley "1 ~I~ MVAL play. 1 I The Eagles lost the. first two ~ matches, but then stonned back I with pins' from' Clayton Rcbertson-l (119 pounds) and Greg Bockelman 1 (125). Wyatt Griffin (130) then,' recorded a major decision win as I Key took the lead for good. . Other Key pin winners included: Jason Etzler (135), Rick woodson: Randy', (heavy-e (145). Todd Wheeler (160). • Parrish (189) and Chris linn weight). Tony Key Son (171) won by decision.' won the junior varsity match. Center. ' . Thevencux scored 11 points and grabbed 15 rebounds. with Wolf adding 10 points and 15 boards. For senior forward Wolf. it was the mnth time in 14-games that she was in double figures in both points and rebounds. She was fifth in reboundIhg in Division III of the NCAA through games of Jan. 6 with a 15.9 average. Western Maryland failed to score until· the 15:54 mark of the first half. when Angie AlfanO hit a short jumper to tie the score _~_t__2_-~.The Green Terrors then ran off 12 01 the next 14 points to take a 14-4 lead. with Jill Evans and Thevenoux each scaring lour points. The visiting Bullets got no closer than eight points the rest of the way. Gettysburg's Donna Bourke and Samantha Chereb were the game's leading scorers with 12 points each. Western Maryland is 11-3 overall and 4-2 in the MAC·Southwest. Gettysburg dropped to 2·11 overall. 1-3 in the section. The Green Terrors host Baruch (N.Y.) College Saturday at 2 pm. Baruch. ~7 with a game Friday at Catholic, features forward HilaJY Williams. Through Jan. 6, Williams was second in Division III in scoring, averaging 26.9 points per game, and was third in rebounding, pulling down 17.6 boards per ouuna. I HANOVER January • EVENING SUN 27, 1990 -B1llIefs~Terr(;ri'V.," l~aa>MAC',divi~f6li1 ., '''''-j CHESTER - Several members of -Get~sbUrg- a'nd--~Western' ~~~ ~~~~k:_~;nla~ ~iddle: Aq·a.ntie :-CQnf.erenc~ Southern DIVISion leaders. _ j ~.Among· the' men, Get!)'sburg's; Y Mar~;~~e~i~ ~ets" ~ott ~~d ~~~~ 'i-h:i d'Bntremont-is. 10thi In-rebounds.with 5.6 per ~me·andi teammate-Scott Lamond 15 tied fori eighth. in S:-point goalsr with 1'.4 pen game;. ,~ Amongthe women, WMC's·Barbl Wolf leads rebounders- with 13.31 ~ game- and is tied for first: iDI Teamr:~;: ~~~ta~e:n~':'~ fourth in rebounds with 11.3 per: game. Gettysburg's Cathy Bosma! IS third in rebounds with 11.5 ~I1 game . • • • BAL TIMORE SUN 28, 1990 Jan. W; Maryland Sa; ~~ii;~~! ·;~.:WESTMINSTER:-:. Barb Wolf (GleneigJand~cattUn Monroe (Oak . :_: land MJllsj'each·scorec:f 13 as West-· em Maryland (l2~3Lnllled" over Ba-. ~~~:~~~n·~;~~:·~~~'"·~·'~;~~~~1 run In the Ilrst half. Including _I6 stralght~ to take. a 26~8 lead With ~:30 remaining:' Carrie "'Alwlne- . scored' an·elght.of her points In that atretch.. .~'. .' . • Wolf. who also' had a team-high' ro'rebounds~has now had'll games true- .seaecn In which' she has' achieved double figures In Doth I points-and rebounds; ".. -". I ,,~,~~l:!uo.·~::~o:.~:"~~"1 j - WI!STI!AN .AAYlAND(UI'-WoII13. Monrw, t3;.Thevenou .. 4.AlIanoI;Smltft-O;SmaII3.Lel!h3, Toal O. EVIl'" O.NIdecIter 2. AlIInvht2. : ~~=-W!:;:"~:27'&""_': ! c.na-.oo. toaIa:B0-4(V.rcadO$0-4~WMO-O.Rftounde: B ; 4O(WIIII..... ,3J:WM"3(WoIt,0! ... IMIMa:B8(WHI..... 3,. CIWIq 3): WM 15 (""-.4). Tot.t tour.: B 17. WM 15. FollIN out: Wlfl-.CIIang. T........ I ~e.l\IChbench.A:80 . • • --~n Term helps many cifwMq Program allows students to foster new skills in atypical courses By seth M. Topolski sp;;ai to The Carroll Co~ Sun any Western Maryland College students spent this month not on break, M bU~~Je~~~ety courses. of mixing the practical and the unusual. The monthlong Immersion in a self· or college-planned subjeCt takes some students to some 1010 the work force in ~~~ look at three Carroll County students who participated J;n CO~=~:r~:S~tijpat In ~:;~nYder of Hampstead helped disabled ch.lldren develop Robert: Moton gjementary In Westminster. thejumor School ~.~;:~~~~~:k to assisting the county's special POP~~Oa;~I~::r~r~d Mrs. AUan snyder worked ~th the children to create a positive l~l~~O~~~~t!~ the kids to accomplish thetr goals. ~ said Ms. Snyder. "They have such good~~!es~lling to learn and ~:v~::~~ ~~ f=f~%e the;;:;; also volunteered time and dfort to Rlchcroit and to TARGET. carroll County assistance twO ~~;~~ ~~~eretaroed ~~~~=~e='She hopes :0 teach dementary school and ;oach for the Special Olympics iller gradualJon from Western oIIaryland . • .JuniOr pre-medictne major !:dward xure ill spent the month ~~~~~~~:ments ltoChemlstry class at Western ~~ofMr-.andMrs. Kurz. Jr. of Mount AJry vorked With carol Rouzer. SSlstant professor of chemistry, ~S. ~~!e::eti~~=fl~e ne claSSroom. feels the experience will st::rengthen his application to the Johns Hopkins Medical School. which he hopes to attend after his WMC graduation. Mr. Kurz. said he would like to specialize In ophthalmology. This summer. the student wiD assist WMC chemistry professor Richard Smith with his continuing research Into the causes andcures of cancer. .Atransfer student. Mr. Kwz saYs he Is n1e3sed·w.:Ith the close .attenttcn he gets from his W~~ Maryland professors. "They help us out with any questions and really look at student demands." he said, "They promote an open mind and try to get students to think. for themselves." • Tina Heck of Westminster LJSed her experience as a working professtonaJ and her academic background as a WMC student to conduct research on substance abuse at the county's Junctlon Inc. treatment facility. This month, the junior social work major studied the relationship between the ways in which a substance abuser enters treatment; and how much he or she Improves after the treatment ends. Ms. Heck said she categor1zo::l clients by age. monvattng