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UW Crew History - GoHuskies.com

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GENERAL INFO.EXPERIENCE CREW HISTORY RACE HISTORY 2006 REVIEWVARSITY PROFILES ROSTERS COACHES60AAarr, Arthur 1908Accorn, Gerald 1929-30*Adam, Gordon 1936-37-38Adler, Brock 1980*Admundsen, Dave 1963Alderson, Ted 1938-39Alan, Robert 1986-87-88Allan, Greg 1976Allen, Grant 1962Allison, Ryan 1993-94-95Allsopp, Chris 1974-75-76*Alm, Charles 1957-58Altman, Andy 2000-01-02Andersen, Lars 1967-68Anderson, Ed 1929Anderson, John 1946-47Anderson, Robert 1983*Anderson, Matthew 1995-96-97Andonian, Paul 1954-55-56Andrews, Adrian 2004-05-06Andrews, Cam 1991-92*Argersinger, Ed 1932-34Argersinger, Ed 1959Arneson, Art 1970Attisha, Raymond 1985-86-87Audett, John 1948-49-50BBacher, Hans 1954Bacon, Tim 1999-2001Bailey, Kristin 1992-93Baird, Roger 1949-50-51Baker, John 1964Ball, James 1987Baranski, John 1971Bargfrede, James 1996Barker, Andy 1974*Barker, Floyd 1956Barker, Paul 1978-79-80Barnewt, Bret 1976-77Bas<strong>com</strong>, Thomas 1977-78-79*Bates, Walter 1935-36Baugh, David 1983-84-85Baze, Randy 1980Beall, Bruce 1971-72-73Beck, Aaron 1997-98-99Beck, Bruos 1908-10Beckstead, Jim 1928Behrbaum, Scott 1992-93-94Beitlers, Girts 1993-94-95Benthin, Bemy 1947Berghuis, Bob 1976-77Berkey, Degraff 1973-75Berling, Seth 2003-04Berque, Leroy 1919-20Bickford, Paul 1983-84Biernacki, Glenn 1985Billings, Roger 1985Birkeland, Irar 1952-53Bishop, Grant 1946-47Bisset, John 1957-58Black, Willis 1983Blanda, Roberto 1993-94-95Blethen, Frank 1926-27Boender, Dean 1962Boeve, Sally 1993Bogards, Almon 1917-20Bolles,Tom 1926Bolstad, Carl 1995-96-97Bonhey, Parker 1913Bothel, William 1976Bowen, Gilbert 1929-30-31Bower, Charles 1956*Bowser, Gren 1967-68-69Bowser, Todd 1999*Bracken, John 1940-41-42Brand, Erik, 1996-97*Brandenthaler, T. 1917-19-20Brayshaw, Chuck 1963Breitenberg, Don 1949Briggs, Brall 1916-17Brinsfield, Jim 1973-74-75<strong>UW</strong> CREW HISTORYBrislin, Tim 2000*Brokaw, Clyde 1914-15-16*Bronson, Mike 1971-72-73Brooks, Winslow 1936Brossard, Regan 1983Brown, Chuck 1947-48Brown, Harold 1949Brown, Harry 1964-66Bruton, Jason 1994-95Buckland, Brodie 2004Burch, Alan 1985Burkhart, Tom 1970Burns, Jon 2000-01-02Burns, Sam 2002-03-04*Buse, Jon 1971-72-73Buse, Mike, 1970Buvick, Norm 1947-48-49-50Buwaldo, Paul 1910Byrd, Bill 1970-71-72Byrd, Joe 1984-85-86C*Calder, David 1998-99-2000-01Caldwell, Hugh 1938Callaghan, Jim 1951*Callahan, Michael 1994-96*Callow, Russell 1914-15Cameron, Bill 1951-53Camfield, Roland 1952-53Campbell, A.C. 1913Campbell, Archie 1913Campbell, Art 1912Campbell, Greg 1989-90Campbell, Charles 1964Campbell, John 1962-63Campbell, Talbot 1919Campodonico, Gabriel 1993-94-95Canfield, Don 1939Carey, John 1937-38Carrol, Levi 1911Carter, Scott 1979-80Carter, Victor 1934Cathey, Dick 1955Catlin, Claude 1909-11-14*Chait, Mike 1998-99-2000Chan, Elvis 1991Charters, James 1989Chiang, Norm 1970Chica, George 1938Christenson, Jim 1959Christianson, John 1981Chudzik, Mike 1992-93Clancy, Brad 1983-84*Clapp, Charles 1979-80-81Clark, John 2000Clark, Newman 1920Clarke, Dennis 1967Clarke, Whit 1952Clay, Christopher 2000-01Clingan, Wes 1972-73Clipson, Vance, II 1987Clothier, Dick 1964-65Coder, Ellis 1939*Cohen, Eric 1980-81-82Colbert, Fred 1939-40Colbertson, Terry 1974Cole, Mike 1972-73-74Cole, Rick 1967-68-69Collins, Melissa 1996Condon, Hal 1924-25-26Condon, Hal, Jr. 1955-56Connolly, Mike 1974Coon, Carl 1975-76Copstead, Rick 1970-71-72Corovic, Aljosa 2005-06Cotter, John 1983-84Covey, Dave 1965-66-67Coy, Donald 1936Crain, David 1994Crim, Orin 1903-04Cummins, Bob 1997-98Cushman, Ed 1922Cushman, Tom 1914-15DDahl, Jim 1982-83-84Damm, Tommy 1977Dankbaar, Toby 2006Davidson, Frank 1979-80-81*Davis, Warren 1928-29-30Day, Charles 1935-36-37Day, Herb 1932-33*Deakin, Matt 2000-01-02Decker, Jay 1955Dehn, Bill 1943Dembicki, Pete 2000-01-02Dempsey, Andrew 1995-96-97Derrick, Andy 2002-03-04Dickhaus, David 1976-77-78Dingwall, Ewen 1938Dixon, Dave 1947Dodd, Hugh 1989-90*Dodd, Lou 1962-64Donaldson, Scott 1976-77Dohrn, Gary 1980-81-82Dolan, Kevin 1998-99Dowell, George 1997*Doyle, Dan 1987Doyle, Mike (Manager) 1993Doyle, Phillip 1985-86-87Dressler, Jack 1943Dunbar, Walt 1907-11-14Dunn, Charles 1923Duppenthaler, Dallas 1939-40Duppenthaler, Mike 1939-40Dutton, H.J. 1923-24-25Dysart, Don 1965-66-67EEastabrooks, Sarn 1981-82-83Ebright, Ky 1916-17Edmundson, Clarence 1932Edwards, Jim 1969-70Efird, Terril 1965-66Eldridge, Les 1957Eng, Rich 1971Enger, Kyle 1992Erdly, Bill 1978Erickson, Al 1940Erickson, Alan 1980-81-82Erickson, Dick 1956-57-58Erickson, Gus 1937-38Ervin, Jack 1943Estevenin, Perry 2000Evans, Gary 1979-80-81FFarrell, Gene 1987Farrer, Matt 2000-01-02Felix, Marius 1979-80-82Feltin, Michael 1984-85-86*Filippone, Michael 1988-89-90Fish, John 1957-58*Fisk, Terry 1977-78-79Fix, Charles 1989Fletcher, Ben 2003-04Fletcher, Jack 1952Fletcher, Robert 1948Flint, Bill 1960*Flint, Ned 1993-94-95Florer, Mark 1978-80Fomo, Vic 1940-41-42Fonkalsrud, Eric 1953*Forney, Alan 1980-81-82Fountain, Michael 1977-78Fowler, Doyle 1941-42Fox, Fred 1974-75-76France, Rowland 1921-24Frankland, Jim 1913-14Franklin, Jesse 1975-76-77French, Doug 1955Frisch, Stephen 1987-88-89*Frost, Ted 1952-53-54Full, Steve 2006Fulton, Dave 1959-61Funk, Eric 1998-99-00All-Time Letterwinners (Men)GGagliardi, Dominic 1993-94Galloway, Evan 2003-04-05Gallup, John 1938Gamble, Gil 1974-75Garhart, Ted 1940-41-42Garrett, Frank 1985Gault, Scott 2003-04-05Gavin, Jim 1962-63-64Gellermann, Lou 1956-58Genther, Chet 1975Gibson, Andrew 1985Gibson, Ed 1946Gibson, Rob 2006Gillespie, Steve 1994-95-96Gilmour, Ross 1980Ginger, John 1929-31Giovanelli, Gordon 1948-49Giovanelli, Tom 1973-74Gleason, Pat 1983-84*Glerup, Maruis 1926-28Gloster, Dick 1905, 1907Gobler, Arthur 1932Godfrey, Bill 1909-10Goodman, Ron 1985Gordon, Wayne 1939-40Graham, Ty 1982-83-84*Grant, Don 1922-23-24Grant, Steve 1962Graybeal, Herb 1938Green, Bob 1935Green, Norm 1973Greif, David 1994-96Griffin, Tren 1949-50-51Gruendell, Gordon 1989-90Grunboch, Bob 1939*Guiliani, Greg 1978-79-80HHaak, Dale, 1978Hall, Kevin 1993Hammer, Paul 1913-15Hammond, Whit 1998-99-2000Hansen, Kevin 1982Hansen, Krishan 1998Hanson, Alden 1964Hanson, Mel 1973Harper, Guy 1952-53-54Harr, Adolph 1915-16Harrah, Bill 1947Harrington, Silas 1995-96-97Harris, Bob 1947*Harris, Richard 1929-30-31Harrison, Ian 2004Hart, Art 1954Hart, Jim 1925-26-27Hart, Jim 1972Hartman, Charles 1935-36-37Hatch, Merton 1936Haunreiter, Larry 1964Hawel, Leo 1937-38Hawkins, Chris 2000-01-02Hearing, Ed 1948-49Hedges, Richard 1983-84-85Hedvall, Ed 1992Helgerson, Warren 1950Henderson, Steven 1988Henry, Phil 1992-93-94Henry, Tom 1972-73-74Herness, David 1989-90-91Hertzfeld, Stephen 2005*Hess, Michael 1975-77-78Hiatt, Lewis 1978Hoekstra, Todd 1987-88-89Hoffman, Greg 1981-82Holdren, Dale 1983Holm, Brian 1992Holmstrom, Ross 1957-58Holtz, Benjamin 1987-88*Holtz, Chuck 1961-62-64Horlsley, Jim 1946*Horn, Blair 1981-82-83Horrocks, Phil 1950Hovland, Andy 1956-57-58Howay, Jim 1952-53-54Hubbard, Bill 1978-79-80Hudson, Nick 2004Huey, Jesse 1999-2000-01Hughes, Bobbie 1999Hume, Donald 1936-37-38Hunt, George 1935-36-37*Hurn, Cliff 1970-71-72Hurn, Hans 1999-2000-01Hutton, George 1913IIngham, Ned 1955-56Ingram, Robert 1921-22Ito, James 1983-84-85Ives, Ed 1981-83JJackman, Bill 1992Jackman, Ron 1975-76-77*Jackson, Charles 1939-40-41Jackson, Dylan 1992*James, Daniel 1993-94Janjic, Nebojsa 1980-82Janjic, Uglesa 1979Jarvis, Paul 1907Jensen, Eric 1991John, Skip 1952-53Johnsen, Jerry 1962-63-64Johnson, Bob 1939Johnson, Joe 1986-87Johnson, Larry 1970Johnson, Michael 1984-85*Johnson, Rod 1947-48-49-50Johnson, Stu 1974-75-76Julien, Paul 1972-73Jones, Doug 1976-77Jordan, Dick 1950Jorgensen, Jeff 2001-02-03KKauffman, Bert 1927Keely, Gerald 1939-40Keely, Skip 1977Kehoe, David 1978-79Kenfield, John 2003Kerns, Homer 1924-26Ketcham, Stu 1975Kieburtz, Phil 1956-57-58Kimball, Jared 1989Kimbrough, Ray 1992King, Greg 2004-05Kinley, Dave 1960-61*Kirby, Homer 1907-08Kitson, John 1984-85Knapp, Christopher 1985Knoll, Chuck 1971Koehler, Trish 1990Koenig, Jurgen 2002Kopicky, Matt 2003-04-05Kraus, Dustin 2005Krause, Greg 1998-99*Kriefall, Adam 1988-89*Kroeger, David 1965-66-67Kronfield, Dave 1919-20Kueber, John 1991-92-93Kuhns, Rich 1978*Kumm, Ward 1914-16-17Kunnen, Steve 1993-94-95*Kusurin, Ante 2004-06LLacy, Dick 1953Lamb, Lynn 1954-55-56Landon, Don 1947-48-49Landwehr, Todd 1982-83Lange, Cooper 2005Langlais, Mary Katherine 2005Lantz, Clint 1903-04Lanzone, Guiseppe 2003-04-05Larson, Kyle 2003-04-05Lauber, David 1981Lawrence, Guy 1981-82Leader, Ed 1913-16Leader, Elmer 1913*Leanderson, Fil 1952-53Lee, Bob 1947-48Lee, Clint 1913Lee, Howard 1983Lee, Tom 1983Legg, Robert 1975Leland, Bill 1961Lethin, Dan 1990Lethin, Kris 1996Lethin, Richard 1988-89Lewis, Dan 1975Lewis, Pete 1932Lewis, Tim 2000-01Liden, Neal 1962Lind, John 1959Lisemayer, Kurt 1985Litchfield, Wally 1929-30*Logg, Chuck 1920-21Loken, Elliott 1943Long, Ron 1991Lorenz, Robert 1993Lorton, John 2001-02-03Love, Harvey 1933-34*Lovejoy, Bart 1907-08-09Lovsted, Carl 1950-51=52Lovsted, Jim 1983Lowe, Wilbur 1949-50Luft, Herman 1919-21*Luft, Max 1923-24-25Lumpkin, Anna 1992Lumpkin, Toby 1989-91Lund, George 1935-36-37Lund, Philo 1948Lund, Sydney 1935-36Lusher, Doug 1956M*MacDonald, Ellis 1927-28-29MacDonald, Joseph 1985MacDonald, Roger 1958MacDonald, Ron 1983-84Magee, David 1978-79Magnuson, Charles 1920-21Magnuson, John 1960Malone, Walt 1925Mann, Fred 1968-69Marks, Ryan 2001-02-03Marolick, Frank 1934Martin, Bob 1947-48Martin, Brian 1977-78Mason, Lloyd 1922Matthews, Jim 1925-26Maxwell, Jim 1972-73May, Charles, 1942McCann, Thomas 1985-88McCarthy, C. 1948-49-50McCarthy, Joe 1932McConacle, Bill 1964McConihe, Paul 1915-16-17McCormick, Gannon 1964McCrea, Tad 2006McDougall, Jim 1975-76McElmow, Fred 1903-04McFarland, Earl 1964-65- 66McFarlane, Bob 1946McGovern, Brian 1985-86McGuinness, Charles 1927McIntyre, Joe 1951-53McKenzie, Dan 1964-65McKeown, Mick 1956*McMillin, James 1935-36-37McNeill, Manford 1947McRory, Ed 1959Mead, Mark 1984-85Mezincescu, Edward 1996Menefee, John 1980Michaelson, Victor 1938-39-40Mickelson, Bill 1971-72-73Millar, Mitch 1976-772007 WASHINGTON CREW MEDIA GUIDE


