United States Merchant Marine Academy - Midships Yearbook (Kings Point, NY)
- Class of 1991
Page 1 of 536
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9
Pages 12 - 13
Pages 16 - 17
Text from Pages 1 - 536 of the 1991 volume:
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1991 N _• tA United States Merchant Marine Academy As The World Enters The Last Decade Of This Century, Change Is Upon Us. The World Is Becoming One And Its People One. International Trade Is The Chain That Holds The World Together The American Merchant Marine Is A Vital Link In This Interglobal Chain. It Is A Concrete Manifestation Of Our Faith In The Future Of International Trade And Through Such Trade The Future Of The World Economy. Serving Our Nation And World A . rjjjf '1 —— —i Acta Non Verba ♦ ♦ Deeds Not Words, Our Motto, Our Challenge And Trust As Graduates And Officers Of This Nation's Merchant Fleet Touching Countless Ports In Every Land, We Are Entrusted With The Task Of Being To All The World America's Ambassadors: In War, The Means To Victory; In Peace, The Means To Abundant Life, We Carry On The Highest Traditions Of Selfless Devotion To Duty, The United States Merchant Marine Stands In The Service Of Our Nation And The World, t ■ Deeds Not Words For 48 Years, The United States Merchant Marine Academy Has Fulfilled Its Mission To Our Nation. From The North Atlantic In World War II To The Persian Gulf In 1991, Academy Graduates And Cadets Have Lived Up To The Motto — Acta Non Verba—. Every Day Numerous US. Flag Container Ships, Tankers, And Bulk Carriers Depart World Ports Continuing Our Nations Dedication To Free Trade. In The Future, Kings Pointers Will Continue To Dedicate Their Lives To Maritime Service For Our Nation, Fulfilling Our Never Ending Mission. Table Of Contents Editors in Chief Theresa Twaddle Jacqui Gerber Cevan LeSieur Photography Editor Merwyn Oliveria Section Editors Aaron Bresnahan Douglas Price Joe McGuinness Spencer Johnson Benita Sloan Patrick Manning Rolando Rodriguez Bob Carr Carlos Deleon Staff Derik Nelson Missy James Dave Fontana Advisor Mary Cunningham Jos tens' Rep. Carl Miller 1 President Washington, DC George H. Bush President Congratulations to the members of the U.S. Merchant Marine Academy's Class of 1991 on successfully completing four years of arduous study and training at sea. Kings Point has a well-deserved reputation for the scope and depth of its curricula and the high calibre of its graduates, and I salute you for your part in upholding that legacy. America's civilian seafarers have played an important part in promoting our Nation's economic growth, and history shows clearly how important their work has been to the preservation of freedom worldwide. The American Merchant Marine was a lifeline to our military forces in World War I, World War II, Korea, and Vietnam. Today, its support of Operations Desert Shield and Desert Storm again underscores the importance of sealift capability to a credible and effective military. As you leave Kings Point, you join the ranks of America's seafaring professionals. The disci- pline, leadership skills, and dedication you have developed during the past four years will serve as a strong foundation for your continued success. I commend each one of you on this outstanding achievement and send best wishes for the future. 4 Vice President J. Danforth Quayle Washington, DC Vice President ★ ★ % ★ ★ Members of the United States Merchant Marine Class of 1991: For the past four years, the Merchant Marine Academy has taught you your stuff, sharpened your leadership skills, and helped shape your character. These are skills and values important in fulfilling your responsibility as future leaders protecting this nation's economic and security needs. You are now part of the Merchant Marine Academy's rich heritage, and you have every right to be proud of your accomplishment and confident in your future. The education you have received and the friendships you have formed will last a lifetime. Now the long years of preparation are over; your career is just beginning. Yours will be a career with many challenges requiring sacrifice and a high standard of dedication few are willing to give. On behalf of a grateful nation, let me be the first to extend America's appreciation for choosing a career which will contribute to our standard of living and protect our most cherished values: freedom, democracy, human rights and the rule of law. During world conflict, the Merchant Marine Academy has met our country's needs by providing leaders at sea. Today, its graduates contribute significantly to the world's efforts in the Middle East to secure peace and stability. The post-cold war world is uncertain, and we will continue to need your contributions to make it a fitting place for all free people to live in peace. Good luck, and God bless you. Transportation Secretary It is a pleasure to congratulate the Class of 1991 of the U.S. Merchant Marine Academy. You join a distinguished group of Kings Point alumni, superbly qualified to serve as officers in our merchant marine and armed services, or pursue managerial careers in the American maritime community. During your tenure at Kings Point, you were provided with a carefully balanced program of academic instruction, military training and sea experience which honed your individual talents and capabilities. The contributions of the American merchant marine, including Kings Point undergraduates and alumni, to the victory of the coalition forces in the Persian Gulf deserve our nation's gratitude. You already are a part of America's proud maritime heritage, and I know that you will continue the spirit of comradeship, loyalty and dedication as you work toward fulfilling your goals and aspirations. Samuel Skinner 6_________________________________________________________________________ Maritime Administrator Warren G. Leback Maritime Administrator Washington, DC It is a pleasure for me to congratulate the Class of 1991 of the U.S. Merchant Marine Academy on your graduation. As an alumnus of Kings Point, I am aware of the intensive curricula and the unique combination of classroom instruction and at-sea experience you have successfully completed. During your four years at the academy, you became keenly aware of how political developments affect international trade and the importance of sealift to executing this country's forward defense strategy. The Persian Gulf crisis, once again, has brought attention to the importance of the American merchant marine and merchant mariners to our Nation's economy and military strength. This conflict clearly confirmed that adequate and reliable sealift capacity is indispensable to projecting our military might to distant shores. In the spirit of patriotism that America has come to expect from merchant mariners, more than 1,400 seafarers and 165 Kings Point midshipmen crewed vessels needed for Operations Desert Shield Storm, proudly serving and upholding the traditions of duty, honor, country. In pursuing your aspirations and meeting your challenges, you must ultimately earn your success and achievements through hard work, competence and perseverance. All of us have faced that challenge. With the training you received at Kings Point, I am confident that you will succeed in meeting the challenge. I wish you well as you embark an your chosen careers CAPTAIN WARREN G. LEBACK Maritime Administrator Class of 1944 Superintendent To the Class of 1991: Congratulations on the occasion of your graduation! You have learned a great deal and accomplished much since your plebe summer of 1987 and you leave behind a fine record of achievements and contributions to the Regiment of Midshipmen and the Academy. You depart Kings Point to enter a world still troubled by conflict and travail. You will be called upon to serve our nation in many different places and in many different roles but each of you will be expected to provide one thing in common -leadership! I am confident that you will succeed as other Kings Pointers did before you. It has been a privilege being associated with you during the past four years and I am proud of your individual and collective achievements. Your commencement marks the beginning of a new phase of service and accomplishment. On behalf of the Regiment of Midshipmen, faculty and staff, I bid you farewell and wish you continued success. On behalf of Kings Point alumni everywhere, Welcome Aboard. My sincerest good wishes for your future. Sincerely, P. L. KRINSKY CJ Rear Admiral, USMS Chief Of Staff CHIEF OF STAFF SECRETARIES CAPT JAMES ORMISTON JANE LEACH. JOANNE BALUCHINSKY Deputy Chief Of Staff DEP CHIEF OF STAFF Secretary CAPT Charles Renick Ll$a Duque Asst Superintendent For Admin. Left to Right: K. Sendlein, J. Muir, B. Bloomfield, L. Schiavello, LT. Crook, CAPT. Jochmans, T. Goodman, J. Amoroso, J. Katz-Schwartz, J. Long Academic Dean Staff Left to Right: Dr. Warren Mazek, Patricia Fitzpatrick, Marga- ret Czanowicki, CAPT. William McMullen Registrar Staff Commandant Staff Admissions Office Left to Right: CDR. Joe Gebhard, LCDR. Reeve Schecter, LCDR. F. Ferguson, Will Kirk, Harold Lasher, CAPT. E.L. Jenkins External Affairs Office Left to Right: CAPT. Robert Safarik, Marcelle Schermerhorn. Florence Finkelstein, Martin Skrocki Marine Engineering Department Front: Charnews, Butman, Prigozy, Madden, Flarbach Middle: Baham, Brazeil, Chubb, Flennings, Hubert Back: Russo, Jannone, Rhea The Marine Engineering program has two objectives: to prepare graduates to sail as 3AE and to give graduates a sound engineering education. It accomplishes these objec- tives through a mix of practical courses, such as welding and machine shop, and theoretical courses, such as Thermody- namics and Strength of Materials. Exposure to engineering begins early during the Plebe year as continues throughout the midshipman’s stay at the Academy. The Marine Engineers are offered the Marine Engineering Systems option. This is a program approved by the Accredi- tation Board of Engineering and Technology. This program gives the engineering student a deeper understanding of the design process for marine related materials. H I 1 Marine Transportation Department i, Standing: LCDR. Hunt, CWO. Potter, CDR. Greggory, Daley, Katz, CAPT. Meurn. CAPT. Sand- berg, CDR. Zefafa, CAPT. Stewart, CDR. Huber. CDR. Hall, CDR. Nunnenkamp Sitting: Hershey, Cannizzaro, CAPT. Needham, Haendel The Department of Marine Transportation offers the stu- dents the opportunity to specialize by taking electives of- fered by either of two divisions. A specialization in the Division of Nautical Science can provide in-depth knowledge of the technical aspects of ship operation. Midshipmen can develop a basic foundation in marine electronics, domestic shipping, advanced tanker operations, and small vessel oper- ations. Completion of the core curriculum in Marine Transporta- tion and concentrations in management in the Division of Maritime Business can provide students with a foundation in law and regulation, personnel management, industrial psy- chology. and international trade. Deck students are also able to take electives offered by other departments. Math And Science Department r The Department of Math and Science serves to provide a fundamental foundation for both the Marine Transportation and the Marine Engineering programs. Basic courses in the physical sciences, such as college Physics and Chemistry, college level Calculus and Differential equations, are at the head of the department's offerings. In order to introduce students to advanced areas of science and serve the stu- dent’s special needs, there are a wide range of electives available. Offerings in Atomic and Nuclear physics. Hazard- ous Materials, Ocean Chemistry, Solar Energy, Probability, Statistics, Operations Research, and Astrophysics are just some of the electives that have attracted many students. Humanities Department r-s Left to Right: P. Arnold, P. Szaluta, P. Bardot, P. Donovan, P. Brickman, P. Oleszczuk, P. Magnus (Not Shown—Eastwood, Gardella) The Department of Humanities is charged with the broad- er aspect of a midshipman’s training. This department likes to regard itself as the Baccalaureate” Dept, of the Acade- my. It offers the types of liberal arts courses required for the award of a degree, but none necessary for licensing. This department adds to the whole person” development. This program is designed to balance the technical and professional emphasis in the rest of the curriculum. As gradu- ates go on to positions of increasing responsibility, they discover that it is the world of people and ideas, rather than techniques and things, upon which continuing success de- pends. Humanities courses seek to open windows on the world and to provide a basis for personal growth and profes- sional success. Shipboard Training Left to Right: CAPT. Finley, CAPT. The Merchant Marine Academy evolved as a result of the need to provide a structured educational program both ashore and at sea for future merchant Marine Officers. As part of the total professional educational training, each mid- shipman still participates in a cooperative education pro- gram, consisting of one semester of the sophomore year and one semester of the junior year at sea. Every effort is made to assign sea going midshipmen to several commercially op- erated merchant vessels. The midshipmen then become fa- miliar with the operating and performance characteristics associated with various classes of ships. They also gain expe- rience in performing shipboard duties as well as observe the operating requirements for diverse trade routes. Heroy, CAPT. Walters, CAPT. Davenport Naval Science Front: LT. McCue, Mrs Norberg, YNI. Wicelinski, SKC. Gatchalian Middle: LT. Bartlett, CAPT. Pafias, LT. Johansen Back: LT. Walker, LT. Adler The need for Merchant Marine officers who are well- trained in Naval procedures and operations is paramount to our country’s national defense and well-being. The Acade- my’s Naval Science department is charged with the fulfill- ment of this need. Through its comprehensive offering of naval science courses, the department instructs midshipmen in a variety of areas that include.- Sea Power, Naval Organiza- tion, Naval Weapon Systems, Naval Communications, and the Naval Control of Shipping. The material presented in these courses and the midshipman’s other training sufficiently pre- pares him to fulfill the duties and responsibilities of a U.S. Naval officer. The staff also assists midshipen with the pro- cess of seeking active commissions. . Physical Education Department Left to Right: J. Lyons, O. Konakogi, Maureen, C. Pravata, P. McGorry, S. Peterson-Lubow, T. Buarch, J. Sussi, R. Brown, T. Meyer The Physical Education Department plays an integral part in the midshipmen’s whole person” outcome. By combining athletics with our background of nautical and military funda- mentals a midshipman is able to develop a high sense of honor, loyalty, and pride in his profession more readily. By interweaving a monitored physical fitness program with a broad recreational program the midshipmen receive an opportunity to stay physically fit and have fun in the process. Courses in self-defense, swimming, life-saving, vol- leyball, and tennis expose students to a wide range of compe- tition and recreational sports. The aim of the department is to produce young men and women, well-equipped, with a knowledge of physical fitness and a positive attitude to- wards sports. I | Patten Infirmary Staff What would we do whithout our Bob? Left to Right: William Evans, Regina Ebner, Lynne Green, Beryl Trim, Kim Lauckhardt, Bob leva, Dan Kalash, Annette Fox SS5371 Bob, Beryl, and Roman kicking back between patients. Waterfront Staff Front Row: Chris McMahon, Eve Rosen, Pat Filleylove, Carey Slipper, Jim Murphy, Bob Parsons Back Row: Bill Bosendahl, John Cain, Frank Giambrone, Thomas Kinney, 4 Special Services Director of Counseling Alcohol Couns. Band Dir. Dr. Terry Bordan CAPT. Kenneth Force The Counseling Dept was established to address all issues which affect a midshipman’s life and per- formance at the Academy. It is committed to provid- ing an extensive program of individual assistance and at the same time assuring that confidentiality is maintained. Midshipman Hostess Mary Cunningham Counselor Florence Bernard Female Advisor Dr. Jane Brickman tanner's Chapel Staff Left to Right: LCDR. Bennett, PO. Hollenbeck, CDR. Leone Otis Bland Library Staff Left to Right: Esther Bovarnick, Freda Grasberger, Dr. George Billy, Theresa Bogner, Blanche Peyser wmn These are just a few of the faces that have made our stay at the Acade- my just a little easier. They are the unsung heroes that deserve a bit of thanks. Ship's Service The Regiment Of 1st Rotation The Regimental System represents the greatest departure of the new plebe from civilian and high school life. The class system, with its privileges, duties, and responsi- bilities provides an integral and necessary part of the midshipman’s training for a career as a Merchant Marine Officer, since the efficiency and safety of ships at sea depend as much upon the discipline and leadership of their officers as upon their intelligence and technical expertise. As first classmen, the midshipmen become eligible for midshipman officer billets, and bear the responsibility for maintaining the standards and traditions of the Academy, and instilling these traits in the subsequent classes. Upon graduation, these young men and women are sufficiently trained and experi- enced to pass on to positions of leadership and responsibility in their chosen fields. I yt V' t . - Regimental Staff First Battalion Officers BC- SPENCER JOHNSON BX- DUANE BENNETT BOPS- SHANNON REESE BSWO- KEVIN KRICK BIO- JAMES BELL BFL- MICHAEL ROSENBLATT BCOMM- PETER GEDNEY BTO- DEAN ZAHRADKA BHBC- MARK HAIGIS BHBVC JAQUEL1NE GERBER BAO- JAMES TREVINO BAAO- JASON KNUST First Company CC SCHAMPERA, CX RILEY CLASS OF 1992 BOONE. CLUXTON, DELOSSANTOS. DONOVAN. KANE KETTERER. WYNNE CLASS OF 1993 CURLL. FARRELL. FLATLEY. WRIETH, PLUTA. SMITH. McCABE, MclNTYRE. POSTMAN. SCHROEDER, MARTINEZ CLASS OF 1994 ARENELLA, AXTELL, BAKER. BATTENSERGER. BIDDLE BLAND. BRENNER, DONSKEY. FAILLA. FINK. HARRIS GOODNIGHT. LEVI. HEYDMAN. HOUSTON. LEONI. LIM- BERG. MERRILL. MERSHON, MONSON. RAGONESSE, SAUNDERS. SHULTZ, VACANTI I ,• Second Company CLASS OF 1992 DELSOTA, DOUGHNEY, HOLDEN, HOWLAND, SIE- MONSMA, SINGLE CLASS OF !993 BELL, BRESCIA, BROWN, CLEARY, HAYES, HAYNES, NOLAN, SMITH, SWEET, TRACY, WELLENS CLASS OF 1994 BLOMQUIST, BOWEN, CARTY, CONSTONGUAY, WOLFORD, CHANHMANY, COLE, FLAHERTY, FREY, GAGNE, WHITE, KEARNEY, KROEGER, LORASH, MOLLNOW, SHEA, NACE, MOORE, SCHMITZ, SKILL- MAN, STEPHENSON, WALDECK, CC SCHMIDT, CX DRIER CLASS OF 1992 BRANDON. CLARK. DARNELL, EARLEY, KELLY, MUNCH BACH, QUINN. REIMER. RITZ CLASS OF 1993 BRODSKY. CRIPPS, HARTWIG. KLOSE. LARSON, LIBBY McMANUS, MOLISHUS, NICHOLSON, SANDERS, SEIDEL, SERS, SKIPPER, THOMSEN, ZAPOLSKI CLASS OF 1994 ANDREWS. BALLESTEROS, BOWDICH, BUXTON, TANAEL CHRISTOFF, CORNIBE, DANIELS, EVANS, FIELDS. FOX. GLASER, GLAISER, HARLAN, HEPP, KACHLER. LINSKEY, MANGUBAT, NELSON, NORRIS, SHADOFF, W W v Til BE) Fourth Company CLASS OF 1992 BEHLKE, BONZAK, BROWN, BUDACH, CARLSON, CRAWFORD, LEBEDOVYCH, MacARTHUR, NEY- MAN, ROBINSON, SCHULZE, SCIACHETANO, SHINE CLASS OF 1993 COOPERMAN, FLANDERS, KNIGHT, McNULTY, POLCZYNSKI, RIGGIO, RUSSEL, SACHWITZ, YAGEN CLASS OF 1994 BRODEUR, CHAREST, CH1NG, COUSINEAU, CUSH- MAN, DAVIS, DIETER, GRYNIVK, HENDRICKSON, HONECKER, HUGHES. KAGAN, KENNEDY, LANO, LOHMIER, LOTZ, MELCHIORRE, MOSHELL, PASCAL, SALAZAR, SCRAROLA CC OLIVERIA, CX STEFFENS EFFECTS OF POOR HYGINE SMALL, DARK, AND HANDSOME? STOOD UP AGAIN? MAYBE SHE’S LATE First Battalion In Action Second Battalion Officers BC- ROBERT KOCIS BCOMM- KATRINA HASELMAN BX- DOUGLAS THEIN BTO- KEVIN OLSEN BOPS- ROBERT SANGER BHBC- CHRISTOPHER BARCOMB BSWO- DAVID BALL BHBVC- DON KOPECKY BIO- KARL HIRDNING BAO- CHARLES VELIE BFL- DISCHMOND SPURRIER BAAO- EMMA YN1GUEZ CLASS OF 1992 HINES. NEUBECKER, REEDER, SHERRILL, UHLMANN CLASS OF 1993 CARPENTER, ENRIGHT, FULLER, HENDERSON, KIRBY MENSCHING, O’LEARY, SINZ, SWEENEY CLASS OF 1994 COSTANZA, DEHAAI, DRAGOO, DURNAN, ED WARDS, FORTER, GAFFNEY, GARCIA, GARDINER HARMS, HEALEY, HENNESSEY, KROLL, LECHECK MUTTO, PARKER, PLADSEN, SULLIVAN, SZCZYG LINSKI, TRESP, VERSLUIS, YOCKEY CLASS OF 1992 CHU, DYNES, ERHARDT, KOSTECKI, MUR RAY, SWANSON, URBANIC CLASS OF I99S BROWN, DALY FITZPATRICK, GODFREY HOLMAN, KIRSCHNER, NICE, OLAES, PER SINA, SMITH CLASS OF 1994 BRODY, CAPOZELLO, COX, CRUZ, DES VERGES, FERINGER, LACY, PEARSON, PRES- TON, PRICE, SMITH, STONER, THOMAS, THOMPSON, VIEGA, WAHL, Aiil 1 v ' Seventh Company CLASS OF 1992 DEHAAI, HILL, MARTIN, McNALLY CLASS OF 1993 CARROLL, CHIERICO, DARR, FLANAGAN, FOX, HE DRICK, INNOCENTE, KLEPPER, NICHOLS, PRIT CHETT, VanNORMAN CLASS OF 1994 COLLINS, CROCE, FANUCCHI, FAUL, GUIDO HUGHES, JACKO, C. MURPHY, S. MURPHY, RAPONE RIGIO, ROSELLE, ROSS, J. SMITH, M. SMITH, THOMP SON. WOLFELD, YOUNG CLASS OF 1992 DEHAAI, HILL, MARTIN, McNALLY CLASS OF 1993 CARROLL, CHIERICO, DARR, FLANAGAN, FOX, HE DRICK, INNOCENTE, KLEPPER, NICHOLS, PRIT CHETT, VanNORMAN CLASS OF 1994 COLLINS, CROCE, FANUCCHI, FAUL, GUIDO HUGHES, JACKO, C. MURPHY, S. MURPHY, RAPONE RIGIO, ROSELLE, ROSS, J. SMITH, M. SMITH, THOMP SON. WOLFELD, YOUNG CC LEWIS, CX LeSIEUR DO WE REALLY WANT TO KNOW THE STORY? BOB KOCIS —FEARLESS LEADER TURN TOWARDS THE CAMERA AND SMILE, COX HAPPY BIRTHDAY, DISCH Second Battalion At Play 42 v — Third Battalion Officers 'Xi BC- PAUL NICHOLAS BCOMM- LUCAS HICKS BX- CARLOS DELEON BTO- ROBERT CARR BOPS- LORI LUNDIN BHBC- LISA LIU BSWO- VINCENT FOLEY BHBVC MARC COMTOIS BIO- CHRISTOPHER DUGAN BAO- ROBERT CORNWELL BFL- DEAN ERCK BAAO- YANN DURIEUX Si CC HUMPHREYS. CX BANDY Ninth Company CLASS OF 1992 GARCIA DE PAREDES, GUTIERREZ, IRLAND, JANUS, LEE. MILLER, PETERSON, PHILLIPS, SANDS, SECREST CLASS OF 1993 CORRIS, G. DOUGLAS, S. DOUGLAS, KIM, MANUEL, MORGAN, MURPHY, QUINN, SELL, SMITH, STUART CLASS OF 1994 BROWN. BUCKO, J. DAVIS, K. DAVIS, FAIR- LEE, HOSEY, HITE, HOUGHTON, HOWSE, CLASS OF 1994 BROWN, BUCKO, J. DAVIS, K. DAVIS, FAIR- LEE, HOSEY, HITE, HOUGHTON, HOWSE, JERMANE, WOOD, JOHNSON, JONES, LEV- INGS, LISTER, McDONALD, MclNTYRE, McLAFFERTY, MURPHY, POLTRACK, POUND, QUARTUCCIO, RANDALL, RIT- TINGER, SLOOTMAKER, TRIPLETT, VAN DYKE, WAAGE, WANDER, WYSOCKI -T 5 -- V- r Tenth Company , v CS Aa J mt CIu ul, - S 'xin H N n icv a rj CLASS OF 1992 HARRISS, KANTNER. PHILIP CLASS OF 1993 BEAN, BERGERON, BRENNAN, BURG, BURNS, HUT- TON, MIECZYNSKI, MURRAY, PREBLE, STEARNS, TAYLOR CLASS OF 1994 BEERS, BELLISSIMO, BENDIXEN, BLACKWELL, BOOK- HEIMER, BROWN, BURAK, CASERTA, DEVIN, DU- BICK, ERDELJAC, FOOS, GARDNER, GREEN, HENDER- SON, HERGET, HOAG, ILES, WILLET. KOLIBA, KRELL, KROLAC, KURAS, LARSON, LEYSON, LO BONO, McDuffie, minnis, noiseux, olson, peters, POWER, PUDJAYANA, RADER, RAMOS, WEISE, SHEETZ, SKAHEN, SMALL, SMITH, SPEISER, TEMMELI CC RODRIGUEZ, CX RAN- KIN___________________ The Regiment Of 2nd Rotation The mission of the United States Merchant Marine Academy is to graduate outstand- ing young Americans with definite ambitions to serve as leaders in the United States Maritime industry; to impart to them the necessary academic background and funda- mentals of a nautical and military education essential to a successful maritime career-, to develop in them a high sense of honor, uprightness, and loyalty; to instill in them a pride in their profession, and determination to uphold the traditions of their Maritime Heritage; and through effective teaching, training, and guidance, to send them forth to their calling with a deep respect and affection for the United States Merchant Marine Academy and its Midshipmen. —The Mission of the Academy During the Academic year the Regimental system was revised to streamline the system and to make it more efficient. The Regimental and Battalion staff billets were restructured to remove the redundancy of certain positions. In addition, the number of companies was reduced from ten to six, to provide each company with a larger body of midshipmen, and to reduce the number of officer billets. By the time the restructuring was done, the regiment was composed of two battalions; first containing first and second company, second containing third, fourth and fifth company; and the Regimental band. At the company level, the Platoon Commanders began to assume a larger share of the responsibility for the company members, ranging from ensuring the cleanliness of rooms to counseling midshipmen with disciplinary problems. In addition to the changes in the officer billets, a new hierarchy was created to support the regimental system. The second classmen, or juniors, were arranged in a Petty Officer system that is designed to support and supplement the regimental officers, in addition to teaching the Petty Officers the responsibilities and duties of an Officer. Regimental Staff eg RC- DUANE BENNETT RX- DANIEL RILEY RADJ- ACHILLE BROENNIMANN ROPS- DAVID PALMER RLOG- JASON CRAIN RLOGX- HOWARD HOOVER RPA- CEVAN LESIEUR RAO- JAMES TREVINO RSWO- KEVIN KRICK RWO- LOY STEWART m RAD- CHRIS LIVERMORE RTO- ROBERT VILLA-LOBOS RCOMM- BRIAN HUNT RPO- JO ANN BALDWIN RHGC- SHAWN WERCHAN RCGC- WILLIAM BLAINE RML- JUANITA ANDREAS RHBC- ANDREW ACKERMAN RHBVCI- AARON BRESNEHAN RHBVCE- TODD ELWARDT First Battalion BC- PHILIP REICHERT BX- SPENCER JOHNSON BADJ- ALAN ARRIGONI BOPS- JOHN SHAMPERA BLOG- JOHN HAW BHBC- MARK HAIGIS BHBVC- JAQUELINE GERBER BAO- CHARLES NEAL 50 V-' ‘ nrsi CC- GRASSO, CX- SCHNEIDER, CCOM- KANAK CAO- WILLIAMS, PC’S- GIREISI, CULLUM, RICKS CLASS OF 1992 ACKERMAN, BROWN, BUSK, DIEHL, FORD, HAKE, HILL HILLBURN, JOHNSON. MAY McCAIN, MC- DONALD, SCOTT MURRAY. PIETILA, PIKIEWICZ, RYAN. VALENTINO WALLACE CLASS OF 1993 BUCKNER, CASSIDY, COUILLARD, DOSTIE, GRA- HAM, HASTIE, LECOMPTE, MARLOW, MEDRANO, MILLER, NEUBERT, ROEBUCK, SMITH, STREETER, THOMAS, VANDERBERG, WICKERSHAM Second Company CC- SHELLY, CX- REESE, CCOM- HEITGER, CAO ABRAMS, PC’S REED, SALKELD, RUBRECHT CLASS OF 1992 BONE, CLUNE, DeLASHMUT, DETERMAN, FEENEY, GUITEG HIME, MAINA, McCANN, McCARTHY, MILLER, PARKER, PENNY, RIGGIO, RITCHIE, SELT- ZER, WALTON, WEBER CLASS OF 1993 BONNER, BOYAJEFF, CONNER, DALTON, DORRI- COTT, FORD FERGUSON, GELFAND, GOIN, HEINZ, HUNTER, KANE, KEMSLEY, LANG, LEWIS, LIPPS, MASING, MASINSIN MURPHY, O’BEN, PILANT, REYNOLDS, SAINSBURY, SMITH SHEERON, STACK- POLE, STEINER, VOLPE, VORACEK, WIBERG, WROBLEWSKI Murphy . - SPENCE! MOVE CLOSER! First Battalion BC- JOHN CONDON BHBC- LISA LIU BX- JASON HINEY BHBVC- MARC COMTOIS BADJ- DOUGLAS PRICE BHBVC- CHRISTOPHER BARCOMB BOPS- ROBERT KOCIS BHBVC- DON KOPECKY BLOG- MADONNA ORTON BAO- EMMA YNIGUEZ y “ i Jk -• '■4 ■■■'$• ' f. c-m. ■______ Third Company CC- HOLMES, CX- LEFEBVRE, CCOM- THIEN, CAO- SANGER. PCS- HOLLY, CARR, OLSEN CLASS OF 1992 BARNABY, DUFFIELD, LANGLEY, MEDLAND, McGRADY, DYER. NEALE, NICE, OLSON. PALIN, PAUL. SPEARS. UKISHIMA, WACHTEL, CLASS OF 1993 ABBOTT, BLAKE, CAWLEY, CONLEY, FROST, GOMBOS, HART, JOHNSON. KVANVIG, LANE, LIVA, MARTIN, RICE, SAUNDERS. SCOTT, SIEMER, ZACHRICH Fourth Company CC- TWADDLE, CX- VELIE, CCOM- LEWIS, CAO- ERCK, PCS- SOUZA, WALKER, SHILLING CLASS OF 1992 BEEBE, BRIGHT, COLLETT, FARHA, GIROURD, HILL, IVEY, LACROIX, McVAY, PATTERSON, VOGT CLASS OF 1993 BIRNIE, CHERICO, CONNOLLY, CRANE, DOD- SON, FRY, FARRELL, GRAHAM, HAGUE, HAIFLEY, HERRMANN, JOHNSON, LAVIN, LEIGHTON, MacNICHOL, MARK, MILLER, MILLER, MILLER, PARK, PECHEREK, RIGBY, RAPONE, SCAMELL, SNYDER, SPIETH, STROBEL, WILLIAMS, WIL- LOUGHBY, WHITE, ZABROSKI i Z Vv- Fifth Company Barry Hall CC- HICKS, CX- KOVALESKI, CCOM- ROBINSON, CAO-ZAK, PCS- MORGANTI, REYNOLDS CLASS OF 1992 GARCIA DE PAREDES, GUALT, HEALEY, JURENA, KRISTENSEN, McCLINTOCK, NIX, VILLAR CLASS OF 1993 BRENNAN, GALLAHER, GARRAHY, HALL, LEVITT, MALY, RIEMAN Sixth Company CC- CHRASTINA, CX- SLOAN, CCOM-KILKEN- NY, CAO- LUNDIN, PC’S- NELSON, DELEON CLASS OF 1992 BOSSA, BROWN, BROWNELL, ECHOLS, FEDOR, RAMOS, FLEISHER, McFADDEN, MURRAY, SHULER, SMITH, THRALL, USON, VOGT CLASS OF 1993 BASALLAJE, BATALDEN, BLACKLEDGE, BOND, McLINN, DRIELING, FREEBORN, HURLEY, KENT, MAGNIFICO, MILLER, SMITH, TODD Battalion _ 4 7 J On The Loose 1 60 . I WALTER BERNARD ABNEY Slidell, Lousiana VESSELS AND COMPANIES MAJOR, COMPANY SS Jean Lykes Lykes Lines Marine Transportation SS Elizabeth Lykes Lykes Lines First Company SS James Lykes Lykes Lines CLUBS AND ACTIVITIES USNS Regulus Military Rugby, Track, Weightlifting Club, Sealift Regimental Pub Commander, Under PLACES VISITED the Pub Club, Park Rangers South Africa, Kenya, Tanzania, Pan- MESSAGE ama, Columbia, Ecador, Peru, Chile What a long strange trip it’s been.” INTERNSHIP Thanks Tracy, Frank, and my ever Cresent Riverport Pilot Association supporting family and friends at - Belle Chasse, CA home. ELIZABETH ANNE ABRAMS Ridgefield, Connecticut MAJOR COMPANY VESSELS AND COMPANIES Marine Transportation MV Delaware Bay Topgallant Third Company USNS Vega MSC CLUBS AND ACTIVITIES USNS Neosho MSC Varsity Sailing Team. Honor Guard. SS Argonaut a? Varsity Club. Social Club. Arts and Farrell Lines World Affairs Committee. Class Vice Presdient SS Kainalu Matson Lines n MESSAGE PLACES VISITED Unless each day can be looked Holland, Germany, England. Spain, $ back upon by an individual as one in Italy. Greece, Hawaii, Puerto Rico, which he has had some fun, some Scotland. Egypt joy. some real satisfaction, that day INTERNSHIP is a loss. —Eisenhower Maryland Port Administration - Bal- Dad, Mom, Family, and friends: Thanks. 