factors. cocpeaucnwnn treatment. and type and length of treatment. ~~~:=~~~~ sends I -We are like guinea pigs. - said Mr':e~d he SPEClAL TO THE CARROll. COUNTY SUN _ 8ETl1 M. TOPOt..SKl Junior pre-medicine rnaror Edward Kurz !II spent the month designing laboratory experiments to be used in a 300-1evej biOChemistry class. She hypothesized that the longer the duration of treatment. the higher the success rate for rehabtUtatlon. In her full-time job as Carroll County prevention coordinator. she aJso creates substance-abuse prevention programs. SUpervises training sessions for-other substance-abuse training professionals. and offers seminars on substance abuse. She also Is coordinating the Carrou County Drug Summit, which wtll be Apr1126 at Mart1n's' Westminster. "llove my job," said Ms. Heck, who Is a non-traditional (over age 25) WMC student. "But I need ~~d~ucat1on to continue In my After graouenon. she said she hopes to return to Western Maryland College for a master's degree. I • CARROLL COllNT't e • l/2B/f.JO Reading is fundamental III ""pPOri "I ,January as Mary[;,lld Hi'ildillg Month. leada:rs an; book s in nlt~ «tassroom jI!ulIloting ind!-!ll'illg 11,<'sU"knls numerous "I'lh>rILIIIUh'SIIIl'!lj,,\,IIICf<llllf,", Ilirll"I"d .lll',Ollg ('h;,rk" iIII ·"wlnlh nj~:I" parli<'ipdk IJdI"lolllw ElO"li[,:nliH"}' ill "iklll Nu$,-,; nun j,; K\j'Uiug iIiI"'IOllh"IIL,,>ilwlslaJJ 'liT fl,ad I Jooks pro- <II MOllll1 Ilad Dmp Evely- ;\1111 1l:t;,l(1 ad/vilieS Ilo1wllillgbs[ "Llivi- Canoll Eh:Hlclll;,ry 1;,'(';,,1";(" Lill"rallll'l' Illi'l~ li](",w every week THECAAAOU..COIJHTY8UH-~~ Paul weu~~~r,~~ad of ~~s med!cine at Weste~ Maryland College, read -.-------~-.-------- tc K~thleen Seiler's fourth-g~ " Wednesday ~ ~~ - " ~~,~buy: 1'·d1<!:,li:;i~i1t."",-,---,--- __ r• C/\l{l{U!.L January Staff writei' • 28. l"YO State meet could move to WMC! By Ed McDonough • :":lllINTY :-iiJN The state track meet is leaving Towson State University after a one-year stay. and Western Maryland College Is one of the sites under consideration for the 1990 event. . As it was last year. the meet would be a three-day ...... <J"alrthat would have all four class championships for boys and girls decided at one site. "The expenses we Incurred at Towson were prohibitive: said Edward F. "Ned" Sparks. executive director of the Maryland Public Secondary School Athletic AssOCiation. the group-that operates the meets. sparks said the MPSSAA and Its track-and-field committee are negotiating wtth several Institutions. Including WMC. Western Maryland was host for a Class AA (now known as 4A) state meet. run by Westminster High. in the rmddle 19805. But Sparks has, in the past. expressed concern about the lack of fencing and ability to control ticket sales for spectators at Scott S. Batr Stadium. which has one of the fastest surfaces of any track in the state. Sparks did not say what other institutions the association Is negotiating with. but said a decision could be made Within the next week. Last year's meet at Towson State was the first time all four class championships had been run together since the early 19808. when the association held all four boys and girls competitions In two days at Towson State. After coaches complaJned about competition lasting long into the night. the state track committee spilt the meet among four sites from 1983 until 1988". most of them high school sites. The three-day format last year had the Class lA2A competition on Thursd::ly and Saturday and the Class 3A-4A competitions on Friday and Saturday. Some coaches. especially from the eastern and western regions of the state. compla1ned about the day's layoff and the long stretches of Inactivtty for- I their athletes. Eastern Shore coaches also had reo quested. shtftlng this year's meet to a mid-week I' schedule to avoid traffic jams with Ocean City-bound trarnc. -rrnat proposal] got absolutely, positively not one-! shred of endorsement," Sparks said. "The prtndpals ; couldn't stomach that; not only the time missed by i ~~:t~e:::S~i~~ s~~ ered running ~o~ the meets :n:::=e~~:!~~illto~ never had coneioat split sites again. even! =d~ ~u!~~~~~=~tS~~~ i I !:!;~;:~ ! i be host At least two county coaches have mixed feeltngs i about the three-day. Single-Site format vs. the one- I day. scattered site fonnat of old. ' Francis Scott Key coach John Seaman noted that ' despite the inconveniences of the three-day schedule, ; the combined meet had some benefits for the athletes. especially those from smaller schools. He said I two of his runners were seen by college scouts who I never would have been at a Class IA championship. and noted they had the opportunity to observe top , athletes. such as indoor national prep champion sprinter Derrtck Love of Anne Arundel County's j Meade High. ~I was opposed to it before they did It.v Seaman-. said of last year's format. -tn retrospect. it was run: more smoothly than Ianncipated." Liberty coach Brad Hill agreed the three-day meet i went more smoothly than he had expected. but said i he still favors the old slngle-site format. i "Our state can spend its money on much berter-t things than to put people up for the night for a track: ~ meet.~Hillsaid. Sparks said the MPSSAA paid for more than 160 ' motel rooms in the Towson area to house athletes. -- • • • CARROLL January • • • COUNTY SUN 28, LLJ90 WMC wresders win Led. by Joe Bakewell's ind1vtdu-, al title at 142 pounds, the westernMaryland College wrestling team 'I took top honors tn the eight-team fleld at the York College Spartan Invttatlonal Iast weekend at York i (Pa.) College. Bakewell was the only champ for the Green Terrors, who won the title by sccrmg 69.5 points. York and Gallaudet University of Washington tied for second with . 