All-Time Letterwinners (Men)Millar, Norm 1974-75Miller, Brian 1968-69-70Miller, Erik 1995-96Miller, Ernie 1943Miller, Lee 1982-83Miller, Mark 1977-78-79Miller, Owen 1950Miller, Ryan 2001Miller, William 1976-77Mills, John 1961Mills, Tom 1963-64Minas, Matt 1990-91-92-93*Minett, Charles 2001-02-03Mitchell, Fred 1948*Mjorud, Herb 1931-32-33Moch, Bob 1935-36Moch, Bob 1967-68*Moen, Dick 1964-65Mohr, George 1909Molitor, Michael 1989Monte, Daniel 1978-79Moore, Bud 1953-54Moore, Chris 1988-89Moore, Ed 1934Moran, Dennis 1985-86Mor<strong>com</strong>, Herb 1925Morgan, Allen 1947-48-49-50Morgan, Joe 1912Morgan, Mike 1975Morris, Don 1929-30-31Morris, Roger 1935-36-37Morry, George 1935Mortensen, Art 1943Moses, Bruce 1985-86-87*Mulligan, Sean 1997-98-99*Munn, Scott 1990-91-93*Murphy, George 1921-22Murphy, Virgil 1922*Murray, Bob 1937-38-39NNaden, Charles 1977Naden, George 1973-74-75Nagler, Russ 1919-20-21Neal, David 1984-85-86Nederlee, Louis 1920-21*Neil, Doug 1968Neill, Bill 1940-41Nesbit, Dave 1985-86Ness, Ken 1964Newlin, Brett 2003-04-05Newton, Chuck 1916-17Nicol, Gorham 1959-60-61Nikolic, Dusan 2003-04-05Noble, Charles 1931-32Nommensen, Gene 1955Nord, Swan 1920Nordstrom, John 1957-58*Norelius, Jon 1984-85-86Norelius, Mark 1972-73-74Northfield, Walt 1919Norton, John 1984Nukker, Greg 1970-71OOates, Kenneth 1984-85O’Brien, Chris 2002-03-04O’Brien, F.L. 1907-08-09O’Connel, Pat 1983Odell, Dick 1929-30Oistad, George 1928Olason, Mark 1974-75-76Olmstead, Joel 1927-28O’Neal, Arthur 1908-09Olsen, Scott 1984Olson, Rich 1970Ormond, Pat 1997-99Orr, Paul 1928-29Orvald, Tucker 1987Osterman, Garth 1992PPanasik, Sasha 1992-93-94Parker, Ross 1975-76-77Parker, Tony 1978Parkins, Wright 1922-23*Parrott, Gordon 1931-32-33Parsons, Rich 1996Paterson, Bruce 1990-92Patterson, Brendan 2000-01-02Payne, Bob 1943-46Pearce, Bill 1974Pederson, Mike 1978-79Pengelly, Mark 1995-96-97Perrin, Micah 2006Peters, Bradley 1986-87-88Petersen, Kiel 2005-06Peterson, Mark 1979-80Pettit, Jacob 2004-05Petrovic, Marko 2002-03-04Phillips, Acton 1929-30-31Phillips, Colin 2004-05-06*Phillips, Dwight 1969-70-71Phillips, Gene 1958Pickles, Mike 1986-87-88Pierce, Richard 1985Pitlick, Bill 1965-66Pocock, Stan 1947Popp, Derek 1989-91Powell, Glenn 1984Pugel, Chris 1983-84Pugel, Jim 1979-80*Pullen, Dan 1903-04-05*Pullen, Royal 1910-11-12*Purnell, Dave 1954-55-56Putman, Mark 1978-79Putnam, Roy 1949Putyrae, Glenn 1993QQuast, Tom 1925-27Querubin, DaveQuinney, Paul 1976-77-78RRaaum, Scott 1973Rademacher 1993Raney, Fred 1959-60-61Raney, Walter 1933-34-35Rantz, Joe 1935-36-37Rawson, James 1996-97Reade, Joshua 1997-98*Reese, Dave 1972-73-74Reese, Karl 1930*Reisinger, Brett 1996-97-98Rhein, Dirck 1984-85Richardson, Otis 1919Richardson, Robert 1989Riely, Keith 1952-53-54Roberts, John 1974Robinson, Rick 1977Roderick, Dave 1942Roegner, Kevin 1985*Roesch, Dwight 1973-74-75Rogers, Bob 1955Rogge, Dan (Edgar) 1996Rogulja, Martin 2003-04-05Rose, Clyde 1914Rosenkranz, John 1937-38Rosequist, Craig 1974Rossi, Al 1952-53Roys, Tom 1985*Rudolph, Chad 1969-70Ruggers, Will 1912Runstad, Jon 1962-63-64*Ruthford, Chas 1970-71-72SSabo, Steve 1976Sadler, George 1907Salaks, Gints 2003Sanford, Harrison 1924-25-26Sawyer, Ian 2002-03-04Sawyer, Mark 1976-77-78Sayre, John 1958Scales, Don 1976-77-78Schacht, Bud 1935-36Schafer, Jamie 1985-86-87Schenck, Earl 1937-38Schmaltz, Chris 1995*Schmidt, Henry 1929-31Schmidt, Henry 1959-60-61Schmidt, Scott 2004-05-06Schneider, Marc 1993Schoch, Delos 1935-36-37Schoch, Fred 1971-72-73Schock, Brad 1981Schoel, Loren 1930-32Schostak, Matthew 1995-96-97Schluter, Chuck 1967Schneider, Marc 1994-95Schocken, Kara 1994-95Schoenberg, Kris 1975-77-78Schoettler, Bob 1928Schroeder, Carl 1942Schumacher, Hal 1914Schwabland, George 1913Schwartz, Robert 1982Scott, Jason 1993Scott, Myron 1927Seelye, Les 1992Seifred, Jeff 1992-93Semritc, Ryan 2003Sereiva Kestas 1992-93-94,96Sewell, George 1983-84Sexton, Larry 1913Shapiro, Dan 1999Shaw, Frank 1927*Shaw, Sam 1921-22-23Shepherd, Robert 1987-88-89Shinbo, James 1978-79Shinbo, Roberta 1989Shindler, Dick 1963-64Shotwell, Lyman 1910Silver, Mitchell 1978Simdars, Paul 1940-41Simmons, Preston 1978Sjaastad, Erik 1994-95Skibeness, Al 1922Slemmons, Wilbert 1917Smith, Bob 1955Smith, Craig 1970Smith, Curt 1955Smith, David 1994Smith, Newton 1911Smith, Steve 1974-75-76Smith, Tyler 2005Snider, Robert 1933-34-35*Snody, James 1983-84Snyder, Lani 1994-95Soli, Wally 1943Sommersett, John 1911*Sonju, Norm 1925-26-27*Soules, Paul 1939-40Spuhn, Fred 1922-23-24Starace, Brent 1996-97Steinman, Denny 1974Stevens, Thomas 1985-86Stewart, Patrick 2002Still, Ross 1985Stillings, John 1977-78*Stocker, Al 1953-54-55Stoll, Fred 1955-56Stromberg, Gage, III 1986-87-88Stuart, Evan 1997-99Sundquist, Arthur 1990Suni, Pete 1971-72-73*Svendsen, Bob 1958-59Sykes, Colin 1990, 1992T*Taylor, Ed 1912-13Taylor, Jeffrey 1988-89Taylor, John 2003Taylor, Tom 1941-42Teather, Mike 1984-85Tennesen, David 1973Thomas, Bob 1955Thomas, Brad 1968-69-70Thomas, Orwin 1940*Thompson, Dave 1946-47Thompson, Dick 1971Thompson, Don 1938-40Thompson, Linc 1983-84Thompson, Rex 1970-71Thomsen, Ev 1908-09Thomsen, Steve 1983-84Thomson, Steve 1973-74-75*Thorstensen, Bob 1955-56*Tiedje, Henry 1910-11Tilten, Guy 1905Tiomarsh, Pat 1922-23Todd, Steve 1997-98-99Towner, Joe 1980Tuller, Mark 1978Tupper, Jim 1946-47Turay, Norm 1937-38<strong>UW</strong> CREW HISTORYTyler, Andrew 1995-96-97Tyler, Craig 2005-06Tzeng, Richard 1996U*Ulbrickson, Al Sr. 1924-25-26*Ulbrickson, Al Jr. 1950-51-52Ulbrickson, Ed 1932Umlauf, Mark 1975-77Umlauf, Robert 1977-78Underwood, Julian 1994Urback, Steve 1975-76*Urness, Mike 1989-90-91VValentine, Jack 1928Valentine, Stan 1928-29Vanbronkhorst, T. 1972-73-74*Van Kurhan, Carl 1903-04Van Pelt, Charles 1981-83Van Schalkwyk, Mark 1985Van Winkle, Adam 2005-06Vekved, Tim 1987-89Venema, Ben 1992Vernon, Trevor 1992Viereck, Mike 1968-69-70Vigil, Peter 1986-87-88Vincent, Bob 1940Voris, Don 1953-54-55-56*Vynne, John 1964WWager, Brian 1960-61Wagner, Dana 1975Wahlstrom, Dick 1952-53Wahnsiedler, Alex 2000Wailes, Ron 1927-28Wailes, Ron, Jr. 1955-56Waiss, George 1950Walker, Bill 1978Walker, Dee 1970Walker, John 1987-89Wallace, Howie 1966-67-68Wallace, Walt 1941-42Waller, Hal 1911-13-15Walling, Dow 1923-24-25Walske, Max 1913-14-16*Walters, Ken 1949-50-51Wand, Walter 1910-11Ward, Art 1915Washburn, Wilbur 1933-34Waters, Wayne 1955-56Watne, Eric 1979-80-81Weight, Mike 1975*Wells, Chris 1974-75-76Welsh, Tim 1979-80Wengard, Melissa 2001-02-03Wescott, Robert 1938Westlund, Warren 1947-48-49-50Wetter, Doug 1955-56*White, Bob 1933-34-35*White, Dave 1969-70-71White, Dave 1992-93-94White, John 1936-37-38Whitney, Karey 1917Wiberg, Rich 1960-61Wilcox, John 1959-60-61Wilkey, Doug 1966-68Will, Bob 1948-49Will, Clark 1912-15Will, Rolfe 1978Williamson, Don 1931-32Willis, Hart 1907-08-09*Willite, Harold 1943Willits, Hal 1943Wilson, Gregg 1932Wingard, Phil 1986-87-88Winston, Tim 1978Witter, Bob 1952-53Wohlmacher, Bill 1927-28*Wolfkill, Ron 1960-61*Works, Bill 1946-47-48Wright, Larry 1912Wright Newell 1912Wunsch, John 1979Wuthenow, Art 1925-26Wyckoff, Hal 1909-10YYantis, Dick 1940Yasutake, Keith 1978-80York, John 1935, 1937Young, Bob 1947-48-49-50*Yount, Paul 1990-91-92ZZevenbergen, Dave 1982-83-84Zevenbergen, John 1979-80-81*Zimmerman, Hank 1913-14-15* — captainThe 1936 Washington crew, representing the United States, won the Olympic gold medal at the Berlin Games. Standing (L-R):stroke Don Hume, No.7 Joe Rantz, No. 6 George Hunt, No. 5 Jim McMillan, No. 4 John White, No. 3 Gordon Adam, No. 2Charles Day, bow Roger Morris. Kneeling: coxswain Bob Moch.61GENERAL INFO. COACHES ROSTERS VARSITY PROFILES 2006 REVIEW RACE HISTORY CREW HISTORY EXPERIENCE2007 WASHINGTON CREW MEDIA GUIDE