1 love you. timore. MD Lizzie tt ANDREW DENIS ACKERMAN ■■ACK Arvada, Colorado VESSELS AND COMPANIES SS Matsonia SS President Madison MV President Lincoln SS Kenai PLACES VISITED Matson Lines APL APL Keystone Guam, Taiwan, Japan, Hawaii, Alas- ka, US West Coast INTERNSHIP Continental Airlines - Denver, CO MAJOR COMPANY Marine Engineering Systems Old Third Company CLUBS AND ACTIVITIES Varsity Soccer Team, Offshore Sail- ing Team MESSAGE Kings Point wasn’t all bad, I did get to meet some great people and see the world to boot. Thank you Mom and Dad for keep- ing after me even though I always complained. I really appreciated it. 64 JUANITA JEAN ANDREAS White Bear Lake, Minnesota Nita, Chngi” MAJOR COMPANY Marine Engineering Systems Third Company CLUBS AND ACTIVITIES Ambulance Corps, Christian Fellow- ship Club. SNAME MESSAGE The only way to discover the limits of the possible is to go beyond them into the impossible.” —Clark's Second Law Thanks to everyone who helped me on my journey into the impossible. I love you. Mom. Dad, and Chilly. VESSELS AND COMPANIES SS Exxon San Francisco SS Exxon Philadelphia MV President Roosevelt SS Maui MV President Jackson PLACES VISITED Alaska, Hawaii, Japan, Korea, Hong Kong, Taiwan INTERNSHIP Riverway Company - Minneapolis, MN Exxon Corp. Exxon Corp. APL Matson Lines APL JEFFREY RUSSELL ARMSTRONG Beaker Vermilion, Ohio VESSELS AND COMPANIES MAJOR COMPANY MV Sealand Marine Transportation Anchorage Sealand Eighth Company Services, Inc CLUBS AND ACTIVITIES MV Sealand Mariner Sealand Varsity Tennis Team, Varsity Club, Services, Inc. Arts and World Affairs Committee, SS President Grant APL MDA Club, Ski Club SS Manukai Matson Lines MESSAGE SS Marjorie Lykes Lykes Lines 1 would never had made it through SS Letitia Lykes Lykes Lines this place without encouragement PLACES VISITED from my family and friends. I’ll get Alaska, Hawaii, Japa n, Hong Kong, even with you Korea, Singapore, Indonesia Moroc- co, W. Africa, South Africa, Kenya, Somalia, INTERNSHIP Great Lakes Towing Ohio - Cleveland, MAJOR COMPANY Marine Transportation Fourth Company CLUBS AND ACTIVITIES Trident Club, Honor Guard, Crew Team, Varsity Club MESSAGE Through all of the turmoil and all of the strife I’ve learned many things about my life and though things have not gone as I hoped they would. I’d not change it at all even if I could. VESSELS AND COMPANIES SS President Adams APL SS President Kennedy APL SS President Pierce APL SS Keystoner Keystone PLACES VISTITED Panama, Guam. Japan, Korea, Philip- pines. Taiwan, Hong Kong, Singa- pore, Sri Lanka, United Arab Emir- ites INTERNSHIP San Francisco Bar Pilots Association - San Francisco, CA ''Rem ft ALAN LACOSTE ARRIGONI Belmont, California JOHN WALLACE BAILEY John W Palatine, Illinois VESSELS AND COMPANIES SS Manulni SS Kuaui MV President Kennedy SS Mormacstar Matson Matson APL Mormac Bulk Transport Farrell Lines SS Export Patriot USS Abraham Lincoln USN PLACES VISITED Hawaii, Japan, Taiwan, Hong Kong, Spain, Eygpt, Israel, Greece, Italy, Belgium, England, Nova Scotia Alge- ria INTERNSHIP Great Lakes Naval Training Center - Great Lakes, IL MAJOR COMPANY Marine Engineering Systems Old Second Company CLUBS AND ACTIVITIES American Society of Naval Engi- neers, SNAME, Crew Team, Mid- shipman Officer Rugby Team, Weightlifting Club, Sailing Team MESSAGE Remember: All rules are meant to be broken. Thanks, Jennifer, for all your support and love. P.S. A special thanks to Bennigans and Dublin Pub. 68 JOANN BALDWIN Boerne, Texas MAJOR COMPANY VESSELS AND COMPANIES Marine Transportation MV Spirit of Texas Seahawk Tenth Company Mgt. CLUBS AND ACTIVITIES SS Stella Lykes Lykes Lines Band, SNAME. Chapel Choir, Sailing SS Arco Fairbanks Arco Marine Team MV Sealand MESSAGE Defender Sealand Thanks Mom and Dad, Eric, family, and friends for the love and support MV Sealand Service, Inc. you all gave me to get through here. Anchorage Sealand Now it’s ONWARD and UPWARD. NV Sealand Service, Inc. Independence Sealand SerciServe, Inc. PLACES VISITED Tunisia, Turkey, Yugoslavia, Egypt. Israel, Gibraltar, Japa n, Korea, Sin- gapore, Taiwan, Hong Kong, Alaska INTERNSHIP Kelly Air Force Base TX San Antonio, Jo Jo DAVID GLENN BALL Las Vegas, Nevada VESSELS AND COMPANIES SS Lurline Matson SS Exxon Renicia Exxon Corp. SS President Monroe APL USS Independence USN USNS Walter S. Diehl MSC USNS Passumpsic MSC PLACES VISITED Hawaii, Alaska, Guam, Japan, Tai- wan, Philippines, US West and Gulf Coasts INTERNSHIP US Air Force Flight Training - sar's Palace MAJOR COMPANY Marine Engineering Systems Old Fourth Company CLUBS AND ACTIVITIES Karate Team, Cross Country, Guess Girl Fan Club, Rifle Team, Volleyball Team, Midshipman Officer MESSAGE Kings Point delivers the best of the best because there are no points for second place. Turn and burn! I want thank everyone that helped me through Kings Point, but most of all—thanks Mom! We did it!!! ROBERT SCOTT BANDY Nampa, Idaho Band-Man, MOE MAJOR COMPANY VESSELS AND COMPANIES Marine Engineering Systems SS President Ninth Company Madison APL CLUBS AND ACTIVITIES SS President National Defence Transportation Harrison APL Association, ASNE, SNAME, Arts SS President Jackson APL and World Affairs Committee, In- SS Maui Matson termural Sports, The Herman Mel- SS Moku Pahu Matson ville Society, Pet Shop Boys, Appli- USNS Sealift Arctic MTL cant to Skid Row School for Girls SS Golden Gate Keystone MESSAGE PLACES VISITED To my Mom: Thank you for your Hong Kong, Singapore, Japan, Tai- support and for always being there wan, Alaska, Hawaii when 1 needed you. To the friends INTERNSHIP I’ve had and the friends I’ve made: Morrison Knudsen CO. - Boise, ID May we remain friends forever. Now, let’s make some money! CHRISTOPHER WAYNE BARCOMB Stain Newport News, Virginia VESSELS AND COMPANIES MAJOR COMPANY MV Charlotte Lykes Lykes Lines Marine Engineering MV Julius Hammer Hvide Sixth Company Shipping CLUBS AND ACTIVITIES MV Exxon Offshore Sailing Team, SNAME, Chi- Charleston Exxon nese Handball Team, Class of '91 Shipping Professional Cribbage Team MV Falcon MESSAGE Champion Seahawk Through it all, we’ve come to know Mgt. ourselves and our friends. Thanks SS Stella Lykes Lykes Lines Brian and Brendan for the good SS Valley Forge Keystone times and friendship. Thanks Mom, PLACES VISITED Dad, JoAnn, Dawn, and Granpa for Germany, England, Russia, Spain, the support. Only the wind knows Canada, Israel, Italy, Greece, Azores, US East and Gulf Coasts where 1 shall roam. INTERNSHIP United States Navy, Fighter Squad- ron Naval Air Station Oceana - Oceana, VA 12 RUDY JOSEPH BAUTISTA Eureka, California MA JOR COMPA NU Y VESSELS AND COMPANIES Marine Transportation MV Louis J. Hauge Mearsk First Company MV Sealand CLUBS AND ACTIVITIES Innovator Sealand Wrestling. Indoor Outdoor Track Service. Inc. MESSAGE SS Keystone Canyon Keystone May we all have many tacos and PLACES VISITED bagels for all. Watch out for those Japan. Korea, Flong Kong. Diego who look for sponsorship. Garcia, Alaska INTERNSHIP Star Shipping- Humboldt Bay. CA Marine Corps OCS - Quawtico. VA Mexican-Jew, Scamtista” CAMBRIDGE GRAHAM BEERS, III Bud' Lock Haven, PA VESSELS AND COMPANIES MV Rainbow Hope American Ship Management, Indc. MV American Falcon American Transport Lines SS Cherry Valley Keystone Shipping MV Lt. Baldomero Lopez Amsea Corp. Tug Clipper § Barge Maritrans Group, Inc. PLACES VISITED Canada, Iceland. Wales, England, Scotland, Germany, Belgium, Hol- land, Venezuela, Guam, Siapan INTERNSHIP Westinghouse - Pittsburgh, PA MAJOR COMPANY Marine Engineering Eighth Company CLUBS AND ACTIVITIES Scuba Club, Woodwork Club, Lifer Clubs, Park Bound MESSAGE It is always easier to travel then to stay. As long as one travels toward the promised land, the dream is there, to stop means to face reali- ty.” —The Ferguson Rifle 74 JAMES PATRICK BELL Dover, Delaware MAJOR COMPANY Marine Engineering First Company CLUBS AND ACTIVITIES Class President, Class Ring Commit- tee Chairman. Football Team, Rugby Team, Golf Team, Surfing Club, Wilcox Invitational” MESSAGE They say that Kings Point is a great place to be from, but not a great place to be at -1 think we all can say that so far. We know at least half of that saying is truel I am grateful for having found the best of friends and for having a great family to make it all easier. VESSELS AND COMPANIES SS President Hoover APL MV President Polk APL MV Lt. Alex Bonnyman Maersk Lines, LTD MV Sea Lion Crowley Maritime SS Atigun Pass Keystone Shipping PLACES VIS Tl VIS TIS TED VIS I TED Japan, Taiwan, Hong Kong, Korea, Diego Garcia, Venezuela, Brazil, Ar- gentina, Uruguay, Alaska, Panama INTERNSHIP Port of Wilmington, Delaware - Wil- mington, DE Jimmy tt DUANE ALLEN BENNETT Flora Vista, New Mexico VESSELS AND COMPANIES MAJOR COMPANY MV Sealand Marine Transportation Navigator Sealand Old Second Company Service, Inc,. CLUBS AND ACTIVITIES $S President Hear This”, Bicycle Club, Outdoor Eisenhower APL Track,Indoor Track President Madison APL MESSAGE SS President Scientifically, Kings Point is a per- Jefferson APL feet school, for it has reached a SS Kuaui Matson state of total entropy. SS Exxon Benecia Exxon Corp. SS Druzhba Black Sea ▲ Shipping Co. A PLACES VISITED jt Sri Lanka, Taiwan, Guam, Alaska, Hawaii, Spain, Soviet Union, Istan- bul, Morocco, Canary Islands, Ber- muda, Korea, Japan INTERNSHIP Energy Transportation Corp. - New York, NY 76 WILLIAM BURGESS BLAINE Brewer, Maine MAJOR COMPANY VESSELS AND COMPANIES Marine Transportation MV PFC JAMES Sixth Company ANDERSON JR. MAERSK CLUBS AND ACTIVITIES LINES Hockey, Sailing Team, Arts and SS ALMERIA LYKES LYKES LINES World Affairs USNS SEALIFT MESSAGE ATLANTIC AHRENKIEL We spent four years prostrate to SHIPPING the higher mind; We have our pa- SS LAKE CHARLES AHRENKIEL pers, now we are free.” SHIPPING SS RESOLUTE FARRELL LINES PLACES VISITED Ireland, Germany, Spain. France, Monacco, Italy, Greece, Turkey, Is- rael, Egypt, Algeria, Diego Garcia INTERNSHIP Energy Transport Corporation - New York, NY Willy B. MARCUS A. BRAUCHER Brauch” North Canton, Ohio VESSELS AND COMPANIES MAJOR COMPANY SS Brooks Range Inter-Ocean Marine Engineering Management First Company MV President CLUBS AND ACTIVITIES Harding APL Football MV Sealift Indian MESSAGE Ocean Military For those of you who did not drown Sealift in this pool of robotic authoritar- Command ians, but emerged from it with san- MV Sealift ity intact, HERE’S TO YA— and Mediterranean Military Sealift Command don’t forget how you did it. PLACES VISITED Alaska, Guam, Taiwan, Japan, Cuba, Panama, Colombia, Peru Ecuador, Chile, U.S. East and West Coasts INTERNSHIP 78 AARON GORDON BRESNAHAN Memphis, Tennessee MAJOR COMPANY Engineering Systems Fourth Company CLUBS AND ACTIVITIES Rifle Team. Christian Fellowship Club, Trident Club. Honor Guard. Color Guard. Reserve Officers’ As- sociation. Yearbook Staff, Press Box Crew, Honor Board Representative MESSAGE Jesus said, Peace I leave with you, my peace I give unto you: not as the world giveth. give I unto you. Let not your heart be troubled, neither let it be afraid.” VESSELS AND COMPANIES MV Star of Texas Seahawk Management MV Falcon Champion Seahawk Management MV Sheldon Lykes Lykes Lines USS Abraham Lincoln U.S. Navy MV Falcon Princess Seahawk Management SS Marjorie Lykes Lykes Lines PLACES VISITED Egypt, Israel, Netherlands, Germa- ny, England, South Africa, Mozam- bique Tanzaniqa, Kenya, Somalia, Ascension Island INTERNSHIP AFROTC Field Training - Plattsburg AFB, NY Popeye” ACHILLE ERIC B Pago Pago, American Samoa ''Bob, Harry, Chilly VESSELS AND COMPANIES MAJOR COMPANY MV President Marine Transportation Eisenhower American Regimental Staff President CLUBS AND ACTIVITIES Lines Ambulance Squad, Radio Club, Cha- MV Sealift Arctic Marine pel Choir, Mariner’s Chorus, Chris- Transport tian Fellowship club Lines MESSAGE MV Gus W. Darnell Ocean Ships It is pleasant, when the sea is high Inc. and the winds are dashing the MV Sealand Kodiak Sealand Lines waves about, to watch from shore PLACES VISITED the struggle of another. Thanks to Japan, Hong Kong, Taiwan, Guam, all those who helped me make it in- Hawaii, Alaska, California, Greece, stead of watching my struggle. Je Djibouti, Bahrain, Australia, Antar- t’aime, Chnagi. tica INTERNSHIP Upper River Services - Saint Paul, MN i i F t ROBERT WESTLEY CARR Mifflinburg, Pennsylvania MAJOR COMPANY Engineering Systems Tenth Company CLUBS AND ACTIVITIES Midshipman Officer, Yearbook Staff, Regimental Band, Arts and World Affairs Committee, SNAME MESSAGE Thanks Mom, Dad, Thanh, Mai. and the rest of the family. Your support has helped me to make it through here. Now, my mind is full and my pockets are empty so I guess it’s time to get a job. VESSELS AND COMPANIES MV 1st It. Jack Lummus American Overseas Marine SS Coronado Keystone Shipping MV Charlotte Lykes Lykes Lines MV Frances Hammer Occidental Marine PLACES VISITED Russia. Venezuela, Guam, England, Netherlands, Germany, Italy, Ireland INTERNSHIP Applied Research Laboratory - State College. PA WILLIAM SPENCER CARROLL Washington, D.C. VESSELS AND COMPANIES MV Margaret Lykes Lykes Lines SS Ashley Lykes Lykes Lines SS Genevieve Lykes Lykes Lines PLACES VISITED Netherlands, England, Germany, Morrocco, Egypt, Ethiopia, Singa- pore, Sudan, South Africa INTERNSHIP Military Sealift Command - Wash- ington, D.C. MAJOR COMPANY Engineering Systems Third Company CLUBS AND ACTIVITIES Ethnic Culture Club, SNAME MESSAGE It’s good to be FROM Kings Point!! RONALD CHRASTINA Parsippany, New Jersey MAJOR COMPANY VESSELS AND COMPANIES Marine Transportation SS Mason Lykes Lykes Lines Tenth Company SS American CLUBS AND ACTIVITIES Resolute Farrell Lines Weight Club, Phonothon, Midship- SS Energy man Officer Independence Keystone MESSAGE Shipping No Citizen has a right to be an ama- MV Ambassador Crowley teur in the matter of physical train- Caribbean ing . . . What a disgrace it is for a Transport man to grow old without ever see- PLACES VISITED ing the beauty and strenght of Spain. Italy, Egypt, Israel, Turkey, which his body is capable. Socrates- Greece, Guatemala, Honduras, Cos- XEN.. MEM, iiilZ ta Rica, Panama, Colombia. Ecuador, Peru, East Coast INTERNSHIP Roboron” KEVIN STEPHEN CICHON 'Kev' Meriden, Connecticut VESSELS AND COMPANIES MAJOR COMPANY MV PVT. Harry Marine Transportation Fisher Maersk Lines Ninth Company MV Delaware Bay Topgallant CLUBS AND ACTIVITIES Inc. Power Squadron, Honor Guard, Ski SS Spray American Club, Varsity Club, Automotive In- Heavylift terest Club, Skid Row Shipping MESSAGE PLACES VISITED IT’S OVER! Mom and Dad - Thanks Netherlands. Germany, England, and 1 love you! ”... Dizzy in the France, Diego Garcia, U.S. East head and 1 feel Blue, things you said Coast well maybe they’re true, gettin’ fun- INTERNSHIP ny dreams again and again, 1 know Wyatt Oil Terminal Inc. - New Ha- what it means but - 1 can’t explain.” ven, CT - THE WHO BRENDAN JOSEPH CLINCH Oxnard, California VESSELS AND COMPANIES MAJOR COMPANY SS Atigun Pass Keystone Marine Engineering Shipping Fourth Company MV President Polk APL CLUBS AND ACTIVITIES MV President Offshore sailing. SNAME, ASNE, Eisenhower APL Frank Reed Fan Club, Big Blue Team MV President MESSAGE Harding APL All my love to Mom, Dad, Big Bro, MV President Frank, Chris, Brian, and numerous Monroe APL others. See you all LATER. Oh, by PLACES VISITED the way Frank, which way back to Guam, Japan, Hong Kong. Taiwan, the ship? South Africa. Singapore. Sri Lanka, Panama. Alaska INTERNSHIP Port Hueneme Port Authority -Port Hueneme. CA Largomarsino” MARC ALLEN COMTOIS Keomtoys, Comtwa Levant, Maine VESSELS AND COMPANIES MV Moku Pahu Pacific Gulf Marine Corp. SS Golden Gate Keystone Shipping SS Letitia Lykes Lykes Lines PLACES VISITED Costa Rica, Hawaii, Mozambique, Madagascar, Tanzania, Kenya, Phil- ippines, Singapore, South Africa, Panama Canal, Indonesia INTERNSHIP General Electric Naval Drive Tur- bines and Compressors - Bangor, ME MAJOR COMPANY Marine Engineering Tenth Company CLUBS AND ACTIVITIES Yearbook Staff, ASNE, SNAME, Pro- peller Club, Hear This, Regimental Band, Arts and World Affairs Com- mittee MESSAGE Thanks Mom, Dad, Jana, Beth and friends. Give me your hand I’d like to shake it, I want to show you I’m your friend, you’ll understand if I can make it clear. It’s all that mat- ters in the End.” Paul McCartney 86 JOHN PATRICK CONDON Camp Hill, Pennsylvania MAJOR COMPANY VESSELS AND COMPANIES Engineering Systems SS Elizabeth Lykes Lykes Lines Sixth Company MV Falcon Princess Seahawk CLUBS AND ACTIVITIES Management Football, SNAME, Weight Lifting SS Mormac Sky Mormac Club, Sunday Whiffle Ball in the Park Marine Club, Midnight Football on the Transport Grinder Club MV Senator Crowley MESSAGE Caribbean A special thanks to my family for the support and encouragement PLACES VISITED Transport through the good times and bad. 1 West Coast-South America, Egypt, love you very much. To my friends Pakistan, Turkey, Spain, Canada, who helped make it bearable- party U.S. Gulf and East Coast at my house tonight! INTERNSHIP Three Mile Island Middletown, PA Nuclear Plant - ROBERT WATSON CORNWELL New Carlisle, Ohio VESSELS AND COMPANIES MAJOR COMPANY MV President Engineering Systems Truman APL Ninth Company SS Exxon CLUBS AND ACTIVITIES Washington Exxon Baseball, ASNE, SNAME, NDTA, Her- Shipping man Melville Society MV American MESSAGE Condor Crowley The Door Is Open But the Ride Caribbean Ain’t Free” -The Boss Transport Thanks Mom, Dad, Benj, Kris, and MV Marine Reliance Marienne Jodi. 1 couldn’t have made it without Transport you. Thanks to my friends at KP Lines (especially Skid Row) 1 made it with PLACES VISITED Japan, Hong Kong, Taiwan, Panama, Azores Islands, England, Germany, Belgium, Denmark, Netherlands INTERNSHIP Victory Express Inc. - Medway, OH some sanity left. r .— LOIS KATHLEEN COSTELLO Charlotte, Iowa MAJOR COMPANY VESSELS AND COMPANIES Marine Transportation SS Nedlloyd Hudson Sealand Seventh Company Shipping CLUBS AND ACTIVITIES SS Robert E. Lee Waterman MDA, Newman Club, Cross Country, Marine Midshipman Officer SS Mallory Lykes Lykes Lines MESSAGE SS Chilbar Keystone Those who bring sunshine to others Shipping cannot keep it from themselves. SS Cherry Valley Keystone Thanks to my friends for support - Shipping Mom, Dad, and family for love - PLACES VISITED Dale for inspiration. England, Netherlands, Germany, Pa- You never know until you try. kistan, India, Ethiopia, Bangladesh, Sri Lanka, Malaysia, Thailand, Singa- pore, Colombia, Panama, Ecuador, Chile, Peru, Canada INTERNSHIP McQuilling Brokerage - New York, NY KEVIN EDWARD COULEHAN Cumberland, Maryland Coo! VESSELS AND COMPANIES MAJOR COMPANY SS Sealift Atlantic Marine Marine Transportation Transport Eighth Company Lines CLUBS AND ACTIVITIES SS Sealand Varsity Basketball, Knights of Co- Expedition Sealand lumbus Shipping MESSAGE MV Dewayne T. Mom, Dad, Katie, Quinn, Mow and Williams American Pap, 1 love you all! Thanks for all the Overseas support. Casey, without you and SS Tunsina Keystone your dedication, 1 wouldn’t be herel Shipping 1 love youl To all my buddies, 1 MV Kings Pointer USMMA know its not that great, but here’s PLACES VISITED to Kings PointI” Iceland, Puerto Rico, Cuba, Domini- can Republic, Jamaica, Panama, Guam, Saipan, U.S. Gulf and East Coast INTERNSHIP Westuaco Paper Mill Fine Paper Di- vision - Luke, MD 90 JASON DONALD CRAIN Scottsdale, Arizona MAJOR COMPANY Dual license First Company CLUBS AND ACTIVITIES Trident Club, SNAME, IME, Emery Rice Repair Club MESSAGE All work and no play makes jack a dull boy. VESSELS AND COMPANIES SS Keystone Canyon Keystone Shipping MV President Roosevelt American President Lines MV Sea Fox Crowley Shipping Co, PLACES VISITED Alaska, Panama, Japan, Hong Kong, Taiwan, Venezuela, Brazil, Uruguay, Argentina. Puerto Rico INTERNSHIP Acerman Law office - Long Beach, CA — JOHN PATRICK CULLAN The Cullan, Stessmonster, King, Calvin, Husker” Hemingford, Nebraska VESSELS AND COMPANIES SS Genevieve Lykes Lykes Lines SS Stonewall Jackson Waterman Marine MV Falcon Duchess Seahawk Management MV Sugar Islander Pacific Gulf Marine PLACES VISITED Colombia, Panama, Ecuador, Peru, Chile, Egypt, Jordan, Sudan, Ethio- pia, Pakistan, India, Bangladesh, Ma- laysia, Indonesia, Singapore, Thai- land, Poland, Hawaii, West Germany, INTERNSHIP Estess Electrical Company - San An- tonio, TX MAJOR COMPANY Marine Engineering Ninth Company CLUBS AND ACTIVITIES Hecklers Club, Power Squadron, Honor Board Representative, SNAME, Hear This, ASNE, Anti- Smokey Club, Honor Guard MESSAGE Thanks to my friends at home and KP for making the good times bet- ter. (STOP - CULLAN TIME) Thanks especially to Dad, Mom, Chris, Pete, and Jami for believing in me and for giving me ail the support in the world ... I love you all. 92 JONATHAN ANDREW CULLUM East Northport, New York MAJOR COMPANY Engineering Systems Second Company CLUBS AND ACTIVITIES Rifle Team. Christian Fellowship Club. MESSAGE Commit to the Lord. Whatever you do, and your plans will succeed. Proverbs 16:3 Thanks Mom. thanks Dad. You guys are smooth. Thanks Nan the Man and Dave too. VESSELS AND COMPANIES SS King American Heavylift SS Louise Lykes Lykes Lines MV Nosac Ranger Pacific Gulf Marine MV SeaWolf American Transport Lines PLACES VISITED U.S. East Coast, South Africa, Philli- pines, Indonesia, Singapore, Bel- gium, Germany, Sweden, England, Venezuela, Brazil, Argentina. Uru- guay, Puerto Rico INTERNSHIP Bridgeport and Port Jefferson Steamboat Company - Port Jeffer- son, New York Cully DEAN G. DELCAMP Talent, Oregon ,Nickname? Not Me! VESSELS AND COMPANIES MAJOR COMPANY SS President MadisonAPL Marine Transportation MV Sealand Fourth Company Anchorage Sealand CLUBS AND ACTIVITIES Shipping Karate Club, Midshipman Officer, MV Sealift Honor Guard, Axis Dance Troupe Antarctic Marine MESSAGE Transport 1 was right, and you were wrong, Or Lines was it the other way? After all is MV Sealift Arabian said and done, does it really matter Sea Marine anyway? Forever the Axisl Dietkp, Transport ahaahl LFR, UT, MAAAM, Heahl Lines YNGMI, you lose, uncanny, what is PLACES VISITED your purpose? Japan, Hong Kong, Taiwan, Alaska, Spain, Italy, Greece, France, Turkey INTERNSHIP U.S. Coast Guard Marine Safety Of- fice - San Diego, CA no esto pocn a, n I POCO LLEGVE 1L PVL TO A QVIEN LOS DE (A TaGO DILLON SOMBRE CLOACA A, TODOS VIENTOS ENCVBIEI TO A CV 0 CLA4 0 y SINGVLAf) i{EN0NH)C SE POSTPaN (vantos - 1 v PYERTOS EL MAIl BVjA M'CYBRE EL SOL 1 HA Na EGAOO el hohbk. - ■ , 94 CARLOS BELTRAN DE LEON Bonita, California MAJOR COMPANY VESSELS AND COMPANIES Engineering Systems MV President Arthur APL Tenth Company SS Atigun Pass Keystone CLUBS AND ACTIVITIES Shipping Co. Midshipman Officer, Speech and USS Aspro, SSN-648 U.S. Navy Debate Team. Yearbook Staff. Regi- USNS Walter S. Diehl Military mental Band. Glee Club. Propeller Sealift Club. Arts and World Affairs Com- Command mittee USNS Passumpsic Military MESSAGE Sealift 1 want to thank my family and Command friends for the support and love for PLACES VISITED my time here in this institution. To Guam, Taiwan. Singapore, Sri Lanka, all the people who doubted in me. 1 United Arab Emirates. Panama. Phil- leave you this thought, Just do it.. ippines, Alaska. U.S. West Coast . . 1 did!” INTERNSHIP NAS Miramar, VF-2 Bountyhunters - Miramar. CA DAWN KUUIPOHAPUALEILOKE DREIER Boom Li hue, Hawaii VESSELS AND COMPANIES MAJOR COMPANY SS Joseph Lykes Lykes Lines Engineering Systems SS Letitia Lykes Lykes Lines Second Company MV Sheldon Lykes Lykes Lines CLUBS AND ACTIVITIES SS Robert E. Lee Waterman SNAME, Society of Women Engi- Marine neers, Fanfare Trumpets MV Exxon MESSAGE Wilmington Exxon Thanks to my Mom for all the en- Shipping couragement and support through PLACES VISITED the years. All my love to my hus- Portugal, Egypt, Gibraltar, South Af- band for always being there for me rica, Mozambique, Netherlands, En- when 1 just needed a hug or a smile. 1 gland, Germany, Jordan, Pakistan, Saudi Arabia, India, Port Kelang, Sin- gapore, U.S. East Coast love you with all my heart! INTERNSHIP Mormac Marine Transport - Stam- ford, CT CHRISTOPHER ALOYSIUS DUGAN III Port Jefferson Station, New Doogs MAJOR COMPANY Marine Transportation Eighth Company CLUBS AND ACTIVITIES Debate Team - Weightlifting Club - President. Automotive Club Emery Rice. Intramurals MESSAGE Thank you Lord and Mom and Dad and Shawn and friends for helping me through some tough times and being there to hear my troubles. Through you Lord all things are possible” Phil 4:12-13 VESSELS AND COMPANIES Mason Lykes Lykes Lines LT. John P. Bobo American Overseas Marine Sealand Navigator Sealand President EisenhowerAPL President Garfield APL President Tyler APL PLACES VISITED Italy, Turkey, Israel, Egypt, Spain, Scotland, Denmark, England. Canary Islands, Hawaii. Guam, Taiwan. Sin- gapore, Sri Lanka, United Arab Emir- ites, Japan INTERNSHIP Burlingham Underwood and Lord - Manhattan, NY Maher Terminals - Port Elizabeth. NJ YANN STEPHANE DURIEUX Do-er, Yarrnic” Bell Buckle, Tennessee VESSELS AND COMPANIES MV Falcon Duchess Seahawk Management SS Leslie Lykes Lykes Lines MV Margaret Lykes Lykes Lines SS James Lykes Lykes Lines PLACES VISITED Tunisia, Spain, Egypt, Oman, South Yemen, North Yemen, Algeria, Mo- rocco, Netherlands, Germany, En- gland, Tanzania, Kenya, Somalia, Mozambique, South Africa INTERNSHIP Coors Brewing Company - Golden, CO MAJOR COMPANY Marine Transportation Tenth Company CLUBS AND ACTIVITIES Band, Arts and World Affairs Com- mittee, Ethnic Culture Club, Propel- I ler Club, Shoe Golf MESSAGE Roll on, thou deep and dark-blue ocean, roll! Ten thousand fleets sweep over thee in vain Man marks the Earth with ruin, his control stops with the shorei ...” Byron Thanks for all the love and support, and everything Mom and Dad. TODD ROBERT ELWARDT Palos Hills, Illinois MAJOR COMPANY VESSELS AND COMPANIES Marine Engineering Systems MV President Fourth Company Eisenhower APL CLUBS AND ACTIVITIES USNS Sealift Arctic Marine Jazz Band. Drill Team, Fencing. Transport ASNE. SNAME, Power Squadron. Lines Honor Guard. RBU, Midshipman Of- USNS Sealift Arabian ficer, Honor Board Rep., Sports- Sea Marine man's Club. Indoctrination (Class of Transport ’94) Lines MESSAGE PLACES VISITED You only get one life, so you better Japan. Taiwan. Hong Kong, Guam, damn well live it . . . keep slammin’, American West Coast, France, and I'll see the rest of the axis in Spain, Italy, Greece, Turkey hell. INTERNSHIP Merchandise Mart Properties, Inc. - Chicago. II. SEAN MICHAEL ENNIS Dearborn, Michigan VESSELS AND COMPANIES SS Manukae MV President Harding SS Minnow MV President Washington SS Santa Adela Matson APL Charter Boat APL VCI SS Keystone Canyon Keystone PLACES VISITED United Arab Emirates, Singapore, Sri Lanka, Taiwan, Japan, Panama, Hawaii, Alaska, Columbia INTERNSHIP Matson Navigation - San Francisco, Ca. MAJOR COMPANY Marine Engineering Eighth Company CLUBS AND ACTIVITIES Rugby, Wrestling, Varsity Club, Blue Crew (Co. capt.) MESSAGE Never eat spinach with a stranger. I DEAN ANDREW ERCK Saratoga Springs, New MAJOR COMPANY VESSELS AND COMPANIES Marine Engineering SS Genevieve Lykes Lykes Old Fourth Co., Funkenland Brothers CLUBS AND ACTIVITIES SS King American Wrestling, Rugby, Varsity Club, Golf, SNAME. Knights of Columbus, MV 1st. Lt. Heavylift Big Blue Team (Captain), Battalion Baldomero Lopez AMSEA Officer, ESC SS Knight American MESSAGE Heavylift The best of times, the worst of BT San Diego Marine times. Triumphs and Tragedies-Set- Transport backs and Obstacles. My time in hell has been served. Success has PLACES VISITED Lines not been mine alone. The ones who Kenya, South Africa. Ghana, U.S. went before, with, and after me Coast, Guam, Saipan, Alaska, Pana- along with my family share in my ma. Foyer between Rogers and Bar- final victory. 1 love you. ry Hall, ED musters. Assistant Comm. Office, Outside Funken’s door INTERNSHIP Capital Materials Testing - Ballston Spa, NY Smerk, Noid, 1-Roc” PETER HINOJOSA FERDIN San Antonio, Texas VESSELS AND COMPANIES USNS Pollux Bay Tankers MV Pfc Wm B. Baugh MV Falcon Duchess SS Solar Maersk Line Ltd. Seahawk Management American Heavylift USS Abraham Lincoln, CVN-72 US Navy PLACES VISITED Diego Garcia, Indian Ocean, Thai- land, Singapore, Japan, U.S. East Coast INTERNSHIP Non-Destructive Test Facility - Kel- ley Air Force Base, San Antonio, TX MAJOR COMPANY Marine Engineering Systems First Company CLUBS AND ACTIVITIES Regimental Drill Team, Honor Guard, Color Guard, National Eagle Scout Association, Society of Naval Architects and Marine Engineering, American Society of Naval Engi- neers and K.P. Automotive Club MESSAGE There can be nothing so distant that one does not reach ... eventu- ally” R. Descartes So hold on loose- ly, but don’t let go”-38 Special Thanks Mom and Joe for helping me get through these past four years! VINCENT JOHN FOLEY Stamford, Connecticut MAJOR COMPANY Dual Ninth company CLUBS AND ACTIVITIES ASNE, SNAME, Institute of Marine Engineers, Wrestling, Skid Row, Capt. Ahab Club MESSAGE Thanks Mom, Capt. John, Grandma, Jennifer and Aunt Marge for all your love and support. Thanks to 9th company and the class of '91. Cheers! Graduation at last! VESSELS AND COMPANIES SS Argonaut Farrel Lines MV Seawolf Crowley MV President Kennedy APL USNS Sealift Arctic Marine Transport Lines PLACES VISITED Mediterranian Sea, East Coast of South America, Japan, Korea, Hong Kong, Taiwan, Alaska, West Coast of USA INTERNSHIP Moran Towing and Transportation Inc, Greenwich, CT Vin-man, Duals, AxeI” DAVID VINCENT FONTANA Queens, New York ' in Ur IK t Ik 0 10 T lift $ Inn Ut for 5® Ine VESSELS AND COMPANIES MV American Eagle Pacific Gulf Marine $S Texaco Georgia Texaco MV Sea Fox Crowley SS Mormacstar Moore McCormack SS Mason Lykes Lykes Brothers PLACES VISITED Germany, Holland, Turkey, Puerto Rico, Panama Canal, Venezuela, Bra- zil Uruguay, Argentinia, Italy, Israel, Egypt, England, France INTERNSHIP Stanley Associates - Alexandria, Virginia MAJOR COMPANY Marine Transportation Eighth Company CLUBS AND ACTIVITIES Baseball-Captain, Academic Coun- cil-President, Yearbook, Varsity Club, Weightlifting, Midshipman of- ficer, Fine Arts and Culture Club MESSAGE One, two, three strikes ... I’m out of here. I’d like my family to know that with- out their love and guidance I would never have made it through. Thank you for the support. DAVID MAURICE GARDNER, JR Topsail Beach, North Carolina Shrimper, Garden-Hose, Coo ter” MAJOR COMPANY VESSELS AND COMPANIES Marine Transportation SS King American First Company Heavylift CLUBS AND ACTIVITIES MV Falcon Champion Seahawk Liberator, Power Squadron. Trident Management Club, Offshore Fishing Club. Good SS Genevieve Lykes Lykes Ole Boys Club Brothers MESSAGE MV Dock Express Die down biscuits and rise up muf- Texas Dock fins, let your ass stick out like a Express Co. tugboat whistle. I'm ready to go!”- SS Stella Lykes Lykes Jimmy Mohn Brothers Hey Rener, let’s get a keg” PLACES VISITED Thanks Rener. Festus, Jughald, Greece. Italy, Spain. Venezuela, Gnarly, Scrooge, and Wilburys. 1 Norway, Turkey, Egypt love you. INTERNSHIP U.S. Army Corps of Engineers - Wil- mington District, Wilmington, NC MARK RICHARD GARRETT Butler, PA VESSELS AND COMPANIES MAJOR COMPANY SS Export Freedom Export Lines Marine Engineering Systems MV Jack Lummus American First Company Overseas CLUBS AND ACTIVITIES Shipping Baseball Team, Pub Club, Honor Sea Fox Crowley Board Rep., Intramurals, SNAME Maritime MESSAGE SS Mormacstar Moore Mom and Dad, we did it! 1 owe it all McCormack to you, 1 love you. Tyke and ten, you PLACES VISITED two were always there through it Spain, Italy, Egypt, Israel, Greece, all, thanks for your unfailing friend- Turkey, Guam, Panama, Venezuela, ship. And Connie, 1 love you, here’s Brazil. Paraguay, gland, France Argentina, En- to our life together. INTERNSHIP John Colletti and burgh, PA Assoc. - Pitts- Red PETER TIMOTHY GEDNEY Pensacola, Florida MAJOR COMPANY VESSELS AND COMPANIES Marine Engineering SS Kenai Keystone Third Company USS Abraham CLUBS AND ACTIVITIES Lincoln, CVN-72 U.S. Navy Rugby (KPRFC), Sailing Team, Tri- MV Falcon Princess Seahawk dent Club. Class President (Third Management Class year), Surfing Club MV Sheldon Lykes Lykes MESSAGE Brothers I’d like to buy the world a Coke and SS Knight American keep it company Heavylift - Be excellent to each other. PLACES VISITED Panama, Holland, Germany, En- gland, France, Bahamas, Puerto Rico, INTERNSHIP Facilities Maintenance Dept. - NAS Pensacola Gedrocks” JACQUELINE ANDREE GERBER Schertz, Texas VESSELS AND COMPANIES MV NEDLLOYD HUDSON Sealand lines SS ROBERT E. LEE Waterman Marine SS KING American Heavy Lift PLACES VISITED England, Netherlands, Germany, Egypt, Pakistan, Eithiopia Djibouti, India, Sri Lanka, Bangladesh, Thai- land Malaysia. Singapore, U.S. East Coast INTERNSHIP Transportation Squadron at Ran- dolph AFB Universal City, Texas MAJOR COMPANY Marine Transportation Third Company CLUBS AND ACTIVITIES Honor Guard, Sailing, Hear This” Newspaper Editor Glee Club, Volley- ball, Yearbook Editor, Midshipman Officer, Arts and Worlds Affairs MESSAGE The Moving Finger writes) and , having writ. Moves on ... i Thanks to family, friends and Rich- ard for support, survival packages and good times. 3 The one difference between Hell and Kings Point is that one has an end to it. RICHARD DOUGLAS GILL Scappoose, Oregon MAJOR COMPANY VESSELS AND COMPANIES Marine Transportation SS President Hoover American First Company President CLUBS AND ACTIVITIES Lines Football MV LT. Alex MESSAGE Bonnyman Maersk Lines 1 send my love to my Mom. Dad. MV Sea Lion American Rob. and Ron, for always being there Transport when 1 need you. 1 couldn't have Lines done it without you. Special thanks SS Atigun Pass Keystone to my friends and their families. I'll Shipping never forget the times we had to- MV President Polk American gether. 1 want to thank my family President and friends for the support and love Lines for my time here in this institution. PLACES VISITED To all the people who doubted in me. Japan, Hong Kong, Taiwan. Diego 1 leave you this thought. Just do it. Garcia, Panama, Venezuela Brazil, 1 did!” Argentina. Uruguay, Korea, U.S. East and West Coasts INTERNSHIP Port of Portland - Portland, OR MICHAEL ANTHONY 6IRESI •Res Staten Island, New York i s ! H I n « fr ft it' fj L VESSELS AND COMPANIES MV American Falcon Crowley MV Nosal Ranger PGM MV Pfc William B. Baugh Maersk PLACES VISITED England, Germany, France, East Coast of U.S., Diego Garcia, Holland INTERNSHIP South Street Seaport Museum - NY MAJOR COMPANY Marine Engineering First Company CLUBS AND ACTIVITIES Football-Captain, Weightlifting, Honor Board, Tracy Wilcox Gradua- tion Program MESSAGE If the sun refused to shine I would still be lovin’ you, when mountains crumbled to the sea it would still be you and me.” Led Zepplin Thank You ETHEL LINA Oklahoma City, Oklahoma MAJOR COMPANY VESSELS AND COMPANIES Marine Engineering Systems MV Spirit of Texas Seahawk Tenth Company Management lLUBS AND Al TIVITIES SS Stella Lykes Lykes Lines Sailing Team. Regimental Band, Arts MV Sheldon Lykes Lykes Lines and Worlds Affairs Committee, MV President Hear This staff Eisenhower American MESSAGE President Thanks a bunch Pad, Mom. Sa- Lines mantha. Christopher. Lilly. Dearest SS President Hoover American Eric. Homely Roomy Lisa. Doug President Price and John Cullan. Real friends Lines are those who. when you've made a PLACES VISITED fool of yourself, don t feel that Tunisia, Turkey, Yugoslavia. Egypt, you've done a permanent job. Israel, Holland. Germany, England, France, Guam. Taiwan, Japan, Hong Kong INTERNSHIP Air Force Reserve (465)- Tunker Air Force Base. Oklahoma THOMAS MICHAEL GRASSO Swedesboro, New Jersey VESSELS AND COMPANIES SS Sue Lykes Lykes Brothers SS Sealand Challenger Sealand Services, Inc. MT Chesapeake Trader American Trading Transporation PLACES VISITED Turkey, Syria. Egypt, South Africa, Somalia, Sri Lanka, India, Puerto Rico, Dominican Republic, Jamaica INTERNSHIP Mattioni, Mattioni and Mattioni, Ltd - Philadelphia, PA MAJOR COMPANY Marine Transportation First Company CLUBS AND ACTIVITIES Intramurals, All American - Racking Team, New Jersey Turnpike Racing Team MESSAGE I sincerely thank for my KP success: Mom and Dad for unending love and financial support-, my friends for providing a way to use up my finan- cial support; Grandpa Riley for Ro- ma’s T M’s and helping me pass nu- merous classes. Wow ... I made it. AdioS, M----er F----ers! r'; ' If 0 iimjl T«y3f Tommy-G” TROY JOSEPH GRECO Schaumburg, Illinois MAJOR COMPANY VESSELS AND COMPANIES Marine Transportation SS Manuka Matson Nav. Sixth Company Company CLUBS A NO ACTIVITIES President Harding APL kP Hockey Team 87, SS. 89. KP President Rugby Team 88. 