69 points. i bl~~~j~br!~~=rsedw~::: '! sday night by slipping away with a I hard-fought 22-21 Victory In a du- ! almatch. The Western Maryland men's: basketball team, meanwhtle. sur- I fered a pair of close losses In last. weekend's White Rose City Classic, also In York, Pa. York (N.Y.) College nipped the Green Terrors 41-40 In the consolation game last Sunday, and dropped a 75-71 verdict to highlyregarded Philadelphia Pharmacy: in the opening round the night be-. \ fore. The 40 points scored by the Green Terrors in .the consolation game was the lowest point total for the team since a 71-39 loss to ~~;ner (Pa.j College on Dec. 9, CARROLL January COUNTY TIMES 28, 1990 • Ursinus downs WMC swim teams 3:2520 . Staff Report • Gebhard w~y There wasn't -much in the of good sports news on. the Western Maryland campus' Saturday. The mens' and womens' swim teams were beaten by Ursinus while, the mens' basketball team fell to Muhl· enberg. • • Uninus men 59. WMC 36 Unlnus' women 50, WMC 31 The Western Maryland College, swim team was swept by Ursinus in a ,Middle Atlantic Conference meet at Westminster. The Green Terror men' fell to the Bears 59--36. Rob Newman won two events for Western Maryland, taking the 100 meter freestyle in a schoolrecord time 01 49.29 and the 200 meter freestyle in 1:51.08. John Ehlman captured the 50 meter freestyle in 22,70. The Creen Terror quartet, of Ehlman, Newman, Matt Gebhard and Matt Cook won the 400 meter freestyle relay in finished t650 meter freestyle 18:32.94, was also a third in' the' but his time-at': Western Mary~.:' land record. . Ursinus defeated the Western Maryland women 50·31. Ashley Scattergood. won the 100 meter breestc stroke in 1:30.09 and Stacy Stauffer:took the 200 meter backstroke lrr- 2:32.13. The team of JJ. Boggs, Coneers Dolan. Melissa Hallmarlc and Helen: Lowe won the 200 meter freestyle'!' relay in 1:57.85. Muhlenberg men 86. WMC 66. Trailing 40·29 at the half, Western.. Maryland pulled to within 51-44 orr; Marc Rudolph's three-pointer witlt"" 12:55 remaining. But the Mules~ responded with nine unanswered' points to quell the Green Terror' rally. Jim Smith led Muhlenberg (8-11: overall, 3-4 MAC-Southwest Sectloa)" with 20 points. Rudolph led westernMaryland- (3·13, 1-6) with 15. • • •• CARl{QLL January winning free throw by Hopkins to save the Diplomats. The second matchup between Hopkins and F&M again went into overtime, with the Diplomats holding on for a 69-67 victory. . Western Maryland lost to F&M 75·45 earlier this month. The Green Terrors trailed 30·7 at one point. Last season the Green Terrors were beaten by F&M three times, losing by II points at home and being routed in the MAC Southern Division finals. The Green Terrors can beat Hopkins. In the first meeting the game was still close, 31-30, early in. the second half before Western Maryland began to self-destruct. The big difference was on the bench. as the Blue Jays subs autscored their Green Terror counterparts 42-1 That shouldn't happen again. Rhonda SmaJJ and Janelle Leith missed the game and Alice Smith. who gets a late start because she is on the volleyball team, wasn't yet ready to play. Without their usual bench strength. the Green Terror starters tired in the second half and started making mistakes. A Western Maryland victory Saturday would likely see both teams finish the season with 7-3 section records. The first tiebreaking criteria, head-to-head play, would be a draw. So would COUNTY TI11ES 28, 19110 the second, as each team would have a 6-0 record against the three teams below them in the section standings. The two teams would have a special one-game playoff to decide the second-place finisher in the section and the MAC tournament berth, A coin flip would detennine which team would host the game. OR, Western Maryland could beat Hopkins Saturday and follow that with a victory over visiting Franklin & Marshall next Tuesday. In that case. the Green Terrors would finish 8-2 in the division to Hopkins' 7-3 and there would be no need for a playoff. Beat Franklin & Marshall? Sure. Alter all, the Diplomats aren't inhuman: Hopkins has demonstrated that twice already. Problem is. when Western Maryland plays Franklin & Marshall. both teams know how its· going to turn out. As coach Martin said, and the players will readily admit. "It's a mental thing." The Green Terrors don't go out on the court thinking they're going .to win: they go out trying not to lose. And the past lour times the two teams have met. F&M has jumped out to a big lead within the first few minutes and never looked back. But forget Franklin & Marshall. That game doesn't exist until after the Green Terrors win Saturday . this season has not been a cause for disappointment (well, except lor that Joss to Messiah). Frankli & Marshall is its same awesome sell. The dillerence is that this season Johns Hopkins is a rector and that wasn't unexpected. Last year Western Maryland pulled out two narrow victories over the Blue Jays. holding all Hop~ns at home 66-59 and rallymg with a 52-45 victory at Hopkins for a school-record 17t1 vieto?, (quickly broken). And Hopkms returned every member that team. plus brought in an ~~:~l!~hman, .. --;u Gates is a Times' SylkeKnuppe Johns Hopkins' improvement was apparent before the two teams met for the first time this season. The Blue Jays hosted Franklin & Marshall and took th delend~ng ~C-Southem Divisic champions mto double overtimr before succurnbtng. 