GENERAL INFO.EXPERIENCE CREW HISTORY RACE HISTORY 2006 REVIEWVARSITY PROFILES ROSTERS COACHES62<strong>UW</strong> CREW HISTORYAAchterman, Peg 1981-82*Alba, Katherine 1991-92-93Anderson, Annrie 2005Anderson, Eva 2004-06Anderson, Katie 2005Anderson, Noelle 1998-99-2000-01Arbeit, Amy 2001Arnold, Merideth 1992-93-94Athmann, Lynn 1980-81Armstrong, Alisa 1985Armstrong, Kim 2006Armstrong, Lynn 1979-80BBailey, Betsy 1987-88Baker, Denise 1984-85-86Baker, Julie 1982-83Baptist, Ruth 1986Barber, Maili 2000-01-02Barnes, Hope 1977Bas<strong>com</strong>, Ellen 1976-77Batcheller, Gretchen 1997Bates, Colleen (Manager) 1993Bates, Jennifer 1990Beal, Sue 1977Becht, Erin 1999-2000-01-02Beluche, Lisa 1986-87-88Benson-Goldberg, Sofia 2006Biles, Cindy 1986-87*Bingham, Jennie 1997Black, Lisa 1977Bolland, Kristen 1976Bolz, Laura 1984-85Boone, Karen 1986-88Borges, Nicole 1998-99-2000-01Bowers, Amy 1985Bowman, Corianne 2006Brakke, Laura Leigh 1976-77Branesky, Calista 1999Bray, Paula 1988Brillon, Alicia 1987-88-89Broadie, Jody 1994-96Broome, Susan 1980-81-82Bucko, Jeanne 1984Bulger, Jeanne 1977-78-79-80Bulger, Kathy 1976-77-78C*Campbell, Chris 1984-85-86Campbell, Tiffany 1989Carbonotto, Angella 1977Carlson, Karin 1989Cate, Margie 1982Cerny, Michelle 1985-86Chadwick, Becca 1994Chan, Michelle 1989-91Christie, Annie 1997-98Clare, Mary Anne 1997Clark, Jane Louise 1976-77-78Clark, Jane 1979Cockrell, Kay 1977-78Colin, Kathy 1994Collins, Missy 1998-99Connole, Marah 2004-05-06Cook, Elizabeth 1989Cox, Linda 1976-77-78Crabtree, Tara 1999Craig, Penny 1971Crandall, Emily 2003Crescenzi, Lynda 1990-91-92Crowell, Liz 1986-87Crymes, Kristin 1997-98Cullen, Helen 1987-88Curry, Erin 2002-03DDariusova, Hana 1992-93-94-95Dauphiny, Lori 1984Davis, Karen (Manager) 1985DePalma, Allison 2004-05-06Dermendjieva, Ivayla 2006Dezwager, Karol 1986Dicke, Karen 1990-91Dion, Laurie 1979-80*Dorf, Gail 1986-87-88Dotson, Christine 1985-86-87Doyle, Stephanie 1987-88-89Dreyer Sheryl (Manager) 1976Drumheller, Lisa 1978Dubbins, Janelle 2004-05Dumond, Valerie 1989Duncan, Jill 1980-81Dunnet, Katy 1996-97-98-99Dunnet, Rachel 1997-98-99EEdward-Aron, Gemma 2003-04-05Ellzey, Sharon 1981-82Elmberg, Kari 1986English, Rachel 1987Esterly, Jill 1980-81Estevenin, Lauren 2000-01-02-03Etsell, Karen 2003FFairchild, Rebecca 1976-77-78-79Farquharson, Kara 2004-05Finholm, Gretchen, 1986Finnigan, Michelle 1987Fisher, Alice 1984Flint, Andrea 1979-80Fong, Ramona 1997Franklin, Charlene 2006Freeland, Denby 1992-93*Freeman, Margaret 1991Fullerton, Candace 1983Fulton, Janise 1982-83GGardner, Julie 1985-86-87Gardner, Katie 2005Garrie, Alaina 2005Gawley, Cherie 1984-85*Geary, Maura 1993-94*Geyser, Rika 1998-99-2000-01Gillespie, Megan 1992-93Gilliland, Anne Marie 1986-87Glick, Tristine 1995-96-97Godwin, Karla 1978-79-80-81Good, Sarah 2001Graham, Rachel 1989Graves, Gayle 1978-79Gray, Tasya 1997-98Green, Kari 1996-97-98Grevstad, Fritzi 1987-88-89Grigsby, Asiha 2005-06Guerrero, Melissa 1999Guyot, Denise 1984-85H*Haines, Stephanie 1987-88-89Hamano, Leona 1992Hamlin, Kathy 1978-79-81Hangan, Sanda 2002-03-04-05*Hanson, Madeline 1980-81-82Harder, Anna 1986Harm, Jessica 2001-02-03Hartman, Mary 1979-80Hearing, Tracy 1981Helde, Carolyn 1989Helenius, Tina 1988-89Helsell, Alexa 2000-01Henderson, Alice 1985-86-87Hendrie, Liese 1983-84-85Henry, Margaret 2003Herner, Jennifer 1991Hessburg, Anne 2000-01-02-03Holzrichter, Kim 1991Hook, Heidi 1987Horn, Lisa 1981-82Horton, Kelly 1996-97-98Horton, Lindsey 1998-99-00Hou, Anne Marie 1987Howard, Joslyn 1994-95Hubbard, Sarah 2004-06Hunt, Mary 1987Hunter, Adrienne 2000-01-02-03Hurn, Heidi 2000-01-02-03IIrvine, Linda 1986-87Iverson, Mary 1989The 1969 women’s crew team with Coach Bernie Delke - a group of Pre-Title IXathletes who will be recognized in the spring of 2007 by the <strong>UW</strong>All-Time Letterwinners (Women)JJackson, Laura 1978-79Jacobson, Cara 1992Janzik, Kim 1992Jay, Julianne 1992Jensen, Amanda 2003-04-05Johannes, Signe 2003-04Jones, Ashley 2006Jones, Julianna 1979Jones, Stacey 1989-90Jozaitis, Anne 1986KKalina, Lynn 1984-85-86Kalinoski, Mieka 2003*Kalmoe, Megan 2004-05-06Kasinger, Mary 1985Kast, Cheryl 1976-77Kauth, Jennifer 1986Keesee, Tracey 1988Kennedy, Kim 2006Kielska, Basia 1999King, Maureen 1983Klinefelter, Kristina 1985Kneip, Cynthia 1985-86-87Koehler, Trish 1990Kohan, Michael 2003-04-05Koorji, Alysha 2006Kosovich, Wendy 1994Krikava, Lisa 2003Kronlof, Monica 1981-82Krumm, Zoe 1993LLake, Carol 1977-78Langlois, Taryn 2006Lawson, Samantha 1991Lee, Erin 2005Leppink, Nancy 1981Lueck, Dianne 1990-91-92Lueck, Susie 1990-91-92Liu, Pauline 1986-87*Lusk, Linda 1985-86-87Lydon, Patricia 1985-86-87MMach, Megan 2003-04Magnuson, Karen 2006Magnuson, Marilyn 1979-80Maloney, Katie 1994-95-96Manipon, Sue Ann 1987-88Marcotte, Nichole 1992-93Martin, Shauna 1986Matson, Courtney 2003Mayer, Debora 1979Mayer, Elizabeth 1978-79McBride, Julie 1986-87-88McDonald, Molly 1979McDougall, Jane 1980-81-82*McDougall, Laura 1976-77McElvaine, Eleanor 1983-84-85(Manager, 1986)McLauchlan, Alina 1998McNally, Stephanie 1993McNamara, Romany 1999-2000-01McPherson, Janet 1976-77Mendoza, Bernadette 1985-86Merriman, Shelley 1987Michalson, Laraine 1976Mickelson, Anna 1999-2000-01-02Misterek, Cindy 1987Mitchell, Barbara 1976Miller, April 2002Miller, Lisa 1978-80Miller, Martha 1981*Mohling, Karen 1981-82-83Monroe, Ramona 1986Moore, Debbie 1981-82Moore, Kathleen 1981-82Morrow, Olivia 2004-05-06Moscrip, Amy 1992Moss, Siri 1976Munn, Stacy 1986Munson, Andrea 1985NNelson, Mandy 2002*Nessler, Denni 1996-97-98*Nevin, Sara 1983-84-85Nicoloff, Jennifer 1994Nilles, Paige 1984Norelius, Kristi 1981-82Nygren-Birkholz, Theresa1997-98-99-2000Nykreim, Kara 1999-2000-01-02OOates, Kim 1999-2000Oates, Shannon 2000-01-02*O’Brien, Wendy 1990-91-92*O’Connell, Erin 1994-96Ockenden, Trudy 1986-87-88Odegaard, Kristin 1987O’Neill Kerry 1986-87O’Steen, Shyril 1980-81*Osterhaug, Karin 1991-92-93PPark, Ellen 1993-94-95Patterson, Trista, 1993-94Patton, Carolyn 1976Pemberton, Sandra 1985Petersen, Erin 1991-92-93Peyer, Katie 2004-05Pfunder, Paige 1998-99Pheasant, Joann (Manager) 1976Pierce, Marina 1985-86Piper, Amy 1994-95Plitt, Courtney 2004-05-06Popovice, Anna Maria 1987Pottmeyer, Ellen 1981-82-83Pottmeyer, Susan 1984-85Powers, Jane 1984-85Pugel, Ann 1993Purves, Alida 1997RRamirez, Cindy 1995Ramos, Katherine 2003-04-05Rattan, Leslie 2000-01Reeves, Mary 2002-03-04Rider, Jill 1985-86Rider, Megan, 1993-94Ritchie, Annabel 2001-02Rochester, Lucy 1976Rogers, Julia 1988-89-90Rogers, Nicole 1998-99-2000-01Roling, Anne 1992-94*Rose, Kasey 1989-90Rosenberg, Trisha 1999Rousso, Kathryn 1978-79*Rubbright, Keo 1990-92Ryan, Dana 2003-04-05SSanford, Kristen 1986-87-88Schueler, Gail 1976Schueler, Diane 1977-78Schwab, Erica 1993-94-95Schwankl, Judy 1977-78Schwartz, Lindsay 2003Scott, Ingrid 1986-87Seay, Maggie 1997-98-99-00Shaver, Julie 1985-86Shaw, Sarah 1987-88Shemeta, Julie 1983Shepherd, Analena 2004*Siebold, Babette 1993-94-95Silrum, Mary 1980Simenstad, Liz 2005-06Slehofer, Lori 1979-80-81Small, Marian 1976Smart, Jo 1976Smith, Laura 1983Smith, Loren 1982-83Smith, Michelle 1996Smith, Suzanne 1976-77Snow, Jonell 1997Solem, Karen 1991-92Solmssen, Jennifer 1988Sooter, Andrea 2004-05-06Spangler, Tara 1986Spencer, Pasha 1994-95*Stasiak, Carrie 2000-01-02-03Steed, Teresa 1976-77Steele, Katie 1987-88-89Steele, Lora 1999-2000-01Steinkerchner, Denise 1986Stenken, Yvonneke 2001-03-04Stewart, Brooke 1992-93-94*Stewart, Gail 1984Stingl, Kristi 1984-85-86Stoertz, Mary 1978-79Stokke, Brook 2002Storey, Susan 1981Strazer, Mary 1999-2000Sumner, Tiffani 1996-97-98-99Sweet, Erika 2006TTabacaru, Alina 2003-04-05Tavalero, Vanessa 1997-98-99-2000Telenska, Sabina 1997-98-99-2000Thoenig, Lucia 1993-94Tilmanis, Lara 1998-99-2000Troelstra, Cara 2004-06Tuttle, Liz 1993-94-95Tylee, Kate 1997-98-99Tyler, Kathleen 1979-80YUnwin, Jamie 2006VVan Deusen, Christie 1989Van Pelt, Christine 1986-87-88Van Pelt, Rachael 1990-92Velling, Marisa 1981-83*Vesnaver, Jenni 1999-2000-01-02WWahlstrom Rebecca 1994Walker, Sharon, 1980Watson, Sarah 1986-87-88Wheeler, Jennifer 1987Whipple, Mary 1999-2000-01-02White, Ardath 1994-95-96White, Liz 1983-84Wilcox, Amanda 1993-94-95Wikstrom, Katarina 1987-88*Williamson, Jan 1997-98-99Wilson, Cynthia 1976-77-78-79*Winters, Jenny 1984-85-86(Manager) 1987Winters, Susan 1981-82-83YYamaura, DeAn 1986Young, Heidi 1993-94-95Youngberg, Carrie 1994-96ZZiegler, Birgit 1984-85Ziobron, Cynthia 1976* — captain2007 WASHINGTON CREW MEDIA GUIDE