89, 90. Offshore Washington APL Sailing Team 88 (Dawn Star), SS Keystoner Keystone Weight Lifting Club Nav. MESSA GE Company To all my friends who helped me SS Kaimoku Matson Nav. through these last four years- Company Thanks, you guys are the best! SS Maui Matson Nav. Special thanks to Mom and Dad. Company Tory and Jeff. Frank and Bill, and PLACES VISITED Susie for all your support - 1 love you Hawaii, U.S. West Coast, Panama, all! Guam. Taiwan. Singapore, Sri Lanka, Oman. Japan INTERNSHIP CSX Sea-Land Shipping Company - Chicago, IL PAUL ANTHONY GUALDONI Johnston City, Illinois VESSELS AND COMPANIES SS Maui Matson MV President Kennedy APL MV President Washington APL MV President Arthur APL SS Keystoner Keystone PLACES VISITED U.S. West Coast, Hawaii, Japan, Tai- wan, Hong Kong, Singapore, Sri Lan- ka. United Arab Emirates, Texas INTERNSHIP Magic Chef - Herrin, IL MAJOR COMPANY Marine Engineering Fourth Company CLUBS AND ACTIVITIES Football, Lacrosse MESSAGE I developed a formula for getting through this place. I figured that if I slept twelve hours a day, I would only be here for two years. i I I ( s I C 5 I MARK FRANCIS Hudson, New Hampshire MAJOR COMPANY VESSELS AND COMPANIES Marine Transportation SS American Fourth Company Resolute Farrell Lines CLUBS AND ACTIVITIES USNS Sealift Arabian Varsity Track, Color Guard. Honor Sea Marine Guard, Drill Team. Honor Board Transport Representative Lines MESSAGE MV Rainbow Hope American They say that life's a carousel. Heavylift spinning fast you’ve got to ride it MV Cape Domingo Marine well. The world is full of Kings and Transport Queens, that blind your eyes and Lines steal your dreams, it’s Heaven and MV Sea Fox Crowley Hell.” Marine Ronnie James Din MV Kings Pointer USMMA USS Lawrence (DDG-4) U.S. Navy PLACES VISITED Spain, Italy. Egypt, Israel, Turkey, Greece, Iceland, Venezuela. Brazil. Argentina. Uraguay, Mexico. Maine INTERNSHIP United States Navy, Yard Patrol Boat Squadron 10 - Newport. Rl Grumpy KATRINA SHARI HASELMAN Trina, Ice 9f Richmond, Virginia VESSELS AND COMPANIES MAJOR COMPANY SS Joseph Lykes Lykes Lines Marine Transportation SS Letitia Lykes Lykes Lines Seventh Company SS Robert E. Lee Waterman SS CLUBS AND ACTIVITIES Corporation Varsity Sailing, Swimming and Div- MV Exxon ing Team, Captain-Diving Team, Wilmington Exxon SS BCOMM 2 Corporation MESSAGE PLACES VISITED It’s all a game - one big mind game. Portugal, Egypt, South Africa, Mo- 1 never would have made it if it zambique, Chile, Peru, Ecuador, Pan- weren’t for the love and support of ama Canal, Suez Canal, Jordan, Ye- my family - especially Mom and men, Sudan, India, Bangladesh, Thai- Dad. land, Malaysia, Singapore, Gibraltar, Spain c INTERNSHIP Cape Canaveral Pilot Association - Cape Canaveral, FL JOHN OSBORNE HAW III Houston, Texas Johnny, J.Q., Hawser” MAJOR COMPANY VESSELS AND COMPANIES Marine Transportation MV Sealand Atlantic Sea-Land Thrid Company Service Inc. CLUBS AND ACTIVITIES MV Spirit of Texas Seahawk Varsity Sailing (Crew Chief Skip- Mngmt. per-7th son). Intramurals. Chapel MV Exxon Choir Charleston Exxon MESSAGE Shipping Thanks and blessings to: Mom. Dad. MV Julius Hammer Occidental Abigail. Meredith. Eric, Phil. Johnny, Chemical Ruby, Jay (Go Giants), Todd E.. PLACES VISITED JoAnn, Lo. Steve, Fly, Chris the Or- U.S. East Coast, Holland. Germany. ganist, and the rest of my class- England, Egypt, Russia mates - WE OUTTA HERE! Take care INTERNSHIP of yourselves, and God Bless. Chiquita Brands Int’l Transportation Division- Cincinnati, OH RICHARD COCJIN HEBRON San Diego, California VESSELS AND COMPANIES MV President Arthur APL MV Sealand Endurance Sealand SS Arco Anchorage Arco Marine Inc. MV Green Ridge Central Gulf Lines PLACES VISITED Guam, Taiwan, Singapore, Sri Lanka, United Arab Emirates, Korea, Hong Kong, Japan, Midway Island, Philli- pines, Alaska INTERNSHIP Valdez, Somcio, Hardin and Asso- ciates - San Diego, CA MAJOR COMPANY Marine Transportation Fourth Company CLUBS AND ACTIVITIES Honor Guard, Midships staff 88, Hear This 88, Football Statistician, Intramural Softball MESSAGE Just do it - Nike Just did it - R.C.H. 118 KURT ALAN HEITGER Massillon, Ohio MAJOR COMPANY Marine Transportation Third Company CLUBS AND ACTIVITIES Sailing Team (Power Squadron), Football, Karate MESSAGE When I decided to come here I didn't know they could keep me here for weeks at a time . . . Had I known that I wouldn't have signed anything . . . Good thing nobody told me what to expect ... To ev- eryone! Good Luck! VESSELS AND COMPANIES MV Prsesident Kennedy APL SS President Harrison APL MV President AdamsAPL SS President Johnson APL MV President Eisenhower APL SS Atligun Pass Keystone PLACES VISITED Japan, Okinawa, Taiwan, Hong Kong, Singapore, Korea, Phillipines INTERNSHIP National Weather Service - Cleve- land and Akron. Ohio LUCAS EARL HICKS III Seaford, Virginia S’ VESSELS AND COMPANIES SS Kenai Keystone MV Sealift China Sea MSC MTL MV American Eagle Pacific Gulf Marine PLACES VISITED Panama, Gulf and East Coast of U.S., Puerto Rico, Cuba, Germany, Hol- land, Belgium INTERNSHIP Newport News Shipbuilding and Drydock Co. - Newport News, VA MAJOR COMPANY Marine Engineering Systems Ninth Company CLUBS AND ACTIVITIES Pub Club, Football fan-club presi- dent, Society of Naval Architects and Marine Engineers, NDTA, ASNE MESSAGE If I didn’t love myself so much, I’d hate myself for coming here. Thanks to everyone for your sup- port and helping me through these four long years. All of my love to Mom and Dad, whose love and support made it possible. r' i ' i jin -—' DUSTIN DALE HIGHERS Homer, Alaska MAJOR COMPANY VESSELS AND COMPANIES Marine Engineering Systems SS Brooks Range Inter-Ocean Old First Co” Management CLUBS AND ACTIVITIES SS Great Land T.O.T.E. Society of Naval Architects and Ma- SS President Grant APL rine Engineers, indoctrination Com- MV President mittee. Midships staff. (Midshipman Adams APL Officer SS Matsonia Matson MESSAGE Navigation At last . . . Sweet freedom!!! PLACES VISITED CO. Alaska. Panama. Coasta Rica. Japan. Korea. Taiwan. Hong Kong. Hawaii INTERNSHIP Polarconsult Alaska, age. AK Inc. - Anchor- BOYD BUCHANAN HILL •Buck Jamestown, Colorado VESSELS AND COMPANIES Sealand Freedom Sealand Inc. President Washington APL Exxon North Slope Exxon SS Manulani Matson PLACES VISITED Japan, Alaska, Singapore, Hong Kong, Hawaii, U.S. West Coast, Tai- wan INTERNSHIP Coors - Golden, CO MAJOR COMPANY Marine Transportation Third Company CLUBS AND ACTIVITIES Sailing, Lacrosse, Trident Club MESSAGE . . . there’s a million ways to go - C. Stevens JASON C. HINEY Humble, Texas MAJOR COMPANY VESSELS AND COMPANIES Dual Falcon Champion Seahawk Fifth Company Management CLUBS AND ACTIVITIES Thompson Lykes Lykes Lines NAVTAG Falcon Princess Seahawk MESSAGE Management Think with your heart instead of Joseph Lykes Lykes Lines your head and you'll be forever hap- SS King American py- Heavylift By the way Miller, we always stud- PLACES VISITED ied on the zero deck of Samuels. Egypt, Greece. Spain. Africa INTERNSHIP Lykes Brother - Houston, TX KARLA KAY HIRDNING Vicksbug, Michigan Kar, K, Circle K” VESSELS AND COMPANIES MV Sealand Performance Sealand SS Thompson Lykes Lykes Lines SS Lurline Matson MV President Jackson APL SS Golden Gate Keystone Shipping Co. PLACES VISITED Netherlands, Germany, England, Togo, South Africa, Mozambique, Madagascar, Kenya, Japan, Korea, Hong Kong, Taiwan, Hawaii INTERNSHIP Armstrong Int., Inc. - Three Rivers, Ml MAJOR COMPANY Marine Transportation Seventh Company CLUBS AND ACTIVITIES MDA, Varsity Club, Offshore Sail- ing, Varsity Volleyball, IM, Honor Guard, Color Guard, Indoc 90, Mid- shipman officer (BIO 2) MESSAGE Adversity causes some men to break, others to break known re- cords. KP- what an experience: sailing, V- ball, Vegas, RMI, Cleave and Beave, Jake, the Gate, Dublins, and great friends! Thanks Mom, Dad, Kel, Grandma, Monkey, Lulu, Shan, Rock- head, Terrance, Miss, Sean, Nak and J! Love ya, Karla Kay JAMES CLIFTON HOLLY Council Bluffs, Iowa MAJOR COMPANY Marine Systems Engineering Sixth Company CLUBS AND ACTIVITIES Football, Spring Rugby. SNAME. Wif- fleball. Floor Hockey, Special Pro- jects, Mike Roth Fan Club, Attitude Adjustment Squad, Sunday Sea Grape Survivor MESSAGE We'll be back by one o'clock for sure. Thanks to Mom, Dad and Kim. Without Your Love support and guidance, none of this would have been possible. Good-bye to all the boys and keep in touch. VESSELS AND COMPANIES SS Stonewall Jackson Waterman Steamship Co. Francis Hmammer Hvide Shipping Co. Sea Wolf American Transport Lines Mormacsun Moore- McCormick PLACES VISITED Brazil. Venezuela. Puerto Rico, Sin- gapore. Russia. Spain. Pakistan, Egypt, Ethiopia. India, Malaysia INTERNSHIP American Commercial Transport- Omaha. Nebraska 'Buddy ft ANTHONY WAYNE BLASIUS HOLMES San Antonio, Texas VESSELS AND COMPANIES SS Genevieve Lykes Lykes Lines SS Stonewall Jackson Waterman SS Company USNS Regulas Military Sealift Command SS Sealand Consumer Sealand Inc. PLACES VISITED Columbia, Equador, Peru, Chile, Pa- kistan, India, Malaysia, Singapore, Belgium, West Germany, Puerto Rico, Dominican Republic, Jamaica INTERNSHIP USMC Officer Candidate School- Quantico, VA MAJOR COMPANY Marine Transportation Old Second CLUBS AND ACTIVITIES Drill Team-4 years, Color Guard-2 years. Honor Guard-1 year. Pistol Team-1 year. Reserve officers’ Asso- ciation, Christian Fellowship Club MESSAGE Fight the good fight, every moment, everyday. Hold on to your dreams. Follow your heart in this world of fantasy. Most of all lay it on the line and live for the weekend. HOWARD WEBSTER HOOVER Tampa, Florida MAJOR COMPANY Marine Transportation First Company CLUBS AND ACTIVITIES Trident Club, Track, Power Squad- ron MESSAGE Is it fated that he should escape. Book XX The Iliad Thank you Mom, Dad, David, Lor- raine. and Deuron for supporting me with your love and understanding through the good and bad times VESSELS AND COMPANIES SS Genevieve Lykes Lykes Lines SS Maj. Stephen W. Pless Waterman Shipping MV Julius Hammer Hvide Shipping MV Cape Henry Interocean Management PLACES VISITED Egypt. Gibraltar. Norway, Denmark, Scotland, England, Spain, Canary Is- lands, Greece, Turkey, Russia, Jor- dan, Oman. Kenya INTERNSHIP Maritrans- Tampa, FL KEVIN JAMES HUMPHREYS Morgantown, West Virginia Acknod” VESSELS AND COMPANIES MAJOR COMPANY MV Francis Hammer Hvide Marine Engineering Systems Shipping Ninth Company SS John Lykes Lykes Lines CLUBS AND ACTIVITIES SS Thompsen Lykes Lykes Lines Hockey Team, 9th Company Com- SS Golden Gate Keystone mander, intramurals, NDTA, Shipping SNAME, ASNI MV President MESSAGE Adams APL When Alexander saw the breadth of SS President Pierce APL his domain he wept, for there were MV President no more worlds to conquer. Kennedy APL Two roads diverged in a wood, and 1 MV Falcon Dutchess Seahawk -1 took the one less traveled by, and Management that has made all the difference. PLACES VISITED Russia, Romania, South Africa, Mo- zambique. Tanzania, Somalia, Kenya, Japan, Korea, Hong pines, Taiwan INTERNSHIP Kong, Philli- American Association of Cost Engi- neers-San Diego, Ca. BRIAN RICHARD HUNT Southington, Connecticut MAJOR COMPANY Engineering First Company CLUBS AND ACTIVITIES Swimming Team, Computer Club, RBU. Rub Rugby Club. Midshipman Officer. Honor Board Representa- tive, SNAME MESSAGE After 350 days of sailing as a cadet, it's finally time to get paid off. Kings Point has given me a future which may have otherwise been dif- ficult. impossible, another or simply unknown. Look out world, here comes ... 3 A E VESSELS AND COMPANIES SS Export Champion Farrell Lines MV PFC William B. Baugh Maersk L ines MV Sealift Pacific Military Transport Lines MV President Kennedy American President Lines MV American Eagle Pacific Gulf Marine PLACES VISITED Turkey. Spain, Tunisia, Egypt, Italy, Diego Garcia, Germany, Ireland, Saudi Arabia, Alaska, Hawaii. Japan, Taiwan, Hong Kong, Honduras INTERNSHIP Moran Tug Corporation - Green- wich, CT JEAN -CHRISTOPHE HERVE JACOB J-C, Jay Albuquerque, New Mexico VESSELS AND COMPANIES President Hoover APL Westward Venture APL President Monroe APL Falcon Duchess Seahawk Management Inc. Sam Houston Waterman SS MAJOR COMPANY Marine Engineering First Company CLUBS AND ACTIVITIES Chapel Choir, Glee Club, Newman Club, Knights of Columbus, 3rd Class VP, 2nd Class President, Rug- by, ECC Co. PLACES VISITED Taiwan, Japan, Hong Kong, Egypt, Ethiopia, Thialand, Pakistan, India, Malaysia. Singapore, U.S. Gulf and West Coasts INTERNSHIP USCG Air Base- Mobile, Alabama MESSAGE To learn you must want to be taught. To refuse proof is stupid - Proverbs My thanks to Mom, Dad, my family in NY and all my friends. - God bless you all. r MICHELLE ANNE JAMES Challis. ID MAJOR COMPANY Marine Transportation Old Second Company CLUBS and activities Offshore Sailing Team, Women's Volleyball. Glee Club, Ski Club. Year- book Staff, Honor Guard, Diesel Club, Mariner Club Marion to Ber- muda '89, Commodore USMMA Sail- ing, Power and Crew Squadron MESSAGE My life is better left to chance. I could have missed the pain, but I would have had to miss the dance. Garth Brooks A special thanks to everyone, since there are too many to name. Carpe Diem KP. VESSELS AND COMPANIES MV President Jackson APL MV Sea-Land Trader Defender Sea-Land USNS Mercury MSC SS Golden Gate Keystone PLACES VISITED Japan, Korte Korea, Hong Kong, Tai- wan. Honduras. Okinawa. Califor- nia, Washington INTERNSHIP American President Lines - Seattle, WA Missy” SPENCER WAYNE JOHNSON •sr Corona, California VESSELS AND COMPANIES Sea-Land Innovator Sea-Land Inc. President Kennedy Brookes Range American President Lines InterOcean Management Sea-Land Inc. U.S. Navy Sea-Land Pacific USS Buccanan PLACES VISITED Japan, South Korea, Hong Kong, Tai- wan, Guam, Hawaii, Alaska, Panama INTERNSHIP Nas Miramar - Miramar, CA MAJOR COMPANY Marine Transportation Fourth Company CLUBS AND ACTIVITIES Yearbook Staff, Crew Team-3 years, Weightlifting, Midshipman Officer- First Battalion Commander MESSAGE Thanks Mom, Dad, and the rest of the family for supporting me through this place. I knew I could do it! SHAUN ALLEN KANAK Fort Smith, Arkansas MAJOR COMPANY Marine Transportation First Company CLUBS AND ACTIVITIES Crew, Offshore Sailing. Debate Team. 2 c Vice President, Vice President-MDA Club, Ring Dance Committee Chairman, June Week- end Committee 1990. RPX. Ex-RPX, Bennigan’s Happy Hour Club VESSELS AND COMPANIES 5.5. Spray 5.5. Sue Lykes M V Sea-Land Express 5.5. Manukai PLACES VISITED American Heavylift Lykes Lines Sea-Land Matson Navigation Company MESSAGE There is a certain freedom in being totally screwed because you know that it can’t get any worse. Israel. Egypt, Panama. Peru, Japan, Hong Kong, Singapore. Taiwan. Ha- waii, Baytown Texas INTERNSHIP U.S. Navy Patrol Wing 10, Squadron VP 48, Moffett Field, California K-man ft JASON ALAN KAPLOW Manhattan, New York Kap VESSELS AND COMPANIES MAJOR COMPANY MV Baltimore Apex Marine Marine Engineering MV Noble Star Sea Lift Third Company SS Energy CLUBS AND ACTIVITIES Independance Keystone Diving Team-4 years, Diving Cap- MV Ambassador Crowley tain-2 years, Swim Team Captain-1 SS Chilbar Keystone year. Water Polo-1 year, six time All- PLACES VISITED American, Chinese Handball Team Norway, St. Croix, Panama, Colum- MESSAGE bia. Ecuador. Peru, Hondouras, Gua- To all those that didn’t think I’d temala, Coasta Rica, Mississippi Riv- make it - er Transit There you go!! SCOTT PATRICK KEARNEY San Diego, California VESSELS AND COMPANIES Sealift Arctic MTL President Washington APL Matsonia Matson Lines Martorie Lykes Lykes Brothers PLACES VISITED Japan. Korea. Taiwan, Alaska, Ha- waii. Singapore. Panama, Indonesia. North, West, South, and East Africa, Sri Lanka INTERNSHIP NASSCO - San Diego, CA MAJOR COMPANY Marine Engineering Ninth Company CLUBS AND ACTIVITIES Water Polo. Intramurals, Arts and World Affairs, Skid Row SNAME. Trident Club. B.A.R., K of C. NEDTA. Surfing, ASNE MESSAGE In this life there are only three men- talities that set precedence-always have a good time, don't let anything or anyone get in the way of your 'performance and finally when in doubt ''Have another!” MARTIN EARLE KEGEL III Hampstead, North Carolina VESSELS AND COMPANIES SS Spray American Heavy Lift MV Adabelle Lykes Lykes Brothers MV Frances Hammer Hvide Shipping Company MV Exxon Charleston Exxon Shipping Company USS Independence (CV-62) U.S. Navy PLACES VISITED England, Holland, Germany, Spain, France, Gibraltar, Russia, Mexico, The Pink Pussycat, Suzies, Benni- gans, Dublin Pub, McHebes, Bishop Rock, Patricks Pub, Raleigh NC, Magnifico NH, The Lantern, The Back Park!!! INTERNSHIP David Taylor ReseArch Center-Be- thesda, MD MAJOR COMPANY Marine Engineering Ninth Company CLUBS AND ACTIVITIES SNAME, Hallway Sports Club, Pet Shop Boys Club, Mens Vollyball, Golf Team, National Defence Transpor- tation Association, ASNE, US Air Frequent Traveler Club Century Club, Applehead Fan Club, Chem- Calc-Dynamics Minor MESSAGE llligitimi Tatum non carborundum f- - pig, we’re done. Thank you Mom and Dad, you made it possible - I love you Special thanks to Eric, Tom, US Air, and AT T. Lori, you made the year. I love you! Apple- head, this Buds 4U 136 TIMOTHY KELLY Lexington, Kentucky MAJOR COMPANY Marine Transportation Third Company CLUBS AND ACTIVITIES Sailing Team. Skipper-Mariner. Regi- mental Honor Board Chairman, Newport to Bermuda '88. Washing- ton-Annapolis-Philadelphia '90 MESSAGE Sincere thanks to my family for in- spiring within me the will to suc- ceed. Also. I'd like to add. ... at Kings Point we’ve an expression . . . Once you’ve made it here, you can make it anywhere (or so says the training film).” VESSELS AND COMPANIES President Roosevelt American President Lines Brooks Range IMO Golden Gate Keystone Shipping PFC James Anderson Jr. Maersk Sea Wolf Crowley PLACES VISITED Hong Kong, Tokyo. Singapore. Bang- kok, Kaoshung, Rio De Janeiro. Bue- nos Aires. Recife, Santos, San Juan, Rio Grande. La Guira, Panama, Val- dez, San Francisco, Los Angeles, Jacksonville INTERNSHIP Freehill, Hogan § Mahar Admiralty Law Firm New York, NY BRIAN JEREMIAH KILKENNY Tempe, Arizona VESSELS AND COMPANIES MAJOR COMPANY SS Golden Gate Keystone Engineering Shipping Tenth Company MV Moku Pahu Pacific Gulf CLUBS AND ACTIVITIES Marine Regimental Band, Society of Naval MV President Architects and Marine Engineers, Monroe American Arts and World Affairs Committee, President Propeller Club Lines MESSAGE MV President Life is only a game, no matter how Truman American you play it, it all ends the same, just President play it good enough so that when it Lines ends you go to heaven. Thanks Mom PLACES VISITED and Dad. Hawaii, Japan, Costa Rica, South Ko- rea, Hong Kong, Taiwan, Washing- ton State INTERNSHIP Acoustic Imaging Inc.- Tempe, AZ ,Killer, Chukenny” 138 WESLEY DAVID KNAPP Voorhheesville, N.Y. Bongo” MAJOR COMPANY VESSELS AND COMPANIES Marine Engineering MV Senator Crowley Eighth Company Maritime CLUBS AND ACTIVITIES MV CPL Louis J. Varsity Soccer-3 years. Varsity Hauge Jr. Maersk Lines Golf-2 years. Varsity Basketball. ST American Trader American Varsity Club-2 years Trading and MESSAGE T ransportation Let the words of my mouth, and MT Delaware Trader American the meditation of my heart, be ac- Trading and ceptable in thy sight. O Lord, my Transportation strength, and my redeemer.'' Psalm PLACES VISITED 19-14 Panama, Coasta Rica, Guatemala. Nicaragua, Diego Garcia INTERNSHIP Crowley Maritime - Jacksonville. FL JASON BOYDE KNUST Phoenix, Arizona VESSELS AND COMPANIES MAJOR COMPANY President Pierce APL Marine Engineering President Hoover APL Fourth Company President Jackson APL CLUBS AND ACTIVITIES President Wrestling-2 years, Weightlifting Washington APL Club-2 years, Called for Phone-a- MV Sam Cobb Ocean Ships Thon-2 years, Karate Club-1 year, Inc. Football-1 year, Academic Officer ! MV Lawrence H. year Gianella Ocean Ships MESSAGE Inc. It’s about time! Good luck every- PLACES VISITED body. John, Todd, Phil, Kap and Japan, Korea, Taiwan, Hong Kong, small” feld, 1 never thought we’d I Phillipines, Singapore, Sri Lanka, make it. I’ll see you guys at the re- United Arab Emirates unions and hopefully between them. INTERNSHIP See ya! Kappa Pi Sigma dudes!! Brookhaven Laboratories-Long Is- land, NY 140 L MAJOR COMPANY Marine Engineering Systems Fifth Company CLUBS AND ACTIVITIES Track and Field Team-Team Cap- tain, Four year letterman. 1990 NCAA Indoor Track and Field All- American, Second Battalion Com- mander MESSAGE Winning isn’t everything, its the only thing” Thanks to Dad. Mom and Dorene for giving me the love and support needed to become a scholar, athlete, and a winner. I love you all! VESSELS AND COMPANIES M V PFC James Anderson Jr. Maershk Lines Ltd. MV Sea Wolf American Transport Lines SS Almeria Lykes Lykes Lines PLACES VISITED Thailand, Turkey, Egypt, Italy, Isra- el, Ireland. Greece, Brazil, Argenti- na, Venezuela, Puerto-Rico, Ura- guay, Diego-Garcia INTERNSHIP John P. Colletti and Assc. - Can- nonsburg, PA Pumpkin” ROBERT ANDREW KOCIS A mb ridge, Pennsylvania DON DUANE KOPECKY Siren, Wisconsin VESSELS AND COMPANIES MAJOR COMPANY S L Arctic Marine Marine Engineering Transport Sixth Company Lines CLUBS AND ACTIVITIES Brooks Range Interocean Rifle Team, Christian Fellowship Mgt. Club, Hear This President MESSAGE Eisenhower APL Nobody said it was going to be easy. President Johnson APL nobody said that it would not be President Roosevelt APL worth it - Ricky Scaggs. PLACES VISITED Thank you God and my family for Panama, Alaska, Korea, Taiwan, Ja- pan, Hong Kong, Philipines, Singa- pore. Sri Lanka, VAE INTERNSHIP Coast Guard Station- Duluth, MN helping me get through this place. JOHN JOSEPH KOVALESKI III Custer, Washington MAJOR COMPANY Marine Transportation Ninth Company CLUBS AND ACTIVITIES Basketball-2 years, Offshore Sailing- 2 years. Power Squadron-2 years. President-Trident Club, Propeller Club, Sportman's Club MESSAGE Sailing takes me away to where I’ve always heard it could be. Just a dream and the wind to carry me and soon I will be free.” Christopher Gross VESSELS AND COMPANIES President Harrison APL President Cleveland APL Arco Fairbanks Arco Marine Inc. Manulani Matson PLACES VISITED U.S. West Coast, Alaska. Japan. Tai- wan. Hong Kong, Singapore, In- donessia, Hawaii INTERNSHIP Arco Marine Inc. - Long Beach. CA Meat HAROLD WALTER KREBS Ha, Harry, Big H” Garden City, N.Y. VESSELS AND COMPANIES MV Bonnyman Maersk Line SS Almeria Lykes Lykes Line MV Anderson Maersk Line SS Pennsylvania Trader A.T.T. MS Faust I.M.C. PLACES VISITED Diego Garcia, Egypt, Turkey, Israel, Greece, Italy. Belgium. Germany, Flolland, England INTERNSHIP International Marine Carriers, Inc. Mineola, N.Y. MAJOR COMPANY Marine Engineering 1st Co. CLUBS AND ACTIVITIES Football, SNAME, Ski Club, Wilcocx Invitational, EDL Club MESSAGE You might have heard I run with a dangerous crowd. We ain’t too pret- ty; we ain’t too proud. We might be laughing a bit too loud; but that nev- er hurt no one. —Billy Joel I i1 i fi c II s it 1« III fh til st 10 0(i| iff loll KEVIN WILLIAM KRICK Reading, PA., :: MAJOR COMPANY Marine Transportation and Engi- neering First Company CLUBS AND ACTIVITIES Track, Midshipman Officer, SNAME. IME. TRIDENT CLUB. ROA. RBU, Drill Team. Volleyball, Emery Rice Restoration MESSAGE These Years have presented me with great friends, good memories and one hell of an education. Thanks to my family, LaRae. Jas, and the original First Company guys that kept me going. Th-th-that’s all, folks! VESSELS AND COMPANIES MV American Condor Crowley MV Sea Fox Crowley SS Fredericksburg Keystone Shipping Co. PLACES VISITED Azores. Great Britain. The Nether- lands. West Germany, Argentina, Uriguay, Brazil, Venezuela, Puerto Rico, St. Croix INTERNSHIP Keystone Shipping Company, Phila- delphia, Pennsylvania Kev tf SCOTT ALAN LANDRY 'Zero' Grove, California VESSELS AND COMPANIES MV President Truman APL SS Sea-land Trader Sea-Land SS Golden Gate Keystone MV Maersk Constellation Maersk Line Ltd. PLACES VISITED Japan. Taiwan, Hong Kong, Guam, Hawaii, Phillipines, Korea, U.S. West Coast INTERNSHIP Pactow tug Salvage - Long Beach, CA MAJOR COMPANY Marine Transportation Fourth Company CLUBS AND ACTIVITIES Football, Rugby, Varsity Club, Hear This, Cheers” Club MESSAGE Few people in this world are suc- cessful unless a lot of other people want them to be. Thanks to my fam- ily and my friends. Never hesitate to call me or ask a favor. Smooth sailing. BRUCE VICTOR LEACH JR Federal Way, Washington MAJOR COMPANY VESSELS AND COMPANIES Marine Transportation Shirley Lykes Lykes Lines Eighth Company Briton Lykes Lykes Lines CLUBS AND ACTIVITIES S.S. Great Land Tote Lines President Midshipman Council, Exxon Philadelphia Exxon Trustee Knights of Columbus, Shipping Co. Crew Chief auxiliary skipper M V Exxon Baytown Exxon Mariner Shipping Co. MESSAGE S.S. Kiamoku Matson Knowledge is the power that Navigation gives us wings to soar” ... All Co. my thanks to my parents for their INTERNSHIP unending support and love. Boeing Aerospace, Hydrofoil Division Key West, Florida Billy Ray MICHAEL EDWARD LEFEBVRE Beave Blaine, Minnesota VESSELS AND COMPANIES SS Greatland Totem President Hoover APL President Monroe APL President Garfield APL President Lincoln APL SS Lurline Matson PLACES VISITED Japan, Guam, Taiwan. Hong Kong, Singapore, Sri Lanka, United Arab Emirates, Hawaii, Alaska INTERNSHIP U.S.C.G. - Duluth, Minnesota MAJOR COMPANY Marine Systems Engineering Sixth Company CLUBS AND ACTIVITIES Sailing Team, Skipper of S V Dawn Star. SNAME, M N Officer MESSAGE If one advances confidently in the direction of his dreams and endeav- ors to live the life which he has imagined, he will meet with a suc- cess unexpected in common hours.” Henry David Thoreau CEVAN JULIUS LE SIEUR Salt Lake City, Utah MAJOR COMPANY Marine Transportation Seventh Company (old 4th) CLUBS AND ACTIVITIES Debate Team-President, Midships Editor, Football, Midshipman Offi- cer, MV Atlantis, MV Poseidon MESSAGE No eloquent prose could adequate- ly describe four years at Kings Point. It is something that one must experience to understand. Thank you Mom. Pop. Marika, and friends for helping me make it through this place.” VESSELS AND COMPANIES MV Sea-Land Tacoma Sea-Land MV Sea-Land Developer Sea-Land SS President Grant APL USS Independence U.S. Navy USNS Walter S. Diehl MSC USNS Passumpsic MSC PLACES VISITED Alaska. Japan, Taiwan, Hong Kong, Singapore, Las Vegas, Disneyland, Phillipines INTERNSHIP U.S. Army Logistics Center—Ft. Lewis. Washington MJohnny, Toast, Senator ANTHAN ALAN LEWIS Natbo, Lewy” Everett, Washington VESSELS AND COMPANIES SS Great Land TOTE SS President Hoover APL MV Falcon Princess Seahawk Management MV Lyra Lykes Lines PLACES VISITED Japan, Taiwan, Hong Kong, Puerto Rico, West Germany, England, Holland and the Republic of Texas. INTERNSHIP Maxum Marine-Arlington, Washington MAJOR COMPANY Marine Transportation Old Third Co. CLUBS AND ACTIVITIES Crew, Offshore Sailing, intramural basketball, M N Officer MESSAGE Fresh-Fyi you are the greatest friend in the world Mom-no matter what I do Iwill always be deda Fred-Without you this wouldn’t be possible Jen-1 love you with all my heart and soul and will forever. LISA ANNE LIU Warren, New Jersey VESSELS AMD COMPANIES MV President Adams APL MV Sea-Land Developer MV Sea-Land Tacoma SS Export Freedom SS Cherry Valley SS Chilbar PLACES VISITED Japan, Taiwan, Hong Kong, Korea. Singapore, Alaska, Italy, Spain, Isra- el, Turkey, Greece, Canada, East coast of US to Texas INTERNSHIP Sea-Land Service, Inc.-, Iselin, New Jersey MAJOR COMPANY Marine Transportation Ninth Company (old 5th) CLUBS AND ACTIVITIES Midshipman Officer-Batallion Hon- or Board Chairman. Vice-Chairman S.N.A.M.E., MDA Club. Honor Guard, Volleyball MESSAGE Two roads diverged in a yellow woods, and sorry I could not travel both and be one traveler, long I stood ... I took the one less traveled by, and that has made all the differ- ence. Thanks Mom, Dad, Eric, and Matt. Sealand Sealand Farrell Times Keystone Keystone Double L” KRISTEN LEE LIVERMORE Jacksonville, North Carolina VESSELS AND COMPANIES SS Sue Lykes Lykes Lines USNS Antarctic Marine Transport Lines SS Manulani Matson Navigation Co. PLACES VISITED Turkey, Syria, Egypt, South Africa, Somalia, Sri Lanka, India, Panama, Honduras, Hawaii INTERNSHIP Charleston Naval Shipyard; Charles- ton, South Carolina MAJOR COMPANY Marine Engineering First Company CLUBS AND ACTIVITIES Basketball, Weightlifting Club, Var- sity Club MESSAGE Thanks Dad. Ray, and Mike; and thanks to all the little people 1 had to walk on to get to where 1 am today.” LOR! ANN LUNDIN Aurora. Colorado VESSELS AND COMPANIES MAJOR COMPANY MV president Marine Transportation Monroe APL Tenth Company (old 6th) SS Arco Prudhoe BayArco Marine CLUBS AND ACTIVITIES MV Sea-Land Class Secretary, Social Committee. Endurance Sealand Regimental Band. Arts and World SS Manulani Matson Affairs. Lacrosse Manager, Trident Navigation Club. Propeller Club. SWE, NDTA. Co. Ethnic Culture Club. Batallion Oper- SS Keystoner Keystone ations Officer. MV President MESSAGE Truman APL The heights of men reached and PLACES VISITED kept were not attained by sudden Japan, Hong Kong, Taiwan. Korea, flight, but they, while their compan- Alaska. Hawaii, Panama Canal. Cali- ions slept, were toiling upward in fornia, Washington, Texas the night. - Longfellow Thank you INTERNSHIP Mom, Dad, Terri, and Wendy for all Coors Brewing Companyj Golden, your love, support, and confidence. Colorado 1 love youl KRISTA MAGNIFICO Alton, New Hampshire VESSELS AND COMPANIES SS Nuevo San Juan PRMMI SS Mallory Lykes Lykes Lines TV Kings Pointer Slave Lines SS Export Freedom Farrell Lines SS Chestnut Hill Keystone SS Kittanning Keystone SS Golden Gate Keystone PLACES VISITED East and West Coast, Puerto Rico, Dominican Republic, Colombia, Pan- ama, Ecuador, Peru, Chile, Spain, Ita- ly, Greece, Egypt, Turkey, Israel, Gi- braltar. Morocco INTERNSHIP Boynton and Waldron Law Firm - Portsmouth, New Hampshire MAJOR COMPANY Marine Transportation Fourth Company CLUBS AND ACTIVITIES Swim Team, Crew Team, Trident Club, Honor Guard, Hear This” MESSAGE I owe most of everything to my mom and dad-thanks and I love youl Blackbird sing’in in the dead of night, Take these sunken eyes and learn to see. All your life you were only waiting for this moment to be free.” - Beatles My place is of the sun and this place is of the Dark.” - Indigo Girls PATRICK FRANCIS MANNING Mill Valley, California VESSEL AND COMPANIES MV President Truman API SS Exxon Washington Exxon Shipping Co. MV Frances Hammer Hvide Shipping Co. SS Marjorie Lykes Lykes Lines USS Buchanon DDG- 14 US Navy PLACES VISITED Japan, Hong Kong, Taiwan, Panama, Florida, New Orleans, Spain. Gibral- tar. USSR, Great Lakes. Egypt, Ethio- pia, Germany, Norway, Belgium, Azores, San Diego, San Pedro, Long Beach INTERNSHIP San Francisco Bar Pilots MAJOR COMPANY Marine Transportation Tenth Company (old 6th) CLUBS AND ACTIVITIES Debate, Regimental Band. Fanfare Trumpets, Power Squadron, Year- book. Hear This, Trident Club, Propeller Club. Arts and World Af- fairs Committee, Ethnic Culture Club MESSAGE The great thing in this world is not so much where we are, but in what direction we are moving.” - Oliver Wendell Holmes Thank you Mom, Dad, Phyllis, Helen, and Mike for helping me stick it out; it’s been worth itl Posh ft EDWARD RICHARD MCERLEAN Ronkonkoma, New York VESSELS AND COMPANIES MAJOR COMPANY USNS Sealift Pacific Marine Marine Engineering Systems Transport Ninth Company Lines CLUBS AND ACTIVITIES SS Allison Lykes Lykes Football, Lacrosse, SNAME Brothers MESSAGE $S Energy Always remember the people that Independence Keystone you can trust and never forget the MV James Anderson Shipping people you can’t - Eddie Mack Jr. Maersk Line Ltd. SS King PLACES VISITED American Heavylift Far East, West Coast South Ameri- ca, Diego Garcia, East and West Coast of U.S. INTERNSHIP Bridgeport and Port Jefferson Steamboat Co.