68·67. And even then It took a lane vtotenc that negated a potential gamesports BALTlt1URt: Jan. 28, SUN 1 Y90 ~~Y Lube mw.ung mov~ to Texas, president say§:ii __ By Blair S. Walker At Jiffy Lube international rnc.. the winds of change appear to be blowing toward HOllSton. where the Baltimore-based company's new leaders are considering relocating the bulk of Jiffy Lube's operations. Houston is the corporate home of Pennzoil Co.. which bOught 80 percent of the ftnanctally ~~~~e~ ~~~~-~o~f~~~~= ~~l~~ 1:g; Lube's newly installed president, J. Ronald Calabrese. said there are definite advantages I to a Houston move but cautioned that no deer- I sian had been made, Jlr&0~~~:' ~~~~~::ae ~vo; ~~~~~: Northwest Baltimore have been briefed about I the relocation option, as well as about sever- I arice packages, ~A possibility certainly does exist 'that It [JIf· fy Lube's headquarters] could be moved to Houston In order for us to live up to our responslbility by try1ng to make this be a profitable organiZation. - Mr. Calabrese, 54, said durlog an Interview, -rhere are certain synergies that do exist In ston. ~ sajd Mr. Calabrese. who worked for ~ estern Auto Supply Co. for 29 years before ~;I~:;~e~~ ~~~~if;At"u~~~~: and the expense factors. In deference to our respons1blllty to the rnmonry shareholder.J out there. we're going to do what we can to utilize those synergies to help reduce expenses. 'But I pretty much can assure you that there wtll always be a presence In Baltimore especially as It relates to a sales organization; he sald. -We are a sates business. and as such. the vast majOrity of people that are Into sales won't be affected at all.~ Addressing Jury Lube's annual stOCkholders meeting yesterday. Mr. Calabrese said he envisioned a small sales operation In Baltimore similar to the small one the automot!ve qUicklube bUSiness maintains In. Laguna Hills caJtf.. for selling franchise Opportunities. • Mr. Calabrese's predecessor, bustnessman and fonner, Western Maryland College football coach W. James Hindman. Invented the Jiffy Lube concept in 1979 and developed it Into more than 1,000 franchises within 10 years, But In embraCing a strategy of rapid growth to corner the quick-lube market. Jiffy Lube encountered severe financial problems that eventually led to Its acquisition. ne problem stemmed from a den to lend franchisees money to heir operations running, a polJcy started under Mr, Hindman in 1987, It f, ,..:,*·1 'i['_~~:,-, Mr. Calabrese alluded to th~t practice In detailIng a new Jiffy Lube program for start-up franchises. "We have put In place a long-] term. real estate financing program which we would adhere to,- he said .. ' "In other words. If someone wants to ! go Into buetness for themselves and I they'd like to get Into the quick-lube I business. ~~kroll the entire' growth =~~~.Houston, 'j I I the key word "In corqunctron [ wtth the sever- ~::~~ ~~~~:~ ~h~rJ~,!n:~tI~~~:::ru=g proc- j I the) -We outlined our plans In the event that some of the jobs may be i i Since Its Inception, Jiffy Lube has: always been based In Baltimore, first I on Security Boulevard. then In itsnew 810 million. 78.000-square-foot, headquarters In Northwest BalUmore two years ago. The city will see if can persuade i Pennzotl to leave all of Jiffy Lube's I operations in Baltimore, said David Gillece, president of the Baltimore Economic Development Corp. Mr. Glllece said he's heard rumors that Jiffy Lube may be leaving. "guite frankly. Idon't know what their status is - we're attempting to arrange a meeting with the Pennzou folks to discuss their plans, ~he said. "I'm sure there would be some economies realized by having some functions transferred to (Pennzoll's Houston] headquarters. -But there's an equal trend toward the decentralization of corporate structures, and If PennzotJ's thlnklngs are along those lines, a strong Independent headquarters operation In Baltimore_would continue to make sense. "It would be a loss. obvtously. and not one that we want to see happen.Mr. GlIlece saJd. -I don·t think it'd have a massive direct economic 1m· pact. But obviously, when you have success stories of growtng start-up companies. as Jiffy Lube was. you want to keep them In town.· Mr. Calabrese saJd he had personally talked to Jiffy Lube's workers to keep them apprised of the finn's status. "Knowing that they have had questions and they have been uneasy for several months now, we tried to aadress that Issue as soon as we could,~ he said in an Interview, ~~~~~~c~rPs~=o~d I then we have a financing b:r~;~:'~de ~:G ~e: ~~ into business. But we're not going to grow at random. or recklessly or too fast. and we're not gOing to finance the~ ~~~~:t~~=!~ specialist up togo through the details-' I c':t~':es~;~yu~: "we're more concerned j I about peopl~ being concerned about the takeov~ and leavtng Jiffy Lube. We want them to remain In place. so we can afford an orderly transition. What; the ttme frame for that Is. I can't telll you at this ume." About 50 stockholders attended' yesterday's meeting, which tookr place at Jiffy Lube headquarters., Among other things. they sought assurances rhat.Pennzotl won't even-. tually try to gatn 100 percent ownership of the company. "At this point in time, we have nO,1 Intention of buying the mtncrtty: shares: Mr. Calabrese said In re-: sponse to a stockholder's question. One stockholder said she expected more infonnatlon dwing yesterday's meetlng. "J guess Mr. Calabrese was being: as forthright as he possible could be' - I don't know that anything new I was eatd," said the shareholder. who I asked not to be Identified because: she has a relative working at Jiffy Lube. -I think most of It was to reassure stockholders. There was a cer· tain amount of evasiveness on some' Issues. .. In all probability. there I Will be some areas (of the companyJ I that wUl go to Houston. ·What Is going to happen to this ' company? What Is Pennzoil gOIng to do for us that's any different than what has been done in the past? "There's just nothing concrete. said the shareholder, who has I 39,000 shares of Jiffy Lube stock. ; -On the other hand. maybe they i can't be more concrete than that. I Jiffy Lube lost 580 million dwing : I w ", W ;!s~~I ~~. ~~u!ctB~io::I~~ ~~~~ day In over-the-(!ounter trading. 