Honor Roll<strong>UW</strong> HonorsTop-Dawg Award(honoring <strong>UW</strong>’s top student-athlete)1998 Bob Cummins2001 Rika Geyser2002 Anna MickelsonMen’s Team CaptainsAdam, GordonAdmundsen, DaveAlm, CharlesAnderson, MatthewArgersinger, EdBarker, FloydBates, WalterBowser, GrenBracken, JohnBrandenthaler, T.Brokaw, ClydeBronson, MikeBuse, JonCalder, DavidCallahan, MichaelCallow, RussellChait, MikeClapp, CharlesCohen, EricDavis, WarrenDeakin, MattDodd, LouDole, DanFilippone, MichaelFisk, TerryFlint, NedFrost,TedGlerup, MaruisGrant,DonGuiliani, GregHarris,RichardHess, MichaelHoltz, ChuckHorn, BlairHurn, CliffJackson, CharlesJames, DanielJohnson, RodKirby, HomerKriefall, AdamKroeger, DavidKumm, WardKusurin, AnteLarson, KyleLeanderson, FilLogg, ChuckLovejoy, BartLuft, MaxMacDonald, EllisMcMillin, JamesMinnett, CharlesMjorud, HerbMoen, DickMulligan, SeanMunn, ScottMurphy, GeorgeMurray, BobCurrent and former Huskies at the 2006 World Championships in Eton, England.Neil, DougNorelius, JonParrott, GordonPhillips, DwightPullen, DanPullen, RoyalPurnell, DaveReese, DaveReisinger, BrettRoesch, DwightRudolph, ChadRuthford, ChasSchmidt, HenryShaw, SamSnody, JamesSonju, NormSoules, PaulStocker, AlSvendsen, BobTaylor, EdThompson, DaveThorstensen, BobTiedje, HenryUlbrickson Sr., AlUlbrickson Jr., AlUrness, MikeVan Kurhan, CarlVynne, JohnWalters, KenWells, ChrisWhite, BobWhite, DaveWillite, HaroldWolfkill, RonWorks, BillYount, PaulZimmerman, HankWomen’s Team CaptainsAlba, KatherineBingham, JennieCampbell, ChrisDorf, GailDubbins, JanelleFreeman, MargaretGeary, MauraGeyser, RikaHaines, StephanieHanson, MadelineKalmoe, MeganLusk, LindaMcDougall, JaneMohling, KarenNessler, DenniNevin, SaraO’Brien, WendyO’Connell, ErinOsterhaug, KariRose, KaseyRubbright, KeoSiebold, BabetteStasiak, CarrieStewart, GailTelenska, SabinaVesnaver, JenniWilliamson, JanWinters, Jenny<strong>UW</strong> CREW HISTORYConference HonorsAll-Pac-10 Men1979 Terry FiskMark MillerMarius Felix1981 Eric CohenMarius FelixCharles ClappJohn Zevenbergen1983 Blair HornEd IvesTodd LanwehrLee Miller1984 David ZevenbergenPat GleasonJames SnodyBrad Clancy1985 Dennis MoranDavid NealJon NoreliusMike Teather1986 Dave NesbittDirck RheinTom Stevens1987 Dan Doyle1990 Mike Fillipone1991 Dave HernessRon LongMike Urness1992 Paul YountCam AndrewsColin SykesMike Chudzik1993 Roberto BlandaMatt MinasScott MunnJason Scott1994 Scott BehrbaumRoberto BlandaPhil HenryDan James1995 Ryan AllisonCirts BeitlersMarc SchneiderKara Schocken1996 Michael CallahanSilas HarringtonRichard ParsonsRichard Tzeng1997 Silas HarringtonAndy TylerCarl BolstadBob Cummins1998 Bob CumminsBrett ReisingerSean Mulligan1999 David CalderWhit HammondSean Mulligan2000 Mike ChaitWhit HammondEric Funk2001 David CalderMatt DeakinHans Hurn2002 Lucas AhlstrandMatt DeakinJohn Lorton2003 Ante KusurinJohn LortonRyan MarksMarko Petrovic2004 Sam BurnsAndy DerrickGiuseppe LanzoneBrett Newlin2005 Giuseppe LanzoneBrett NewlinDusan Nikolic2006 Ante KusurinKiel Petersen63GENERAL INFO. COACHES ROSTERS VARSITY PROFILES 2006 REVIEW RACE HISTORY CREW HISTORY EXPERIENCE2007 WASHINGTON CREW MEDIA GUIDE


GENERAL INFO.EXPERIENCE CREW HISTORY RACE HISTORY 2006 REVIEWVARSITY PROFILES ROSTERS COACHES64<strong>UW</strong> CREW HISTORYPac-10 MaleNew<strong>com</strong>er of the Year2003 Brett Newlin2004 Greg KingPac-10 Men’sCoach of the Year1980 Dick Erickson1983 Dick Erickson1984 Dick Erickson1990 Bob Ernst1991 Bob Ernst1992 Bob Ernst1993 Bob Ernst1995 Bob Ernst1996 Bob Ernst1997 Bob Ernst2003 Bob Ernst2004 Bob ErnstPac-10All-Academic Men1993 Kristin Bailey (1st)1994 Roberto Blanda (1st)1995 Roberto Blanda (1st)1996 Steve Gillespie (1st)1998 Bob Cummins (1st)1999 Mike Chait (1st)2000 Mike Chait (1st)Whit Hammond (1st)2001 Chris Clay (1st)John Lorton (1st)Charles Minett (1st)Brendan Patterson (1st)Patrick Stewart (1st)2002 Andrew Derrick (1st)Ian Harrison (1st)Charles Minett (1st)Brendan Patterson (1st)Marko Petrovic (1st)John Lorton (HM)2003 Andrew Derrick (1st)Evan Galloway (1st)Ante Kusurin (1st)Kyle Larson (1st)Charles Minett (1st)Marko Petrovic (1st)Melissa Wengard (1st)Seth Berling (HM)John Kenfield (HM)Matt Kopicky (HM)Gints Salaks (HM)2004 Brodie Buckland (1st)Andy Derrick (1st)Kyle Larson (1st)Brett Newlin (1st)Marko Petrovic (1st)Martin Rogulja (1st)2005 Ante Kusurin (1st)Kyle Larson (1st)Brett Newlin (1st)Jacob Pettit (1st)Colin Phillips (1st)Martin Rogulja (1st)Matt Kopicky (2nd)Dustin Kraus (2nd)Cooper Lange (2nd)Mary Katherine Langlais (2nd)Kiel Petersen (2nd)Tyler Smith (2nd)Adam Van Winkle (2nd)2006 Ante Kusurin (1st)Mary Katherine Langlais (1st)Peter McCorkell (1st)Kiel Petersen (1st)Colin Phillips (1st)Andrew Beaton (2nd)Aljosa Corovic (2nd)Toby Dankbaar (2nd)Alan Oriard (2nd)Micah Perrin (2nd)Tyler Smith (2nd)Adam Van Winkle (2nd)Derek DeVries (HM)Pac-10 Medal1998 Bob CumminsAll-Pac-10 Women1987 Trish LydonAlice HendersonHeidi HookLinda Lusk1988 Kris SanfordKatarina WikstromSooter and Troelstra: Winners of the 2006 Pair Head.Lisa BelucheSarah Watson1989 Stephanie DoyleFritzi GrevstadStephanie HainesMary Iverson1990 Julia Rogers1991 Karen DickeWendy O’Brien1992 Keo RubbrightKim JanzikHana DariusovaKari Osterhaug1993 Nichole MarcotteKari OsterhaugErin PetersonAnn Pugel1994 Hana DariusovaMaura GearyBrooke StewartLucia Thoenig1995 Hana DariusovaEllen ParkAmy PiperBabette Siebold1996 Tristine GlickKatie MaloneyErin O’ConnellArdath White1997 Tristine GlickSabina TelenskaDenni NesslerKelly Horton1998 Denni NesslerKari GreenAnnie ChristieKelly Horton1999 Sabina TelenskaTiffani SumnerKaty DunnetRachel Dunnet2000 Sabina TelenskaHonor RollCurrent Husky men’s coach Bob Ernst (right) and former women’s coach Jan Harville(left) won a <strong>com</strong>bined 19 Pac-10 Coach of the Year Awards.Vanessa TavaleroRika GeyserAnna Mickelson2001 Nicole BorgesRika GeyserAnna MickelsonNicole Rogers2002 Anna MickelsonKara NykreimAnnabel RitchieMary Whipple2003 Lauren EsteveninAdrienne HunterCarrie Stasiak2004 Sanda HanganMary ReevesYvonneke Stenken2005 Janelle Dubbins2006 Megan KalmoePac-10 FemaleNew<strong>com</strong>er of the Year2000 Heidi Hurn2001 Annabel Ritchie2002 Sanda HanganAnte Kusurin, 2006 Captain and VBC Commodore nowstudies at Oxford and rows in the Oxford Blue Boat.2007 WASHINGTON CREW MEDIA GUIDE