- Port Jefferson, NY 156 JOSEPH PATRICK McGUINNESS Salem, Connecticut MAJOR COMPANY Marine Transportation Old Fourth Company CLUBS AND ACTIVITIES Football. Intramurals, Midshipman Officer, Yearbook, Class II Club, Funken Fan Club MESSAGE Thanks to all my friends who helped me make it through here. Special thanks to my father, for all his sup- port. Few people are successful un- less a lot of other people want them to be.” It was fun, but I’m happy to be going. VESSELS AND COMPANIES 1st Lt. Jack Lummus AMSEA James Lykes Lykes Lines American Trader American Trading Transportation PLACES VISITED Chile, Peru, Ecuador, Columbia, Pan- ama, Guam, Alaska, US Gulf and US West Coast INTERNSHIP American Trading Transportation, New York ROBERT FRANCIS MCMANUS Portsmouth, Rhode Island D.S., Nitro, Na pol ion, Baby gator” VESSELS AND COMPANIES MV Pvt. Harry Fisher Maersk Line Ltd. MV Senator Crowley Carribbean Transport SS Almerda Lykes Lykes Brothers SS Magallanes Lykes Brothers PLACES VISITED Diego Garcia, Italy, Greece, Turkey, Israel, Egypt, Columbia, Panama, Costa Rica, Ecuador, Peru, Chile INTERNSHIP Newport Offshore Ltd.-Newport, Rl MAJOR COMPANY Marine Engineering Ninth Company (old 5th) CLUBS AND ACTIVITIES Varsity Baseball, Varsity Soccer, in- tramural softball. Basketball, SNAME, THE FARM, owner of stools at McHebe’s, Gil-n-Ernies, and Ben- nigans MESSAGE Have you ever danced with the Devil in the pale moonlight?” The Joker-Mentally yours Thanks Mom, Dad, Ed, Allison, and my whole fam- ily for supporting me through all the good and bad I love you BRENDAN WALLACE MCMILLIN Cocoa Beach, Florida Fly, Chickenbone, Brundle Fly, Super fly, Fly Man” MAJOR COMPANY VESSELS AND COMPANIES Marine Transportation Ashley Lykes Lykes Lines Seventh Company Falcon Champion Seahawk CLUBS AND ACTIVITIES Management Vice Commodore of Waterfront, Josephus Daniels Skipper of S v of Dawn Star. Griev- (CN-2) U.S. Navy ance Committee, Glee Club, Chapel Charollette Lykes Lykes Lines choir-President. Good Old Boys Solar American Club, Diesel Club, Varsity Wrestling Heavylift MESSAGE PLACES VISITED All troubles in life can be met with a Ethiopia, Germany, England, Hoi- smile. land, Azores, Panama, Morocco, Spain, Greece. Egypt, Israel, Sicily, Italy, Canada INTERNSHIP Port Canaveral Pilots Association- Cape Canaveral, FL I TERENCE PATRICK MCVEIGH Rock a way Beach, New York VESSELS AND COMPANIES MV 1st Lt. Alexander Bonnyman Maersk American Resolute Farrel Lines Mormacsun Mormac Bulk Transport American Falcon American Transport PLACES VISITED Spain, Italy, Turkey, Greece, Israel, Egypt, Great Britain, Scotland, West Germany, Belgium, Holland, Azores, Venezuela, Puerto Rico, Cuba, Mon- trial. INTERNSHIP Lancer Insurance Company-Long Beach. NY MAJOR COMPANY Marine Transportation Eighth Company CLUBS AND ACTIVITIES Varsity Cross Country-Captain, Track and Field-Captain, Basketball intramurals, Knights of Columbus, Midshipman Pub MESSAGE So often times it happens, that we live our lives in chains and we never even know we had the key.” -Eagles Thanks to my family and friends for everything. (I jW: klat u U | iniis1 yio 160 ERIC CHARLES MEYER St. Louis Missouri MAJOR COMPANY Marine Engineering Ninth Company CLUB AND ACTIVITIES National Defense Transportation Association. Pet Shop-Boys Club, Hallway Sports Club MESSAGE The fat lady is singing! Thanks to my family and friends for getting me through the hard times and sharing the good, especially Martin. Spk, and Tom. No thanks to all the snappers and BOs, especially Apple- head! Love ya Mom and Dad. VESSELS AND COMPANIES MV Spirit of Texas Seahawk Management American Heavylift Lykes Lines Ocean Chemical Transport American Heavylift PLACES VISITED South Africa. El Salvador. Europe. Russia. Egypt. Puerto Rico, Benni- gans INTERNSHIP SS King MV Lyra MV Julius Hammer SS Knight Missouri Air National Guard, I3lst Tactical- St. Louis, MO 'Dick” JACKIE BURTON MILLER Montauk Miller” Laguna Beach, California VESSELS AND COMPANIES MV D.T. William American Overseas Marine MV President Washington APL MV President Aurther APL MV President Adams APL SS Kauai Matson Navigation Co. PLACES VISITED Indian Island. Taiwan, Singapore, Columbo. Sri Lanka, United Arab Emerites, Guam, Hawaii, Foyer be- tween Roges and Barry Hall. INTERNSHIP Miller and Miller Law Offices-New- port Beach, CA MAJOR COMPANY Dual Third Company CLUBS AND ACTIVITIES Varsity Diving Team, Varsity Vol- leyball Team, Bowling Club, Varsity Club, Society of Naval Architects and Marine Engineers Institute of Marine Engineers, Trident Club, Ski Club, Surfing Club, Volleyball Club, 5 time member of century Club MESSAGE Four years and 500 demerits ago I didn’t know what Kings Point was all about I still don’t . . . Without my family and friends I would have nev- er made it, thank you, live long and prosper!! 162 RACE KANE MINER Harrisburg, Pennsylvania MAJOR COMPANY Marine Transportation Third Company (old 2nd) CLUBS AND ACTIVITIES Rugby. Chinese Handball team. Deck Systems. Arts and World Af- fairs Committee, Volleyball MESSAGE You are never given a wish without also being given the power to make it true. You may have to work for it. however. RB illusions Thanks to ev- eryone that made Kings Point a lit- tle easier to deal with. Outta here. VESSELS AND COMPANIES Stella Lykes Sheldon Lykes Argonaut Mormacsky Senator PLACES VISITED Lykes Lines Lykes Lines Farrel Lines Mormac CCT Germany. Holland. England. Greece, Turkey. Egypt. Italy. Spain. Portugal, Panama. Peru. Equador. Columbia, St. Johns INTERNSHIP Gannett Feming and Associates- Camp Hill. PA Race ff ANDREW JAMES MINSTER Junior Wayne, Pennsylvania VESSELS AND COMPANIES MAJOR COMPANY MV Sea Wolf Crowley Marine Transportation MV CPL Louis J. First Company Hauge JR. Maersk Lines CLUBS AND ACTIVITIES MV Maersk Skipper of S V Contessa, Power Constellation Maersk Lines Squadron Fleet Captain, Mariner SS Energy Club, Good 01’ Boys Club Independence Keystone MESSAGE Shipping So Ah, Whataya Doin? These past MV Golden Gate Keystone four years have been like one of Shipping those disasterous experiences that PLACES VISITED you can always look back and laugh Venezuela, Brazil, Diego, Garcia, at. 1 could not have made it without Midway, Guam, Phillipines, Korea, the love and support of my parents, Japan, U.S. West Coast thanks Mom and Dad. INTERNSHIP Keystone Shipping Co.- Philadel- phia, PA BRIAN WAYNE MOREL Stockton, California MAJOR COMPANY VESSELS AND COMPANIES Marine Engineering President Roosevelt APL Fifth Company President Kennedy APL CLUBS AND ACTIVITIES President Pierce APL Varsity Dinghy Team President MESSAGE Washington APL Thanks Mom and Dad. Laura Lee, SS Brooks Range Interocean Cindy, Bill. Des, and Pete for your Management Encouragement - 1 love you SS Golden Gate Keystone Shipping Co. PLACES VISITED Japan. Hong Kong. Taiwan, Philli- pines. Korea. Panama. Alaska, U.S. West Coast INTERNSHIP American President Lines-Oakland, CA JOHN A. MORG JR. South Ozone Park, New York Gator VESSELS AND COMPANIES MV Pvt. Harry Fisher Maersk Lines MV American Eagle Pacific Gulf Marine SS Solar American Heavylift SS China Sea Marine Transport Lines PLACES VISITED Diego Garcia, Puerto Rico, Cuba, Germany, Netherlands, Belgium, US East and Gulf Coasts INTERNSHIP Farrell Lines- Manhattan, New York MAJOR COMPANY Marine Transportation Ninth Company CLUBS AND ACTIVITIES Football, Baseball, Propeller Club Message hope we get what we deserve for e pain and suffering we have en- dured. Good luck everybody! Thanks Mom and Dad for all your support. I love you! Look out world, the Gator is on the loose.” JOSEPH EDWARD MORRISSEY Canal Zone, Panama MAJOR COMPANY VESSELS AND COMPANIES Marine Transportation SS President Taylor Waterman 10th Company Steamship CLUBS AND ACTIVITIES Co Rugby, Water Polo, Sailing Team. SS Zoella Lykes Lykes Lines Arts and World Affairs Committee MV Star of Texas Seahawk Chairman, Social Committee. Pro- Management peller Club. Automotive Interest SS Spray American club. Sportsman’s Club, Shoe Golf Heavylift Inc. Message SS Ashley Lykes Lykes Lines Thanks a lot Mom, Dad. Noeline. PLACES VISITED and Brenda for your tremendous Sudan, Ethiopia, Djibouti, Yemen, support. You’ve been great! 1 can’t Cape Verde Islands, Senegal, Libe- explain how happy 1 am to have ria, South Africa. Brazil, Panama, made it through this place. I’m glad Chile, Canada, Morocco to have made a number of really INTERNSHIP good friends who made the four Panama Canal Commission, Republic years very enjoyable. Good luck to of Panama all of you. There are two kinds of people in this world, those who go to sea, and those who wish they could. CHARLES WRAY NEAL Butler, Pennsylvania Chuck, C.W ’ VESSELS AND COMPANIES M V Exxon Princeton Exxon Shipping SS James Lykes Lykes Lines USNS Pollux Military Sealift Command MV Falcon Dutchess Seahawk Management PLACES VISITED Germany, Belgium, West Coast of South America, Panama, West and East Coasts of U.S. INTERNSHIP Ervin Industries.- Abrassive Aliys Di- vision -Butler, PA MAJOR COMPANY Engineering Systems Second company CLUBS AND ACTIVITIES Computer Club, Regimental Broad- cast unit. Karate Team, Rifle Team, Class Secretary, K of C, CFC MESSAGE A quadrillion thanks to my family, to the gang at home, to all my friends at KP, AND most a of all, to Jesus Christ for hope and wisdom. God Bless Everyone. Lookout world. I’m ready to roll. 168 DERIK ALAN NELSON Spring Hill, Florida % 'i'f, '«ii;- MAJOR COMPANY Marine Transportation Tenth Company CLUBS AMP ACTIVITIES Waterpolo, Band, Rugby. Hear This”, Midships, Arts and World Af- fairs, Ethnic Culture Club, Sleeping in Class MESSAGE Thanks to my Family and friends for helping me make it through. No mas Grinch! Good Luck Biscuit. Honest Ed, Patricio, Chupa. Yannick. Little Feller. Bunny, Keomtois. Zero, Gum- my, JKiller. Ranky, Jo JO. and Roonie § Family. See Yal VESSELS AND COMPANIES MV PFC James Anderson JR. Maersk Lines MV Margaret Lykes Lykes Lines SS Letitia Lykes Lykes Lines PLACES VISITED Diego Garcia. Netherlands. England. South Africa, Mozambique, Mada- gascar, Tanzania. Kenya, Phillipines, Indonesia, Singapore INTERNSHIP Maritrans - Tampa, FL Big O”” QUOC VIET NGUYEN Faribault, Minnesota VESSELS AND COMPANIES MV Sealand Mariner Sealand Service Inc. MV Sealand Tacoma Sealand Service Inc. MV President Jackson American President Lines SS Golden Gate Keystone Shipping PLACES VISITED Japan, Korea, Hong Kong, Taiwan, Singapore, Alaska, West Coast of U.S. INTERNSHIP VRC-30 North Island NAS - San Die- go. ca CA MAJOR COMPANY Marine Transportation Fourth Company CLUBS AND ACTIVITIES Hockey, Baseball, Softball MESSAGE I just want to thank everyone who helped me make it through this place 170 PAUL ANDREW NICHOLAS Williamsport, Maryland MAJOR COMPANY Dual 01’ Fourth Co. CLUBS AND ACTIVITIES Color Guard. Honor Guard. ROA. Drill Team. Indoc. Planning Commit- tee. Golf Team. MSR. SCA. BC 3. SNAME. Marine Corps Option MESSAGE Ooh-Rah! No- Seriously, it is often more encouraging to remember where we’ve been and what we’ve already accomplished than to look toward where we’re going and what we will accomplish VESSELS AND COMPANIES MV Maersk Constellation Maersk Lines Ltd. MV CPL. Louis J. Hauge Jr. Maersk Lines Ltd. PLACES VISITED Japan. Korea. Phillipines, Austrailia, Wake Island. Midway Island. Guam. Spain. Hawaii, Panama Canal, Diego Garcia. East Coast of U.S. INTERNSHIP Marine Corps OCS - Quantico. VA Joint Chiefs of Staff-Wahshington, DC Nich tf MERWYN ROLDAN OLI VERI A Oli, Flippy tt San Diego, California VESSELS AND COMPANIES SS President Madison SS Manukai MV USNS Sealift Arabian Sea MV USNS Mediterranean Sea USS Buchanan PLACES VISITED Alaska, Hawaii, Japan, Hong Kong, Taiwan, Spain, Greece, Italy, Gibral- tar. Turkey INTERNSHIP General Dynamics Electronics Divi- sion- San Diego, CA MAJOR COMPANY Marine Engineering Systems Fourth Company CLUBS AND ACTIVITIES Varsity Volleyball, Varsity Pistol Team, Varsity Track, 4th Company Commander, Midships Photography Editor, Honor Guard, ASNE, SNAME, Knights of Columbus, Karate Club, MDA, Spize II MESSAGE In the drink TKP is over, you can guess the rest. Laibach, Tweekie, electrical weenies, Slehpe, Clowns, Uptight, Macflight, Firehose, Tanya- Terri...Just can’t see it. Eh, she don’t know ya . . . Axis has finally stripped the end, for real. XYZ APL Matson Lines MTL MTL U.S. Navy 172 KEVIN THOMAS OLSEN Huffman Estates, U IL MA JOR 7 COMPA N Y Engineering Systems Seventh Company CLUBS AND ACTIVITIES crew. Track. SNAME, Midshipman Officer MESSAGE Thanks Mom, and Dad!! VESSELS AND COMPANIES MV President Buchanan American President Lines MV President Harding American President Lines SS Exxon Houston Exxon Shipping MV Caribbean Sea Marien Transport Lines MV American Eagle Pacific Gulf Line PLACES VISITED Guam. Hong Kong, Taiwan, Japan, Hawaii, Alaska, Germany, Holland, Puerto Rico. Cuba INTERNSHIP Recon Optical, Barrington, IL MADONNA VICTORIA ORTON Keys ville, Virginia VESSELS AND COMPANIES MAJOR COMPANY MV Adabelle Lykes Lykes Lines Marine Transportation SS Robert E. Lee Waterman Fifth Company Steamship CLUBS AND ACTIVITIES SS James Lykes Lykes Glee Club, Sailing Team, Intramural Brothers Softball, Women’s Quartet, Pistol MV Falcon Duchess Falcon Team, Aerobics Instructor, MDA, Tanker SNAME Carriers MESSAGE PLACES VISITED I’d like to thank all those who made Northern Europe, Jordan, North Af- this dream a reality- Mom, Dad, Jes- rica, India, Pakistan, Bangladesh, sica and Billy. Your constant sup- Thailand, Malaysia, Singapore, port and letters helped to pull me South Africa. through when things really got INTERNSHIP tough. National Cargo Bureau-Norfolk, VA Helga Mandonna” DAVID JOSEPH PALMER Massapequa Park, New York MAJOR COMPANY Systems Engineer Fifth Company CLUBS AND ACTIVITIES Company Commander, Grand Knight - Knights of Columbus, Mus- cular Dystrophy Club, Goodwill 90 (Sailing Squadron)” MESSAGE Thanks Mom, Dad. Kevin, Diane, Kieth, Donna, Debbie, and Dawn - I Love You AIII! To live only for some future goal is shallow. It's the side of the mountain that sustains life, not the top. Pirsig the side of the moun- tain consists of charity, love, frater- nity, and unity! VESSELS AND COMPANIES Mason Lykes Lykes Lines Delaware Bay Top Gallant Group.Inc Constellation Maersk Line LTD PLACES VISITED Israel, Turkey, Egypt, Italy. Spain, Germany, England, Holland. France, Guam. Midway, Philippines, Japan INTERNSHIP Freeport Municipal Power and Elec- tric Co. Arnie, Dave JOHN JAMES PELLIZZETTI Key Largo, Florida VESSELS AND COMPANIES Sheldon Lykes Margaret Lykes Knight Kenai PLACES VISITED Holland, England, ma, Brazil, Texas INTERNSHIP Lykes Lines Lykes Lines American Heavy Lift Keystone Germany, Pana- American Bureau of Shipping, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil MAJOR COMPANY Marine Transportation Ninth Company CLUBS AND ACTIVITIES Skid Row, Captain AHAB Club, Wa- ter Polo, Wrestling, First Class Pres- ident MESSAGE Thanks Mom and Dad for every- thing, I love you very much - P.S. can I have my old room back? Tom, remember they can’t keep us ho- meys down! To all the great guys and gals in school, this silver bullet is for you and so is the next one. '-fe Johnny, Pells, J.P., Pel I-man 176 JAMES THOMAS PENNY West Islip, New York MAJOR COMPANY Marine Transportation Third Company 14. CLUBS AND ACTIVITIES Swim Team, Sailing Team, Honor Guard MESSAGE The tide is high and I’m moving on. UrT tack’r. patj ittli next® m VESSELS AND COMPANIES Sealift Caribbean MTL Export Patriot Farrell Lines Mormac Star Mormac PLACES VISITED Azores, Venezuela. Aruba. Texas, Texas. Texas, Texas, England. Bel- gium. Spain. Italy. Greece, Egypt, Turkey, Israel. INTERNSHIP Mid-Ship Marine. Port Washington, New York JOHN MATTHEW PETROS Plymouth, Minnesota Wheat” VESSELS AND COMPANIES M V Pride of Texas Seahawk Management 5.5. Maui Matson Nav. Co. 5.5. President Tyler APL M V Baytown Exxon Shipping Co. PLACES VISITED Peru, Chile, Hawaii, Alaska, Tawain, Japan, Hong, Kong INTERNSHIP Tennant Corporation - Minneapolis, Minnesota MAJOR COMPANY Marine Engineering Tenth Company CLUBS AND ACTIVITIES SNAME, Arts and World Affairs Committee, Fanfare Trumpeters, Regimental Band, Computer Club, Emery Rice Club (founding mem- ber), Cheerleading, Sailing Team, Hecklers’ Club MESSAGE OH SCHELLENBAUM THOMAS S. POWERS JR. Branchville, New Jersey MAJOR COMPANY Marine Transportation Eighth CLUBS AND ACTIVITIES Dinghy Sailing Team MESSAGE I would like to thank my friends and family for helping me get through this place VESSELS AND COMPANIES Sea Fox Crowley Sgt. William R. Button Amsea Nosac Ranger PGM Mormacsky Mormac PLaCES VISITED South America, Panama, Guam, Northern Europe, Caribbean, Cana- da. East Coast INTERNSHIP Kings Point Department of Parks and Recreation TJ, Doc DOUGLAS CARL PRICE Woodbridge, Virginia Prico, Duggo VESSELS AND COMPANIES Stella Lykes Lykes Lines Sheldon Lykes Lykes Lines American Resolute Farrell Lines Oklahoma City (SSN- 723) U. S. Navy Exxon Wilmington Exxon PLACES VISITED Egypt, Portugal, England, Germany, Netherlands, Spain, Italy, Greece, Turkey, Israel, U.S. East Coast, U.S. Gulf, Mississippi River, Ft. Lauder- dale. INTERNSHIP Advanced Marine Enterprises, Ar- lington, Virginia MAJOR COMPANY Marine Systems Engineering Tenth Company CLUBS AND ACTIVITIES Regimental Band, Ambulance squad, Yearbook Staff, SNAME, Arts and World Affairs Committee MESSAGE Thanks Ethel, Madonna, Disch, Dave, Mom, and Dad, and everyone else who helped me out along the way. Thanks to God for all the mir- acles and other unexplained events. It’s over! II i Hi c al lii ANTHONY RADSPELER, JR. Huntingtown, Maryland MAJOR COMPANY VESSELS AND COMPANIES Systems-Nuke Discoverer R-ICD NOAA Ninth Company President Tyler APL CLUBS AND ACTIVITIES PLACES VISITED Debate. Sailing. Wrestling. ASNE- Cape of Good Hope - Kaohsiung. Club President Taiwan MESSAGE INTERNSHIP Always knew I'd make it. 1 never American Maritime Congress. had a doubt.” Washington D.C. -ANDREW DICE” CLAY Hey Papa, It was the Kml.- The mor- al and monetary support helped a little too. Mama, thank you for all those won- derful fat Sunday morning letters that took a whole day just to read. 1 love you both very much. Mad Rad THOMAS WALLACE RAMSDEN Lake Ronkonkoma, New York Gummy” VESSELS AND COMPANIES S S Elizabeth Lykes Lykes Lines M V Falcon Princess Seahawk Management T V Kings Pointer USMMA S S Pennsylvania Trader American Trading Transportation M S Faust Wallenius Lines PLACES VISITED Egypt, Turkey, Spain, Pakistan, En- gland, Amsterdam, Munich, Bel- gium, New Orleans INTERNSHIP Farrell Lines, Manhattan MAJOR COMPANY Marine Transportation Sixth Company CLUBS AND ACTIVITIES Varsity Basketball Captain, Varsity Rugby, Sailing, Varsity Club, Centu- ry Club, Pat Jones Club, Wiffle Ball, Floor Flockey, Park Ranger, LT Roth Fan Club, RFIS, White Castle Flail of Fame, Paper Shredding, Official Lu- nar Eclipse Observer, ROOMATE OF ZIT, Part-time Nude Vickery Gate Guard. MESSAGE To the southern islands of rumba and RUM. To the lands of mystery that lie be- low. To the places I know I’m going to go-” -Don Blanding Leave my cares behind Take my own sweet time Oceans on my mind” I LOVE THE NOW” -Jimmy Buffett 182 LAWRENCE DAVID RAMSEY Pecos, New Mexico MAJOR COMPANY Marine Transportation Second Company CLUBS AND ACTIVITIES Karate. Amateur Radio Club, Ambu- lance Geek Squad. Drill Nerds, SNAME, Bennigan's Happy Hour Club, Century Club MESSAGE Death is inevitable - so why pro- crastinate? Those afraid to die shall never live. VESSELS AND COMPANIES M V Sea-land Kodiak Sealand S S President Tyler APL M V President Kennedy APL M V Sea-Lift Pathetic (Pacific) MSC PLACES VISITED Alaska. Japan, Taiwan, Hawaii, Guam, Hong Kong, Singapore, Sri Lanka. US West Coast INTERNSHIP Arkansas Best Freight. Albuquerque, New Mexico Goofy tt ERIC DAVID RANKIN Orange City, Iowa VESSELS AND COMPANIES SS Stonewall Jackson Waterman SS Spray American Heavylift MV Charlotte Lydes Lykes Brothers MV Frances Hammer Ocean Ship Holdings, Inc. PLACES VISITED Jordan, Pakistan, India, Thailand, Malaysia, Singapore, The Nether- lands, West Germany, England, U.S.S.R., Romania, Italy, U.S. Coast INTERNSHIP Fasken Combell Codfrey, Barristers and Solicitors — Toronto, Canada MAJOR COMPANY Marine Transportation Tenth Company CLUB ACTIVITIES Company Officer, Regimental Band, Rugby, Chairman of Arts and World Affairs Committee, Honor Guard, Propeller Club, Century Club MESSAGE All my thanks to family and friends. I must go down to the seas again, to the lonely sea and the sky. And all I ask is a tall ship and a star to steer her by”-John Masefield ANTON NELSON RASMUSSEN III Crystal Lake, Illinois MAJOR COMPANY VESSELS AND COMPANIES Marine Transportation SS Matsonia Matson Ninth Company SS President American CLUBS ACTIVITIES Madison President Football (Four Years) Lines MESSAGE SS Fredericksburg Keystone Mom, Dad and Doug. 1 love you. MV PFC William Doug, do yourself a favor and go to B. Baugh Maersk Madison. PLACES VISITED Do 1 really need a college degree to Hong Kong, Japan. Taiwan, Dutch become a bridgetender or to work Hargor-Alaska. Hawaii, St. Croix, at white hen? Virgin Islands, Diego Garcia To the friends 1 have made - later INTERNSHIP ABS Group Oakbrook. Illinois KIMBERLEY ANN REDMANN Hartford, Wl VESSELS AND COMPANIES MAJOR COMPANY MV DELAWARE BAY TOP MARINE TRANSPORTATION GALLENT OLD THIRD USNS VEGA MILITARY CL UBS ACTIVITIES SEALIFT SWIM TEAM - CAPTAIN TWO COMMAND YEARS, HONOR GUARD, CLASS SS KEYSTONER KEYSTONE TREASURER TWO YEARS, PROPEL- SHIPPING CO LER CLUB MV PRESIDENT MESSAGE TRUMAN AMERICAN THE DAY IS NEAR WHEN WE WILL PRESIDENT WALK IN THE SUN, LOOKING BACK LINES AND WITH A LAUGH, REFLECTING SEALAND ON WHAT A JOKE IT ALL WAS.” ANCHORAGE SEALAND THANKS TO ALL WHO HELPED ME PLACES VISITED THROUGH, JIM. LIZ AND FAMILY ROTTERDAM, BREMERHAVEN, FE- ESPECIALLY MOM ALL MY LOVE L1XSTOWE, SCOTLAND, PANAMA CANAL. JAPAN, HONG KONG, TAI- WAN, ALASKA, U.S. EAST COAST, BRITISH COLUMBIA INTERNSHIP C.R. CUSHING MAJOR COMPANY MARINE TRANSPORTATION THIRD COMPANY 186 LAWRENCE GERARD REDMOND Staten Island, NY MAJOR COMPANY MARINE TRANSPORTATION FOURTH COMPANY CLUBS ACTIVITIES FOOTBALL TEAM - FOUR YEARS MESSAGE SPECIAL THANKS TO MY FAMILY - WITHOUT YOU I WOULD NEVER HAD MADE IT. MOM. DAD, GE- RARD. COLLEEN, PATRICIA. AND KERRY - I LOVE YOUI KINGS POINT WAS LIKE A DREAM TO ME ... I SLEPT RIGHT THROUGH ITI VESSELS AND COMPANIES AMERICAN FALCON CROWLEY NOSAC RANGER PACIFIC GULF MARINE EXPORT PATRIOT FARREL LINES BALTIMORE TRADER AMERICAN TRADING PLACES VISITED ENGLAND. GERMANY. FRANCE, BELGIUM. SWITZERLAND, ITALY, SPAIN. ISRAEL, EGYPT. TURKEY INTERNSHIP GLOBAL TERMINAL JERSEY CITY. NEW JERSEY FRANK EVAN REED JR. Ketchum, Idaho VESSELS AND COMPANIES SS Atigun Pass Keystone MV President Polk APL MV President Eisenhower APL MV President Harding APL MV President Monroe APL PLACES VISITED Alaska, Panama, Japan, Hong Kong, Taiwan. Guam, Sri Lanka Singapore, United Arab Emirates INTERNSHIP Coors Brewing Company-Golden, CO MAJOR COMPANY Marine Transportation Third Company CLUBS AND ACTIVITIES Pub Club, Big Blue Team, Students Against Alcohol Club, Female Appre- ciation Club, DAMM(Drunks Against Mad Mothers) MESSAGE Thanks to my family and friends whose constant love and continued support are the only reason I sur- vive-! love you all. I spent four years prostrate to the higher mind, got my paper and I was free. Indigo Girls 188 SHANNON STACY REESE Sisson vMe, West Virginia MAJOR COMPANY Marine Engineering Old Second Company CLUBS AND ACTIVITIES Rugby, Trident, Honor Guard. Color Guard, Weightlifting, M N Officer (BOPS), 2 C Gold Rush. He-man Woman-Haters Club, Pub Club. Barely-get-caught Club, Country Music Appreciation Club MESSAGE We are all just prisoners here of our own device- The Eagles Mom and Chuck, thanks for everything- I can never repay you. Anthony, (KP'OI) Good luck at being the sec- ond in a long line of seafaring alco- holics. Best of luck to the best of friends that I made here. I love you one and all. VESSELS AND COMPANIES MV Falcon Champion Seahawk Management SS Thompson Lykes Lykes Brothers MV Falcon Dutchess Seahawk Management MV Julius Hammer Ocean Chemical Transport PLACES VISITED Italy, Spain, Turkey, Greece, South Africa, Kenya, Somalia. Mozam- bique, U.S. Gulf, Russia, Egypt INTERNSHIP C.R. Cushing and Son-New York, NY Stace, Hick, Hillbilly PHILIP JAMES REICHERT Rick ter, Phi Ido Germantown, Wisconsin VESSELS AND COMPANIES President Lincoln APL Sea-Land Pacific Sea-Land Inc. Exxon North Slope Exxon Shipping Co. President Adams APL PLACES VISITED Guam, Hawaii, Alaska, Mexico, Tai- wan, Japan, Korea, Hong Kong Sin- gapore, Sri Lanka, United Arab Emir- ates INTERNSHIP Meehan Seaway Services Inc.-Mil- waukee, Wisconsin MAJOR COMPANY Marine Transportation Third Company CLUBS AND ACTIVITIES Football-2 years. Weightlifting Club- 4 years, Skipper Poseidon and At- lantis MESSAGE Thanks to my family, friends, and Chris for always being there when I needed you! Final thought No man may know who has not undergone- It cannot be conveyed by printed page or word of mouth.” Jack Lon- don N f RICHARD JOHN REYNOLDS Whitestone, New York MAJOR COMPANY Marine Transportation Ninth Company CLUBS AND ACTIVITIES Football-4 years, Knights of Colum- bus-Chancellor, Weightlifting Club, Catholic Big Brothers, Propeller Club, Rugby, Ski Club MESSAGE To my friends and teammates. I wish we had forever to play. To my family, as always thanks for the love and support. Words cannot express how much I love you Mom, Dad, Mary Theresa, and Jennifer. Ffey Mom, don’t worry! VESSELS AND COMPANIES MV President Buchanan APL SS President Hoover APL MV Sea Wolf Crowley Maritime SS Mormacsun Mormac Bulk Transport PLACES VISITED Guam, U.S. West, Gulf, and East Coasts, Taiwan, Singapore, Sri Lan- ka, United Arab Emirates, Japan, Brazil, Venezuela. Puerto Rico. INTERNSHIP Global Terminal and container Ser- vices-Jersey City, NJ Hacksaw, Mouth SEAN THOMAS RICKS Ashland, Virginia VESSELS AND COMPANIES MAJOR COMPANY MV Frances Hammer Hvide Marine Engineering shipping Ninth Company SS Louise Lykes Lykes CLUBS AND ACTIVITIES Brothers Crew, Lacrosse, Track, Rugby MV CPL Louis J. MESSAGE Hauge Jr. Maersk Line Looking back at my background, try Limited and figure out how 1 ever got here PLACES VISITED some things are still a mystery to Russia. Romania, Nigeria, South Af- me, others are much too clear. J. rica, Singapore, Mozambique, Korea, Buffet To my family and friends- Panama, Diego Garcia ya’II got me through here: Finally, INTERNSHIP huh, Deb? OP-42 Pentagon DANIEL PATRICK New ville, Alabama ft iysji ids i tn$ ft fi MA JOR COMPA N Y Marine Transportation First Company CLUBS AND ACTIVITIES Drill Team MESSAGE I could always leave this place, would never leave me. VESSELS AND COMPANIES SS Louise Lykes Lykes Brothers USNS Sealift Atlantic Marine Transport Lines but it USS Oklahoma City (SSN-721) U.S. Navy PLACES VISITED South Africa. Phillipines. Singapore, Indonesia, Cuba. Puerto Rico INTERNSHIP Directorate of Logistics. U.S. Army- Ft Rucker. AL RILEY Grandpa ANTHONY LEE ROBINSON Mineola, New York VESSELS AND COMPANIES MAJOR COMPANY MV CPL Louis J. Marine Engineering Hauge Jr. Maersk Lines Ninth Company Ltd. CLUBS AND ACTIVITIES MV PVT. Harry Football, Ethnic Culture Club, Track Fisher Maersk Lines and Field Ltd. MESSAGE SS Export Freedom Farrell Lines No matter where you go there you SS Pennsylvania are” Trader American - Buckaroo Banzai Trading and Transport Thanks to my mother. Brother, Grandmother, and friends for their PLACES VISITED support throughout my years at Spain, Israel, Italy, Turkey, Greece, Egypt, Diego Garcia, Far East Kings Point ROLANDO RODRIGUEZ Panama City, Panama MAJOR COMPANY Marine Transportation Tenth Company CLUBS AND ACTIVITIES Midshipman Officer, Band, Year- book Staff, Debate Team. Hear This, Ethnic Cultural Club MESSAGE Mom, Dad. Elaine and Dennis, Julia: It is not enough to say thank you for helping me achieve this goal. Life itself will demonstrate my fondest gratitude, love, and appreciation for you, I promise. Sespues de todo, Logre mi cometidoll VESSELS AND COMPANIES MV Spirit of Texas Seahawk Management SS King American Heavylift SS Magallanes Lykes Brothers SS Mormacsun Mormac Marine Transport PLACES VISITED South Africa, El Salvador, Colombia, Ecuador. Peru, Chile, Canada, Bel- gium, Netherlands, Venezuela, U.S. Gulf Coast INTERNSHIP Panama Canal Commission-Panama City, Panama Chupa” MICHAEL ALAN ROSENBLATT Rosie. Yid, Purdue. J.A.P. Indialantic, Florida VESSELS AND COMPANIES MV Julius Hammer Hvide Shipping SS Monterey Aloha Pacific Cruise Lines MV Sugar Islander Canoh Marine SS Louise Lykes Lykes Brothers PLACES VISITED Russia, France, Hawaiian Islands, South Africa, Korea, Singapore, McHebe's, Dublin’s, Fizzywigs INTERNSHIP MAJOR COMPANY Marine Engineering Third Company CLUBS AND ACTIVITIES Honor Guard, Weightlifting, Pub Club, Baseball, Bennigan’s Crew, As- sociation of Oven Enthusiasts, Fat Me Fan Club, Debate Team, Intra- murals, Park Activities Coordinator, Loser’s Club U.S. Coast Guard Station-Cape Ca- naveral, FL i I [ ,1 1 o t JEFFERY THOMAS ROYER Marietta, Georgia MAJOR COMPANY VESSELS AND COMPANIES Marine Transportation SS John Lykes Lykes Eighth Company Brothers CLUBS AND ACTIVITIES SS Thompson Lykes Lykes Midshipman Council, Drill Team, Brothers Rugby, Company Commander SS Solar American MESSAGE Heavylift The World stands aside to let any- SS Knight American one pass who knows where he is Heavylift going. Exxon Princeton Exxon Shipping Co. PLACES VISITED South Africa, Mozambique, Tanza- nia. Somalia, Kenya INTERNSHIP Joint Chiefs of Staff, Logistics Di- rectorate- Pentagon Destroyer” MICHAEL ALAN RUBRECHT Ruby , Rajun Cajun” Lake Charles, Louisiana VESSELS AND COMPANIES MV CPL Louis L. Hauge Jr. Maersk Line Ltd. SS Export Freedom Farrel Lines SS Pennsylvania Trader American Trade and Transport MV 1st Lt. Alexander Bonnyman Maersk Line Ltd PLACES VISITED Diego Garcia. Germany. Guam, Phil- lipines, Hawaii, Italy, Egypt Spain, Brazil, Ireland MAJOR COMPANY Marine Transportation Third Company CLUBS AND ACTIVITIES Cross Country, Track, Waterfront- Skipper MV Neptune, Co-Skipper MV Atlantis MESSAGE Most memorable event-washing Dave’s Toyota at Hockey game 2nd class year Special thanks to the photographer for our outstanding senior takes. To Wiley Hall: If it ain’t broke, don’t fix itl - Remember the Delano” 91 We’re done. See yal BRETT JOHN SALKELD Mechanicsburg, Pennsylvania MAJOR COMPANY Marine Engineering Fourth Company(Old 2nd) CLUBS AND ACTIVITIES Water Polo-captain. Swimming Team, SNAME, intramural softball. Chinese Handball Team, Golf MESSAGE I’d like to thank Lo, John, Peg, Doug, Mimi, Bud, Gram and especially Mom. I’d also like to thank my friends cause I couldn’t have made it through this place without you. Whatever your mind can conceive and believe, it can achieve.” VESSELS AND COMPANIES MV Sugar Islander Pacific Gulf Marine SS Export Patriot Farrell Lines MV PFC. Dewayne T. Williams Amsea Corp. MV Sea Lion Crowley SS Knight American Heavylift PLACES VISITED Spain, Italy, Egypt, Israel, Greece, Turkey, Panama Canal, Hawaii, Ja- pan, Guam, Saipan, Venezuela, Bra- zil, Uruaguay. Argentina INTERNSHIP Johns Hopkins University, Applied Physics Laboratory- Laurel, MD ROBERT ALLAN SANGER Chili, Wisconsin VESSELS AND COMPANIES MAJOR COMPANY President Garfield APL Marine Transportation President Monroe APL Sixth Company President Truman APL CLUBS AND ACTIVITIES President Johnson APL Trident Club-President, Sailing President Polk APL Team, Crew, Ski Club Sealand Innovator Sealand Inc. MESSAGE SS Brooks Range Interocean At K.P. 1 learned to relish: A rising Management full moon, the countdown ’til June; PLACES VISITED shore leave in a remote nation, a Singapore, Phillipines, United Arab visit home for a short vacation-, long Emirates, Alaska, Panama, Korea, talks, short walks, and breakfast Japan, Sri Lanka, Guam with a good cup of joe. INTERNSHIP Meehan Seaway Service- Milwau- kee, Wl ANTHONY DINEROS SARANGAY Murphy, Quezon City, Philippines MAJOR COMPANY Marine Engineering Systems First Company CLUBS AND ACTIVITIES Drill Team, Karate. Honor Guard, Newman Club. Color Guard. Knights of Columbus, SNAME. ASNE. Propel- ler Club, Midshipman Officer- RTO, Pistol and Rifle Shooting Team, Fencing, Midships Message Far better it is to dare mighty things, to win glorious triumphs, even though checked by failure, than to take rank with those poor spirits who neither enjoy much nor suffer much, because they live in the gray twilight that knows neither victory nor defeat.” -Theodore Roo- sevelt VESSELS AND COMPANIES SS Keystone Canyon Keystone Shipping SS Golden Gate Keystone Shipping SS Exxon Jamestown Exxon Shipping SS President Kennedy APL MV President F.D. Roosevelt APL MV President AdamsAPL MV American Condor Crowley Maritime PLACES VISITED Japan, Hong Kong, Taiwan, Philip- pines, Singapore, Saudi Arabia, Unit- ed Arab Emirates. Azores, Belgium, England, West Germany. Nether- lands, Panama, Alaska, US West and East Coasts INTERNSHIP American Bureau of Shipping- Ma- nila, Philippines Tony 9 9 ROBERT ANTHONY SASSO Sas ft Centerreach, New York VESSELS AND COMPANIES MAJOR COMPANY MV James Anderson Marine Engineering Jr. Maersk Line Sixth Company MV American Eagle Pacific Gulf CLUBS AND ACTIVITIES Marine Football, 6 man tag team champions. USNS Sealift Wiffle Ball, Floor hockey, Century Mediterranian MTL Club, Attitude adjustment, Shitman, USNS Sealift Indian Mike Roth Fan Club, Special pro- Ocean MTL jects. Park Rangers, Rum Runners SS Mallory Lykes Lykes Diego Gutter Club, Pat Jones Club Brothers MESSAGE PLACES VISITED Living on your knees, conformity or Diego Garcia, Norway, Germany, dying on your feet for honesty . . Holland, Cuba, Panama, Columbia, Following our instinct not a trend go Equador, Peru, Chile against the grain until the end. 202 JOHN DAVID SCHAMPERA JR Redmond, Washington MAJOR COMPANY Marine Transportation First Company CLUBS AND ACTIVITIES Wrestling-4 year letterman. Team captain. Soccer-3 years MESSAGE These past four years of living hell did have their highlights I’ll always remember-, the boys from 1st Co. (especially T.G. D.R.), Friday at the Pub, NICEII, Army Navy game Thanksgiving with G.D., sea year with M.S. A.A., and Mom S Dad thank you and I love you. VESSELS AND COMPANIES SS President Harrison APL SS President MadisonAPL MV Sealand Anchorage Sealand MV President LincolnAPL SS Kenai Keystone PLACES VISITED Valdez, Japan, Taiwan. Hong Kong, Guam, Hawaii, U.S. West Coast INTERNSHIP Sealand Services Inc.