25 cents. up [ CARROLL January • • It. WMC routs Baruch By BILL GATES StaflWril8l' The Green Terrors were hoping for a competitive game but found themselves in another exercisethe-bench affair as the Western Maryland wornens' basketball team routed visiting' Baruch 5636 in a non-conference game Saturday at the Gill Center. To be lair, it wasn't exactly a pleasant trip south for the visitors from New York. The Stateswomen (6-11) lost to Catholic University on Friday night ·and returned to their hotel rooms to "discover they had been robbed. And a few players, including one starter. had to return early to New York. But the Green Terrors tried their' damdest to be gracious hosts. Seniors starters Barb Wolf (26 minutes), Claire Thevenoux (20 minutes) and Caitlin Monroe (16 minutes) only played about hall the game. All 14 members of the Green Terror roster saw playing time, 12 of them reaching. double figures in ~inutes. With 7:50 remammg m thefirst hall the score was 21-4. At halftime it was 27-9. Seven minutes into the second hall it was 39-13, the largest margin of the g~ethOught the game would be more competitive." said Green Terror coach Becky Martin. "As it turned out, this was .the type 01 game when o~r entire team would gain expenence and see some playing time: We. worked on our offense: usmg . the, game clock and sharpening' our fast break." Martin expected a close game because of Hillary Williams. who COUNTY THiES 28, lYLl(J entered the game third in scoring and fifth Jrr reboundtng in Division III, averaging 26.3 points and 16.9 rebounds per game. But Williams had, a ragged start, missing several jumpers, and then got into foul trouble. She had three points- in the first half and' reached' 20 betore fouling out with 5:30 remaining in the game.' The game was close for maybe four minutes. Baskets by Thevenoux and Wolf gave the Green Terrors a 4-0 lead belore Williams halved it with a hook shot After a Monroe free throw, Wilda Colon made it 5-4 with a jumper from the top of the key with 15:58 remaining in the half.' Eight minutes would pass before the Stateswcmen- scored egatn; Western Maryland rattled off 16 unanswered points to' take control 01 the game. Monroe (13 points) had six points during the stretch. on a jumper from the comer and two fast-break Jayups. Carrie Alwine had two layups and Wolf. Thevenoux and Angie' Alfano had Jayups during the streak On the other end, the Terror defense pressured Baruch into missing 13 consecutive shots and allowed two offensive rebounds. The clincher came when the score reached 17-4; The 5-loot-8 Williams rose up for a jump shot and had the ball soundly rejected by 5-loot-7 Terror guard Jill Evans. A 12-6 run at the start· of the second half gave the Green Terrors a 39-15 lead. Baruch came back.' with nine unanswered points to start a 15·3 streak that cut Western Maryland's lead to 42-30 with 6:55 remaining. But free throws' by Monroe and a turnaround jumper by Janelle Leith sparked a 13-2 Green Terror spurt lor a 55-32 advantage with I :45 left in the game. I CtUWULL January ~roup CUUNTY TIHI::S 21:l, lYYO of guards at WMC are terror . on the cour~ By BILL GATES .§!!!!.Wriler .. One view 01 the Western Maryland College womens' bask~tball teams' offense: Claire Thevenoux scormg on a tottow-up ofl a rebound. Barb Wall driving inside lor a ~~:~~~rt:~ere, . ln something .jumper in the key. Another view: Angie Aliano gathering in a long pass and streaking downcourt for an . uncpntested layup. Jill Evans calmly burying a 15.loot jumper. Caitlin Monroe bluffing a , shot and sidestepping a defeoder lor a drive • M~nroe is third on. the team in sconng, averaging 10.1 points per game. She leads the team with 47 ~ISts. Alfano is fourth in scoring WI~ a 7:4 average and second in assl~t With 34. Evans is filth in (f~rng (6.7) and third in assists to the basket. Everyone who watches or must play aga,inst the Green Terrors know that most of their offense IS built around the post players, Wall and Thevenoux. But its doubtful Western Maryland would have been 20-5 last season and 12-3 this year without its fine ~table of guards. There are nine guards' on Western Maryland's 14-player roster. Three 01 them start. three others will play between 10 and 20 minutes in every game and the other three are gaining experience. "One of. our strengths is that we are •• such a diversified team," said Green Terror coach Becky Martin. "Everyone is aware 01 our posts and their capabilities and at times they may overlook our guards. I'd say that's' to our advantage." Lately the, starting trio has been Monroe a senior, juruor Alice Smith and Alfano. ~ sophomore. But Evans, another sophomore doesn't stay on the bench long and neither do, sophomores Rhonda Small and Janelle .. or ~ually I ~~?: :~~;:;r ~:jtha~~:~,~r IlgohOd outside the _job (Jone"according to as y, but gets Martm and Sm~JJ is the ui coach Becky and a terror Lei~h. in Martin said she is the right place at the !'Igbt .time" and her numbers prove It. Leith leads the team in field goal ~~~~e at .636. hitting 14 of 22 Leith. Alfano, the point guard. runs the offense Monroe is the scoring threat and Smith is ~ excellent defensIve player with good ball .