Honor RollPac-10 Women’sCoach of the Year1987 Bob Ernst1988 Jan Harville1992 Jan Harville1993 Jan Harville1994 Jan Harville1997 Jan Harville1998 Jan Harville2000 Jan Harville2001 Jan Harville2002 Jan HarvillePac-10All-Academic Women1993 Nichole Marcotte1994 Rebecca Chadwick1995 Amy Piper1996 Carrie Youngberg1997 Alida Purves1998 Kari Green1999 Romany McNamara2000 Lindsey Horton (1st)Anna Mickelson (1st)Theresa Nygren-Birkholz (1st)Sabina Telenska (1st)Noelle Anderson (2nd)Romany McNamara (2nd)Kara Nykreim (2nd)Kim Oates (2nd)Jenni Vesnaver (2nd)Mary Whipple (2nd)2001 Lauren Estevenin (1st)Anne Hessburg (1st)Adrienne Hunter (1st)Romany McNamara (1st)Anna Mickelson (1st)Mary Whipple (1st)2002 Lauren Estevenin (1st)Adrienne Hunter (1st)Heidi Hurn (1st)Anna Mickelson (1st)Kara Nykreim (1st)Erin Curry (HM)Jessica Harm (HM)Anne Hessburg (HM)Lisa Krikava (HM)Nicole Mazikowski (HM)Shannon Oates (HM)Margherita Pallotino (HM)Mary Reeves (HM)Jenni Vesnaver (HM)Mary Whipple (HM)2003 Gemma Edward-Aron (1st)Lauren Estevenin (1st)Jessica Harm (1st)Anne Hessburg (1st)Adrienne Hunter (1st)Courtney Matson (1st)Erin Curry (2nd)Sanda Hangan (2nd)Heidi Hurn (2nd)Lisa Krikava (2nd)Nicole Mazikowski (2nd)Mary Reeves (2nd)Dana Ryan (2nd)Lindsay Schwarz (2nd)2004 Janelle Dubbins (1st)Gemma Edward-Aron (1st)Megan Kalmoe (1st)2005 Janelle Dubbins (1st)Gemma Edward-Aron (1st)Megan Kalmoe (1st)Eva Anderson (2nd)Katie Gardner (2nd)Olivia Morrow (2nd)Katie Peyer (2nd)Katie Anderson (HM)Asiha Grigsby (HM)Liz Simenstad (HM)2006 Corianne Bowman (1st)Megan Kalmoe (1st)Eva Anderson (2nd)Ivayla Dermendjieva (2nd)Karen Magnuson (2nd)Olivia Morrow (2nd)Liz Simenstad (2nd)Kim Armstrong (HM)Kristine Gauthier (HM)Asiha Grigsby (HM)Ashley Jones (HM)Taryn Langlois (HM)Courtney Plitt (HM)Jamie Unwin (HM)Regional &National HonorsCRCA All-Americans1999 Katy Dunnet (1st)Sabina Telenska (1st)Rachel Dunnet (2nd)2000 Mary Whipple (1st)Sabina Telenska (1st)Rika Geyser (1st)Anna Mickelson (2nd)2001 Rika Geyser (1st)Anna Mickelson (1st)Mary Whipple (1st)2002 Heidi Hurn (1st)Anna Mickelson (1st)Mary Whipple (1st)2003 Lauren Estevenin (1st)Adrienne Hunter (2nd)2004 Sanda Hangan (1st)Yvonneke Stenken (2nd)2005 Janelle Dubbins (1st)2006 Megan Kalmoe (1st)<strong>UW</strong> CREW HISTORYCRCA AcademicAll-Americans2000 Anna MickelsonTheresa Nygren-Birkholz2001 Lauren EsteveninAnna MickelsonAdrienne Hunter2002 Lauren EsteveninAnna Mickelson2003 Jessica HarmAnne Hessburg2004 Gemma Edward-Aron2005 Janelle DubbinsMegan KalmoeSeattle P-ISports Star of the Year1936 Al Ulbrickson1982 Bob Ernst (finalist)1984 Betsy Beard (finalist)1997 Jan Harville (finalist)2002 Jan Harville2003 Anna Mickelson (finalist)2004 Matt Doakin (finalist)Anna Mickelson (finalist)Bryan Volpenhein (finalist)Mary Whipple (finalist)2006 Anna Mickelson (finalist)Ernestine Bayer Award(formerly US Rowing Woman of the Year)(In recognition of outstandingcontributions to women’s rowing)1994 The Women of Washington(Carol Brown, Jan Harville,Jean Laframboise, EleanorMcElvaine)National RowingFoundation Hall of FameYearName Honor InductedHiram B. Conibear 1906 1956Edwin O. Leader 1921 1956Russell Callow 1923 1956Donald Grant 1923 1972R.H. Sanford 1924 1956Thomas D. Bolles 1928 1956Al Ulbrickson 1928 1956Herbert W. Morris 1936 1971Charles W. Day 1936 1971Gordon B. Adam 1936 1971John G. White 1936 1971James B. McMillen 1936 1971George E. Hunt, Jr. 1936 1971Joseph Harry Rantz 1936 1971Donald B. Hume 1936 1971Robert G. Moch 1936 1971Alvin M. Ulbrickson 1936 1971Delos Schoch 1936 1971Theodore Garhart 1940 1972Gordon Giovanelli 1948 1975Robert I. Will 1948 1975Robert D. Martin 1948 1975Warren D. Westlund 1948 1975Allen J. Morgan 1948 1975Richard Erickson 1987 1991Jan Harville 1980 1990Bob Ernst 1984 1994CRCA National AssistantCoach of the Year2003 Eleanor McElvaineJan Harville (left) and Eleanor McElvaine (right) were named the 1994 Women of the Year byUSRowing.65GENERAL INFO. COACHES ROSTERS VARSITY PROFILES 2006 REVIEW RACE HISTORY CREW HISTORY EXPERIENCE2007 WASHINGTON CREW MEDIA GUIDE


GENERAL INFO.EXPERIENCE CREW HISTORY RACE HISTORY 2006 REVIEWVARSITY PROFILES ROSTERS COACHES66<strong>UW</strong> CREW HISTORYMore than 44 years later, Lou Gellermann vividlyrecalls the incident — a pep talk by Al Ulbrickson thatwas as uncharacteristic of the legendary Universityof Washington crew coach as was the event thatspawned it.Gellermann, in July, 1958, was one of nine Huskiesthrust into the midst of a Cold War venue — Russia— for a rowing race against the Trud Club of Leningradand four other Soviet crews on a reservoir near Moscow.In what was billed as the first appearance by a UnitedStates sports team behind the Iron Curtain, the Huskieswere hoping to avenge a loss they had suffered twoweeks earlier to the Trud Club in the first round of theHenley Royal Regatta in England.Ulbrickson, prior to what would be his last race,broke with a personal tradition established during his31-year <strong>UW</strong> coaching career.Gellermann was as shocked as he was inspired bywhat he heard.“Al gave us a pep talk before the race and he’d never,ever done that,” Gellermann said. “The most words hewould ever utter to a Washington crew, at least whileI was there, was `good luck fellows.’“But that day, he sat us down and he said: `Justforget doing this for the country, forget doing thisfor your family, forget doing this for the University ofWashington. Let’s do it for ourselves.”’Gellermann said he suddenly felt “an obligation,even more than normal, to these other guys in theboat. It just bonded us.”Positively bonded and suitably prepared byUlbrickson, the Huskies went out and won one forthemselves. They avenged the Henley loss by beatingthe Trud Club eight on its own Khimkinskoe Reservoirwater by a decisive 1-3/4 lengths. They did it on a windyday while, 12 miles away in front of the U.S. Embassy,thousands of Russiansw e r e p r o t e s t i n gthe landing of U.S.Marines in Lebanon.That race, broadcastby Keith Jacksonon KOMO Radio, isbelieved to be thefirst sporting eventbroadcast to the Westfrom behind the “IronCurtain.”B e c a u s e o fthe internationalsignificance, localeCelebrating a Century of Husky <strong>Crew</strong>Washington Has International ImpactBy Dick Rockne (January 2003)and the reversal of fortune by the young Huskies againstthe older Russians, the race left Georg N. Meyers witha lifetime memory.“I’ll tell you this: When I’m asked what is the mostthrilling sporting event I ever saw it was that one,”said Meyers, who can count several Olympic Gamesamong the sports events he covered during his careeras a Seattle Times columnist.In this 100th anniversary year of <strong>UW</strong> rowing, theHuskies’ 1958 victory over the Russians serves as aprime — maybe the foremost — example of what hasmade Husky crew so special: international impact. TheOlympic Games and World Championships, Henley,the annual Windermere Cup/Opening Day Regattathrough the Montlake Cut and that Moscow reservoirhave been outlets where so many Huskies — menand women — have <strong>com</strong>peted and excelled againstforeign rivals.Beginning in 1936 in Berlin, where a Husky eight wonthe gold medal, a total of 42 Washington men and 10women have rowed on Olympic Games’ crews. In 1948in London, Huskies won the four-oared-with coxswaingold medal; in the same event in 1952 Huskies captureda bronze medal.Washington rowers have been a part of the HenleyRoyal Regatta on an irregular basis starting with theexperience in 1958. In 1977, Coach Dick Erickson’sHuskies became the first U.S. crew in 18 years to winHenley’s most prestigious prize, the Grand ChallengeCup. In 2000, Coach Jan Harville’s Huskies won theHenley Prize, the first trophy awarded to women sincethe regatta began in 1839.Significant contributors to the international lorewere Hiram Conibear and George Pocock.Recognized as the “Father of Washington <strong>Crew</strong>”,Conibear invented a rowing stroke which remains theHenley Prize Winner - 2000 Washington Women’s <strong>Crew</strong>accepted standard throughout the world. Pocock, thebuilder of shells used by crews everywhere, becamea consultant and confidant of <strong>UW</strong> coaches beginningwith Conibear in 1912 until his death in 1976.It was in a Pocock-built shell, christened theSwiftsure, that Gellermann, who sat in the No. 6 seat,and his mates — bow oar John Svendson, No. 2 DickErickson (the future coach), No. 3 Roger MacDonald,No. 4 Phil Kieburtz, No. 5 Chuck Alm, No. 7 AndyHovland, stroke John Sayre and coxswain John Bisset— achieved so much.Rowing into a headwind on the white-cappedreservoir, the Huskies had the lead with about 500meters to go.“And I’m thinking, `don’t catch a crab here,”’Gellermann recalled. “I felt very strong. We werewinning. And when you know that, it feels reallygood. In the last 500 (meters), the joy of it all almostovercame the pain.”Bisset did nothing to disguise how he felt.“Even over the crowd’s bellowing the cries of JohnBisset could be heard as he peered over his shoulderand saw the gap growing,” Meyers wrote in 1958.“As the Husky shell glided past the finish Bisset, innear-hysteria, nearly swamped the shell, standing,yelling, waving his arms and blowing kisses to hiscrewmates.”Gellermann recalled how curious the Russianshad been about the Husky shell. What happened wasillustrative of the lack of trust that existed between thetwo countries at the height of the Cold War.“They measured our shell eight ways to Sunday,”Gellermann said. “They weren’t even hiding it. They tookit out of the rack when we weren’t there. Sometimeswe would show up at the boathouse and it’s out ofthe rack and they’re measuring it. They were lookingfor everything possible onthat boat.”Rather than pay theexorbitant cost of havingthe shell shipped back toSeattle, Ulbrickson decidedto just leave it in Moscow.“I think it was a kind ofan in-your-face gesture byAl,” Gellermann said. “Thatwas Al.”Twenty two years earlier,Washington’s emergenceon the international rowingstage began in Nazi Germany,2007 WASHINGTON CREW MEDIA GUIDE


Celebrating a Century of Husky <strong>Crew</strong>where the Huskies — coached by Ulbrickson, coxedby Bob Moch and stroked by Don Hume — won theOlympic Games’ eight-oared event at Grunau. Theyhad earned the right to represent the United States bywinning the Olympic Trials at Princeton, N.J.Washington gave notice on the first day of<strong>com</strong>petition that it could not be overlooked when itbettered the 2,000-meter course and Olympic recordsof 6:09 and 6:03.2, respectively, by winning its heatrace in 6:00.8. In the final, the Huskies overcame a poorlane assignment and rough water in edging out Italyby less than a second. Germany was third.“Barely a length covered the three leaders at theend of one of the most spectacular races in Olympichistory,” the Associated Press reported.Before the race, the Huskies were concerned aboutthe condition of Hume, who was ill.“I thought Hume was going to collapse in the last100 meters,” Ulbrickson said after the race. “Wherehe got the stuff to finish the way he did I’ll never know.It was a magnificent performance.”With Moch and Hume in the shell were Joe Rantz,George Hunt, Jim McMillin, John White, Gordon Adam,Charles Day and Robert Morris.Twelve years later, during the Olympics in London,coxswain Allen Morgan directed Husky teammatesWarren Westlund, Bob Martin, Bob Will and GordonGiovanelli to a gold medal in the four-with event.While the international ac<strong>com</strong>plishments havebeen many and varied, Washington’s domestic recordregionally and nationally is no less exceptional.Olympic Gold Medalist – 1936 Washington Men’s <strong>Crew</strong>Husky men have won 28 of 41 Pacific Coast/Pac-10championships since 1960. Since 1923, Washingtonhas won 11 Intercollegiate Rowing Association varsitytitles.While it was the men who established Washingtonas a rowing power, women have added significantlyto the Husky legacy since they achieved varsity statusin 1975.Starting in 1980, Huskies won seven of the first ninenational collegiate championships. They have won threeof the first six national championships sponsored bythe NCAA - the only NCAA team championships everwon by Washington.Much of the women’s success has been attributedto an administrative decision made by Erickson, theMoscow oarsman who was Washington’s men’s coachfor 20 years (1967-87). In 1980, when the pressure ofTitle IX enforcement was beginning to expand, hesuggested to the athletic director atthe time, Mike Lude, that rowing’sresources be divided equally.“It wasn’t a matter of dividingthe money equally, it was a matterof taking everything and using itfor the whole team,” Jan Harville,the present women’s coach, said.“There’s a difference betweendrawing a line and saying `this is themen’s portion and this is the women’sportion.’ That didn’t happen here. Itwas, `this is the men’s and women’s<strong>UW</strong> CREW HISTORYprogram and here’s one budget.”’Unusual?“I really don’t know of any school that hasone (rowing) budget, administered together,”Harville said.Women’s collegiate rowing was at acrossroads in 1996 when another keyadministrative decision was made, by athleticdirector Barbara Hedges, in response to theNCAA adding the sport to its family. Amongother things, the NCAA provided schools with astructured outlet for helping them meet genderequityrequirements through the issuance ofathletic scholarships to women rowers.Harville and men’s coach Bob Ernst providedHedges with three alternatives.“We said we can either stay up in the topfive in the nation by phasing in scholarshipsnow, or we can wait until we have to (addscholarships) and lose that (winning) tradition,or we can choose not to do scholarships at alland we’ll just be a regional rowing team ... asmall school,” Harville said.In opting for maintaining the winningtradition at a big school level, Hedges <strong>com</strong>mittedto adding scholarships, up to the present NCAA limitof 20, at an annual cost of about $300,000.So, from modest beginnings 100 years ago,Washington rowing has be<strong>com</strong>e synonymous withathletic success throughout the country and theworld.On water in domestic locales ranging from theMontlake Cut to Poughkeepsie and Lake Onondagaand to sites as varied as the River Thames and theNile River and in events as heralded as the OlympicGames and the Henley Royal Regatta, Huskies havebeen there and done that.And chances are good that they will keep ondoing it.Henley Ladies Challenge Plate Winner – 2003 Washington Men’s <strong>Crew</strong>67GENERAL INFO. COACHES ROSTERS VARSITY PROFILES 2006 REVIEW RACE HISTORY CREW HISTORY EXPERIENCE2007 WASHINGTON CREW MEDIA GUIDE