-Tacoma, WA MARTIN ALEXANDER SCHMIDT Colorado Springs, Colorado Milty” VESSELS AND COMPANIES MAJOR COMPANY $$ President Marine Engineering Systems Harrison APL Old 1st Co. SS President MadisonAPL CLUBS AND ACTIVITIES MV Tug Bulwark Crowley American Society Naval Engineers, Maritime Society Naval Architects and Ma- MV Tug Gladiator Crowley rine Engineers, Art and World Af- Maritime fairs Committee, Honor Guard, Reg- MV President imental Broadcast Unit, Auto Club, Kennedy APL 2nd Company Commander, Intra- USS Spadefish(SSN murals 668) U.S. Navy MESSAGE MV President What is the meaning of life? No- Eisenhower APL body knows, but we might as well MV President push onward and have as much fun Buchanan APL as we can in the process. My thanks MV President LincolnAPL to Mom, Dad, and Tina for all your PLACES VISITED support. History is bunk. Alaska, Japan, Hong Kong, Taiwan, Guam, Singapore, Sri Lanka, United Arab Emirates INTERNSHIP Coors Brewing Co., Physical Distri- bution Dept.- Golden, CO 204 DAVID EDWARD SCHNEIDER Monroe, Connecticut VESSELS AND COMPANIES SS Export Champion Farrel Lines MV PFC William B. Baugh MV Seawolf SS Howel Lykes SS Energy Independence Maersk Lines American Transport Lines Lykes Lines Keystone Shipping PLACES VISITED Spain, Italy, Morocco, Tunisia. Tur- key, Egypt. Diego Garcia, Brazil, Ar- gentina, Uruguay. Venezuela INTERNSHIP South Street Seaport Museum, New York City MAJOR COMPANY Marine Transportation First Company CLUBS AND ACTIVITIES Knights Of Columbus, Outdoor and Indoor Track, National Defense Transportation Association LANCE FREFORY SCOTT ''Lancer Eureka, Illinois VESSELS AND COMPANIES MAJOR COMPANY SS Maui Matson Marine Transportation MV President Ninth Company Kennedy APL CLUBS AND ACTIVITIES SS Santa Adela Vessel Sailing Team-4 years, Rugby-2 Charters Inc. years, Volleyball-I year, Tennis-4 SS Keystone Canyon Keystone years, Propeller Club-2 years. Mid- Shipping shipmen Pub Club, Capt. Ahab Club, PLACES VISITED Football Fan Club Co-President Hawaii, Japan, Hong Kong, Taiwan, MESSAGE Alaska, Panama Mom and Dad, would you believe? INTERNSHIP Couldn’t have made it without you. 1 Matson Navigation Co- San Francis- love you! Grandpa, 1 miss you! Maj- co, CA She’s finally singing to the Reynolds, thanks for everything. Ninth Co. and everyone else. To all my friends . . Free at last!! THOMAS EWART SHELLY Queensbury, New York MAJOR COMPANY Marine Engineering Systems Third Company CLUBS AND ACTIVITIES Skiing. Kayaking, weightlifting MESSAGE To my parents- thanks for every- thing. To my Brother-see you in Par- adise. To my roommate - Say, Hi” to Tara VESSELS AND COMPANIES MV Sealift Pacific MTL SS Allison Lykes Lykes Brothers USS Abraham Lincoln (CVN-72) U.S. Navy MV Nosac Ranger POM SS Knight American Heavylift PLACES VISITED Phillipines. Japan. Diego Garcia. Sin- gapore, Korea, Panama. Columbia, Equador, Peru. Chile. England, Bel- gium, Sweden, West Germany, U.S. West and Gulf Coasts INTERNSHIP Consulting Engineering Services World Guide Corp. Ballston Spa, NY MESSAGE To my parents- thanks for every- thing. To my Brother-see you in Par- adise - Mad River Glen. To my roommate - Say, Hi” to Tara 'Shell” RICHARD DAVID SHILLING Melville, New York VESSELS AND COMPANIES MAJOR COMPANY MV Sea Fox American Marine Engineering Systems Transport Eighth Co. (Old 4th Co) Lines CLUBS AND ACTIVITIES MV Sgt. William R. Indoor Outdoor Track, C E Mari- Button AMSEA ner. Fleet Engineer, Cross Country, 1 MV Nosac Ranger Pacific Gulf Racta non Acta. Marine MESSAGE MV Rainbow Hope American It’s been another day in Paradise- Heavylift the Kings Point experience. Mom, h MV Cape Domingo MTL Dad, Caren, and my friends Steve, A SS Mason Lykes Lykes Mike, Tim, Loy, Kevin, Mimi, and h Brothers Gabrielle- Thanks for all your sup- M PLACES VISITED port. You’ve made this place bear- H Argentina, Brazil, Uruguay, Venezu- able. Je ela, Guam, Panama, Iceland, Swe- 1 LOVE YOU ALL! den, France, Germany, Italy, Greece, Israel, Egypt, Belgium, Tur- key INTERNSHIP South Street Seaport Museum-New York, NY 208 ERIC NORMAN SHINE San Diego, California MAJOR COMPANY Marine Engineering Second Company CLUBS AND ACTIVITIES Offshore sailing team. Karate Team. Automotive Interest Club-Presi- dent, Varsity Basketball. Hear This- Editor in chief. Honor Guard, Color Guard. Surfing MESSAGE A special thanks to all those who have helped me through my ordeals: Mom. Dad. Paul. Carol. Karen, Lisa, Henry, Scott, John, and especially Jessica. To you all oxxoolll VESSELS AND COMPANIES Pride of Texas Seahawk SS Kaui Management Matson SS Manukai Matson MV Sealift Antarctic MSC MV President Harding APL MV President Roosevelt APL MV President Monroe APL PLACES VISITED Peru. Hawaii, Singapore, Taiwan, Ja- pan. United Arab, India, Guam, Chile, Panama, Sri Lanka, Honduras, Guatamala INTERNSHIP General Dynamics, Ethics Depart- ment-San Diego, CA Shiner BENITA LANNETTE SLOAN B, Sweet Biscuit” San Antonio, Texas VESSELS AND COMPANIES Marjory Lykes Lykes Brothers Letitia Lykes Lykes Brothers SS Robert E. Lee Waterman Steamship Co. ST King American Heavylift PLACES VISITED South Africa, India, Egypt, Malaysia, Singapore, Thailand, Phillipines, Turkey, Israel, Jordan, Sudan, Dji- bouti, Madagascar, Taiwan INTERNSHIP Randolph AFB-San Antonio, TX MAJOR COMPANY Marine Transportation Tenth Company CLUBS AND ACTIVITIES Regimental Band, Ethnic Culture Club, Women’s Varsity Volleyball, Yearbook, Hear This, Arts and World Affairs, Fanfare Trumpets, Propeller Club MESSAGE I dedicate these 4 years to my mother and father; they were my inspirationi Thanks to my friends who were always there for me! - Beyond the East the sunrise, be- yond the West the sea, and East and West the wander-thirst that will not let me be! 2 0 CHRISTINE MARIE SMITH Oakland, California MAJOR COMPANY VESSELS AND COMPANIES Marine Transportation President Old Second Co. Washington APL CLUBS AND ACTIVITIES President Hoover APL MDA, Dinghy Team, ’88 Beach Club President Pierce APL MESSAGE President Kennedy APL All I’ve done before has made me Westward Venture TOTE what 1 am now. Was it worth it?” R. Samuel Cobb OSI Bach PLACES VISITED Yesl Guam, Taiwan, Singapore, Sri Lanka, Thanks Scooter; you’ll always be my Oman, Phillipines, Korea, Japan, inspiration! Hong Kong, Hawaii, Alaska INTERNSHIP American President Lines- Oakland, CA STEVEN ARTHUR SOUZA amiam RHmEiJiMflD VESSELS AND COMPANIES SS Export Freedom Farrell Lines SS Fortaleza MV Sea Lion Transamerican Trailer Transport American Transport Line Sealift Inc. MSC MV Noblestar USNS John Lenthall PLACES VISITED Israel-, Italy-, Mallorca-, Norway; Argen- tina-, Brazil; Uruguay; Crete; Turkey; Spain; Puerto Rico INTERNSHIP Alexander Star and Kersey, Rhode Island MAJOR COMPANY Marine Transportation Seventh Company CLUBS ACTIVITIES Soccer, Yearbook Club, Propeller Club MESSAGE The Kings Point experience was worth my time thank God.” Thank you Mom, Dad, Family, and Friends for your support. I won’t say bye, but see you later Joe, Tracey, Cevan, Lois, and Team. By request I don’t hold grudges I only form opinions.” m DISCHMOND L SPURRIER Wellsburg, West Virginia Disch MAJOR COMPANY VESSELS AND COMPANIES Marine Engineering Systems MV 1st Lt. Jack Fourth Company Lummus American CLUBS AND ACTIVITIES Overseas Intramurals, doing as little as possi- Marine ble and wasting as much time as MV Frances Hammer Hvide possible doing it. USS Independence MESSAGE CV-62 Thanks to all those special people MV Star of Texas Sea Hawk who helped me make it through this SS Matej Rocar Waterman place, which is a whole lot nicer PLACES VISITED than what I’d like to say to all those Northern Southern Spain, Hondu- who were involved in getting me ras, Russia. England, Scotland, here! Guam, California, East Coast USA INTERNSHIP John P. Collettii and Assoc. - Can- nonsburg, PA DAVID JOSEPH STEFFENS Twin Falls, Idaho VESSELS AND COMPANIES MAJOR COMPANY MV President Marine Engineering Systems Lincoln APL Third Company MV President CLUBS AND ACTIVITIES Adams APL Pistol Team, Wrestling Team, SS Keystoner Keystone SNAME Shipping MESSAGE Company Let Life’s Permanent free gangway SS Exxon North begin. Slope Exxon PLACES VISITED Guam, Taiwan, Singapore, Sri Lanka, United Arab Emirates, Japan, Korea, Hong Kong, Costa Rica, Panama Ca- nal, Alaska INTERNSHIP Pueget Sound Nava Shipyard - Bremerton. WA Dave” 214 DAVID LOY STEWART, JR. Mt. Pleasant, South Carolina MAJOR COMPANY VESSELS AND COMPANIES Marine Engineering Rainbow Hope Rainbow First Company Navigation CLUBS AND ACTIVITIES Ruth Lykes Lykes Lines Offshore Sailing Team, Power Falcon Champion Seahawk Squadron, Offshore Fleet Captain Management MESSAGE Exxon Charleston Exxon Thanks to Mom. Dad and all my Mobile Apex Marine friends for putting up with me PLACES VISITED through everything. 1 love you. Iceland. Turkey, Ethiopia, Germany, Greece, France, Croix INTERNSHIP Israel, Egypt. St. White Stack Towing and Transpor- tation-Charleston, SC ... , — DOUGLAS ALAN THIEN Dougie Fresh” Fulton, Illinois VESSELS AND COMPANIES SS Knight American Heavylift MAJOR COMPANY Marine Engineering Systems Old Third Company SS PFC Eugene A. Obregon Waterman SS Corp. MV Falcon Princess Seahawk Management MV Lyra Lykes Lines PLACES VISITED Denmark, Scotland, England, Spain, Canary Islands, Germany, Holland, Puerto Rico, Canada and the Repub- lic of Texas INTERNSHIP Army Corps of Engineers- Rock Is- land Arsenal, Rock Island, IL CLUBS AND ACTIVITIES Varsity Crew-4 years, Co-Captain, Chapel Choir, M N Officer, SNAME, Varsity Club, ROA, Free gangway team-Captain MESSAGE If stairs are called a ladder then what is a ladder called? Eternal thanks goes out to my roommate for life, Nate; Mom, Dad, Meliss for be- ing my foundation; and Maggie for being the sole reason I enjoyed free gangway. 216 LISA DAY THURSTON Thorton, Colorado MAJOR COMPANY Dual Tenth Company CLUBS AND ACTIVITIES Regimental Band. Fanfare trumpets. Arts World Affairs Committee. Mariners's Chorus MESSAGE Instruction may end in the school- room, but education ends only with life VESSELS AND COMPANIES MV President Monroe American President Lines SS Matsonia MV Sealand Matson Navigation Company Endurance Sealand MV Gus W. Darnell Ocean Ships Inc. SS Arco Prudhoe Bay Arco Marine Inc. PLACES VISITED Japan, Korea, Hong Kong, Taiwan, Hawaii, Alaska, Australia, Greece. Djibouti, Bahrain, Antarctica INTERNSHIP C.R. Cushing Company-New York City, NY JAMES CUMPIAN TREVINO San Antonio, Texas VESSELS AND COMPANIES MAJOR COMPANY SS Genevieve Lykes Lykes Lines Engineering Systems MV Julius Hammer Hvide Second Company Shipping CLUBS AND ACTIVITIES MV Exxon SNAME-Chairman, ASNE-PR Direc- Charleston Exxon tor. Auto Club, Drill Team, 1989 Shipping 1990 Cleveland Marathon, 1989 Long USNS Pollux Bay Tankers Island Marathon Shipping MESSAGE MV Pvt. Harry Thanks Mom and Dad, Rick and Fisher Maersk Lines Leslie for your support, patience PLACES VISITED and guidance through the years. Gibraltar, Russia, Turkey, Spain. Thanks Pete, Todd, Goofy, Tony Canada, Diego Garcia, Thailand, Ja- and Chris for all the good times that pan, US Gulf Coast brought me headaches the next INTERNSHIP morning. Without it all, 1 would have Non-Destructive Testing and In- not survived here.” spection Section, Quality Control Branch, Air Logistics Center- Kelly AFB. Texas Jim, Fer din, Gonzo” DAVID DRYSDALE TURNBULL III Elyria, Ohio MAJOR COMPANY Marine Transportation Ninth Company CLUBS AND ACTIVITIES Sportsman Club, Eagle Scout Associ- ation MESSAGE You’ve got to wait and keep faith for the best things to come. Once you have it, hold on and don't let go. Kelley, you are the greatestl Thanks to my Mom and Dad, my Grandmas, Uncle Fred, my two sisters, and Mr. and Mrs. Hatcher for their sup- port.” VESSELS AND COMPANIES SS President Taylor APL SS Westward Venture TOTE SS Thompson Pass IOT SS Sealand Enterprise Sealand SS Courtney Burton Oglebay Norton Co. PLACES VISITED Japan, Korea. Canada, Panama. Cos- ta Rica, Guam. Taiwan, Okinawa, Hawaii, Alaska, US West Coast and Great Lakes INTERNSHIP US Coast Guard Marine Safety Of- fice- Cleveland. Ohio THERESA CARAWAY TWADDLE Newport, Rhode Island VESSELS AND COMPANIES MAJOR COMPANY MV Sealand Marine Transportation Performance Sealand Seventh Company SS Thompson Lykes Lykes Lines CLUBS AND ACTIVITIES USNS Regulus MSC Women’s Varsity Volleyball Team, SS LNG Louisiana Ahrenkiel Company Intramurals, Crew Team, Ship Midships Editor, Hear This”, Mid- Management shipman Officer, Bicycle Club, Arts SS Mormacstar Mormac Bulk and World Affairs Committee, Cha- Transport pel Choir PLACES VISITED Message Holland, West Germany, England, Don’t let the bastards grind you Togo, South Africa, Mozambique, down.” -Gen. Joe Stillwell Thank you Madagascar, Kenya, Algeria, Spain, to all those, especially my family Venezuela. Canada, US East and and friends, who helped me bear Gulf Coasts the hardships and take life a little INTERNSHIP less seriously. Energy Transportation Corporation- New York, New York 220 CARLOS M URRUTIA Panama City, Panama MAJOR COMPANY Marine Transportation Second Company CLUBS AND ACTIVITIES Varsity Dinghy Sailing Team, Secre- tary- National Defense and Trans- portation Organization, President- KP Surfing Club, Fencing Club, Weight Lifting Club, Under the Pub Club MESSAGE If it’s not love then it’s the bomb that will bring us together - Morris- sey. Happiness is being famous for your financial ability to indulge in every kind of excess.” - Calvin. Thanks Mom and Dad, Porriqui, Kar- in, and family. VESSELS AND COMPANIES SS James Lykes Lykes Lines SS Zoella Lykes Lykes Lines SS Solar American Heavy Lift SS Edgar M. Queeny Keystone Shipping Company MV American Falcon American Transport Lines PLACES VISITED Spain, Egypt, Israel, Panama, Colum- bia, Ecuador, Peru, Chile, England, Belgium, Germany, East Coast USA INTERNSHIP Panama Canal - Panama Chuckie SALVADOR VELA Jr. Clio, Michigan Chunk VESSELS AND COMPANIES MAJOR COMPANY MV President Truman APL Marine Engineering Fourth Company Manukai Matson CLUBS AND ACTIVITIES Matsonia Matson Wrestling, Rugby, Varsity Club Constellation Maersk MESSAGE SS Golden Gate Keystone There is no golden rule which ap- PLACES VISITED Yokahama, Kobe, Shipping Company Nagoya, Hong plies to everyone: every man must find out for himself in what particu- lar fashion he can be saved.” - Sig- mund Freud. Thanks for all the help Kong, Phillipines, Korea, Guam, Oki- Mom, Dad, Gina, Cassie, and Anissa. nawa, Hawaii INTERNSHIP PacTow - Long Beach, CA 1 love you all. CHARLES FREDRICK VELIE Port Angeles, Washington Chuck, Smiley” MAJOR COMPANY VESSELS AND COMPANIES Marine Transportation MV Sealand Tacoma Sealand Old Fourth Co. MV Sealand CLUBS AND ACTIVITIES Independence Sealand Offshore Sailing Team, Power MV Exxon Long Squadron, Pistol Team, Ambulance Beach Exxon Squad Shipping MESSAGE Thanks to: Family and friends for SS President Corp. their steadfast support; Calculus for Harrison APL teaching me to never give up; to the SS Manulani Matson staff and faculty of Kings Point for Navigation the experiences which make gradu- ation so hard to attain. PLACES VISITED Co. Japan, Hong Kong, Singapore, Tai- wan, Alaska, Hawaii, U.S. West Coast INTERNSHIP Port of Port Angeles-Port Angeles, WA ROBERT MICHAEL VILLA-LOBOS Gaithersburg, Maryland VESSELS AND COMPANIES MAJOR COMPANY Rainbow Hope Rainbow Marine Engineering Navigation Seventh Company American Falcon Pacific Gulf CLUBS AND ACTIVITIES Marine Regimental Commander, Regimental American Kestrel Pacific Gulf Training Officer, Regimental Drill Marine Team Commander, Pistol Team, Sealift Atlantic MSC Semper Fi Club, SNAME Reserve Of- Sealift Carribean MSC ficer’s Association, Sea Farer Work- American Eagle Pacific Gulf er Marine Message PLACES VISITED Thanks to Mom and Dad, Karen West Germany, Norway, England, and Bud, and most of all Kelly! 1 nev- Wales, Puerto Rico, Cuba, Canada, er would have made it without you! 1 US Gulf Coast love you all! INTERNSHIP US Marine Corps Officer Candidate School- Quantico, Virginia if ii it $ 0 port pto w Ife mem Bob” 224 ROBERT GEORGE VOS NICK McDonald, Pennsylvania MAJOR COMPANY Marine Engineering Systems Third Company (old i Co) CLUBS AND ACTIVITIES SNAME, ASNE. Varsity Tennis Team, ECC, Intramurals, Park Enthu- siasts, Pub crew. Bar. MESSAGE Thanks to my family for all the sup- port and encouragement that helped me make it through this place. Thanks to all the guys (you know who you are) who have made KP easier to take. It's time to move into reality now and make KP a memory. VESSELS AND COMPANIES SS American Resolute Farrell Lines USNS Sealift Arabian Sea MTL MV Marine Reliance MTL USS Abraham Lincoln U.S. Navy PLACES VISITED Spain, Italy, Egypt. Israel. Turkey, Greece, Panama. Japan. Korea, Brit- ish Columbia, West, East, and Gulf Coasts INTERNSHIP John Colletti and Assoc. - Pitts- burgh PA t t Vos tt i BRANDY RACHELLE WALKER Erie, Pennsylvania VESSELS AND COMPANIES MAJOR COMPANY Mason Lykes Lykes Lines Marine Transportation Allison Lykes Lykes Lines Fourth Company Mormacsky Mormac CLUBS AND ACTIVITIES Sealand Freedom Sealand Varsity Dinghy Sailing, Varsity Off- Sealand Anchorage Sealand shore Sailing Chesapeake Trader American MESSAGE Trading The chief value in going to college Company is that it’s the only way to learn it PLACES VISITED really doesn’t matter.” George Ed- Italy. Israel, Egypt, Turkey, Panama, win Houses. My thanks to all my Columbia, Peru, Chile, Ecuador, Hong Kong, Singapore, Taiwan, Ja- friends who made it worthwhile. pan, Alaska SHAWN PATRICK WERCHAN Houston, Texas MAJOR COMPANY Marine Transportation Tenth Company . CLUBS AND ACTIVITIES Fanfare Trumpets. Band. Midship- man Council, Academic Council, Flonor Guard, Aviation Club. Propel- ler Club, Automotive Interest Club Message Though I can't wait for it to end, I know that in the end I’ll be sad. To all my friends, I would like to say that if I see you tomorrow then I bid you a good day; if not this parting was well made. Always remember that to love another person is to see the face of God.” VESSELS AND COMPANIES MV Dock Express Texas Sea-Lift Services. Inc. SS Leticia Lykes Lykes Lines MV Sealand Performance Sealand MV Sealand Atlantic Sealand SS Thompson Lykes Lykes Lines MV Nedlloyd Holland Nedlloyd PLACES VISITED Nigeria, Egypt, Holland, Germany, England. Panama, Colombia. Peru, Ecuador, Chile INTERNSHIP Law Office of Jaw Mills Werch, Work-lt, Shosh, Little Feller TRACY TAFT WILCOX Homer, New York VESSELS AND COMPANIES SS Argonaut Farrell Lines MV American Falcon Crowley MV James Anderson Jr. Maersk, LTD. MV Chesapeake Trader American Trading and Transportation PLACES VISITED Azores, Spain, Italy, Greece. Israel, Turkey, Egypt, Holland, England, Germany, Diego Garcia, Japan, Phil- lipines INTERNSHIP Metropolis Group - Ithaca, NY MAJOR COMPANY Marine Engineering First Company CLUBS AND ACTIVITIES Varsity Wrestling 87-90, Rugby Team 87-90, Rugby Team Captain 90, Varsity Club 87-89, SNAME, member of the Kings Point 2.0 and go club MESSAGE Four years ago, when asked Why go to Kings Point?” I said it’s free” . . . After now having spent four years at this fine institution, I think they should have paid me. 22$ TODD NELSON WILLIAMS MAJOR COMPANY Marine Engineering Systems - Nuke First Company CLUBS AND ACTIVITIES Track, SNAME-Secretary. Auto club. Marathon Club, ASNE, Honor Guard, Color Guard MESSAGE Do not ask for perfection in all you do but for the wisdom not to repeat mistakes. Thanks Mom and Dad. East Rochester, Ohio VESSELS AND COMPANIES MV Louis J. Hauge SS Kauai MV President Jackson American President Lines SS Howell Lykes Lykes Lines SS Energy Independence PLACES VISITED Diego Garcia, Hawaii, Kobe, Yoka- hama, Japan, Hong Kong, Taiwan, Cairo, Tsmir, Naples, Liverno Italy INTERNSHIP BP America - Cleveland, OH SCOTT ERIC WINFIELD Spring Hill, Kansas Doobage VESSELS AND COMPANIES Jean Lykes Lykes Lines James Lykes Lykes Lines Elizabeth Lykes Lykes Lines PLACES VISITED South and East Africa, West Coast of South America, Mediterranean, Middle East INTERNSHIP Schmitt Engineering Concepts - My next door neighbor’s house MAJOR COMPANY Sweathog First Company CLUBS AND ACTIVITIES Century Club, Don Davison Clueless Shave Club, Honorary member of The Ten”, Pub Club MESSAGE Once I cruise this school I ain’t cornin’ near this end of the coun- try.” - Jeff Spicoli Thanks Mom, Dad, and Jason for all your support over the past few years. I couldn’t have done it without you. EMMA REBECCA YNIGUEZ Los Angeles, CA. 'Em” MAJOR COMPANY VESSELS AND COMPANIES Marine Transportation President Grant APL Seventh company Sea-Land Navigator Sea-land CLUBS AND ACTIVITIES Matsonia Matson Midshipman Officer, American ARCO California ARCO Merchant Marine Museum MESSAGE Ruth Lykes Marine Inc. Lykes Line Mom, Dad, Dmitri, Thank You. PLACES VISITED The essence of the morality of Al- Taiwan, Japan, China, Korea, Indo- truism: The greater one’s achieve- nesia, Guam ment and the greater society’s need INTERNSHIP of him-, the more vicious the treat- ARcO Marine Inc., Los Angeles, CA. ment he receives and the closer to being a sacrificial animal. wJSwi?V 5 DEAN ROBERT ZAHRADKA Bayport, New York Zak- s' VESSELS AND COMPANIES MAJOR COMPANY MV American Eagle Pacific Gulf Dual Marine Third Company SS Mason Lykes Lykes Lines CLUBS AND ACTIVITIES SS Export Patriot Farrel Lines Offshore Sailing, Trident Club, Mid- SS Baltimore American shipman Pub, Blue Crew Trading and MESSAGE Transport I never imagined 1 would see the MV Sea Fox American northern lights in Norway, or Leop- Transport ard Seals in Buenos Aires. I’ve Lines learned so much about all things in PLACES VISITED this short time .... Missy! Did you Norway, Denmark, Spain, Italy, Greece, Turkey, Israel. Egypt, Vene- zuela, Brazil INTERNSHIP Eagle Control Corporation-Yaphank, NY leave the triangles in the Foc'sle? MAJOR COMPANY Marine Engineering Systems Ninth Company CLUBS AND ACTIVITIES Football, Trident Club, ASNE res iW MARTIN ROBERT ZAK Aburn, Illinois VESSELS AND COMPANIES M V President Kennedy APL 5.5. President Harrison APL M V President Truman APL 5.5. Kauai Matson Navigation Co. PLACES VISITED Japan. Taiwan. Hong Kong, Korea, Hawaii, Dutch Harbor INTERNSHIP ABS Group Oakbrook, Illinois Zak” As They Entered The Gates ♦ ♦ ♦ Somehow it doesn't seem quite complete to tell only of the graduated class of 1991. So many more contributions were made by those who started with us but for some reason or another did not finish among us. Whether it was by personal choice or by forced separation from the Academy, each of these individuals gave part of themselves to the Class of 1991 mold. We honor each of these Midshipmen and thank them for their special contributions. Maybe by reading this list will be reminded of someone who gave a piece of themself to you. Walter B. Abney Steven G. Godinho Krista Magnifico Eric D. Risley Elizabeth A. Abrams Michelle A. Grace Pedro J. Maina Sean K. Ritchie Andrew D. Ackerman Thomas M. Grasso Patrick F. Manning Anthony L. Robinson Emily G. Adams Troy J. Greco Dennis P. Maroney Rolando L. Rodriguez Robert C. Allan Patrick M. Grimes Michael R. Martino Michael A. Rosenblatt Roselito A. Amparo Paul A. Gualdoni Jeffery J. Mason Jeffery T. Royer Juanita J. Andreas Mark F. Haigis Jason W. Mather Michael A. Rubrecht Christopher J. Ardezzone Christopher L. Haines William B. Mays Colin M. Rush Jeffery R. Armstrong William S. Hall Krystyn L. McCarthy Dawn E. Ryder Alan L. Arrigoni Paul A. Hamel David D. McCann Brett J. Salkeld Eric $. Aulabaugh David L. Harrington Edward R. McErlean Vincent J. Sands John W. Bailey David J. Harriss Francis T. McGuigan Robert A. Sanger Jo Ann Baldwin Katrina S. Haselman Joseph P. McGuinness Robert A. Sasso David G. Ball John O. Haw Robert F. McManus John D. Schampera Robert S. Bandy Richard C. Hebron Brian K. McMillan III Martin A. Schmidt Christopher W. Barcomb Kurt A. Heitger Brendan W. McMillin David E. Schneider Jr. Rudy J. Bautista Karl W. Henley Terence P. McVeigh Lance G. Scott James P. Bell Dwaine E. Heroux Gregory K. Merica John E. Shackleton Jr. Duane A. Bennett Lucas E. Hicks III Eric C. Meyer Thomas E. Shelly William B. Blaine Dustin D. Highers Jerry W. Middleton Jr. Richard D. Shilling Steven J. Blatus Boyd B. Hill Jackie B. Miller Phillip A. Shively Laurence S. Bonday Jason C. Hiney Race K. Miner Domingo J. Silva III Michael T. Brandon Karla K. Hirdning Andrew J. Minster Cliti E. Skinner Aaron G. Bresnahan James C. Holly Shawn L. Mitchell David L. Slamcik Achille E. Broennimann Anthony W. Holmes Franklin M. Moore Benita L. Sloan Robert M. Burns Howard W. Hoover Brian W. Morel Christine M. Smith Steven M. Buscemi David H. Horne John A. Morganti Robert L. Smith Jr. Matthew M. Carden Kevin J. Humphreys Daniel P. Morris Scott F. Smith Robert W. Carr Brian R. Hunt Thomas M. Morris Jr. Thomas P. Sostarics William S. Carroll Jeffrey S. Irvine Vahid Y. Morris Steven A. Souza Paul G. Cavanaugh Jean-Christophe Herve Deegan Jacob Joseph E. Morrissey John L. Spano Ronald G. Chrastina Matthew J. Jahns Kerry W. Mott James G. Sparacino Lance L. Christensen Michelle A. James Marc J. Munago Dischmond L. Spurrier Kevin S. Cichon Clarence L. Johnson Jr. Charles W. Neal Mark A. Stanger Benjamin F. Clark Spencer W. Johnson Derik A. Nelson John H. Staugler Brendan J. Clinch John S. Jolley Quoc V. Nguyen David J. Steffens Thomas P. Clune Wade M. Jones Paul A. Nicholas Eric A. Swanson Marc A. Comtois Shaun A. Kanak Harry W. O’Hagin Maurice B. Thibodeau John P. Condon Jason A. Kaplow Merwyn R. Oliveria Douglas A. Thien Robert W. Cornwell Gregory G. Karas Madonna V. Orton William F. Thomas Lois K. Costello Scott P. Kearney David J. Palmer Frederick P. Thompson Kevin E. Coulehan Martin E. Kegel III Christopher K. Pankratz Lisa K. Thurston Jason D. Crain Timothy R. Kelley Franklin H. Patterson Jr. John T. Tiller John P. Cullan Wesley D. Knapp Cynthia M. Paul James C. Trevino Jonathan A. Cullum Jason B. Knust Christopher L. Pawloski Theresa C. Twaddle Thomas J. Cummins Jr. Robert A. Kocis John J. Pellizetti Carlos Urrutia Dean G. Delcamp Don D. Kopecky James T. Penny Salvador Vela Jr. Carlos B. Deleon John J. Kovaleski III Craig D. Pepoon Joseph Viscuso William H. Dobbs Robert G. Krause Brian P. Perry Jay T. Vogt Christopher A. Dugan III Harold W. Krebs Kristen M. Piatkowski Robert G. Vosnick Yann S. Durieux Kevin W. Krick Thomas S. Powers Jr. Brandy R. Walker Jeffrey R. Durkin Kateri L. Krus Douglas C. Price Gregory S. Warren Robert S. Eberle Kurt R. Lacher Anthony C. Radspieler Jr. Shawn P. Werchan Andrew J. Edwards Michael A. Lacroix Hamilton 1. Ramos Montgomery R. West Todd R. Elwardt Scott A. Landry Thomas W. Ramsden James A. Whittel Sean M. Ennis Cevan J. Le Sieur Lawrence David Ramsey James R. Wilburn Peter H. Ferdin Kelly J. Ledford Eric D. Rankin Tracy T. Wilcox Vincent J. Foley Michael E. Lefebvre Anton N. Rasmussen III Randall J. Wilke Martin D. Ford Ronald E. Leighton III Kimberley A. Redman Todd N. Williams Tim E. Fowler Steven G. Lemay Lawrence G. Redmond Scott E. Winfield Michael T. Gaither Nathan A. Lewis Frank E. Reed Jr. Edwin A. Wong Mark R. Garrett George M. Lind Jr. Richard B. Reed Regina K. Wynne Lesley A. Garrison James V. Lindner Jr. Shannon S. Reese Arthur J. Yerman Jr. Peter T. Gedney Steven W. Lipsky Philip J. Reichert Emma R. Yniguez Jacqueline A. Gerber Lisa A. Liu Richard J. Reynolds Dean R. Zahradka Richard D. Gill Kristen L. Livermore Michael J. Ricciardi Martin R. Zak Michael A. Giresi Ivan R. Lopez Paul G. Richardson Jack N. Girouard Lori A. Lundin Sean T. Ricks Ethel L. Glisson Jamie P. Maclean Daniel P. Riley 234 . . . And As They Left On 17 June 1991. we will lake one last walk through Vickery Gate as the Class of 1991 graduates from not of the same number as those of us who entered here four long years ago. Our numbers have withered from 273 on 7 July 1987 to 169 on 17 June 1991. Below is a list of those thankfully leave Kings Point. Kings Point. However, those of us that are leaving are of us who have persevered and. with license in hand. Walter Bernard Abney Lucas Earl Hicks III James Thomas Penny Elizabeth Anne Abrams Dustin Dale Highers John Matthew Petros Andrew Denis Ackerman Boyd Buchanan Hill Thomas Sheridan Powers Jr. Juanita Jean Andreas Jason Cameron Hiney Douglas Carl Price Jeffrey Russell Armstrong Karla Kay Hirdning Anthony Radspieler Jr. Alan Lacoste Arrigoni James Clifton Holly Lawrence David Ramsey John Wallace Bailey Anthony Wayne Blasius Holmes Eric David Rankin Jo Ann Baldwin Howard Webster Hoover Anton Nelson Rasmussen III David Glenn Ball Kevin James Humphreys Kimberley Ann Redmann Robert Scott Bandy Brian Richard Hunt Frank Evan Reed Jr. Christopher Wayne Barcomb Jean-C. H. D. Jacob Shannon Stacy Reese Rudy Joseph Bautista Michelle Anne James Philip James Reichert James Patrick Bell Spencer Wayne Johnson Richard John Reynolds Duane Allen Bennett Shaun Allen Kanak Sean Thomas Ricks William Burgess Blaine Jason Alan Kaplow Daniel Patrick Riley Marc Allen Braucher Scott Patrick Kearney Anthony Lee Robinson Aaron Gordon Bresnahan Martin Earle Kegel III Rolando Rodriguez Achille Eric Broennimann Timothy Robert Kelley Michael Alan Rosenblatt Robert Westley Carr Brian Jeremiah Kilkenny Jeffery Thomas Royer William Spencer Carroll Wesley David Knapp Michael Alan Rubrecht Ronald Chrastina Jason Boyde Knust Brett John Saikeld Kevin Stephen Cichon Robert Andrew Kocis Robert Allan Sanger Brendan Joseph Clinch Don Duane Kopecky Anthony Dineros Sarangay Marc Allen Comtois John Joseph Kovaleski III Robert Anthony Sasso John Patrick Condon Harold Walter Krebs John David Schampera Jr. Robert Watson Cornwell Kevin William Krick Martin Alexander Schmidt Lois Kathleen Costello Scott Alan Landry David Edward Schneider Jr. Kevin Edward Coulehan Bruce Victor Leach Jr. Lance Gregory Scott Jason Donald Crain Michael Edward Lefebvre Thomas Ewart Shelly III John Patrick Cullan Cevan Julius Le Sieur Richard David Shilling Jonathan Andrew Cullum Nathan Alan Lewis Eric Norman Shine Dean Gordon Delcamp Lisa Anne Liu Benita Lannette Sloan Carlos Beltran Deleon Kristen Lee Livermore Christine Marie Smith Dawn Elizabeth Dreier Lori Ann Lundin Steven Arthur Souza Christopher Aloysius Dugan III Krista Magnifico Dischmond Lewis Spurrier Yann Stephane Durieux Patrick Francis Manning David Joseph Steffens Todd Robert Elwardt Edward Richard McErlean David Loy Stewart Sean Michael Ennis Joseph Patrick McGuinness Douglas Alan Thien Dean Andrew Erck Robert Francis McManus Lisa Kay Thurston Peter Hinojosa Ferdin Brendan Wallace McMillin James Cumpian Trevino Vincent John Foley Terence Patrick McVeigh David Drysdale Turnbull III David Vincent Fontana Eric Charles Meyer Theresa Caraway Twaddle David Maurice Gardner Jackie Burton Miller Carlos Miguel Urrutia Mark Richard Garrett Race Kane Miner Salvador Vela Jr. Peter Timothy Gedney Andrew James Minster Charles Frdrick Velie Jacqueline Andree Gerber Brian Wayne Morel Robert Michael Villa-Lobos Richard Douglas Gill John Anthony Morganti Jr. Robert George Vosnick Michael Anthony Giresi Joseph Edward Morrissey Brandy Rachelle Walker Ethel Lina Glisson Charles Wray Neal Shawn Patrick Werchan Thomas Michael Grasso Derik Alan Nelson Tracy Taft Wilcox Troy Joseph Greco Quoc Viet Nguyen Todd Nelson Williams Paul Anthony Gualdoni Paul Andrew Nicholas Scott Eric Winfield Mark Francis Haigis Merwyn Roldan Oliveria Emma Rebecca Yniguez Katrina Shari Haselman Kevin Thomas Olsen Dean Robert Zahradka John Osborn Haw Richard Cocjin Hebron Kurt Alan Heitger Madonna Victoria Orton David Joseph Palmer John James Pellizzetti Martin Robert Zak OC- T- O - 1 rrr- LZ156J KKK1AL Kt'MHXH I 94 Sft U K NI'MIIKII 649095 1-5 - gf ,nA.y mmm y uj , jfi M.fS yj,$r M THIRD MATE,,OF OCEANS STEAM,.AND. MOTOR VESSELS OF ANY GROSS TONS. M a aaaaaa aaa a a BADAB OBSERVER (UNLIMITED) (EXPIRES1? 