~:~~am then ['II of a statistical streak odd- 1 to qoP=~t~~~~~~ "We always want to go . guardS have outside shots ms~e. but our penetrate," Martin said. "Caitli~ they can I outside shot and she has a ~an take the I the basket. She has the abil~ICk move to I zone and win a game for yo~." to break a ."Angie is an excellent ballhandler Wlth.a g~ head on her shoulders." Martin, saI.d. "Everyone has complete confidence in her ability to bnng the ball down the court and set up the offense. And she's an ~cellent ~efensive player. Dependmg on height. she'll usually guard th: other teams' leading scorer. Defense. keeping the ball under control. are a lot more important than people believe." Martin said. Alfano gets a lot oi layups off fast bre~ and steals. Otherwise her mam concern is running the offense and getting the .ball to someone else to do the scoring. "I'm definitely not a scorer" Alfano s~d. ·'On fast breaks, it depends m the team we're playing. A lot of good teams won't let you take that fast break. so I have to look to take an outlet pass. But if I see it's ~~~ th~~~~t~:~?:~=~P.:n~ I very rarely put one up last year It's not something these guarOs do' J Nonetheless. teams that to collapse on Woll and Thevenoux I ~ usually be made to suffer lor it I Th~n there's the other side of the, COlO: defense. I The Green Terrors play out of a man-to-man or a 2-3 zone. In beth- I ~~ps the guards have the responslbility of harassing opposing players so they can't just sit back and sh,~t over Wolf and Thevenoux. l.ts a comfort knowing Barb an'd I Claire ~ back there, but we're still not. golO~ to let people penetrate" I Smith said. Adds Martin: "The posts-! are our sec~nd I,ine of defense. The ! trY I I ~a:n~~et ~~~~~e~!; job if they ~ut the bottom line when ~nng the Western Maryland IS: Martin can put any of the on the court with little dropolf in performance ''That's one of the I~ries I considguards top six or no =i~~~~ that :d.h~~e ~: b~~~ bench and they'll do the job. Most ~ams, they'll send the bench in and lust hope they keep the game s~eady. Our bench can go in and pick us up. "It's ~ice to be able, if someone is struggnng and putting a little more pressure on themselves then necessary, to put some other people on the court," Martin said . • USA TODAY 1/31/90 USA TODAY ~!L~'!i~%:lIfllljli:'i~*lllij!lij55If.1llli2./ f / 90 --.,.79,"'_ 65 AlIJeny F'IIatm8cV 60, SouIMm l~"'~'" •• VIlllTlOOt 5" (N.Y.J73 " JOMJay 71. LelllMn61 ~""rS(N_Y_)88,_'(OI'kU~~. t::"e:''1o 83. W-:-" Mt VarnonNua..- Ma<yI8nd 19 83,.BklffIon~. I.h'Iicn(N.Y.)&t.t.::<ldlllbury60 Villano\r.96.~88(on IWestem~83.E.Comec:ticuI891 WII!UVinJnoI78,1>..q..oesne11 WMIIamPaterson74.A~88 I I BALTIMORE Jan. 29, SUN 1990 • ~I '7:700)14:1 32.600811 .31131 23 ..ao118.1147 23.<100108..55&1 23.<100813.31&1 04.000314 ;1181 • •• • BALTIMORE Jan. 30, SUN 1990 -1 q j ~~=;:~~~:ss:!o~~~~~ I . 1 '::.:. of.'2l-.84.<r'Tearmnat~.~,~ber(;i:'~liV'··"j ., I r • • BtlL TIMORE Jan. 30, • SUN 1990 :::;r.own Crier/Jan. 3()"31 ,,- .:.:::;:;:~:j ~,:::j .·:::.:t,rONIGHT: Skipjacks v; Maine ~t:1 -1:30. lD the Baltimore Arena. call4al-&000.,,~, ,,;;,:SHOWTIMES TONIGHT: Dark. "The FUm Society" resumes ...\,.. 1 1 Center Sta.", tomorrow at'a .-'" I '1 o'clOck. Tb.ro.ugh Feb, 11. Call 33%-0033. • . '.'~ e . Mcurls A. MecbanJe Theatre:"Les MiserabIeslrr" o'clock. Through March 10, Call 62S-1400. ... , Tbeatre'Projeet: Dark. "The Serpent's Fall'" . 'Jto.m. orrow at 8 o'clock. In rep with" Anna on Alma..' .·1 through Sunday. Call 152-8558, ., .,'-. :ara TOMORROW: The Baltimore Science ,~ Fiction Society shows the film THX 1138 at 8 p.m.'1 .;"~;~32~:~hOuse at 2233 5t. Paul St. Free. Gall ·\-:.''"COMING' UP: Photographer Arnold i i ~":'=: ~r;:~~::~:r~a~~I ~~~::sat.7:30' McDaniel Lounge. CARROLL February • Call 876-2055, Ext. 599. COUNTY SUN 11, 1990 Photos presented at WMC Photographer Arnold Newman. known • for portraitlJre and abstraCt phOtOgraptIy. presents side show and , lecture: 7:30 p.m. Feb. 20; Western Maryland College. McDaniel Lounge. Westmin$Ulf.lnformation: 857-2599. I !iANOVER January eVENING 30, SUN 1990 St¥dent helps disabled children:" .' Tl - ..._.;,._ •..•. _ .. _ .....~~ " __ .-. __.. _._. s: I WESTMJNSTER.'Md.i Snyder- of Ham~cl bas, been, _ Snyder also volunteers time and- , hel~ diSabled.childieu,.cfeOiellit>1~eltor!l!' RidJaoftand to TARGET 'J.' commol<motot"skilIs as porto! her- >(TraiiJi!Jg>. ArId. Research. Gro"" TraceY "ibem.'· '. '. , ~~o:::r;~S~re;r.~-·'-=~P:!~~~led\~ ~:: =%Jr~";=yh~ 'N~~"""lar)<educatiOD' ~ major at' Western· Maryland College' has been devoting_ seseral. tarded gain· .independence, She hopes, to .teach elementary school and coach for the S~ Olymp- -i WMC: , TRACEY SNYDER WMCStudent • • Bt,LTH1URE Jan. 31, • w.""'_ SUN 19lJO 75, aa-49 ..... WASfUNGTON,-CJah.e.ThtiVen. oux had,19 points and 12 rebounds. and Barb Wolf {Glenelgl added 18 points and 10 rebounds to, lead Western Maryland (13-3)-over Gal~~(75)_WoIIa.132-31B. Monr'oe5-11_14, "_'_.123-319.A.IfWIO 1-92414. SmiIn 14 0.02. SmMIO-l0.00. LAICII Il-l o.oo.TOIII2-20.0 •• E-.l~0.02,"""""'14 0.02,~040.0o.T __ 1"1.71. GAU.AUDE1'{.,_ClMry ...10G-OI,GuI*Ta 7·92.211,....._.,Q.40.0O,FIetIcMr'·50-02, ~7·190-21 .. s.-no-t3-t3.T""*-1~ 1... 3.~1-4143.,.....21 .. 17·M4I. ......,_w-..MaryIand,35-23.T1IfM.poIrII ~W .. O-O;GO-l!FeIIowIiO-l)._WM 46~12):G33(a-.6.~6. RotIinIcn6), ........ WM 17(......... S);G 11(Simp. 1IOfl5).T_'_WM 12,G 13.1"ouIIod_Gutler· n<L""""""''_NQna.A:9D. • • Arearollndup • LEBANON VALLEY 83. W. MARYLAND 79 - In. Westminster, Parkville graduate Eric_ Watkinson hit a career-high 26 points and. a scnccl-recore-sts three-pointers. but it- wasn't enough as Western Maryland (3-14. 1-7) fell to Lebanon Valley (10-1, 4-4) in a Middle Atlantic Conference game. ' .---~---- _ _ ..__ .._~~UNTYeD~_~_~~~ .. l/3\/90 .