GENERAL INFO.EXPERIENCE CREW HISTORY RACE HISTORY 2006 REVIEWVARSITY PROFILES ROSTERS COACHES68<strong>UW</strong> CREW HISTORY<strong>UW</strong> <strong>Crew</strong> Historical TimelineWashington’s rowing program, born 103 years ago, is steeped in tradition. A cornerstone for the Huskies’ entire athletic program, Washington’s history reads like aWho’s Who of rowing. From national championships to Olympic glory, the trademark white blades of Washington have cut through the water of race courses aroundthe world.1901-0419031905190619071908190919101912Rowing at Washington dates back to 1901 when the first Class Day race was held. The Class Day races still mark the end of the winter trainingperiod and the start of the spring racing season for the rowers. Rowing was not considered a “major” sport at the University until 1904. Thatyear, James C. Knight, who became the first crew coach in 1903, led the team to its first Pacific Coast Championship, rowing in Seattle infour-oared shells.The women at the University of Washington began to row informally under the direction of Football and Rowing Coach Bill Knight.In 1905, Stanford and California joined the <strong>UW</strong> in the first triangular regatta. A year later racing was abandoned when Cal sent word that itssquad would be unable to attend the meet because of an earthquake, bringing the racing scene to a standstill until a revolutionary gentlemancame along in the Fall of 1906.Conibear, whom some recognize as the founding father of Husky crew, started a spectacular coaching career in a rather unspectacular fashion.A one-time athletic trainer, Conibear took over the Husky program without any eight-oared shells and no basic knowledge of the dynamics ofrowing. Undaunted by the challenges at hand, he began raising the “voluntary funds” necessary to purchase two new shells.Conibear converted an old lighthouse from the Alaska Exposition into the first Husky shellhouse. It was not much, but it was a start. Today,Conibear would be proud to know that the Huskies’ current shellhouse is named after him. The Varsity Boat Club and the Board of RowingStewards were other innovations instituted by Conibear and are still in existence today.In order to better understand the dynamics of the stroke, Conibear borrowed a skeleton from the medical department and used it to study themost effective and safest body positions for rowing.The “Conibear Stroke” was born and quickly accepted nationwide. His coaching ability resulted in Washington’s oarsmen rowing to a thirdplacefinish in Poughkeepsie, N.Y., in 1917 against the country’s fastest crews. Tragically, a few months after the Poughkeepsie race, Conibearpassed away and the future of Husky crew seemed uncertain.Women’s crew was formally sanctioned as a University sport by the Board of Control.The <strong>UW</strong> women raced against each other over a one mile course on Lake Washington. The Freshman eight beat the sophomore eight.By October, 40 freshman and sophomore women were training in “Old Nero” the crew’s training barge.The <strong>UW</strong> women <strong>com</strong>peted in their first ever “Form” contest. Conibear’s contest judged the women on form and boat handling skills. Thejudges awarded 10 points in each of the following categories: loading, the stroke’s expertise, starboard and port backing, starboard and portrowing, the coxswain’s expertise in handling the crew, general positioning, all backing, and unloading. Form contests would continue in similarstructure (during the years that the women rowed) through 1916.The first ever All-University regatta was held on April 10, 1909. Both the men and the women <strong>com</strong>peted. The women raced a distance of 600meters. Gretchen O’Donnell (class of 1912) became an assistant coach to Conibear’s head coach. O’Donnell was a strong advocate for thewomen’s crew until her graduation in 1912.Miss Jessie Merrick, the women’s Gymnasium Director, forbade the women to race. After many appeals the women acquiesced and heldtheir 2nd form contest.In October of the same year Dr. D.C. Hall, Gymnasium Director, and Jessie Merrick canceled the women’s crew as a sport at the <strong>UW</strong>. GretchenO’Donnell, Conibear and the women protested and mounted many appeals but the Administration sided with Dr. Hall and the women’s crewwas disbanded.In anticipation of the re-introduction of the women’s crew at the <strong>UW</strong>, Conibear renovated the Tokio (sic) Tea Room as a locker room for thewomen. However, due to a drop in the level of Lake Union because of a failed dam at the sight of the construction of the new Shipping Canal,rowing for the women was postponed another year.2007 WASHINGTON CREW MEDIA GUIDE


<strong>UW</strong> <strong>Crew</strong> Historical Timeline<strong>UW</strong> CREW HISTORYLucy Pocock, George Pocock’s sister, trained and coached the women during the fall 1913 season. A champion sculler in her own right, Lucywould sometimes follow the crews and coach from her single.Ethel Johnson was hired as an athletic instructor and coached the women’s crew from January of 1914 through the spring of 1916.The first women’s crew eight oared shell, aptly named “1915 Co-Ed”, was christened on December 7, 1915. The boat was built by the Pocockbrothers and cost $250.00.Miss Ethel Johnson left the University for reasons unknown and Miss Ethel Harrington replaced her as women’s rowing coach. By April of 1917there were ninety-two women participating in crew.The United States entered WWI on April 6, 1917 and the University decided to continue with the Co-ed spring sports. The sophomore womenwon the 1917 form contest.Hiram Conibear tragically died in the fall of 1917.Ed Leader emerged as Conibear’s successor and the crew program moved from its makeshift boathouse/lighthouse to the corner of the MontlakeCut into what is now referred to as the Canoe House. With a new home base, and new coach, Husky crews continued the school’s winningtradition.The women’s crew was not among those women’s sports re-established after the war – the University of Washington would have to wait overfifty years for women’s rowing to return.Taking over the helm upon Leader’s departure was Russell S. (Rusty) Callow. Washington Rowing flourished during Callow’s tenure (1922-27),winning three Intercollegiate Rowing Association Championships and be<strong>com</strong>ing the first west coast crew to win the Hudson River Classic.Under Callow, a young man named Al Ulbrickson became the varsity stroke. Following his graduation in 1927, Ulbrickson was hired on as anassistant coach. Courted by the University of Pennsylvania for the head coaching position, Callow took the job on the east coast and Ulbricksonbecame the fifth coach in <strong>UW</strong> history.Coach Ulbrickson took his team to even greater successes. The 1936 crew (bow-Roger Morris, 2-Charles Day, 3-Gordon B. Adam, 4-John G.White, 5-James B. McMillin, 6-George E. Hunt, 7-Joseph Rantz, 8-Don B. Hume, cox-Robert G. Moch) <strong>com</strong>peted in the Olympic trials on LakeCarnegie. In dominating fashion, the Washington crew won the right to represent the United States at the Berlin Games. Coming from behindfor an unprecedented victory, the crew of 1936 won the Olympic gold medal.That was not the only time Ulbrickson escorted a crew to the Olympic Games. In 1948, the Olympics were held in London, England on theThames River. Washington sent a coxed four that won the gold (bow-Gordon Giovanelli, 2-Bob Will, 3-Bob Martin, 4-Warren Westlund, c-AllenMorgan) and in 1952, another Washington coxed four secured a bronze at the Helsinki Olympics (bow-Fil Leanderson, 2-Dick Wahlstrom, 3-AlUlbrickson Jr., 4-Carl Lovsted, cox-Al Rossi).Ulbrickson’s 1958 crew had a new challenge. They needed to go undefeated during the racing season to qualify for the prestigious HenleyRegatta. The team made quick order of California, Stanford, and the University of British Columbia, to earn the right to row in England. There, apowerhouse team from the Soviet Union handed the Huskies their first defeat of the season. A scheduled side trip to Moscow set up a rematch.This time, on the Soviets’ home course, the Huskies shocked the rowing world by overpowering the juggernaut USSR team. The event, broadcastby Keith Jackson on Seattle’s KOMO Radio, is believed to be the first sporting event ever aired from behind the “Iron Curtain.” Future coachDick Erickson was a member of the crew that played one of the biggest parts in the program’s history.19131914191519161917-2219181922-27192719361948195869GENERAL INFO. COACHES ROSTERS VARSITY PROFILES 2006 REVIEW RACE HISTORY CREW HISTORY EXPERIENCE2007 WASHINGTON CREW MEDIA GUIDE


GENERAL INFO.EXPERIENCE CREW HISTORY RACE HISTORY 2006 REVIEWVARSITY PROFILES ROSTERS COACHES701959-671968196919701971-7219721972-75197519771980-8319841987-88<strong>UW</strong> CREW HISTORY<strong>UW</strong> <strong>Crew</strong> Historical TimelineUlbrickson retired after returning to the States and Fil Leanderson became Washington’s head coach. Leanderson coached from 1959-1967 andthen stepped down, allowing Erickson to head up the program after coaching the freshmen for four years.Women’s rowing returned to the <strong>UW</strong> campus. Joan Bird, a transfer student who had rowed with the Lake Merritt rowing club, suggested thatthe <strong>UW</strong> start a rowing team to <strong>com</strong>pete at the 4th annual National Women’s rowing Association (NWRA) Nationals to be held at Green Lakein the spring of 1969. Bernie Delke, a rower training with the Lake Washington Rowing Club, agreed to coach the team. Delke coached fromthe fall of 1968 through the spring of 1972.The <strong>UW</strong> women <strong>com</strong>peted in their first NWRA National regatta at Green Lake.Dick Erickson’s varsity men’s crew won his first IRA championship.The <strong>UW</strong> women won their first National Championship title – the lightweight four with coxswain at the 5th NWRA Nationals on Lake Merritt.The <strong>UW</strong> women <strong>com</strong>peted in the Steward’s cup for the first time. They raced for the newly established Dolly Callow Ladies Challenge Cup.The <strong>UW</strong> women <strong>com</strong>peted at the 6th NWRA Nationals in 1971, and won gold in the lightweight eight, four and wherry. The women won thelightweight eight again and the lightweight quad at the NWRA national championship regatta in 1972.Congress passed Title IX of the Education Amendments of 1972. “No person in the United States shall, on the basis of sex, be excluded fromparticipation in, be denied the benefits of, or be subject to discrimination under any education program or activities receiving Federal financialassistance.”Coleen Lynch and Paula Mitchell coached the <strong>UW</strong> women from the fall of 1972 through the spring of 1975. During their tenure, the <strong>UW</strong> womenwon gold in the lightweight eight, (for the third year) and gold and silver in the lightweight four at the NWRA national regatta in 1973.Women’s rowing became a varsity sport at the <strong>UW</strong>. John Lind was hired as the first full time women’s rowing coach. Lind coached the womenfrom the fall of 1975 through the spring of 1980. During Lind’s tenure, the women participated for the first time in Opening Day, Class Day andthe Pac-10 regatta. The women brought home gold at the 1978, 1979 and 1980 NWRA National regatta in the Flyweight four, and gold in thelightweight novice wherry at the 1978 NWRA regatta.Under Dick Erickson’s direction, in 1977, the Huskies won the Grand Challenge Cup and Visitor’s Challenge Cup at the Henley Royal Regattaand, as a result, were invited to <strong>com</strong>pete at the Nile Invitational Rowing Regatta in Cairo, Egypt.Title IX (under the Federal Education Act) allowed members of the women’s team to join the Varsity Boat Club which, until that time, had been<strong>com</strong>prised solely of men. The Varsity Boat Club still provides leadership for the program with a membership of more than 1,000 men andwomen.Bob Ernst, the freshman men’s coach and Erickson’s assistant for six seasons, succeeded John Lind as the women’s coach in the fall of 1980.It did not take him long to put his mark on the Husky program.In Ernst’s first season, both the varsity and junior varsity crews won national championships (1981) and repeated the feat for the next two years.The varsity eight won every title between 1981-85.Dick Erickson’s varsity men’s crew won the collegiate national championship in Cincinnati, Ohio.The 1987 season was Ernst’s last year as head women’s coach. His varsity, junior varsity, and varsity four crews swept at the nationals,capturing all three titles.Ernst became the varsity men’s coach in 1988 when Erickson retired.2007 WASHINGTON CREW MEDIA GUIDE