1 95V ft a M CTM j§ J ft - - a aa a a a aa 4 M clMlil 4MMa a TTI 6't sj -___June 21 MEM YORK .MY W JCEK 5 - KALI! W ? fTcrrtn Jm t ttnnr ;w r i) BY DIRECTION OK OCMI IAJ ivt ae 7 z z f M Zy ved ez tv t v Jy £ mytedd !e nz ez I a ed- @3 771 7 7i t€CO 7717717 7l o 77l 7 7 CZZzZ TTlZC (2$ 2Z ( MfaUTl eTir e7l rff Z m ez o ffia ed S etdzzTi S atzTie ZZ$c zz e77iy Zad Txm eMe n TTtetZT Z z eytee 7 Har lnr nf i mnr? 71 Te zyriz ivTi fdzz zd azZ fy zz 77i i e z 7i T Z e zz?zvtde z Zd zzz y vtedz7i ZZetyZt. 3n HitncBB uilrmof ms s estetivT o' Ae£ x oA J cd' Adtc e z da O f tib y eaA O Otifr zvnes ti oud vncJ sneeze d!uricJted and umes sri We Would Like To Recognize The Honorable Senators And Congressmen Who Nominated Members Of The Class Of 1991. HON MIKE ANDREWS HON WILLIAM ARMSTRONG HON LES AUCOIN HON ROBERT BADHAM HON HERBERT BATEMAN HON JIM BATES HON BERKLEY BEDELL HON LLOYD BENTSEN HON SHERWOOD BOEHLERT HON DOUG BOSLOE HON BARBARA BOXER HON BILL BRADLEY HON JOHN BREAUX HON ALBERT BUSTAMANTE HON ROBERT C. BYRD HON BEVERLY BYRON HON WILLIAM CAENEY HON JOHN CHAFFEE HON ROD CHANDLER HON JIM COOPER ■ HON PHILIP CRANE HON ALFONSE D'AMATO HON DAN DANIEL HON DON DANNEMEYER HON MICHAEL DEWINE HON WILLIAM DICKENSON HON JOHN D. DINGALL HON CHRISTOPHER DODD HON ROBERT K. DORNAN HON THOMAS DOWNEY HON RICHARD DURBIN HON DAVE DURENBERGER HON ROY DYSON HON DAN EVANS HON DANTE FASCEL HON WALTER FAUNTROY HON HARRIS FAWELL HON JACK FIELDS HON FLOYD FLAKE HON JAMES FLORIO HON BILL FRENSEL HON DEAN GALLO HON GEORGE GEKAS HON RICHARD GEPHARO HON SAM GIBBONS HON JOHN GLENN HON BARRY GOLDWATER HON WILLIAM GOODLING HON HENRY B. GONZALES HON CHARLES GRASSLEY HON JOHN PAUL HAMMERSCHMIDT HON GARY HART HON ORRIN HATCH HON CHIC HECHT HON JOEL HEFLEY HON ERNEST HOLLINGS HON DUNCAN HUNTER HON EARL HUTTO HON HENRY HYDE HON NANCY KASSEBAUM HON JOE KOLTER HON MARTIN LANCASTER HON THOMAS LANTOS HON ROBERT LARGOMARSINO HON FRANK LAUTENBERG HON NORMAN F. LENT HON CARL LEVIN HON JIM LIGHTFOOT HON ROBERT T. MATSUI HON SPARKY MATSUNAGA HON JOHN MCCAIN HON AL MCCANDLESS HON DAVE MCCURDY HON JAMES MCCLURE HON BUDDY MCKAY HON ROBERT MICHAEL HON GUY MOLANARI HON DANIEL MOYNAHAN HON ROBERT MRAZEK HON FRANK MURKOWSKI HON BILL NELSON HON DAVID OBEY HON DONALD PEASE HON CLAIBORNE PELL HON TIM PENNEY HON RALPH REGULA HON BILL RICHARDSON HON JOHN D. ROCKERFELLER HON WILLIAM V. ROTH HON MARGE ROUKEMA HON JOHN ROWLAND HON WARREN RUDMAN HON JAMES H. SCHEUER HON RICHARD SCHULZE HON JAMES SENSENBRENNER HON NORMAN SHUMWAY HON JERRY SIKORSKI HON MARK SILJANDER HON PAUL SIMON HON FRENCH SLAUGHTER HON BOB SMITH HON OLYMPIA J. SNOWE HON CLAUDINE SNYDER HON ARLEN SPECTOR HON SAMUEL STRATTON HON BOB STUMP HON FOFO SUNIA HON AL SWIFT HON STEVE SYMMS HON TOM TAUKE HON CHARLIE WHITLEY HON PETE WILSON HON TIM WIRTH HON GUS YATRON HON EDWARD ZORINSKY ‘W i • - ■- iFor a §ailor zSfeavenly father, as this child of Yours embarks on a voyage whose outcome is known to You alone, Please bless him with Your divine grace and guide him as he weathers the swells and tempests of everyday living. Bestow upon him the courage to follow the course You in Your wisdom have set for him, Although it may appear remote and unappealing at times. Give him strength to resist the temptations that lie waiting to spring upon him at his weakest moments. Let him always remember that he is Your servant and grant that his actions be carried out with the intent of bringing glory to You. Bless his family. Comfort them in those times when they feel his absence most keenly. Let him relish the joys of his youth and celebrate the very fact that he is alive. Most important, never let him lose sight of his goals. Place them on the horizon of his mind Where they may shine as a constant inspiration to him. Where this voyage ends, another will begin for this is only a small part Of that greater journey whose completion is the purpose of our existence here on Earth. We entrust this sailor into your care So please take him in the palm of Your hand and protect him. fill him with peace, Lord and when his days of traveling are over, bring him back safely to those who love him. men. Midshipmen Life . '% THE PLACE WE LIVE IN PLEBE LIFE OUR DAY JOB LIFE WITHIN THE PRISON FREE TIME - PLACES MIDSHIPMEN FREQUENT MOST YOU CAN DRESS THEM UP FORMING LASTING TIES AFTER 4 YEARS = GEEKY FAREWELL - We all came here with our own ideas of what comfort is; of what home means!!! Then for four years Kings Point became our home away from home!! Here are shots of places within the Academy we will never forget. FREEDOM ILEY HALL AMPHITRITE POOL - THE 601 DESS OF 2.0 TRUXT, ssss till MARINERS CHAPEL - A P W — III? r SUN SETTING O ADE_- WHERE ARE THE VIDEO GXtyES? I upperclassman Get it right Nicklll Willa-lobos practicing to make it t Seniors [oni awake at huncks ] c I Giana, What are you doi Fall Out For Tattool! 6 - No Gambling on 8oard cognitio Kings Point gives new meaning to the phrase we do more before 9 A.M. than most people do all day!” It always seems that there aren’t enough hours in one day to do what is required of you. Here are shots of what we do here during the day. CULUS finals Merwyn supervises ! w 'lit ie famous a-breaka-fall! We even do parades The aftermath of a Captain Hard’s rules test I ife Within The Prison Whether we are stressing out from our demanding academic loads, dressing up like the opposite sex for laughs, letting off some serious steam, or contemplating suicidal thoughts, the Midshipmen here never loose sight of the fact that Kings Point has every assimilance of a prison of the worst kind. Jacqui Club Halloween Party Who needs women? 6th Co. Floods 5th Co cr r f L ree Time After being locked up in our cells for a whole week, the weekends mean catching up on our treasured pastimes. Before, we took for granted hanging out with our friends, taking a warm shower, having a coke, or taking a nap. Here at Kings Point, we always used our free time to its maximum potential. h i ht eskating The Un r Guzzler Bob Kocis and his bevy of beautie: «mh i The Big Blue Magnet = Rack attack P laces Midshipmen Frequent We Midshipman have our favorite places on campus. Whether it be purchasing our favorite delicacies, or checking our mail- boxes three times a day, you can always find a group of Midship- man gathered in places we find necessary to frequent most. - ■p latest in haircutting fashion ?sSa aa| a a m a HI _______________ Throughout our four years here, we as Midshipmen find many chances to dress up, go out and have a great time. However, chemistry has taught us that all matter in the state of order goes toward disorder. i am NOT DRUNK!!!’ F orming Lasting Ties Without comraderie, no midshipman would ever be able to bear this place for four years. Be it the buddy system or the party scene, we all could never make it through and maintain minimal sanity without the help of our friends Old second Co ssed up for Halloween Wow and she’s smilini tol Pah teamin' ig the blues There’s no doubt about it- after four years in this stimulat- ing” place (yeah right!) few could avoid the geek magnet. Even some of the 'coolest’ dudes have not escaped this dreaded fate. Yikes! fter 4 Years = Geeky” t Willis? Dr. Elwardt and Mr. To Jdhnny rfiofffT shower fashions ' r, n Echols contemplates the meaning of life Prima la is having a snack i p arewell Now it comes down to the time of graduation. We look back on the past four years with joy and sadness. We reflect on all the good times and the bad times. We prepare for things unknown, yet we do not say goodbye to friends forever. We say farewell and start a new chapter in our lives. t Bate Sea ..jfe. pii|a I ' VV ,: ■■■ Year Sea Year is a wonderful opportunity that can only be experienced and nev- er explained. The following pages at- tempt ro show a cadet’s one year of shipboard training and introduction into the world arena. Traveling on all manners of vessels: container, tanker, break bulk, LASH. RO RO, LNG, etc, a cadet gets to see the world in all its Travel, in the younger sort, is a part of educa- tion, in the elder, a part of experience. He that traveleth into a country before he hath some en- trance into the language goeth to school, and not to travel. Francis Bacon beauty, strangeness, failings, complicity and humanity. Francis Bacon’s quote, above, roughly translated by Kings Pointers be- come, The World is Our Play- ground!” Truly so, for one year, the world is laid at our feet to enjoy, experience and learn from. And what a cadet realizes upon return is that this Journey never really ends. C W. Nimitz rn Voyage Around The World Containership at berth Build me straight, O worthy Master! Staunch and strong, a goodly vessel. That shall laugh at all disaster. And with wave and whirlwind wrestlel H. W. Longfellow Ships Of The World LNG Louisiana Top: Research, vessel Bottom: Sri Lankan sailing ships ■■ I 4 Europe Though the trip across the North Atlantic tests the stoutest sailor, the destination is worth it. Usual ports visited includes Bre- merhaven, Germany? Rotterdam and Am- sterdam, Holland? Felixstowe, England. Eu- rope has all the charm and history of the Old World” while her people exude the vibrant, New World” lifestyle. ififiy ■ in i ill til 111 ! Ill 1 Above: A sea story being told in Bremerhaven, Germany. Below: Her Majesty's Royal Guard, Lon- don. Bullfight: (Spain) Above: Lois § Jacqui in winter wear in Holland 280 To the glory that was Greece And the graneur that was Rome. E.A. Poe Between Lands Clockwise from top: Pompei; Med island; alonica, Greece; Rome, Italy; The isles of Greece, the isles of Greece Where burning Sappho loved and sung. Lord Byron i i Dark Continent So have I heard on Africa’s burning shore, A hungry lion give a grievious roar The grievious roar echoed along the shore. W. B. Rhodes Clockwise from top left: Mombas, Kenya; African lioness (Kenya); Dar Es Salaam, Tanzania 2S2 Bridge in Morroccan countryside Above: Casablanca, Morrocco? Below: Kenyan elephant Africa has always walked in my mind proudly upright, an African giant among the other continents, toes well dug into the other final ocean of one hemisphere, rising to its full height in the graying skies of the other ... making light of the bagful of blue Med slung over its back as it marches patiently through time. Laurens Van der Post Bustling downtown of Lome, Togo — 284 Suez Canal Both pages, from top: Camel rentals in Egypt; Wail- ing Wall of Jerusalem; Mount Olive, Jerusalem; Christ’s birthplace; Skyline of Cairo, Egypt; Jem- Panoramic view of Jerusalem . . . from the summit of yonder pyramids forty centuries look down upon you. «ft ill Nannlean I Ship me somewhere east of the Suez, where the best is like the worst. Where there ain't no Ten Commandments, man’ a man can raise a thirst. Rudyard Kipling Above and below: Pakistani modes of transportation Below? Pakistani urbanites 286 I I Below: Diego Garcia Below left: Indian bargeworkers Wretched and abundant Oppressed and powerful Weak and mighty Mother RussiaI N. Nekrasov anding Bhuddha temple in Colombo, Sri Lan ka Cadets leaving from Top left: Buddhist Shrine in Kamakura, Japan; Above: Hong Kong Right: Singapore’s Chinatown” with the city in the background Bottom right: Yokoha- ma street scene? Be- low: Sidney mountain on Hong Kong island the West Coast invari- ably travel to the Far East: Japan, Taiwan, Hong Kong, Phillipines, Singapore, etc. It’s a favorite destination offering cosmopolitan cities as well as the beauty and mystic of the traditional Eastern culture. UK Left: Taiwan temple Below.- a close-up of a serpent dragon and spirits-, Bottom right.- sea-view of same temple; Bottom left: Temple in Taiwan The Far East The following pages reveal the stark contrast between the moderr and the traditional in the Orient. Where else can you visit a 3,000 yi old shrine in the morning, have lunch at Church's or Mickey D’s, shop for Sony’s, Reeboks, souvenirs in the afternoon, eat REAL Chinese food for dinner and go to a hot nightclub till dawn? Mallaysia Top and below: Singapore harbor A harbor, even if it is a little harbor, is a good thing, since adventures come into it as well as go out, and the life in it grows stfong because it takes something from the world and has something to give in return. Sarah Orne Jewett Top left: Hong Kong harbon Top: Sentosa island ! -- L Clockwise from top: Sentosa island with Singapore in the background; Benita and fierce Chinese warrior; portion of Chinese gardens in Sin- gapore-, Malysian countryside Sugar Loaf in Rio Top left Rio pedestrian Above: South American boat people South America, the Love Run”, a favorite among Kings Point males, where the brew is cheap and the women are cheaper, or at least more willing. Though not a bastion of high- er culture attributed to first world” countries, it can boast of Rio, carni- val, perpetual sunshine, alpaca sweaters and blankets and very friendly people. South America 292 1 Clockwise from top: Street in Azores; night view of Rio De Janeiro; Joe carving KPS” into the Andes mountains, Chile; Honduran ragamuffin; can you find the Kings Pointer in this carnival street scene? Left and Below: Indian children Yann and Mozambique friends The women of Bombay s infamous ' cages’ Ah, what would the world be to us if the children were no more We should dread the desert behind us Worse than the dark before. H. W. Longfellow 296 No less exciting or educating is the ad- venture of glimps- ing, for a brief mo- ment, the various people around the world whose differ- ences: race, religion, idealoligy, and cul- ture emphasize to the cadet that hu- mans are the same all over. Bombay street entertainer Typical engineeers World Sri Lankan natives Far left: Rotterdam MJ-user Left: Romanian guard, one month before rev- olution ■ F; i To know of someone here and there whom we accord with, who is living with us, even in silence--this makes our earthly ball a peopled garden. J. W. von Goethe Faces Of The Engineer hard at work 298 I In love with a Spanish senorita Russian sailor on a mission Left: Old and new in Pakistan Above: Druzbha’s Love that wave actioni Really gets you moving in the morning. Bet my stars turn out better than yours. Life At Sea It was a great experience, something that I’d never imagined I’d be doing----especially mucking tanks for two days straight! L. Lundin ’91 It was good, too good. I failed Rules and Labor Relations, but it was worth it. L. Scott ’91 I liked everywhere I went. My second sea year was greatl J. Penny '91 It was great, but I was too drunk to remember the details. M. Comtois '91 300 From top: Kevin likes mixed drinks? Benita’s coffee- time”? Where’s your girl, Steve?? sailors at their best Tis said that, with grog and our lasses. Because jolly sailors are free. Our money we squander like asses. Which like horses we earn’d at sea. Charles Dibdin 302 Boy, the mate’s really screwed now! Hey mate, thanks for the keys to the lifeboat!” Not another stowaway. Homeports 304 Y V r L. Stevenson Though home means family and friends to the sailor, a true mariner feels the tug of the sea after a spell ashore. Graduates of Kings Point feel this yearning, as expressed by Masefield below, extending their sea experi- ence into one as a deck or engine licensed officer. £ Above: New York skyline. Below: tanker entering San Francisco harbor I must down to the seas again, to the lonely sea and sky, And all I ask is a tall ship and a star to steer her by. And the wheels kick and the winds song and the white sail’s shaking And the gray mist on the sea’s face and a gray dawn breaking. I must down to the seas again, for the call of the running tide Is a wild call and a clear call that may not be denied. I must down to the seas again, to the vagrant gypsy life. To the gull’s way and the whale’s way where the wind’s like a whetted knife-. And all I ask is a merry yarn from a laughing fellow rover, And quiet sleep and a sweet dream when the long trick’s over. John Masefield Football USMMA Football (6-30) 17 USCGA 21 USMMA 15 C.W. POST 35 USMMA 29 PACE 0 USMMA 42 FDU 0 USMMA 10 ST. JOHN’S 8 USMMA 10 WESTERN CONN. 12 USMMA 25 STONYBROOK 19 USMMA IS IONA 14 USMMA IS UPSALA 6 The 1990 Football season was characterized by the unity developed by the team, led by its large number of senior players. This years Mariner Football team finished with an overall record of 6-3, 4-1 in the Liberty Conference. The Mariners started off the season at 0-2, but the leadership of the seniors, as well as some outstanding individual efforts, brought new life to the team as it stormed back with a 6-1 record in its final 7 games. To Coach Dennis Barrett, who leaves the Academy after ten years of coaching, and to his staff, goes a wholehearted Thank You. The players would also like to thank their families, friends, and fans for their ever- present support and encouragement. The respect and friendship among the coaches and players of the 1990 Mariner football team will never be forgotten. With a relentless defense and a never-say-die offense, they got the job done Together! Ed McErlean, Defensive Captain From top to bottom, left to right Millet, Dehnert, Coen, Costanza, Libby. Bell. Pravata. Ameral, Trainer. Srour. 2nd rowi Edwards, Blenk, Beers, Kuras. Peters Capozello, Green, Fowles. DeSmet. Mahoney. Bice, Ragonese, Scarola, Hendrickson, 3rd row; Lohmeier, Quinn, Bean, Burg. Jones, Lenski, Kroeger, Wolford Glasier, Flanagan, Castonguay. McLaffortv. - Foringer, Brody. 4th row: Cornibe. Douglas, Enright, Thomas, Kim, Herleman, Corris, Kirby, McNulty Carroll. Sachwitz. Sell. Slants. ' . 5th row; Martin, Goodwin, Nichols, Clark. Delsota, Gill, Ketterer, Daly. Gutierrez. Persina, Delew Uhlmann, Sers. Carlso- o'ds Sasso. Holly. Braucher. Giresi. Coach Barrett. McErlean, Morganti. Redmond. Russell. Rasmussen’ Robinson. Not Shown ■ ■' : kSchultz, Fox, Miller. - Clockwise From Below: -Ron Gill Is Off And Running -Trench Warfare -Stearns Is Wrapped Up -Dave Daly Looks For A Couple More -Chris Clark Drops Back Offense Clockwise From Right: -Ed And Buddy Zero In -Rob Sasso Recovers -Harold Krebs, Div. Ill All- American -The Gator -Eddie Mac Attack -Brauch In Pursuit -Crunch! Defense Special Teams Clockwise From Below: -Block That Kick! -Ken Kuras Blocks The Punt Before And After -Brody, Beers And Gualdoni Cover -Rob Enright For 3 Clockwise from right: -Another lecture -Rick and Ron talk it over -Sure Coach -Shower up! -The Braintrust -Are you sure Charlie? — Sidelines Volleyball WOMEN S VOLLCYBALL SCORES USMMA 0 ST. Francis College 3 USMMA 0 Dowling College 3 USMMA 1 Manhattan College 3 USMMA 1 Iona College 3 USMMA 3 SUNY Maritime 0 USMMA 1 C.C.N.Y. 3 USMMA 3 Brooklyn College 2 USMMA 1 Old Westbury 3 USMMA 0 Fordham Univ. 3 USMMA 0 Col of New Rochelle 3 USMMA 0 U.S.C.G.A. 3 USMMA 1 SUNY Maritime 3 USMMA 1 Old Westbury 3 USMMA 3 Medgar Evers College 1 USMMA 0 Molly College 3 USMMA 0 Jersey City State 3 USMMA 1 York College 3 The 1990 Women’s Varsity Volleyball season was a time of change, transition and building. New head coach Maurice Behar joined the Lady Mariners in August to begin the pre-season train- ing. Coach Behar was a positive change for the team as fundamen- tals and a positive attitude were stressed. From August to November, the women put in a great deal of effort and dedication, unfortunately, Murphy’s Law reigned. Early in the season, returning four-year starter Benita Sloan severed her Achilles tendon and was lost for the year. This was the first of many adversities that the women had to overcome. Consequently, the younger menbers of the team stepped forward and gave I 10%, gaining valuable experience. Seniors Benita Sloan and Karla Hirdning will be missed, but the remaining women will be able to draw from their experiences of the 1990 season to have a more successful one in 1991. Karla Hirdning, Captain 314 Standing from left hi Carpenter. J. Gerber. K. Triplett. B. Sloan. T. Twaddle. M. Orton. Coach Behar. Kneeling, left to right: N. McIntyre. K. Hirdning. B. Neubecker. K. Kantner. - Soccer SOCCER SCORES USMMA 0 Scranton 1 USMMA 0 R.l. Col 2 USMMA 0 N.Y. Tech 5 USMMA 1 Vassar Col 0 USMMA 0 Dowling Col 1 USMMA 1 Hofstra Univ 2 USMMA 2 C.C.N.Y. 2 USMMA 2 Manhattanville 0 USMMA 6 SUNY Maritime 0 USMMA 0 Southampton Col 3 USMMA 1 Col of Staten Is 4 USMMA 2 Stony Brook 0 USMMA 0 U.S.C.G.A. 3 USMMA 0 Cortland 6 USMMA 2 King's Col 2 The Soccer Team had a slightly better season this year by bringing home 4 wins, 2 ties, and first place in the Metro League, but still losing 9 games. With Mike Smolens as the new head coach of the Kings Point Soccer Team, he was able to motivate the players by bringing his enthusiasm and knowledgeable expe- rience of the game to the team. The team will be graduating four players, Co-Captain Andrew Ackerman (first team MVP) and Co- Captain Steven Souza, Wes Knapp and John Schamperra, but next season the team should see good play from Jim O’leary and Jim Homan who were both named as 91-92 season captains. The Kings Point Soccer Team found itself in the International Arena playing two Russian Teams including The Red Army Na- tional B Team. Kings Point had tough luck on the road, but everyone will remember cookies” on the bus, fountains at Scranton, movie night at Cortland and the window Wes saved on the way back from King’s College. Good luck next year’s team you were all a great bunch of guys. Top: Trainer D. Tarara S. Spinello R. Sciachetano B. Homan M. Shanley J. O’Leary J. Homan A. Ackerman S. Souza W. Knapp B. Brown C. Wol- field Wolfield M. Murphy D. Charest Coach M. Smolens Bottom: M. Leoni T. Cole. K. Aanonsen C. Schroder K. Fitzpatrick C. Janus C. Ander- son J. Schampera R. Pound M. Hannuksela Jim blowing away from the Coastie Co-Captains Andy Ackerman and Steve Souza with Coach Mike Smo- lens Holding back the Russians while Andy slips around back ■ Courageous Mike with nerves of steel Chris clearing the ball out for the team Steve’s only clean tackle Spinello is unstoppable with the ball J Homan and Ack controling the midfield Coach and Dan giving their half time analysis Schroder and M Shanley demonstrating textbook style ball handling O’Leary Dancing with a Ruskie Coastie is blinded by J Homan’s footwork Fitz has perfect form Souza with some Hangtime Plebe’s move the ball up field easily Mike’s legs are made of rubber Rugby A SIDE (2-6) KPRFC 15 Coast Guard IS KPRFC 6 Rutgers 10 KPRFC 52 Hofstra 0 KPRFC 14 Army B 19 KPRFC 7 Fairfield 9 KPRFC 0 Army A 67 KPRFC 7 Fordham 14 KPRFC to Columbia 0 Ruggers Go Division I The Kings Point Rugby Football Club, after many years of dominating play in Division II of the Colliegiate Rugby League, was awarded Division I status for the first time since the 70's. The team responded to the challenge by upholding the tradition of past Kings Point Ruggers. The season had its highs and lows with most of the matches coming down to just a few points difference. The team, led by Captain Tracy Wilcox, the Canole, Gedrocks, JoMo, Tool, Smerk, Gummy, Zero and the rest of the seniors held together through rough and good times. Their lead- ership and the taunting play of the plebes helped inspire the Killer B’s to a 6-2 record and a second place finish in Division l-B. Yet more importantly, the Ruggers attained sole bragging rights to McHebes. A great deal of credit should go to the Alumni at Homecoming, and with their inspiring support and free refresh- ment on upper Roosevelt encourage the killer B’s to revenge the Army B side for their other teams immoral bombing of the A- Squad. Long live the Scum of the Rugby League. Scrummin’ it up Pete leads the pack Ruggers on the line Jimbo and Trace Kickoff r ks Ran ;s” Gedney. 1 Jo Mo” Morrissey, ry, Tom Gummy” Ramsden roy Yes. Dear' McNally, Rob Munch” Munchbach, Troy Troy Destroy” Sherrill, B. Eddy” Hen- derson. Pete Meier, Dave Sinz. Brent Wy- eth, Pat Zap” Zapolski, John Beliisimo. A. Alf” Bucko. Mike Jim” Croce, Cole Cush” Cushman. Steve Fairlee. Glenn Fields. Jaimie Rosie” hite. Joe Hose” Hosey. N. Headache” Morgan. Pete Sloot” Slootmaker. Jim Jimbo” Powers, Dana Dieter (Manager). Honorary Rug- gers: Jim Bell and Frank Reid. KPRFC B-Side (6-2) 9 Coast Guard 7 KPRFC 15 Rutgers 4 KPRFC 6 Hofstra 0 KPRFC 6 Army D 16 KPRFC 3 Fairfield 0 KPRFC 3 Fordham 8 KPRFC 10 Army C 6 KPRFC 10 Columbia 0 ■fj' The 1990-1991 track season could be seen as a season of rebuilding for the Mariners. The returning Mar- iner Lettermen were namely team captain Bob PUMPKIN” Kocis and Duane GIMP” Bennett, Ray WILDTHING” Collett, Joe LOAD” Coulliard, Anna Maly, Chris NOODLE” Pecherek, and Tim Ryan. | Along with the Mariners was new and promising talent Wesley K1TT” Corbett, Rustin WINGS Edwards, Candice Harlan, Karla Hirdining, Mike McLaffderty, Blake Miller, and Dale Young. Hammer thrower Bob Kocis made his fourth appearance at Division Three Nationals this Season and just ended up short for qualifying for ALL AMERICAN. Bob has been throwing the Hammer for four steady years now. He not only progressed from his first throw of eighty seven (87) feet his plebe year, but went on to set the school record in the Indoor 35-lb Weight Throw and the Outdoor Hammer. The success behind his throwing comes from a lot of hard work, and his coach Marty Engle a former U.S. Olympic Hammer Thrower. Bob hopes to keep throwing the Hammer and make it to the Olympics in 1996. GOOD LUCK, PUMPKIN! This past season saw other midshipmen reach the pinnacle of collegiate excellence by qualifying for NCAA Division Three Nationals. These were Chris Pecherek in the Javelin Throw, and Joe Coullard in the Discus. The Kings Point Track Team also did very well as a competitive voice this year. The team was P.A.C. Champions The Track Team also had a contingent of athletes who continually excelled. Hammer thrower Ray Collett placed in many meets and ended up just short in qualifing for Nationals, keep your eyes peeled next season. Plebe Mike McLafferty competed strongly in the Javelin. Plebe running sensation Wesley Corbett, was a strong contender in the 1500 meter as well as the 800 and 3000 meter steeple chase. Tim Ryan was a fierce contender in the 800 as well. Plebe Blake Miller was a force to be reckoned with in most competitions, ranging from the Shot Put to the 100 and 200 meters. On the women’s side of the team, Kings Point was led by Anna Maly who constantly placed in the Jav- elin and Shot Put. M n Karla Hirdening and plebe Candice Harlin were a strong walking contingent, with Karla placing second in the P.A.C. and C.T.C. competitions overall. All in a!!, it was a great season and as we say good-bye” to those who are graduating, we hope to see a powerful and successful season next year from the Mariners. USMMA’s Track Bennett the Million Dollar Man Iron Men of Kings Point Thumbs Up -rrWMF' Young Blood Standing on his tippy toes —— ■ The next winning throw On one plays catch with me I Wild Man KIT- Corbett USMMA Cross Country The 1990 Cross Country Team enjoyed great suc- cess under the guidance of Coach Bill Omeltchenko. Although the team was small the Mariners placed well at every meet. The season started in August at the Kings Point 5 mile run for Muscular Dystrophy. The Mariners squad started the season off right by taking the 1st place team trophy. Team Captain Terry McVeigh (26:27) and freshman sensation Wesley Kit” Corbett (27:15) took 3rd and 4th place. The rest of the season saw nothing but improvement from freshmen newcomers D Young, E Kearney, J Hutton and K Lorash. Terry McVeigh and Kit Corbett fin- ished in the top 5 in every race during the regular season. At the Albany Invitation McVeigh set a school record by running the 5 mile course in 26:30. Freshman Kit Corbett made 2nd on the all time list, finishing right behind his Captain in 26:33. Overall the season was a great success. Much thanks is owed to coach Olmeltchenko. Coach is a credit to the Academy and we should all live up to him. Thanks. , written by T. McVeigh X 1 • w- m. mtM if .fv Thanks Coach! Field Next Years returning team Commodore 9h Loy Stewart Waterfront Executive Council 90-91: Fleet Engineer Fleet Captains: Rick Shilling Offshore Chris Brown, Matt Spears Dinghy TJ. Powers Crew Alan Arrigoni, Doug Thien Power Andy Minster Skippers: Leverage Budd Darr, Missy James Envy Brendan Clinch 7th Son Jim Urbanic, Chris Barcomb Mariner Tim Kelly Liberator Dave Gardner Dawn Star Mike Lefebvre, Brendan McMillin Contessa Andy Minster Atlantis, Poseidon £ Neptune Phil Reichert Mike Rubrecht, John Haw HAILING THE WIND GOD GRIND SPOCK WAITING FOR WIND RED RIGHT RETURN URB1 T.J.