- .._ ---~------~---- Jan. term opportunities at WMC 'Untaught' students learn how to get their way in United Nations model year when the students repreoy KAREN GATZKE sented the country of Zaire in South Africa once reaching WESTMINSTER - This January term course is unique for a (Boston. COFf~:t~rt:ij~~istudenls at West~ ern Maryland College, Catonsville Community College and Carroll Community College to attend class J:n~~~1 w~~t :bedu~~~ w~Seiik~f but I had no idea or the amount 01 i':~~d~:ht~ :c'::es ~~~,iitg Uiak: arrive at a consensus on any issue," recalls Swain. This year, the students from the community colleges and WMCwill represent the countries of Portugal in South America and the causes of that nation. The Harvard National Model Congoon the African continent. Both are rather small countries, hardly world powers, a fact sopbo~~\~n~:(Jl~.ternationalfairs and de- ~:~~~rn a~~a~~~d~~~:~e~~~~~t likely to be able to dlctatepolicy to The students attend class at WMe five days a week for' three the United Nations. and a hair weeks during the JanuIn fact, professor Neal has alto~~d1y those students wind up at Harvard University in Boston, ~f~~h:~ :t¥~~ 2:te;aa::ur:~ir: fo~i~d~~~O~t~;~:' ~~mk~ ~fd~~~ru~;n ~s ~~~tOt~:~~11\~ r:r~!?t::e~f!~~~l:~~t~flh~i~~ on the agenda will to create a th~~:i~~i r~~~ ~~~St~~:~_ conflict between the super powers, be Eromise and not look at any situa- li'6n~: ~e~·a~~v:~~W~-rVard,the '-- s~:s %:~e~~~I~n:~it~~t'w~ students will instructors for the course. "Every~:irtocg~ir:ut i =~nJl of the Inter"~ unteach them about moral- ·l~ ~!f.°lh~e~~'sa~~e~~~: structor. "We try to get rid of their Western bias." fo~~~~.s~o:!r:~eJ!W~~ has participated for the last 15 assigned to a gen~~~i~~~~ft~~~~!t~'::;i;rc~~ --'''''''.",''''- ---'L Ann weber, one of the instructors of the Harvard Model United Nations class being ~i~~e ~~m~~l!:'::tirr1~~r~~ ~~~~~tr;tt!~:,t~~~k~'t:r:::;:n~r!~:II~I~:~lr~ ~e~~lth~::,f~f;n~b w~:t t~~ discuss and vote on the resolutions passed in those committees. Students have; been known to become enraptured with the roles they are playing. Some dress in nativeJ8rb. Those who don't are gene EI about the course. have been known to walk oul on speakers during the . General A~~~e~rfor one afternoon when the students will tour Harvard, they will be working continuously. t~~1rv~s~f~e~;t~~n_ Neal says it is not unusual to have tries don't speak to one another, a caucus at 2 or 3 a.m. and representatives of a nation And, as soon as the students r::~cr~o~~~:nd~e C;~!~~ has been hiJdllysuccessful. Scott Swain; a 45-year-oldresident of Westminster, took part last be Web.er is an English teacher at Carroll Community College and will be going with Charles NCIlI. n :::;~:;da~~i~~~~~;dnt::t pate in the program. r::!I~~It1;: ~I:;t~:·i~ you something you don't get from a textbook," says Ryan, a political science major at Carroll Commun ity College. "At Harvard, we'll be g~t~rC;clib~~p'le and issues 011 a B!l.LTU!ORE SUN Jan. J i , LYYQ • Grace A. Dorsey; . is dead at 88; . services today ret;;~~~~s~~~:~t~;~~rt~~~ :j ~~;:.tt~::~;~:~~:!7!~~.~( sian of Instruction at establishment. of the state IJe.: ; ~ 49CS York Road: , I lIV~r~~ ~~~ ;v~~u~~~t: Ma:n~ -.\ • day of heart fatlure at the Sansbury :1 Nursing Home. where she had been _i a patient since November. She retired In 1966 after working. ,j for the state agency since 1942. the first 20 years as elementary school supervisor. She was an elementary school su- 'I pervtsor In Montgomery County from 1933 until 1942 and In Carroll County from 1927 untl11933. Earlter. she taught and was an elementary school prtnctpal In Somerset County. After Ieavtng the state Department of Education. she taught [01 three years at Towson State unrverstty. Earlier. she taught summer school at Western Maryland College the University of Maryland and the Teachers College of Columbia Unl versrty. She was a co-author of the MOe velopmental Reading Series, - ~ text. book for the primary grades nrsr published in 1949. She was a member of the Associ· anon of Supervision and Curricuiurr Development, the National Councf of State Consultants in Elernentarj Education, the International R~ Association, the Maryland' Stab Teachers Association and the Delta Kappa Gamma educational fraternt ty. Born in SneedviUe. Tenn., she, was reared there and In Somerse County. where she was a 1917 grad. uate of the Washington High Schoo' In princess Anne. She graduated from what is newt Towson State University and earnee ' bachelor's and master's degrees-a the COlumbl,a University Teacher.' -, ..... C • ~~~:~ra~~~e~~~!') ;~I~~~t;~e Johns Hopkms University and the University of Chicago. In 1951. she married Richart Dorsey. who died In 1981. She Is survived by two Sisters Mae Bounds of Hurlock and'Sallk Conn of carmel. canr.: and severa nieces and nephews. The family suggested donations b a fund established in her name a the Towson State University Foun dation. • • COUNT'l-\·jlDE NE\JS 1{31/l)U • Greg Preston Instead of studying, he wrote rock music for college wecredit music ure MOSI 01 uamlllWys is original. TI!c group hasn' charged to play III the three years lIy (;IIIUS STlJBNICli WESTMINSTlO:H - The .lanuterm,at Western Murylaud College orrers students a host of unconventional ways to guiu college credits for courses 1I0t normally offered during the regular terms at the college. For Greg Presion, a juniur music major, it was a chance 10 put some serious, thought and nry :~e~~bc~;~~nl~~~~!j~l~e ~~\I~CI~~;(I~~~~ ::~J\~~ilying live as pay (!llfJugh 1,,1 Nor does Preston dream Ulll],,!; ing the big lime ,,!-S a rod; st.u rhough he would hke h~,couunu. wnlmg songs, and playing musuafter graduation Preston says the music industry has become much too eomruercial for his tastes "Sometimes I wr+te ~illl';ugninst oppressicuan.t w. music toceutuiusuruc surt d~~~1~ i~~os~~I,:~e:l:!