<strong>UW</strong> <strong>Crew</strong> Historical Timeline<strong>UW</strong> CREW HISTORYJan Harville stepped up from the novice women’s coaching position, which she held for seven years, to take over where Ernst left off. Harville,who rowed at Washington in the early ‘70s during the program’s revival, also had a stellar head coaching debut.In her first season, the varsity crew duplicated its performance from the year before and won another national championship (1988). The 1989and 1994 junior varsity crews also went on to capture national titles.In 1997, Harville made history as her crews won the first NCAA-sanctioned championship at Lake Natoma in Sacramento, Calif. It was the firstNCAA title for Washington in any sport.That same season, Ernst led the Washington men to a sweep of the varsity, junior varsity and frosh races to capture the IRA Championship inCamden, N.J. It marked the first time since 1950 that Washington had swept the three top races at the IRAs.The Washington women’s team successfully defends its NCAA title, winning the varsity eight and varsity four grand finals en route to theteam title.Washington has the best all-around performance in the country by a men’s and women’s rowing program at the national championships. Thefreshman men’s eight and men’s pair win gold medals at the IRA Championships, together with a silver medal by the junior varsity and a bronzeby the varsity eight.On the women’s side, Washington returns to the site of its second NCAA championship to claim its third team title in the last five years. Thevarsity eight storms from behind to capture the gold medal in its grand final, after the varsity four set the stage with a gold and the juniorvarsity won a silver medal.Washington celebrates is 100th year of rowing with numerous special events, including a Centennial Dinner attended by 1,100 rowers. Afterdirecting the varsity eight to the Pac-10 Championship and a silver medal performance at the IRA, Coach Bob Ernst brings his crew to England.The Huskies win the Ladies Challenge Plate trophy at the prestigious Henley Royal Regatta.Hall of Fame Coach Jan Harville retires and Eleanor McElvaine takes over the head coaching duties fo rthe <strong>UW</strong> Women19881997199820012003In the 47 years that the men’s program has <strong>com</strong>peted at the Pacific Coast/Pacific-10 Conference Championships, the varsity men have won 30 titles, including two stints ofeight consecutive crowns. The women joined the men at the <strong>com</strong>petition in 1976 and have been <strong>com</strong>peting at the championships for the past 30 years. They have claimed 22 titles andhave swept all four races twice.The varsity men have won a total of 12 national titles, including an IRA sweep in 1997. The varsity women’s eight has won 11 national titles, the first in 1981 and the mostrecent in 2001 and 2002. The varsity four won back-to-back-to-back NCAA Championships, in 1999, 2000 and 2001.<strong>History</strong> is hard to miss around the Washington crew program. There are a multitude of reminders for the current Husky oarsmen and women who spend endless hours trainingand studying at the Conibear Shellhouse. Banners of past regattas are scattered throughout the shell bays while photos of past crews and <strong>com</strong>petitions line the hallways.Even the shells are daily reminders to the team of the success of the program. New boats are christened and named for individuals who have worked to make the Huskycrew program a consistent national powerhouse. Among those honored by this tradition are: TheOlympic Champion crew of 1936; the Spirit of ‘58, the Dolly Callow; Dick Erickson; the Varsity BoatClub and dozens more.Washington All-Time Coaching <strong>History</strong>Men’s Coaches1903-06 James C. Knight1907-17 Hiram Conibear1917-22 Ed Leader1922-27 Rusty Callow1927-58 Al Ulbrickson1959-67 Fil Leanderson1968-87 Dick Erickson1987-present Bob ErnstWomen’s Coaches1969-72 Bernie Delke1972-75 Coleen Lynchand Paula Mitchell1975-80 John Lind1980-87 Bob Ernst1987-2003 Jan Harville2003-present Eleanor McElvaineWomen’s rowing flourished at Washington early in the 20th century. Today, theHusky women’s program is the nation’s most successful.71GENERAL INFO. COACHES ROSTERS VARSITY PROFILES 2006 REVIEW RACE HISTORY CREW HISTORY EXPERIENCE2007 WASHINGTON CREW MEDIA GUIDE


GENERAL INFO.EXPERIENCE CREW HISTORY RACE HISTORY 2006 REVIEWVARSITY PROFILES ROSTERS COACHES72<strong>UW</strong> CREW HISTORYIn 1979, the University of Washington inducted itsfirst members into the newly created Universityof Washington Hall of Fame. Numerous peopleassociated with Husky <strong>Crew</strong> have been honored.Russell “Rusty” Callow<strong>Crew</strong> Coach, 1922-27Inducted into the Husky Hall of Fame in 1982Rusty Callow <strong>com</strong>peted infootball and track & field atWashington, but it was increw that he made his mark.He was a member of the first<strong>UW</strong> rowing team to go tothe Intercollegiate RowingAssociation (IRA) regatta inPoughkeepsie in 1913. Callowrowed in a four-oared shelland was an alternate on thevarsity eight. He rowed in theNo. 7 seat on the 1914 and 1915 crews, serving as the teamcaptain in 1915. He returned to Washington in 1922, taking overthe coaching reins from Ed Leader. Callow coached the varsityeight to its first IRA championship in 1923. The Huskies wontwo more IRA titles in 1924 and 1926. His crews were runnersupin 1925 and 1927. His <strong>UW</strong> junior varsity crews won threeconsecutive IRA championships from 1923-25.Hiram Conibear<strong>Crew</strong> Coach, 1907-17Inducted into the Husky Hall of Fame in 1979Called the “Father of Washington<strong>Crew</strong>,” Hiram Conibearlaid the foundation for <strong>UW</strong>’ssuccessful crew programwhile coaching the Huskiesfrom 1907-17. Dozens of hisproteges went on to coach thesport long after his death in1917. Soon after be<strong>com</strong>ingthe Washington crew coachin 1907, his innovations beganimpacting rowing throughoutthe world. During his 10-year coaching career, he implementeda rowing stroke -- the Washington Stroke -- that would lift <strong>UW</strong>into the national limelight and eventually into internationalfame. Conibear became crew coach almost by default, takingthe position because no one else was available. At that time,the long “layback” rowing stroke was the accepted standard.But Conibear felt the layback stroke was unnecessarily longand put undue strain on the rower’s back, neck and stomachmuscles. He set out to find a more <strong>com</strong>fortable, rhythmic strokethat would also provide more power. He was originally hired tobe Washington’s football trainer and track coach in the fall of1906. Lorin Grinstead, the AS<strong>UW</strong>’s general manager, encouragedhim to take the crew coaching job. Conibear remarked that hedid not know the bow from the stern, but that he would studyup on the sport. And study and coach he did. He founded theVarsity Boat Club and the Board of Rowing Stewards and initiatedfund raising activities for the rowing program. He is regardedas one of the great sportsmen in Washington history. Conibearstarted a tradition of national and international excellence forthe Husky crew program.Dick Erickson<strong>Crew</strong> Coach, 1968-87Inducted into the Husky Hall of Fame in 1994Dick Erickson was a memberof Washington’s 1958 eightoaredshell that traveled toMoscow and defeated thefamed Trud Rowing Club onLeningrad. He rowed in theNo. 2 seat for the team thatwon by 1-3/4 lengths onthe Khimkinskoe Reservoirin Moscow. Erickson was amember of the varsity eightteams as a junior and senior,lettering from 1955-58. He coached the Husky freshmen from1964-67. During his four-year tenure coaching the frosh, theHuskies lost just one dual-meet race. Erickson was named headrowing coach in 1968. In 20 years as head coach, Erickson ledthe Huskies to 15 Pacific Coast championships, the 1970 IRAchampionship and a national championship in 1984. His 1977crew won the Grand Challenge Cup at the Henley Royal Regattaand went on to <strong>com</strong>pete at the Nile Invitational Regatta in Cairo,Egypt. Erickson was named the Pac-10 rowing coach of the yearthree times and was a member of the U.S. Olympic RowingCommittee from 1972-75. In 1975, Erickson was instrumentalin the creation of the Husky women’s varsity rowing team. Afterretiring from coaching after the 1987 season, Erickson served asthe facilities manager for the <strong>UW</strong> Department of IntercollegiateAthletics until his death in 2001. Erickson was inducted into theNational Rowing Hall of Fame in 1992.Alan ForneyRower, 1979-82Inducted into the Husky Hall of Fame in 1996Alan Forney led the Huskies to three Pac-10 crew titles, winningin 1979, 1980 and 1981 (going undefeated in 1981). He wasa member of the U.S. National team, <strong>com</strong>peting in the 1982World Championships and the 1984 Olympic Games, where hewon a silver medal.Jan HarvilleHead Coach, 1987-2003Inducted into the Husky Hall of Fame in 2006The Washington women’screw program set thestandard for excellence inrowing during Jan Harville’s16-year tenure as headcoach. Harville won fournational titles at Washington,including the first-ever NCAAteam title in 1997, and led the<strong>UW</strong> varsity eight to back-tobackundefeated seasonsin 1997 and 1998. In 2002,Harville was voted the National Rowing Coach of the Year byher peers at the Collegiate Rowing Coaches Association (CRCA).Harville also collected Pac-10 Coach of the Year honors nine timesas Washington won 12 consecutive conference championshipsbetween 1992 and 2003. The program ac<strong>com</strong>plished anothermemorable `first’ in 2000 when Harville’s varsity eight won theHenley Prize, the first women’s trophy awarded at the HenleyRoyal Regatta in England since the famous regatta began in 1839.Harville first came to Washington as an undergraduate, whenshe rowed for the Huskies from 1970 to 1973. The women’s teamHusky Hall of Fame<strong>com</strong>peted in its fourth national championship regatta in 1972, onGreen Lake in Seattle, and she won a silver medal in the pairs.She received the team’s Most Inspirational Award in 1973. InApril, she will also be honored as a pioneer at the Pre-Title IXCelebration, which will award letters to the women athletes whoparticipated in <strong>UW</strong> sports before the 1975-76 season. Harvilleis also an Olympian, earning a spot on both the 1980 and 1984U.S. National rowing teams. At the ‘84 games in Los Angeles,she finished fourth as a part of the coxed-four.George PocockShell Designer and Builder, 1912-1976Inducted into the Husky Hall of Fame in 1989World famous boat builderGeorge Pocock set up shopon the Washington campusin 1913 and kept the <strong>UW</strong>rowers equipped with stateof-the-artshells for the next53 years. Pocock continuedhis craft until his death in1976. His unique relationshipwith Husky crew beganwhen Coach Hiram Conibearordered a dozen shells in 1912from the then-Vancouver, B.C. based Pocock. George and hisolder brother, Dick, first were exposed to boat building during anapprenticeship in their father’s shop at Eton College in England.They transferred their expertise into building wooden pontoonsfor float planes during World War I. Pocock Racing Shells arestill considered the premier boats worldwide.Al Ulbrickson, Sr.<strong>Crew</strong> Coach, 1927-1958Inducted into the Husky Hall of Fame in 1979Al Ulbrickson was the varsitystroke from 1924-26,a time during which theHuskies won two IRA Championships(1924 & 1926).He became Washington’sassistant coach in 1927.At age 25 he took over thehead coaching duties afterCoach Rusty Callow, directingthe Husky program for thenext 31 seasons. During hiscareer as an oarsman and coach, Washington won more IRAvarsity eight championships than any other school. He coachedthe varsity eight to six IRA titles, placed second five times andthird on eight occasions. His junior varsity crews won 10 IRAraces and his freshmen boats claimed 12 IRA crowns. Hisgreatest coaching achievements came on international waters.His Huskies represented the United States at the 1936 OlympicGames in Berlin and won the gold medal in the eights. At the1948 London Olympics, the Husky four-oared crew captured thegold. His career was capped by one of the greatest upsets inrowing history. His Husky eight beat the Leningrad Trud crew inMoscow in 1958 for his final coaching win. Nine of his crewsare in the Husky Hall of Fame. Ulbrickson served as <strong>UW</strong> AthleticDirector from 1943-46.2007 WASHINGTON CREW MEDIA GUIDE