—THEIR LEADER THE SMART ONES STAY DRY IT'S THAT TIME BOYS! TRAINING ON AND OFF THE WATER STOP WHINING AL IT ALL TAKES TEAMWORK SECRET SUPER-ENERGY DRINK OLD GLORY FLYING FROM DAWNSTAR M V CONTESSA GREG AT THE HELM LIBERATOR VARSITY OFFSHORE FISH ING TEAM Rower Squadron ! ZS1 ifl r--J -r STEPPING STONE MORE THAN A SKIPPER THE FLAGSHIP—MARINER Sl'i 'Daova St i ENGINEERS AT THE HELM DAVE ON A SAILBOAT A FEW GOOD MEN SO LONG KP i Life Long Friends OUR LIVES AND UNIVERSE ARE ALL MADE UP OF CHANGE; IT HAS BEEN THIS WAY SINCE THE BEGIN- NING OF TIME. BUT ONCE IN A WHILE THERE COMES AN INCIDENT OR PERSON THAT BRINGS ABOUT CHANGE TO MANY INSTEAD OF JUST THE FEW. CDR.” MCMAHON IS ONE OF THOSE PEOPLE. THROUGH HIS FIVE SHORT YEARS AS THE ACADE- MY’S SAILING MASTER HE TOUCHED THE HEARTS OF MANY MIDSHIPMAN. HE PROVED TO US OUR STRENGTHS; HE MADE US DISCOVER THAT WE HAVE NO LIMITATIONS. IN OUR FIELD OF EXPERTISE PEOPLE COME AND GO. BUT THOSE WHO TOOK THE OPPORTUNITY TO GET TO KNOW CHRIS REALIZE THAT HE HAS AND WILL BE A PART OF ALL OUR LIVES FOREVER. THIS PAGE IS TO SAY THANK YOU CHRIS FOR ALL YOU HAVE DONE. THEY ARE SMALL WORDS THAT OF- TEN GO UNSAID. BUT ARE FELT IN EACH ONE OF OUR HEARTS. IT IS TRUE THAT PLAQUES CAN NOT CONVEY HOW MUCH WE HAVE ACCOMPLISHED. BUT IT IS WITH THESE FEW WORDS THAT I HOPE YOU UNDERSTAND THAT WE ARE TRULY THANK- FUL. WE WISH YOU THE BEST OF LUCK IN YOUR FUTURE ENDEAVORS. i itnHMf USMMA Swimming Swimming Diving Team’s Season Summary The 1990-91 swimming team started off strong under new head coach Paul Nussgaum. The team started off 7-2 and ended up 7-6 with two tough losses to Marist College and SUNY Stony Brook. In both of these meets the USMMA swim team swam seconds away from victory and both meets were decided by the final relays. The Mariners were led by seniors Jason Kaplow, Jim Penny, and Brett Salkeld. Kaplow finished his career at Kings Point earning two more all-American plaques in diving by finishing second in the nation on the one meter board and sixth on the three meter board. Team records were set by Jason Kaplow on the one and three meter and another record was set by the 200 freestyle relay team of Bruce Skillman, Brett Salkeld, Rick Darnell, and Todd Levitt. Also helping the Mariners were freshmen Bruce Skillman, Hans Rittinger. and Paul Bowdich. Skillman finished his season by placing 3rd in the 200 freestyle, 4th in the 100 freestyle and fifth in the 50 freestyle, at the Metropolitan Swimming Championships. Also swimming well at the Metropolitan swimming champion- ships were Bowdich, who finished Nth in the 500 and 1650 freestyle, Rittinger, who finished 6th in the 100 butterfly and 16th in the 200 IM, Jamie Shine, who finished 10th in the 1650 and 12th in the 500 freestyle, Jim Penny, who finished 14th in the 50 and 100 freestyle, Brett Salkeld, who finished 14th in the 50 and 100 freestyle, and Todd Levitt, who finished 17th in the 50 freestyle and 18th in the 100 freestyle. The Mariners were also led by strong relay performances with the 200 freestyle relay (Skillman, Salkeld, Darnell, Levitt) finishing second, the 400 medley relay team of Jim Penny, Dutee Dodson, Rittinger and Skillman finishing seventh. Penny, Dodson, Rittinger and Darnell teamed up to take 7th in the 200 medley relay and the 400 freestyle relay team of Skillman, Levitt, Rick Penny and Salkheld finished 4th in the relay. The men look forward to next season under the leadership of Chris Farha, Rick Darnell and Jamie Shine, and with the departure of only three seniors the outlook for next year is exceptional. Thank you team well done. 346 Diving Team Seniors: Katrina Haselman, James Penny, Coach Paul Nussgaum, Brett Salkeld, Jason Kaplow, Kimberly Red- mann MAIMH Tl A WOMEN’S SWIMMING SEASON SUMMARY The 1990-91 women's swimming team enjoyed a good year receiving help from the upper and underclass. At the Met Conference Championship Seniors cap- tain Kim Redmann scored in three indi- vidual events as well as on four relays. Freshman diver Michelle Wysocki who was named the meet's Outstanding diver by winning on the three meter board and finishing third on the one meter board. Wysocki became the first Kings Point women diver to win an event at the Mets. Wysocki also contributed in the lane by helping three relay teams to score. Individually, Redmann finished 12th in the 1650 meter freestyle, 16th in the 200 free and 23rd in the 500 free. Also scoring in individual events was Jane Voracek and Michelle Determan. Voracek took 12th in the 400 IM, 17th in the 200 IM and 17th in the 200 butterfly while Determan finished 16th and 18th in the 200 free and 200 breaststroke In relay action, three Kings Point relay teams finished in tenth place. They were the 400 medley relay team of Wysocki, Determan, Voracek and Redmann and the 800 freestyle team of Parker, Determan, Voracek and Redmann. The women also took tenth in the 400 freestyle relay, elev- enth in the 200 freestyle relay and 12th in the 200 medley. Senior, Katrina Haselman, was out for most of the season due to back injury. Victory Song The Captain The Varsity Golf Team for the 90-91 year had a series of ups and downs. It all started in the fall with three match- es scheduled and a bunch of practices. The turnout was surprisingly good from the class of 94, with a fair amount of talent in evidence. Fall golf ended up getting side-lined a little bit due to the sponsoring course, but nothing major. Spring golf rolled around in mid- March with high hopes and a full schedule. An overwhelming amount of interest was shown when sign-ups were announced and tryouts had to be scheduled. This created a problem for the senior class who had to sit for li- cense exams. When tryouts were final- ly held and cuts made, nobody was happy, but that was the least of the teams problems. Almost every match got rained out, both home and away. The final record certainly did not re- flect the talent of the team. The best that can be said is that there is always next year. Wrestling The Kings Point wrestling team officially closed out its 1990-91 campaign with an appearance at the NCAA Division III Eastern Regional Wrestling Qualifiers at Rochester Institute of Technology. At the qualifiers, the Mariners had two wrestlers place in the top six, co- captain Ken Kostecky (177) and Brant Wrieth (158), who both finished in fifth place. Other members of the squad competing at the NCAA Eastern Regionals were, Ken Davis, Carl Philip, Carl Hill and Dave Hedrick. The season got off to a slow start. Kings Point wres- tling team’s double digit winning streak was in jeopar- dy. But the Mariners grapplere came on strong at the end of the season to finish the dual meet season with an 11-4 record, the sixth straight double-digit win total season for head coach Mike Cigala As coach Cigala said This was definitely a rebuild- ing year for us.” After losing nine seniors the Mariners double digit winning streak seemed impossible. The teams hope would lay with this young team that includ- ed: Ken Davis (118), Rich Blake (150), Brant Wrieth (158), Jim Powers (190), Carl Philip (134), co-captain Karl Hill and Ken Kostecki (177). The mainstays for the Mariners this season were co- captains Hill and Kostecki. Hill broke into the starting line-up after serving as a substitute his first two years and recorded a 12-7 season while Kostecki closed out a 16-8 overall record, 12-4 in dual meet competition. Davis, a freshman, finished his season strong, and Blake re- corded a 6-0 season. Wrieth after returning from sea finished with a 10-4 season. Powers, another freshman, was moved up a weight class and finished a season record of 7-3. Philip a big surprise filled in the depleted line-up winning some late matches for the Mariners. f A, Going for the pin There’s no escape The Rifle team had a successful 1990-91 season, compiling a 7-2 league record, and placing third in the regular season. With the help of first year head coach Peter Visconti, the team averaged 2088 out of a possible 2400, and defeated Val- ley Forge, Penn State Main, Penn State Ogontz, Kuntztow-, Wisconsin, Madison, Admiral Faragut, and Cornell. League losses were to VMI and Norwich. In the Admiral’s Cup competition, a four team tournament, the Mariners placed second, only two points behind Coast Guard, while soundly outshooting Maritime. At the West Point Invitational, the team per- formed well despite losing two of the top four shooters to sea year. At the NRA Sectional Tournament at Annapolis, fresh- man Aron Rader took two medals as top smallbore and air rifle ROTC shooter. At the MAC ROTC Championships, the Mari- ners placed third. The team consists of team captain Jonathan Cullum, Aaron Bresnahan, Charles Neal, Don Kopecky, Todd Stubblefield, Steve Brescia, Aron Rader, Doug Smith, and Kyle Lorash. Top four averages for the season, out of a possible 600, are as follow: Rader-559; Cullum-516; Stubblefield-498-, Brescia-508. Basketball The 1990-91 basketball season was predicted to be a rebuilding season but no one could have expected the outcome to be so drastically different from last year. After losing all-American Kevin D’Arcy and three other dey members from last year’s second place ECAC team, the year was correctly predicted to be one that would give younger, untried players more exper- iance. The Mariner hoopsters opened up the season with two over- whelming defeats and then rebounded by defeating St. Joseph’s and Lehman College to bring their record to 20. From then on, it only got worse. The Mariners went into the Christmas break with a record of 2-9. The team came back from the break early with a great atti- tude and the optimism that things could only get better. The attitude was great but the Mariners would once again be set back, but this time Lady Luck was the problem and not opposing teams. The team originally started with twelve players, but due to academic and eligibility problems as well as injuries, the team was wittled down to seven players. This left a beaten squad that went on to win only one of their next 17 games to end the season at 3-23. The sole win was an exciting win over SUNY-Maritime at Fort Schuyler. While the season was very disappointing, two Mariners came away with postseason honors. Senior captain Kevin Coulehan was named first team All-Skyline Conference while Freshman Flugh Flealey was named Skyline Conference Rookie of the Year. To say the least, the year was very taxing on first-year coach Frank Valenti His only solace can be in the fact that next years squad will see the return of six of the seven players that finished the season. These experienced players, along with what has been touted as the best recruiting class in years, will provide the Mariners with a young and hungry team. Hopefully this squad will prove that the record of the 1990-91 team was a fluke and return Kings Point basketball to its previous promi- nence. il m PM i Basketball 11« ii Basketball ifl III ID IK IK mm wm in — RW Basketball Lacrosse SCOREBOARD 4 Dowling 15 1 Queens 12 6 Colby 15 1 R.P.I. 19 8 Steven’s Tech 9 4 Fairfield 19 6 Marist 25 9 Stockton 18 9 Vassar 8 6 Maritime 9 14 C.C.N.Y. 1 7 Pace 16 8 Manhattanville 17 6 Kean 14 3 Montclair 14 12 Vassar 9 13 Southampton 26 Though 1991 Kings Point Lacrosse team only won as many games as last year, this year’s team showed that they were a much stronger team all around. With a new head coach, Tim Gill, his leadership rallied the team to finish with no less than a NO percent effort from every player. This can be seen in the fact that the team always remained in the game without getting blownout. This effort did not go unrecognized. The Hudson Valley coaches rewarded the Mariners by naming Pat Beebee, Ed McErlean and Chris Scarola to the Hudson Valley Lacrosse Conference All-star Team. Junior, Pat Beebee appeared in every game and led the squad with 51 points on 38 goals and 13 assists. Hil Delashmutt led the squad with 39 goals and 9 assists for a total of 48 points. Ed McErlean was third on the team with 25 points on 18 goals and 7 assists. Defensively as well as offensively the team enjoyed a good season. The Mariner’s defense was led by tri captain Boyd Hill with his compatriots Scarola, Brownell, Ford and Wiberg. Boyd Buck” tallied up two assists and Scarola four goals and four assists. written by J. DiBari SCOREBOARD USMMA 4 Dowling 15 USMMA 1 Queens 12 USMMA 6 Colby 15 USMMA 1 R.P.I. 19 USMMA 8 Steven’s Tech 9 USMMA 4 Fairfield 19 USMMA 6 Marist 25 USMMA 9 Stockton 18 USMMA 9 Vassar 8 USMMA 6 Maritime 9 USMMA 14 C.C.N.Y. 1 USMMA 7 Pace 16 USMMA 8 Manhattanville 17 USMMA 6 Kean 14 USMMA 3 Montclair 14 USMMA 12 Vassar 9 USMMA 13 Southampton 26 Backrow: Coach T. Gill, Coach S. Crowley, S Laino, P Beebee, 4th row: S Flahrity, B Hunter, K Brownell, H Delashmutt, 3th row: Mngr C Triplett, E Masinsin, R Scamell, C Scott, E Wiberg, 2nd row: J Cawley, K Aanonsen-, J Davis, C Scarola, M Hartzel, D Former, 1st row: A York, R Ford, B Carty, J. Herget, S Ricks, B Hill, J Ivey k. Baseball SCOREBOARD USMMA 7 Bowdoin 19 USMMA 5 Bowdoin 17 USMMA 10 Bowdoin 6 USMMA 12 New Paltz —F USMMA 17 Hunter 7 USMMA S Mt St Mary 5 USMMA 3 Mt St Mary 4 USMMA 3 N.J. Tech 2 USMMA 16 N.J. Tech 12 USMMA 6 Old Westbury 3 USMMA 8 Stony Brook 10 USMMA 0 Steven's 5 USMMA 8 Maritime 3 USMMA 1 Col of Staten Is 8 USMMA 10 Hunter 9 USMMA 12 C.C.N.Y. 4 USMMA 4 U.S.C.G.A. 9 USMMA 7 US .C.G.A. 9 USMMA 0 Queens 3 USMMA 7 Stony Brook 4 USMMA 12 Old Westbury 10 USMMA 5 St Joseph's 3 USMMA 3 St Joseph’s 2 USMMA 2 Col of Staten Is II USMMA 4 Manhattanville 1 USMMA 7 Manhattanville 6 Coming into the 1991 season, the Kings Point baseball team had three goals. One: Win a game on the spring trip to Florida. Two: Set a school record for most wins in a season. Three: Make the ECAC Playoffs. Well, as Meatloaf would say two out of three ain’t bad. The Mariners accomplished the first goal by winning six of their last seven games to finish the season with a 16-10 record for first year head coach Charlie Pravata. The sixteen wins sur- passed the old record of twelve wins amassed by the 1990 squad. KP also finished 7-3 in the newly created Skyline Conference, good for a second place tie. After returning from their spring trip to Florida, the Mariners got off to their best start ever, winning seven of the first eight games up north. The 1991 Kings Point nine was led by four seniors, three of whom were four year letterwinners. Flere is a breif biography on each senior: John Condon, first baseman and pitcher, only played baseball his senior year after lettering in football his first three seasons. At the plate, John hit .282 with five RBIs and a stolen base. He capped off the season by driving in the winning run in the season’s final game. On the mound, John was 2-2 on the season, striking out eleven batters in 16 innings of work. Dave Fontana, a centerfielder, was a four-year letterwinner and three time captain. Unfortunately for Dave, his career was cut short when he suffered a broken jaw in the ninth game of the season. Before going down with the injury, Dave was leading the team with a .560 batting average with three doubles and three triples and was hitting a perfect 1.000 with men in scoring position. As a junior, Dave hit .378 and led his team with 28 hits, 19 runs, nine doubles, 21 RBIs and six steals and as a sophomore, he hit a team high .410. Dave finished his career with a .375 batting average with 16 doubles, nine triples one home run, 40 RBIs and 17 stolen bases. Overall, he hit .635 over the past three season with men in scoring position. Rob McManus, a second baseman, was a four-year letterwinner and finished his career with a .303 batting average with 13 d-ubles, seven triples, two home runs, 34 RBIs and elev- en stolen bases. Rob hit .368 his senior season, second on the team, with seven doubles, four triples one home run and 14 RBIs and hit .481 with men in scoring position. Overall, Rob hit .435 over the past three seasons with men in scoring position. Bob Cornwell, an infielder outfielder, was a four-year letterwinner and finished his career with 17 hits, one double. 12 RBIs and seven stolen bases. d Ft. Lauderdale Spring Training c Don’t forget the box lunches Sweep! Yo Flatbush! McCann displaces some water as he places 2nd in the Candy Store Belly Flop Contest. The extra sprints were worth it. KP vs Bowdoin College for first Florida win. _________________________________________________________________________ Swinging for the fences McManus picking daisies in the field Gunned at the plate Hustling down the line W «w Tennis Though the 1991 Kings Point tennis team experienced some ups and downs during the season, closing out the year with a record of 6-7, one the was always the same; junior Mike McClintock would not lose to a Division ill opponent. McClintock has not fallen to a Division III oppo- nent in two years, compiling a 5-0 record this season. Overall, McClintock was 10-3 on the season at first sin- gles, going 5-3 against Division I and II players. McClin- tock entered the Metropolitan Tennis Conference Cham- pionship tournament as the number four seed at first singles, the highest seed for a Division III player at first singles. After a first round bye, McClintock won his first two matches to advance to the semifinals. But in the semifinals McClintock ran into the number one seed. Af- ter taking the first two games of the first set, McClintock had the crowd thinking upset but his opponent came back to win the first set 6-2 and the second 6-0. Also enjoying successful seasons in 1991 were Rob Boya- jieff (second singles), Rob Vosnick (third singles), Jeff Armstrong (fourth singles), Tom Echols (fifth singles) and Derick Villar (sixth singles). McClintock and Boyajieff teamed up at first doubles at the Mets while Vosnick and Echols competed at second doubles and Villar and Arm- strong played at third doubles. Vosnick and Echols lost in the first round while the other two doubles pairs ad- vanced to the second round before falling. 376 Tennis Athletic Awards APM, GILES C. ST5PMAN TROPHY HAROLD KREBS Harold Krebs, a four-year letterwinner with the Kings Point football team, received the 1991 Adm. Giles C. Stedman as the Academy's Out- standing Male Athlete. Krebs received the award at the annual USMMA Varsity Award Dinner held on 4 June 1991 at the USMMA's Officer's Club. Last season, Krebs was named a First Team All-America Defensive Back, as well as an ECAC Metro NY NJ All-Star and a First Team All-Liberty Conference Defensive Back. In addition to his athletic achievements he also performed in the classroom and was named Kings Point's Liberty Conference Scholar Athlete Krebs was also named USMMA's Most Valu- able Player at the annual football awards dinner held in December. It was an award that was well earned as he not only led the Mariners but he also led all of the NCAA Division III with ten intercep- tions last season, which is a Kings Point single season record. He was a major reason that the Kings Point passing defense was ranked third in the nation in Division III and that the Kings Point overall defense was ranked ninth in the nation in Division III. He was also named a Second Team All-Liberty Conference Defensive Back asa junior and gradu- ates with two Kings Point school records: Most interceptions in a season which he set last year and most interceptions in a career with 17. STEVEN WICKBOLDT M5MQR1A.L AWARD. Bob Kocls, a four-year letterwinner with the Kings Point track field team, was presented the 1991 Stephen Wickboldt Memorial Award, given annually in memory of Steven Wickboldt Class of '79, and presented to that member of the varsity track team who so exemplifies those traits of dedication, leadership and sportsmanship which Steve displayed as a midshipman at the Academy. According to head coach Bill Omeltchenko, Kocis is an athlete who is too small, too slow and too weak to become an outstanding field athlete. Fortunately, he was a giant amongst men when it came to dedication and seriousness. He had to travel several times a week to see his coach and to master the most difficult event on the track pro- gram, the hammer throw. He is an inspiration to every athlete who has overcome limitations and his All-Am erica status as a weight thrower is the culmination of many years of extremely hard work. Kocis earned All-America honors at the NCAA Division III nationals as a junior in the 35-lb. weight throw and again qualified for the NCAA Division III nationals in the 35-lb. weight throw this season. Outdoors. Kocis qualified for nationals in the hammer throw as a junior and a senior. Wes Stearns, a sophomore football player, was awarded the 1991 Andrew E. Gibson Award, presented , to the outstanding offensive football player each year. The trophy was donated by Mr. Andrew Gibson, former Under Secretary of Com- merce for Maritime Affairs. Steams is the name that im mediately comes to mind when one thinks of the Kings Point offense. Last season, he showed his versatility for the football team, serving as a running back and also returning punts and kickoffs. He led the team with 152 carries for 579 yards and six touchdowns, despite missing two games with an injury. He also recorded 18 receptions for 201 yards and was named Second Team All-Liberty Conference and an ECAC All-Star. Steams also received the 1990 Gibson Award. Harold Krebbs COACH OF THE YEAR AWARD HAZEL BARR KEVIN RYAN Hazel Barr and Kevin Ryan, Kings Point div- ing coaches, were named the Academy's Coach of the Year. Barr and Ryan have been coaching at Kings Point since 1982 and 1984, respectively. They toil in relative anonym ity in the Kings Point natatorium, spending many late nights teaching the intricacies of their sport to willing students. Their hard work has paid off as Kings Point has qualified a person for the NCAA Division III National Championships for the past seven years and have had at least one person earn All-America honors each year. They have combined to help Kings Point athletes earn 21 AILAmerica honors over the past seven years, including a two-time NCAA Division III National champion. This season, they helped three athletes, in- cluding two freshmen, qualify for the NCAA Divi- sion III National Championships, breaking Acad- emy records along the way. One of the athletes earned All-Amenca honors by finishing second on the one meter board and sixth on the three. CHARLES C. RACKETT MEMORIAL AWARD Alan Arrigonl, a four-year letterwinner with the King Point crew, was presented the Charles C, Racfcett Memorial Award, presented annually to the Most Valuable Oarsman on the USMMA Varsity Crew. This athlete has been judged ascontributing the most to the success of the team through stead- fast dedication, outstanding performance and superior leadership. ■ HHIE A.BERKEAWARD KARLA HIRDNING Karla Hirdning, a four-year letterwinner for the Kings Point Volleyball team and one-year letter for the Kings Point track field team, received the 1991 Julie A. Berke Award as the Academy's Outstanding Female Athlete. For the past two seasons, Hirdning has served as the captain of the volleyball team and won Most Valuable Player honors both years. As the team's leading setter, she usually led the squad in assists but that doesn't scratch the surface of her impor- tance to the volleyball team. She single-handedly kept the women’s volleyball program alive round- ing up new players when the team was depleted due to injury. And though the team suffered through some hard times last year, she was always a positive and motivating force for the squad. Deciding to come out for track her senior season, she made an immediate impact on the team, scoring for the Indoor and Outdoor track teams at the Collegiate Track Conference Cham- pionships. She helped the women's team score 18 points at the CTC Indoor Championships, the high- est team score ever recorded by a Kings Point women's team at the CTCs. Karla Hirdning MARK J. PARADISO SERVICE AWARD Tom Meyer, the USMMA Athletic Association business manager, was awarded the 1991 Mark J. Paradiso Service Award, presented annually by the Varsity Club in memory of Mark J. Paradiso, Class of '83. It is bestowed upon that member of the Academy family who best exemplifies the traits of Mark, a midshipman unequaled in his dedication and service to the USMMA Athletic Program. Meyer is a person unequaled in his dedication to the Kings Point athletic program. He started at Kings Point in 1979 and took became the business manager in 1983. But the tide business manager doesn't do him justice. He does it all, from making sure the team have vans for their road trips to keeping track of budgets to scheduling, this man has done it all. David Fontana, a sanior baseball player, was awarded the 1991 Eastern Collegiate Athletic Conference Merit Medal, presented annually by the Petty Officers' Club of the United States Mer- chant Marine Academy in memory of their de- ceased member, Robert Brazeil, to the Outstand- ing Senior Scholar-Athlete, Fontana is a four-year letterwinner for the Kings Point baseball team. He is a three-time •J captain. Over his career, he recorded a .375 batting average with 16 doubles, nine triples, one home run. 40 RBIs and 17 stolen bases and he hit .635 over the past three seasons with men in scoring position. Academically he is ranked sev- :} enth in his class as a Marine Transportation major. Dave Fontana H arold Krebe, a four-year letterwinner in foot- ball, and Brant Wrleth, a two-year letterwinner in wrestling, were named winners of the 1991 Hanley-Naegele Award, presented annually in memory of Midshipmen Paul Hanley and Douglas Naegele who participated as football players and wrestlers while attending the Academy. Last season, Krebs led the NCAA Division III and set a school record for most interceptions in a season with 10 and finished his career with 17. another school record. He was sixth on the team with 43 total tackles and was named First Team All-Liberty Conference. Last season, Wrieth wrestled at 158 pound: and capped the season by finishing fifth at the NCAA Division III Eastern Regional Qualifiers. He finished with an overall record of 14-4 and was 10- 4 in dual meet action. SOLE MVP: Martin Kegel Captain:' Ma tr- Kegel Captains' Pat Beebe, Sean Ricks and 8uck Hill - Pat Beebe, Ed McErlean and Chris Scarola named to Hudson Valley Conference All-Star team PISTOL MVP: Brian Behlke Captains: Brian Behlke and Mark Riggio Sports Summary 1990-91 MVP: Mike McVay Captains: Dave Fontana and Mike McVay - Set Kings Point single season win record - Bill Jurena (OF) and Ryan Vanderberg (P) named First Team All-Skyline Conference - Mike McVay (OF, P), Rob McManus (2B), Walt Hime (C) and Vanderberg (OF) named Second Team All-Skyline Conference MVP: Kevin Coulehan Captain: Kevin Coulehan - Kevin Coulehan named First Team All-Skyline Conference CREW MVP: Jeff Pietila Captain: Alan Arrigoni MVP: Kit Corbett and Terry McVeigh Captain: Terry McVeigh - Kit Corbett finished eighth at the CTC Div. Ill Championships to make All-CTC NCAA Div. Ill - Team finished second at PAC Championships RIFLE MVP: JonCukum Captains: Aaron Bresnahan and Jon Cullum flucax MVP: Joe Morrissey Captains: Pete Gedney and Tracy Wilcox ?A)LMG MVP: Brian Morel Captains: 8ud Darr, T J. Powers ana Matt Spears MVP: Jason Kapiow Captain: Jason Kapiow - Jason Kapiow finished second on one meter board and sixth on three meter board to earn All- America honors - Kapiow finished second on both boards at Met Championships to win Joseph Stetz Award as the meet's outstanding diver - Freshman diver Rory Small also qualified for NCAA Division III Nationals - Finished fourth at the Met Championships - Finished first at the Iona Relay Carnival MVP: Marc Braucher Captains: Mike Giresi and Ed McErlean - Harold Krebs named First Team All-America - Wes Stearns, John Morganti and Krebs named to ECAC All-Star Team - Ed McErlean, Krebs and Morganti named First Team All-Liberty Conference - Rick Gill, Eric Nichols, Rich Reynolds, Anthony Robinson and Stearns named Second Team All- Liberty Conference MVP: Michelle Wysocki Captain: Kim Redmann - Freshman diver Michelle Wysocki qualified for NCAA Division III Nationals and finished 37th and 42nd on the one and three meter board, respectively - Wysocki finished first on the three meter board and third on one meter.board at Mets and was named the meet's outstanding diver - Finished tenth at the Met Championships MVP: Karla Hirdning Captain: Karla Hirdning MVP: Ken Kostecki Captains: Karl Hill and Ken Kostecki - Team recorded it's sixth straight winning season and sixth straight double-digit win season - Ken Kostecki and Brant Wrieth finished fifth at. the NCAA Division III East Region Qualifiers Soccer (4-9-2) MVP: Andy Ackerman Captains: Andy Ackerman and Steve Souza -Team was the 1990 Subur- ban Conference Champion. -Andy Ackerman and Jim O’Leary named to Suburban Soccer Conference All-Star team. Ackerman also named SCC Player of the Year MVP: Mike McClintock Captains: Mike McClintock and Rob Vosnick - Mike McClintock entered the Met Conference Championship as the fourth seed at first singles and advanced to the semi-finals before falling to the first seed MVP (Indoor): Bob Kocis and Kit Corbett MVP (Outdoor): Joe Couiilard, Rusty Edwards, Chris Pecherek and Dale Young Captains: Duane 8ennett and Bob Kocis Indoor - Bob Kocis qualified for the ECAC Div. II! Championships in first meet of season and later qualified for the NCAA Div. Ill Nationals - Also competing at ECAC Div. Ill Champion- ships were distance runner Kit Corbett, weight thrower Ray Collett, and shot putter Chris May. Outdoor - Javelin thrower Chris Pecherek qualified for the NCAA Div. Ill National Championship in first meet of season at Florida Relays and later finished second at the prestigious IC4As, the best finish ever for a Kings Pointer at the IC4As - Later in season. Bob Kocis also qualified in the hammer and Joe Couiilard in the discus - Men's team won the PAC Championship for the fourth straight year and took fourth at the 4 . CTC Championship, the best finish in 23 years A Jacqui Gerber Editors Tracey Twaddle Chief Cevan LeSieur In Midships The 1991 MIDSHIPS Staff was the largest Kings Point has had (14 total), with the added distinction of having three Editor-in-Chiefs: Jacqui Gerber, Cevan Lesieur and Tracey Twaddle. The staff had to overcome two major obstacles in the beginning: 1) All editors were new to Midships, and 2) The death of Cdr. Cohen, who was the advisor for Midships for as long as anyone could remember, before getting together to work on making the ’91 annual the best in many years. One goal which the staff is very proud of accomplishing, and which has never been met by any other Midships staff, is the making of every submission deadline. The 1991 MIDSHIPS Staff presents you with a well-thought out, pain-stakingly done yearbook which we hope will not just gather dust in the years ahead, but will be a rich source of Academy memories. ROTATIONS: Doug LEFT: The three Editors with Jos- ten’s Representa- tive, Carl Miller. FACULTY ADMIN: Aaron OPENING: Cevan Ethnic Culture Club A Split: Morrissey, Manning, deLeon, Rodri- guez, Kantner, Sloan, Robinson, Hill, Phillips, Kilkenny, Duriuex, Liu, Lundin, Carrol, Jacob, Carpenter, Hite, Burak, Gardner, Werchan, Skahen, Hosey, Peters, Sheetz, Herget, Com- tois. Nelson, Rankin, Baldwin, Breshnahan, Power, Willet, Landry, Bellissimo, Minster, Green, Weise, Wolford, McLafferty B Split: Conley, Rigby, Rankin, Ramos, McLaf- ferty, Wolford, Carroll, Peters, Pudjayana, Ol- son, Liu, Manning, Shuler, Robinson, Nelson, Jacob, Skahen, Smith, Cruz, Caserta, Morris- sey, Reynolds, York, Rodriguez, Souza, Wil- liams, McFadden, E. Ramos, Leyson, Burak, Sheetz, Kuras, Beers, Lundin, Baldwin, Orton, Landry, Werchan, Duriuex The Ethnic Culture Club has changed its focus this year in terms of the purpose of the T M’s. This year we were geared more toward experiencing different cultures and learning more about the many diverse cul- tures that surround us. We took a tour of Harlem, a Russian neighborhood in Brook- lyn, and a Brazilian Neighborhood in New- ark. We also went to see Medieval Times in New Jersey. As a club, we learned a lot and also had an excellent time. New York and New Jersey are full of many different types of cultures and this year the Ethnic Culture Club tapped into this resource and took ad- vantage of it. We learned things and shared experiences that we will remember for years to come. Arts And World Affairs Committee The Arts and World Affairs Committee had the most successful year on record. Under the leadership of Eric Rankin and Joseph Morrissey over twelve thousand dollars were spent for more than 400 tick- ets for midshipman use. The Schedule for the year was packed with Broadway plays and musicals, as well as two visits to see opera at Lincoln Center’s Metropoli- tan Opera House. During the first half of the year, the club attended Grapes of Wrath”, Prelude to a Kiss”, Les Misera- bles”, and Radio City Music Hall’s The Christmas Spectacular”. At the MET the club had the opportunity to see Porgy and Bess”, an opera by George Gershwin. The second half of the year began with a visit to the Gershwin Theatre to see Fid- dler on the Roof”. This was followed by the opera Don Giovanni” and the hit Broadway musicals Les Miserables” Phantom of the Opera”, and Cats”. President: Eric Rankin Vice President: Joseph Morrissey PLAYBILU IMPERIAL THEATRE Social Committee Class of 1991 J. Pellizetti L. Abrams C. Neal K. Redmann Class of 1992 A Split: A. Peterson J. Single G. Chu N. Early Class of 1993 A Split D. Knight K. Smith M. Kirshner G. Mensching B Split J. Gallaher A. Fry J. Nicholson S. Goin B Split B. Hilburn J. Nix J. Hill J. Bone Class of 1994 B. Morgan D. Waldeck A. Temmeli B. Thompson A Split: J-C Jacob, RPO S. Kanak, RPX E. Rankin, Arts and World Affairs J. Baldwin, Christmas Ball Chairman B. Postman, Christmas Ball Co-Chairman B Split J. Baldwin, RPO E. Rankin, Arts and World Affairs MDA Club _____I Each year the MDA Club works to raise money for the Jerry Lewis Labor Day Telethon. This year, activities included a five mile fun run”, Boards day, and a formal review for the Nassau County poster child. Each year midshipmen also have the opportunity to participate in the Telethon at various locations, including Manhatten and Secacus, NJ. Once again. Kings Point has had a successful year in the fight Against Muscular Dystrophy. — Regimental Honor Guard The Regimental Honor Guard is the midshipman organization that serves the public relation interests of the academy, working in conjunction with the Deputy Chief of Staff, the Office of External Af- fairs, the Public Information Office, and the Office of Admissions in Wiley Hall. The officer advisor was Capt. Charles Renick, USMS who arranged work details for the Honor Guard that promoted fa- vorable relations with the public. Exam- ples of these work details included con- ducting tours of the Academy, ushering at parade reviews, and bell ringing at the home football games. Kim Redman served as the Regimental Honor Guard Commander during the first rotation. She was then relieved by Shawn Werchan as the B-split Regimental Honor Guard Commander. The Regimental Hon- or Guard consists of about one fourth of the regiment ranging from plebes to first classmen. Regimental Color Guard LmJ l The Regimental Color Guard is a group of students involved in many functions both on and off the Academy. They are responsible for marching the Ensign, Academy Standard, and Battle Standard as Academy representatives. Other du- ties include raising the Ensign and sound- ing the bell at morning colors, and carry- ing the Standards at reviews and other Academy functions. This year the Color Guard participated in the opening day ceremonies for both the Mets and the Yankees. Regimental Color Guard Com- manders this year were: Tony Holmes (A- split). Bill Blaine (3rd Quarter), and Paul Nicholas (4th Quarter). Chapel Choir Yes, Chapel Choir is still here! It’s hard to believe that there are midshipmen capable of singing. Again, we were called upon to sing at St. Patrick’s Cathedral which was an experience that was thoroughly enjoyed by all thirty members. The Christmas service was quite a unique experience with dimmed lights and the choir appearing from the walls singing a Gregorian chant by candle light. For the remainder of the year we have been invited to many churches of Great Neck and hope to visit as many as possible. This has been a great year and I hope the choir gets larger as the years sail by. B. McMillin 91 (president), M. Determan, D. Thien, J. Haw, S. lies, C. Todd, H. Henderson, A. Leyson, J. Paul, D. Gombos, S. Cegelski, S. Brenner. Mariner's Chorus Beautiful harmonies The 1990-91 Mariner’s Chorus had a busy fall season. The Parent’s Weekend concert in September was the first per- formance of the season. The group also performed for several events around Long Island. The Chorus combined with the Chapel Choir to perform in the Armed Forces Service at St. Patrick’s Cathedral. The finale to the fall season was the Chorus’ performance at the Christmas tree lighting ceremony on Long Island, which was televised on cable television. The spring season began with a concert for the Cathedral Club of Garden City. Other performances included a joint con- cert at Villanova College and a benefit concert at Carnegie Hall. The year ended with the traditional performance in Washington D.C. for the Maritime Day celebrations. The Chorus is under the direction of Mr. Tony Pollera. The performances in- clude numbers performed by the entire group as well as small group and solo num- bers. The barbershop quartet is always a favorite part of each concert. The Chorus sings a wide variety of songs ranging from gospel songs to traditional sea chan- teys. -_____ Newman Club A Split: Father J. Leone, J-C Jacob, S. Bre- scia, C. Moore, C. Pladsen, D. Foos, F. Garcia de Paredes, M. Bowen, D. Smitz, D. Skahen, C. Erdeljac, M. Garcia, B. Mor- gan, A. Calleba The Newman Club is a National Catholic Organization established to provide inter- ested midshipmen spiritual, intellectual, and social means to be active in their faith. Mid- shipmen in the club are encouraged to en- rich their faith and to aid others in obtain- ing the same capabilities. Members of the club participate in tours of Manhatten (churches, etc.), dinners, movies (contem- porary and old favorites), retreats with West Point and Coach Guard, Ski Trips, and discussions on religious and domestic top- ics. Overall, it is a great way to come closer to the Lord. B Split: Father J. Leone, J-C Jacob, F. Gar- cia de Paredes, C. Moore, D. Foos, C. Erdeljac, C. Pladsen, M. Garcia, R. Smith, M. Bowen, D. Skahen, B. Morgan, E. Me- drano, S. Frost, M. Determan, M. Good- night, D. Capozello, A. Bucko, M. Smith, C. Spain, J. Caserta, D. Ramsey, D. Palmer, T. Melchiorre, A. Williamson, M. Lenski, C. Wohlfeld, M. Flartzell 394 .y Knights Of Columbus Father Leone, W. Abney, A. Ackerman, J. Armstrong, J. Brennan, B. Brown, T. Campbell, M. Chierico, J. Couillard, M. Dalton, R. Egal, D. Erck, W. Fedor, T. Fen- nell, J. Flatley, V. Foley, F. Garcia de Pa- rades, J. Girouard, K. Godfrey, M. Haigis, C. Janus, S. Kearney, B. Leach, J. Lutz, S. Mark, B. Martin, T. McVeigh, E. Medrano, A. Minster, M. Murphy, C. Neal, M. Oli- veria, D. Palmer, E. Pikiewicz, J. Pluta, W. Rapone, J-C. Rayepen, R. Renolds, A. Sar- angay, D. Schneider, G. Single, T. Sweet, J. Trevino, J. Urbanic, W. Valentino, M. Vogt, J. Volpe, R. Vosnick The Knights of Columbus is an organiza- tion that stands up for charity, fraternity, unity, and patriotism. In general, we are a Catholic Organization that believes in help- ing anyone, regardless of their sex, race, or religion. The Francis Xavier Bevins Council here at King Point has proven to be a fruitful and helpful addendum to the Knights of Co- lumbus order. I want to relay to all of our council members that we have really spread our name throughout the order, and that we have brought upon an excellent name to our academy through our efforts. Thank you all. God Bless. Good luck. Fraternally, Dave Palmer, Grand Knight Christian Fellowship Club The Christian Fellowship Club is an in- ter-faith organization established to help midshipmen draw nearer to God. This mission is accomplished through noon Bi- ble studies, evening devotions, and bi- annual retreats. Under the direction of Chaplain Bennett, the members of the club try to apply the teachings of Christ to their lives. This is so that they can improve their lives and the lives of those around them. . 