~~~e~~~:~~~k music i:~nh~I~~~lr'i\~~~ ail,u.j"I~I~I~~ ~('JI~J~II~J;;I:::I~;:~\~'~~.' I:~~~:II:~ILI('I' "ay" in~~~~~~J~~~k 1~1~~i~i~I;;'Sinec pi,:kroom for J'U~~,i ~)~~~' 1'("(~,;lOLl lug up a violin al age nine, plays je,ll'l: audience Illill Ill! IlL SjJ()JiI:HII.:I[\ participation "J. ,'I, I :r~v~~~~~I~I~~~ :~llit~I~I1~!ill(~J:~I;,j~:'ii;. ~~;::\'L ~~~~e"~~sa~~ri~t!1 also become quite ~~i~ai:~ familiar with 'h~'K~~~e coming 'iireg Preston, a junior music major at Western Maryland College. works on' his music at his coll~~e a~artm~~~. A~ ~ p_a~tof a special independent JaIJ. term pr-oject, Preston wrote music for credit. He also plays in a college band. ~~[1Iar:iI: to western ~~1 :e~t~~ :~~r'i ~:"~dI1hl~edSituaCt~~ri.~ ~:~~ Preston. I . Preston shares the guitar duties in' the band wiUl Fr~nk f{ratovip . lime js ,Pl~~~up'~' \\111..:1, • • Beauty and The Beast The Beast, played fly Rock Reiser. presents Beauty. played h:y EeHv Schoen with ~\ symbol of his love for her ill \Vl;."scerll .'.IaI'Y- land • College-s preseucuton -rt \V,ltTf'll Graves> classic fairy tale 'Beauty and The Beast.' Pertormance dales are Feb. 2 to 4 inu all shows are at I) p.m. and will be held in the Dorethv It lN~'IC . Elder-ice Ttieau-e in .uumnt Hall CARROLL January • COUNTY TIMES 31, 19<,10 ·WMC .MOlmtFwiJme~'§'i~11 .' ". . ..•.J! . " ...". ."".,....,..."'.'C ""'''~1''~''''}' c~ '.<-'":~ win:·while"WM(!~metIJ.:FcJ.lt\ ~'",. :. '.': -,-_ ..__ .,--,," •. ,.... " 1 Staff Report .~' western Ma<ylandl~d Mary's posted womens ,_ ",,,,-,_, :'3-,<-';-. _;~:' Moun; St. basketball, :ton~:~nW~ftt:e~:~ -,,'M'_';-" " .. ,,' ';';"'" 'Maryi~d.·iri~. Lebanon Valley. Lebanon Valley 83, WMC meu. 79 Lebanon Valley went to the free _,_:-<"":"':::-~:"~. '\ C~.WGE!ROUN.DUP1 ~~;~ifte r~ ti:. ~~~~~ ,""i:-,>-' '.". '~'I"J,"L' Da~;~knk- J 15~footjUmperat:the end of the 45second'cJock',to'-gtve'Lebanon'VaJ-1 ley- a;'~17' lead' with 35 seconds: remaining;', . . ,-_ 1 land lor a 83-79 victory-in a Middle- .. Western Maryland, (3·14~. 1.7)1 Atlantic Conference-Southwest secturned. the: b!lIL over- and. BarJup. hit: tion game Tuesday night in" West,both; ends.. at a- one-end-one, Eric ' minster. . Watkinson pulled.the. Green. Terrors i The- Green Terrors led 68-59 with to within 81-79 with 14 seconds I 8:16 remaining in the game. With remaining before Barlup sank two I 4:58 remaining Western Maryland more- free throws to seal the- win. still had a 73-67 edge but the' Flying Barlup scored 26 points to- lead Dutchmen (to-i, 4-4) scored 14 01 the Flying Dutchmen, Daryl Hess' the next 18 points. Scott Barlup tied scored 19 and Bentz. added 18. the game with a three-pointer with • 1:~9 _r~~~ing. After a Western' W. Maryland falls to Lebanon Valley I WESTMINSTER - Enc_WatkInson (Parkville) scored 'a career-high. i 26 points and set a school record I with- sIX three-pointers. but Lebanon., Valley (10-7. 4-4) took the lead late In the second half and defeated host State men Western Maryland (3-14. 1-7). 83-79. In.a Middle Atlantlc Conferencegame. Western. Maryland had a 75-69 lead with 3:24 left, but Lebanon, Valley ran off 12 of the next 14 points ,... ... • . WUT1!JINMARYLAND (7I)-s..... 0.41-21. SMrIOCM"'&--el""V.neton2-30-0""Kru.inIkIl_5 0-02.AudOIQII~1-111.Lvonl4:2·2""Ea_2-3 :i!:"'~~~t130-02S.~5-73--613.TOHalftl_LIOanonValIey39,WM38,TII_ pOInI~~V"""5-1IB1r1u!>11"-1ii"S~ 1·1.M-enO-I).W",*,"M~1!-1.(WlIII<fnIOn 8-lI,AucIoIpII2-3.Krotinaki0-2._0-1).FOUIId aut:L.-....nV.llly-AicIIItdaon.W .. "'"'M~ V_.R_LIbIIIOIIValIey2-4I8eRtz.RiImt}. WeIWn M""_ 19 1_ 5'.""'" lib.nonV.11II111 (Birlup61._IImM-.yI.nd 1.(RudOlIlll"'!. T_ '-* l.eoanon Valley 18, Wntem MIryj.~28.A:175. I BAL TlMOt{E SUN Jan. 31, 1990 HANOVER January EVENING SUN 31, 1Y90 • lVIC)llJif,\.Vomen:halt Loyola ...;.- •.•.••.. ';'-' -:: .• '~ ,! ~:' WMCtmen, women· . ., split ,..with rivals ~, . _ - , - .... . .,,,' •. ~ .. -- - • AREA COllEGIATE BASKETBALL ROUN MEN P - .- ..- KiM RhocIC scored rl Points 'to pace' a trio' of double-figure scorers, on Tuesday as Mount St. MIlFY's.College'swomen outscored visiting, Loyola, Md., 80-58 in a non-league· basketball gameTuesday at Emmitsb~g"Md. Diana Matula, who had 18points; broke a' 21-21. tie with a" running jum~r'with 7:46 remaining in-the first half and the winners scored seven' of: the' first hal!,'s fmal nine,points for a 36-28 halftime lead. Beth. McNulty added. 13 pointsfo'r' the Mount (11-4). Lorrie ~=Sk~:nd22Mfai~~~~~ shared-the same total for Loyola, Delone Catholic' High 'School graduate Kristin Schneider, a freshman at Loyola, did not play. • -, WMC 75",Gallaudet4' At Washington .. D.C .... four Western Maryland.starters-scored at-least 14 points each as.the Green Terrors won their fourth straight ~~':o~e~~~:~~t~~udet' in a Senior center Claire Thevenoux to)~:d~~~bo~~t3i~~~~ L. Valley 83. WMC 79 At Westminster, Scott Barlup'a . 26 points, including seven in the last 1:40, pushed Lebanon Valley past Western Maryland ID a MAC Southwest game. Barlup tied the score at 77 with a 3·point goal with 1:39 left. Dave Bentz put Lebanon Valley ahead to stay with a 15-f~otjumper with 35 s~~~ r~:~i~r!ed 19 oints and Bentz had 18 for the Frying Dutchmen, 10-7 overall and 4-4 in the section. The loss overshadowed a record-tying effort by Western Maryland guard Eric Watkinson. The ]UDlOrmade SIX z-pomters in eight attempts to tie the school ~hg~~ta~eI9~~Wathl~~~ e~J~d the game with a career-high 26 points on 10-0f-13shooting, Mike Sherlock had 14noinrs. Rob . DIANA MATULA Scores go-ahead points HoweU posted 13 and Marc Rudolph had 11 for the Green Terrors, 3-14overall and 1-7in the section. Western Maryland also tied the school single-game ,record for a-petnt Iielo goals WItheight. •