Husky Hall of Fame1923 Men’s Eight-Oared <strong>Crew</strong>Inducted into the Husky Hall of Fame in 1990The 1923 crew was the first in a long line of national championship squads. After Husky oarsmentried for 10 years, the 1923 crew finally won the Intercollegiate Rowing Association championshipby upsetting Navy in the varsity eight race. This unprecedented win helped put Seattle and theUniversity of Washington on the map. The championship crew consisted of Max Luft, CharlesDunn, Fred Spuhn, Sam Shaw, Pat Tidmarsh, Rowland France, Harry John Dutton, Dow Wallingand Don Grant (coxswain).1936 Men’s 8-Oared <strong>Crew</strong>Inducted into the Husky Hall of Fame in 1979This Husky crew earned amateur sports’ highest award, the 1936 Olympic Games Gold Medal.Coached by Al Ulbrickson, Sr., the crew of Donald Hume, Joe Rantz, George Hunt, Jim McMillin,John White, Gordon Adam, Charles Day, Roger Morris and Robert Moch (coxswain) brought theUnited States and the <strong>UW</strong> one of its greatest honors.1940 Men’s 8-Oared <strong>Crew</strong>Inducted into the Husky Hall of Fame in 1986The 1940 eight rowed to an undefeated season and captured the prestigious Intercollegiate RowingAssociation title in Poughkeepsie, N.Y. The crew of Ted Garhart, Dallas “Dal” Duppenthaler, DickYantis, Chuck Jackson, Gerald Keely, Sr., Al Erickson, Paul Soules, John Bracken and FrederickP. Colbert (coxswain) picked up an easy, two-length victory over California during the regularseason. The crew then met Cornell, Syracuse, Navy, Cal, Columbia, Wisconsin and Princeton onthe Hudson River. Washington was challenged at the finish of the four-mile race by Cornell, butthe Huskies hung on to win their sixth Intercollegiate Rowing Association championship. Thegroup of four sophomores, three juniors and one senior was the youngest crew ever to row under<strong>UW</strong>’s colors in the IRA championships.<strong>UW</strong> CREW HISTORY1941 Men’s Eight-Oared <strong>Crew</strong>Inducted into the Husky Hall of Fame in 1991The 1941 crew was crowned Intercollegiate Rowing Association champions. The crew consistedof Ted Garhart, Walt Wallace, Bill Neill, Paul Simdars, Tom Taylor, Chuck Jackson, Doyle Fowler,John Bracken, and Vic Fomo (coxswain). Three members of this crew — Bracken, Garhart andFomo — won every crew race they participated in during their four years. Coach Al Ulbricksoncalled this crew “as great a crew as I’ve ever had.”1948 Men’s 4-Oared <strong>Crew</strong>Inducted into the Husky Hall of Fame in 1981These five men represented the University of Washington and the United States in the 1948Olympic Games in England, and returned home with the Four-Oar with Coxswain Gold Medal.Coxswain Allen Morgan, Warren Westlund, Bob Martin, Bob Will and Gordon Giovanelli defeatedSwitzerland and Denmark in the finals by two full boat-lengths to win the Gold Medal.1948-50 Men’s <strong>Crew</strong>Inducted into the Husky Hall of Fame in 2000From 1948 to 1950, the <strong>UW</strong> men’s crew dominated the national rowing scene, winning eightchampionships at the pretigious Intercollegiate Rowing Association regattas. Four members wenton to win a gold medal in the 1948 Olympic Games. Members: John Audett, Roger Baird, NormBuvick, Ed Hearing, Rod Johnson, Don Landon, Floyd “Bobby” Lee, Carl Lovsted, Charlie McCarthy,Allen Morgan, Al Ulbrickson, Jr., Ken Walters, Bob Will, Bill Works, Bob Young.73GENERAL INFO. COACHES ROSTERS VARSITY PROFILES 2006 REVIEW RACE HISTORY CREW HISTORY EXPERIENCE2007 WASHINGTON CREW MEDIA GUIDE


GENERAL INFO.<strong>UW</strong> CREW HISTORY1952 Men’s 4-Oared <strong>Crew</strong>Inducted into the Husky Hall of Fame in 1998Husky Hall of Fame1977 Men’s 8-Oared <strong>Crew</strong>Inducted into the Husky Hall of Fame in 1999EXPERIENCE CREW HISTORY RACE HISTORY 2006 REVIEWVARSITY PROFILES ROSTERS COACHES74This crew is one of three from the <strong>UW</strong> to win an Olympic medal. Fil Leanderson, Carl Lovsted,Alvin E. Ulbrickson, Richard W. Wahlstrom and coxswain Albert Rossi, despite limited trainingtime, won the bronze at the 1952 Olympic Games in Helsinki, Finland.1958 Men’s 8-Oared <strong>Crew</strong>Inducted into the Husky Hall of Fame in 1984This crew of John Bisset (coxswain), John Sayre, Andy Hovland, Louis Gellermann, Chuck Alm,Phil Kieburtz, Roger MacDonald, Dick Erickson and Bob Svendsen rowed to an outstandingintercollegiate season before traveling to Henley, England for the Royal Henley Regatta. TheHuskies fell victim to the Leningrad Trud Rowing Club of the Soviet Union in their attempt towin the coveted Grand Challenge Cup, losing by one-and-a-half boat-lengths over the one-mile,550-yard Henley course. Washington challenged the Soviets to a rematch in Moscow where theHuskies earned revenge, winning the 1958 Moscow Cup by besting the Leningrad Trud crew byone-and-three-quarters lengths on the 2,000-meter Khimkinskoe Reservoir course.1970 & 1971 Men’s <strong>Crew</strong>sInducted into the Husky Hall of Fame in 2004The 1970 varsity eight, coached by Dick Erickson, beat heavily favored Penn for the IRA nationalchampionship. It was <strong>UW</strong>’s first varsity eight national title since 1951. The 1971 squad placed secondat the IRAs, but rebounded to take the eights crown at the NAAO championship. Representing theU.S. at the 1971 Pan American Games, the Huskies brought home a silver medal. It marked thelast time a college crew represented the U.S. in major international rowing. The individuals whorowed for both teams included Cliff Hurn (stroke), Greg Miller and Rick Copstead. Larry Johnson,Brian Miller, Brad Thomas, Chad Rudolph, Bill Byrd and Mike Viereck rowed for the 1970 teamthat included coxswain Jim Edwards. The 1971 team included Jon Buse, Charles Ruthford, FredSchoch, Bruce Beall, Pete Suni and coxswain Dwight Phillips.individuals who rowed for bothteams included Cliff Hurn (stroke), Greg Miller and Rick Copstead. Larry Johnson, Brian Miller,Brad Thomas, Chad Rudolph, Bill Byrd and Mike Viereck rowed for the 1970 team that includedcoxswain Jim Edwards. The 1971 team included Jon Buse, Charles Ruthford, Fred Schoch, BruceBeall, Pete Suni and coxswain Dwight Phillips.The team of John Stillings (coxswain), Mike Hess, Jesse Franklin, Terry Fisk, Mark Miller, MarkUmlauf, Ross Parker, Mark Sawyer and Ron Jackman surprised the rowing <strong>com</strong>munity in 1977.The Pac-10 and national collegiate champions defeated the British National Team at Henley inthe Grand Challenge, earning the first victory for the U.S. at the Regatta in 18 years.1981 Women’s 8-Oared <strong>Crew</strong>Inducted into the Husky Hall of Fame in 1989Competing in their first Women’s Collegiate National Championship, the <strong>UW</strong> women capturedthe 1,000-meter title in a time of 3:20.8, defeating Yale by two seconds. The crew consisted ofDebbie Moore, Madeline Hanson, Susan Broome, Karen Mohling, Peg Achterman, Kristi Norelius,Shyril O’Steen, Jane McDougall and Lisa Horn (coxswain).1982 Women’s 8-Oared <strong>Crew</strong>Inducted into the Husky Hall of Fame in 2001The 1982 crew overcame many challengesto win its national title. The race distancewas extended from 1,000 meters to 1,500,a length more familiar to the eastern crews.They also had to battle the weather onLake Waramug in Kent, Connecticut. Thevictorious rowers: Loren Smith, KarenMohling, Susan Broome, Peg Achterman,Margie Cate, Kristi Norelius, Julie Baker,team captain Jane McDougall and coxswainLisa Horn.1983 Women’s 8-Oared <strong>Crew</strong>Inducted into the Husky Hall of Fame in 2001The 1983 crew added to<strong>UW</strong>’s legacy at the collegiatechampionships. Racing on LakeWingra in Madison, Wis., theHuskies won their third straighttitle. The winning shell, namedBodacious, was made up ofJulie Baker, Eleanor McElvaine,Sara Nevin, Ellen Pottmeyer,Jan Fulton, team captain KarenMohling, Maureen King, LorenSmith and coxswain Betsy Beard.2007 WASHINGTON CREW MEDIA GUIDE


In MemoriamMatthew “Fil” Leanderson1931–2006Courtesy of Sarah Anderson and ColumnsMagazineMatthew Fillip “Fil” Leanderson, ’53, whodied Nov. 2, had a dedicated work ethic andan innate sense of leadership that carried himto a stellar career as rower and coach for the<strong>UW</strong> crew team.As a junior, he was hand-picked by thencoachAl Ulbrickson for an elite team thatwould eventually qualify to the 1952 Olympics.Due to a series of misunderstandings, thatteam ended up in Helsinki without a coach.Leanderson rose to the occasion and led thesquad, piloting them to a bronze medal forfour-oared shell with coxswain. “He was afierce <strong>com</strong>petitor,” teammate Al Rossi, ’53,recalled on the <strong>UW</strong> crew website. “But it washis rowing ability that helped carry us in theOlympics.”His passion and experience helpedLeanderson move on to a coaching positionat MIT after graduating. In 1956 he returnedto the <strong>UW</strong>, hired by his former coach to leadW. Hunter SimpsonW. Hunter Simpson, longtime VBC memberand Rowing Steward, passed away January20th of heart failure. Simpson was an activeparticipant in Washington Rowing, fromhis college days at the old boathouse onthe Montlake Cut to his recent gifts to theshellhouse renovation. Even at the peak ofhis career as CEO of Physio-Control, it wasnot unlike Mr. Simpson to drop everything atone of his lakeside parties and jump into thecoxswain’s seat of a passing shell. A strongyet humble presence defined Mr. Simpson,and his passion for the sport of rowing andthe freshmen, and eventually succeededUlbrickson as head coach in 1959. In the nineyears Leanderson led <strong>UW</strong> crew, his teamsdominated the West Coast and won multiplechampionships.From 1977 to 1993 he headed up theWestern Washington University crewprogram, coaching his rowers to a number ofsmall-college championships. He is a memberof both the Husky and the WWU Viking hallsof fame.Leanderson met his wife, Jane, ’53, in anEnglish class their sophomore year at the<strong>UW</strong>. Even after his retirement in 1969, thetwo continued to watch the <strong>UW</strong> crew teamwith interest and with stopwatch in hand.They often took their three daughters—Linda,Gretchen and Paula—on salmon-fishing tripson Puget Sound. Leanderson was also an avidgardener and model-airplane flier.Leanderson remained close with hissurviving Olympic teammates—Rossi; AlUlbrickson Jr., ’52; Carl Lovsted, ’52; and DickWahlstrom, ’54—throughout his life. Eachyear, around the time of <strong>UW</strong> Home<strong>com</strong>ing, themen would reminisce over dinner and Rossi’shomemade wine. Wahlstrom passed away in2003.the University will be greatly missed. Oursincerest condolences to the Simpson familyand the many friends he had throughout theUniversity <strong>com</strong>munity.<strong>UW</strong> CREW HISTORYLeanderson was 75 years old, and issurvived by his wife, daughters and threegrandchildren.—Sarah AndersonPhoto courtesy of Bob Peterson.75GENERAL INFO. COACHES ROSTERS VARSITY PROFILES 2006 REVIEW RACE HISTORY CREW HISTORY EXPERIENCE2007 WASHINGTON CREW MEDIA GUIDE

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