396 Fanfare Trumpets I L. Thurston (Director), J. Petros, D. Price, B. Bossa, D. Uson, J. Hurley, A. Brown, B. Noiseux, D. Olson, E. Pudjayana The Fanfare Trumpets, under the di- rection of senior Lisa Thurston, contin- ued to be an integral tool for the Acade- my’s Public relations. The Fanfares not only open every Academy formal review, but have also performed at the Waldorf Astoria, Capital Hilton in Washington D.C., Manhasset Yacht Club, and various other functions. Hear This This year, Hear This struggled to get back on its feet. The interest in the paper has greatly diminished over the last few years. The small Hear This staff attempt- ed to spark interest in the paper once again by getting out a few issues. But, due to the small number of people, deadlines were difficult to keep and the regiment became discouraged. Things were ac- complished, despite the setbacks encoun- tered. Improvements were made in the opera- tion of Hear This, and a good foundation was built for next year. With the help of faculty advisor Dr. Magnus and interest- ed midshipmen. Hear This once again may become the voice of the regiment.” Regimental Broadcast Unit B. Hunt (Director), J. Thrall (Asst. Direc- tor), M. Dreiling (Assoc. Director), T. Shelly, J. Crain, H. Hoover, S. Kanak, D. Kopecky, J. Krick, C. Neal, S. Reese, M. Schmidt, J.J. Murray, S. Richie, Morgan. Smith, Austin, Baltemsperger, Caston- guay, Daniels, Glaser, Hatcher, Hawco, Jacko, Johnson, Kearney, Kennedy, Ko- liba, Melchoirre, Rittinger, Schmitz, Skill- man, Thompson, Tran, Urwiller, Hughes, Wander The Regumental Broadcast Unit at- tempts to promote new music and please a wide variety of tastes with the music it provides during meal hours, as well as performing d.j. work at mixers and class parties. Affectionately known as WRBU, Kings Point’s version of a college radio station, the club appears in the College Music Journal listing as a current carrier station. Our achievement of this status through weekly play-list submission has put us on the mailing lists of most music companies in the industry. Though al- ways controversial, the club has perse- vered. The future of the RBU as a college station depends upon the classes after 1991. ■ USMMA Ambulance Corps Andreas, Broemnimann, Price, Ramsey, Bonner, Dorricott, Miller, Wallace, lies, Henderson, Norris, Minnis, Bendixen, Smith, Larson, Ramos, Knoll, Urwiller, Tresp, Bertlels, Dubick, Herget, Davis, Brodeur, Leyson, Devin, Harlan, Craw- ford, Belkge, Robinson, Kolesa, Riggio, Cleary, Copperman. The USMMA Ambulance Corps is comprised of a group of mid- shipmen from all classes dedicat- ed to the care and well being of others, namely fellow midshipmen in the Academy. The Ambulance Corp is on call at all times when the regiment is present at the Academy. The EMT’s of the corps are New York State Certified Emergency Medical Technicians and have undergone training in accordance with New York State EMS requirements. Uncertified members of the corps are enrolled in an EMT course and trained as profession- als in Pre-Hospital care. The Ambulance Corps is proud to offer its services to further promote the high standards of excellence expected of and observed among the Regiment of Midshipmen. — - _ _1 — Regimental Drill Team The Regimental Drill Team, led by M N Lt. Robert Villa-Lobos, is a highly orga- nized group of midshipmen who are re- sponsible for conducting rifle and cannon salutes and representing the Academy in prestigious affairs and formal parades. Over the past two years, they have per- formed in numerous holiday parades and functions, escorted Vogue models at a formal dinner, performed at wedding cer- emonies, and conducted funeral gun-fire salutes. In addition to their numerous ac- tivities, the Drill Team also participates in a variety of invitational drill meets and competitions, living up to their motto of Duty, Pride, and Discipline”. Villa-Lobos led his team to victory in a very competi- tive drill meet held at Seton Hall Universi- ty, where they received first place in Squad Basic” and secured a fourth place finish in Platoon Trick”. This year more competitions are scheduled for Villa-Lo- bos and his band of troops”. SNAME The Society of Naval Architects and Marine Engineers is: A society orga- nized in 1893, to advance the art, science, and practice of Naval Architecture, Ship- building, and marine Engineering; com- mercial and governmental, in all of their branches of the Allied Arts and Sciences, and to promote the professional integrity of its members.” SNAME allows for mem- bers of the maritime industry to pool their resources and address major devel- opments and problems through paper pre- sentations and journal publications. liftd ASNE T The American Society of Naval Engi- neers provides a forum of direct commu- nications between government engi- neers, shipbuilders and operators, and suppliers of related services and equip- ment. In particular, the student section encourages students incline in the Naval Engineering community, and through in- creased participation in the affairs of the Society, to establish closer personal asso- ciations with professionals working in the many areas of Naval Engineering. - A Split: C. LeSieur, C. deLeon, T. Elwardt, M. Kirshner, J. Buxton, M. Fowles, A. Mur- ray, P. Manning, S. Kanak, D. Hawco B Split: C. LeSieur, T. Elwardt, J. Buxton, M. Fowles, J. Lipps, D. Hawco, A. Miller, S. Fedor This year the Debate and Speech team continued to improve and be competitive in the East Coast Area. The A-Split broke two teams into Octa-Finals at the West Point Invitational in October. In Speech and Dra- ma, team captain, Cevan LeSieur, qualified for NFA Nationals in four events, Impromp- tu, Extemp, Impromptu Sales, and Dramatic Duo. Consistently good performances were added by 3rd Classmen, Andy Murray and Johnathon Lipps, and Plebe David Hawco. One again this year, the valuable coaching of Capt. Richard Stewart and Dr. Roberta Delson was the key to the teams success. The future looks promising as the Debate and Speech team continues its re-emer- gence into national prominence. ■a Trident Club i r Divers do it deeper” has been the theme of the Trident club this year. Training has been the major objective of the club. Co- Presidents Rob Sanger and John Kovaleski organized a spring and fall training session which certified forty midshipmen as open water divers. Bob and Donna Edgar have been instructing for over 15 years at Kings Point and are still putting up with our antics. The club also trained midshipmen in ad- vanced scuba certification and has gone on weekend dives to places such as Block Is- land and Montauk. The Trident Club has shown midshipmen, who are used to seeing the ocean from above, an intriguing and spellbinding new world. Jf. S'' f v’ •• I Men's Volleyball Club The men’s Varsity volleyball team unfortunately ended it’s last year as a non-varsity sport and was not included in this year’s program. With the continuing in- terest, effort, and support by Christopher Knight, ’93, Merwyn Oliveria, ’91, and Jeremiah Smedra, ’94, a Men’s Volleyball Club was established. The club consisted of returning players and new freshmen with excellent potential. The volleyball club is an organized team set up to scrimmage against other colleges and universities in the division III competition. The team is open to anyone and is not limited to returning players. The club had an excellent turn out with two teams, a first and a second. If the underclassmen continue to excel and convince the Athletic Depart- ment that the Mariner’s Volleyball team is highly motivated, they can BUMP, SET, SPIKE, and DIG their way up to an official Varsity sport once again. M. Oliveria, J. Smedra, C. Knight, B. Bos- sa, A. Tanael, B. Carr, N. Lane, K. Mer- shon, P. Hastie, A. Williamson, G. Olson, J. Gelfand, S. Goin, E. Medrano, A. Miller, M. Murray, M. Strobel, Croche, Blake Fencing Club The Fencing Club has returned with the help of team captain Brendan McMillin. With the con- tinued support of Capt. Richard Stewart and Lcdr. Dave Mund the team will prosper. The season started with much opposition from the Commandant’s Department, but the student’s interest was tri- umphant once again. As you can see by the team picture, much interest was displayed. Although under the coaching of Joe Brodeth, an instructor at both Santelli and nationally ranked St. Johns women’s team, we hope to become more competitive next year. Financially the team was fighting an up-hill battle. We held raffles and sold books to raise money to reduce the personal expense of the team members. For the most part, the team is eager to cross swords with other colleges and will continue to strive for a national rank. B. McMillin (Captain), J. Jacob, M. Rigby, M. MacNichole, A. Brown, R. Edwards, T. Kelley, B. Flill, M. Lefebvre, A. Bresnahan, T. Elwardt, B. Tresd, R. Sanger, C. Randal, C. Miyuki, F. Thomsen, E. Lechak Karate Club D. Delcamp (Captain), M. Oliveria, L. Ramsey The 90-91 Kings Point Karate Club had a very successful year. The team placed in the top 3 out of 9 teams at every collegiate tourna- ment, including a first place win at the Western New England Tournament. In addition to the team’s routine practices conducted twice a week, the team also practiced and sparred at a local Dgo in Great Neck. A great advantage came from those who held high degrees in various styles of Martial Arts, as well as those beginners who possessed potential in the Martial Arts. The style and form of Karate practiced here at Kings Point is Shodakan. Most of the Karate team’s successes were credited to such style because of its emphasis in sparring instead of Katas, which in individual form competitions. The colleges and universities that Kings Point competed against took place at the following tournaments: Western New England College Tournament, taking first place against West Point, West- ern New England, and Middle Sex-, West Point CMA Finals, with a second Place finish against St. Johns, Western New England, Mid- dle Sex, West Field, and West Point; and finally the West Point Invitational, taking third place against Middle Sex, Rutgers, Prince- ton, Ithaca, and West Point. With the effort and support from midshipmen, the Karate club at kings Point will continue to keep its reputation among other col- leges and universities as one of the most competitive and top ranking teams in the art of college level Karate. Weightlifting Club fcs _________________ The weightlifting Club is a group of midshipmen who monitor and maintain the weightroom. The members of the club also help anyone in need of assistance. A yearly fundraiser is held through the sale of tank tops, with the money going to the improvement of the facilities, which are open to use by the entire regiment. — ■ . - V ■ s Midshipman Council Midshipman council serves as the voice of the regiment, raising and dis- cussing issues with Wiley Hall concerning our welfare and quality of life. Topics of discussion have ranged from food quality in the commissary to academic and regi- mental policies that do not sit well with the regiment. The Midshipman Council encourages all midshipman to voice their opinions and differences at the weekly meetings. r Pub Club The Midshipmen Pub provided a place for midshipmen to have a good time on Friday nights without having to leave the Academy. In addition, there were special parties like 200 and 300 nights. This year under the supervision of Cdr. Mund, the pub has had a good year and even added Killian’s Red to give midshipmen a choice of beer to drink. Offshore A. Minster, T. Kelly, D. Preston, S. Upton, M. McManus, L. Stewart, C. Smith, P. Ma- lone, D. Gardner (Captain), R. Villa-Lobos, M. Boone (Crewchief) Jack Sussi, Club Sponsor Fishing Club The Offshore Fishing Club is a branch of the power squadron under the sailing team. The club activities include offshore canyon and reef fishing, as well as local fishing in the Long Island Sound. The M V Liberator serves as the Club’s fishing platform. The vessel is powered by twin Detroit Diesels and has sleeping accom- modations for twelve. The 1990 fall season was very successful as the Liberator re- turned with her limit each day from weekend fishing trips based from the Academy and the Clam Hut” under the ownership and hospitality of Bob Rope” Hunter in Sandy Hook, New Jersey. J ' f Auto Interest Club The Auto Interest Club is located below the Babson Center and provides a space for midshipmen to fix their cars. This year the club is in the rebuilding stage and has received several donations of tools and equipment. Hopefully in the fu- ture, the club will have the ability to keep the midshipmen’s junker’s alive and well. Army Interest Club Beginning during the A-split year under the leadership of Kim Kantner 92, the Army Interest Club was established for midshipman interested in getting exposed to military activities and ma- neuvers. The first activity the club did was sur- vival training in the woods of Fort Flamilton. Building on the A-split foundation was the B-split year which began with taking midshipman to Airborne training. Although activities have been difficult to organize, the Army Interest Club has a bright future for those midshipman who truly want to experience the military adventure”. Asian Culture Club With the increasing number of Asian back- ground students, a few seniors felt it appro- priate to form the Asian Culture Club. The club was slow in getting started, but now is stand- ing on firm ground. This year’s activities in- cluded several T M’s to Chinatown, and a few dances. Next year, we expect to increase the number of T M’s and dances and hope to gain more new members. Members: J. Gerber, M. Oliveria, B. Carr, C. deLeon, D. Price, E. Glisson, T. Sarangay, L. Liu, B. Walker, A. Tanai, E. Medrano, J. Ching, A. Olaes, J. Kim, R. Lee, T. Echols, E. Ramos The Year In Review Peace, Unity And War This year has seen the lights of peace, unity, and the shadow of war. Peacefull res- olutions between the United States and Soviet Union have caught the attention of the entire world. The Unification of Germany has brought about reform all throughout Europe. Overshadowing this encouraging and progressive panorama is the war between the Allies” - comprising 28 countries-, and Iraq for the liberation of Kuwait. The war that was supposed to break out on January 15 did not actually start until the 16th, but it did start. The questions asked then were will it end and will it actually unite the American people and help the economy out of its recession. President Bush promised the Gulf war would not be another Vietnam. So far, his promise has been fulfilled. Surprising Events As we welcomed in the new year, questions arose concerning such topics as how would Germany unify, how would the war in the Middle East affect Kings Point, and how would the class of 1994 ever pass. So much happened in the past year . . . internationally, British Prime minister Margaret Thatcher resigned and Russia’s Boris Yeltsin was elected. Locally, Soviet sailors from the Druzhba visited the Academy, the Regiment was restructered, and a keg party on the rugby field over homecoming weekend was busted by a stealth breathalizer. We also heard the offensive voice of Roseanne Barr butcher the National Anthem on Baseball Season’s Opening Day; and we watched our patriotic troops deploy to the Persian Gulf. Fame 5 Fortune What did the past year bring for stars such as Demi Moore, Mel Gibson, Madonna, Arnold Schwarzenegger, Robin Williams, Kevin Costner, and Tom Selleck? The stars came out with hit movies such as Ghost, Hamlet, Awakenings, Dancing with Wolves, Kindergarten Cop, and Three Men and a Little Lady. Home Alone, released in December of 1990, was one of the top- grossing movies of the year. The Nation saw Sinead O’Connor take a stand against Andrew Dice Clay and his foul sexual comedy acts, declining to appear on an episode of Saturday Night Live in which he was also a guest. Bartmania hit the stands everywhere with the The Bartman”, a rap song sung by no other that Bart Simpson, from the hit cartoon show The Simpsons”, which rose to the top of the charts becoming one of the most popular shows of the year. The Year In Review Germany Unifies And Liberia Fragments I October 3rd, 1990 a day in which East and West Germans ) were able to finally reunite un- ider one flag, one constitution, one anthem. Unification was pretty much out of the question in early 1989, but gradually this event took shape as the Commu- nist regime in East Germany crumbled. Thousands of East German refugees left their homes to look for new opportu- nities inside West Germany. With the final blessing of the Soviet Union, Germany was able to unite, and is now determined to progress and develop fully, trying to bury the old stereo- types Hitler made of the Ger- mans. The new generation of Germans appear to be peaceful- minded people who are con- cerned about improving and strengthening their country. On an opposite course to that of Germany, Liberia, a small Af- rican country on the West Coast of that continent, suf- fered political turmoil in mid- I990’s. Rebellious guerrilla groups conducted a very effec- tive campaign from the moun- tains against the government. This campaign was so success- ful that Liberian Ruler, Samuel K. Doe was under rebel siege in his seafront mansion. When the Berlin Wall came down, 38 of the 45 sub-Saharan states were led by one-party or military dic- tatorships. Liberia is one of these states and their public po- litical movements demonstrate the population’s desire for a change and the establishment of real Democracy. Liberian anti-government guerrillas fought to the point of virtually sieging Monrovia, and the presidentaial mansion on the coast of the city. The Year In Review Storming Changes In The Soviet Union In 1990, the President of the Soviet Union, Mikhail Gorba- chev, paid a visit to the Unit- ed States, in which important and historic documents were signed. During the summit, the Soviet leader established a comfortable relationship with President Bush on a per- sonal level. However, back in the Soviet Union, Gorbachev’s control was being hampered with and challenged. Boris Yeltsin, the Soviet politician whom Gorbachev described as dead in his political ca- reer”, emerged from the grave and climbed high to become the President of the Russian Soviet Federated Socialist Republic. Yeltsin, who was born in Sverd- lorsk in 1931, has become a pe- rennial nemesis for Gorbachev. Despite the fact that Gorbachev brought Yeltsin up from the sticks, making him Moscow par- ty chief and only two months later a Junior member of the Po- litburo, friction between these two leaders eventually appeared in several opportunities, such as when Yeltsin, in the very Public forum of a Central Committee Plenum, said he believed the So- viet Union needed to restruc- ture the work of the entire par- ty. He was ousted by Gorbachev, but this was not a smart move, as a product of it was Yeltsin’s exhaltation and growth of popularity. Edward Schverdnadze, a very close aid and personal friend of Gorbachev, resigned from his post as Soviet Union foreign minister. This was a rather surprising resignation as Schverdnadze was an excel- lent and loyal minister, whom Gorbachev had upmost confi- dence in. However, the Soviet leader’s political backing or support has been severly weakened as the Soviet popu- lation grows more anxious and discontent due to the in- neffectiveness of peres- troika. Gorbachev continued to consolidate his political po- sition by widening his presi- dential powers. The Baltic Republic did not welcome these presidential reforms. Lithuania is one re- public which has expressed more vividly their desires to- wards independence from the Soviet Union. Recent clashes have occurred with the Soviet Army, resulting in many casu- alties. These republics contin- ue their struggle but no solu- tion is yet on the horizon. Lithuanians demonstrate, in Vilnius, striving for independence. 418 The Year In Review Imperial Traditions Reaffirmed Emperor Akihito was pro- claimed the new Japanese monarch in a nation which was both receptive and rejec- tee towards him and what he represents. When Emperor Hirohito passed away, Japanese senti- ments towards having an im- perial figure were divided. On one side stood the people who felt the Emperor was mainly a symbol of tradition and wealth. On the other side were those who wanted to do away with the system. There- fore, weeks after Hirohito’s death, anti-imperial demon- strations erupted in Tokyo. The latter though, did not jeopardize in any way the im- perial rituals. Among the dignataries pre- sent, we can mention Presi- dent and Mrs. Bush, Princess Diana, and many other for- eign diplomats and dignatar- ies from many countries of the world. Trumped Out! Donald Trump, famed in the business industry, rose and fell just like the bulls and bears of the stockmar- ket. His successes were sporadic. His highs were low. His monopolies crum- bled just like cookies as the banks came to sweep up the crumbs, laughing as they foreclosed on his multi-billion dollar loans. And to top it off, he traded in his Czechoslovakian skater for and American skier with no excuses. MARGARET THATCHER, also known as the greengro- cer’s daughter, resigned as Britain’s Prime Minister in December of 1990. She repre- sented the Conservative Par- ty, standing for hardline for- eign polcicies and market values. Her IP 2 years in office as a post war minister is the longest reign for this position in Modern British history. Known as a radical conservist, her greatest achievement is strengthening Britain’s econ- omy. Having three election victories behind her, Thatch- er leaves office in a good standing. One of her favorite quotes is: In politics, if you want anything said, ask a man. If you want anything done, ask a woman.” In Margaret Thatcher we see a woman who never lost an election, a woman who had total command of the House of Commons, and a woman who will be greatly missed in Parliament and in politics. The Year In Review America Goes To Wan The Leaders The war in the Gulf was one in which leadership and perseverance were crucial for success. It was a war in which leaders had to prove them- selves in the eyes of the world. America’s military leaders were the pillars for the success of our nation’s forces. TOP: The High Command: General Norman Schwarzkoph, Secretary Dick Cheney. Presi- dent George Bush, General Collin Powell. MIDDLE LEFT: The President addresses the American people. MIDDLE RIGHT: General Powell and the President address the troops. BOTTOM LEFT: Secretary Cheney reviews some plans. BOTTOM RIGHT: General Schwarzkoph is in command. The Year In Review America Goes To Wan Technology Vs. Manpower This was a war where man met technology on the battlefield. Al- though America’s technological ad- vantage was a key to victory, it was the will of the individual soldier that decided the final outcome. TOP LEFT: An American commander instructs the troops about avoid- ing mines on the field. TOP RIGHT: American troops in ac- tion. MIDDLE LEFT: Advanced U.S. anti- aircraft missies. MIDDLE RIGHT: An Iraqi citizen pleads for peace. BOTTOM ROW: Saddam Hussein and his troops The Year In Review Finals Run A Success! Sign-ups for the ’Naked Fin- als Run in December were few, but the turn out was sur- prising. Kings Pointers who did not run watched and they saw the bare behinds of mid- shipmen who had the balls to run. The Finals Run is a two- year old ’BJ’ tradition that has much promise of continuing. The fastest streakers who ran down the Oval (M N Carl Philip, and M N Dave Olson) were the first to ring the bell, and finished where the run started, at Truxton Arcade, screaming all the way. Midshipmen from 6th Company and other companies enjoy the Finals Run At 2200, bathrobes fell to the ground as the run began. The run took the place of the 2200 'yell’ during final exams week. After the 'under the minute run’ was over, the run- ners longed for their bath- robes only to find them miss- ing. The Run was a huge success! iron Mike . . . Busted!! A right uppercut, followed by two even more viscous blows, and a left hook, sent Mike Tyson to the floor for good at 1:23 of the 10th round against James Buster” Douglas. It was the fight that would shock the box- ing world. This was supposed to be the first in a series of easy” fights for Iron” Mike Tyson, but it turned out not to be at all easy for him. Douglas forgot how to be scared and he came out of his corner like an out of control locomotive. Not even Sylvester Stallone could have written a better script. Douglas had lead a very hard life and his mother had died just 23 days before the fight. The oddsmakers in Las Vegas, would only take bets on the round in which Douglas, the underdog, would go down. Although Douglas convincing- ly knocked out Tyson in the 10th round, he was almost knocked out in the 8th round. In fact Douglas was down for more than ten seconds, but only be- cause he waited for the referee to count nine before he got up. 422 The Year In Review New Dudes On The Block From the Flinstones to the Simpsons: A typical American Family? My name is Bart Simpson, who the hell are you?” Most Americans and people around the world know the facetious brat who stars in the show The Simpsons”. And most TV viewers are familiar with the satirical family, the Bundy’s, of Married with Children ...” Both families hold up a cracked mirror to domestic life. Far fetched as these families seem, they still reveal many family trends that people do not realize ex- ist, even in their own families. These outlandish satires on the American family must be tapping on the right funny bone, because they have rap- idly grown to be two of the hottest TV shows in America. The Simpsons”, however, has an edge over Married with Children ...” due to its appeal to children as well as adults. Flow could a thirty min- ute cartoon, whose main char- acter’s job is showing a lack of respect to his family, appeal to adults? Earlier cartoon sitcoms had idealized family ties. Even the prehistoric family The Flintstones”, and their fu- turistic counterparts The Jet- sons”, set the model for the way a family should live, but The Simpsons” branched off and created its own view of domes- tic life. The Simpsons” are a result of the twisted mind of Matt Groening, who swore to take revenge on anyone who had wasted his time. This lead to writing a comic strip called Life is Hell”. He also made similar, more specific cartoons, such as Work is Hell”, for wasted office work, and Love is Hell”, for bad rela- tionships. From these rela- tively simple cartoons evolved the messed up family The Simpsons”. Evi- dently, this is his way of getting revenge on those traditional” sitcoms that idealized domestic life, like The Brady Bunch” or The Cleavers”. As for Married with Children ... ”, this show portrays a rather typical middle class family with a careless wife and children, and a very naive and often clueless” head of the fam- ily, namely Al Bundy. This funny character usually runs into trouble due to his attitude towards life, com- plimented by Peg Bundy’s selfishness and desire for money. One of the main at- tractions of the show is Kel- ly Bundy, the daughter, who is a typical 'hot’ bimbo, and is the constant source of headaches for Al Bundy. And let us not forget Bud, the teenager Bundy who is always women-hunting and running into trouble. Over- all, this show is very enter- taining and represents the mainstream of American culture. Married w’ Children: Awesome 6 Funny! The Year In Review Music The Arts Page Movies Books TWO LIVE CREW has been of the musical groups that has created a lot of controversy in the courts, due to the pornography depicted in their songs. This raised the issue about sex and pornography in all the fields of art, includ- ing photography, paintings, and music. The authorities were so disturbed with the selling of TWO LIVE CREW's LP that it was banned from stands in Florida and eventually in Texas. Pop music diva, MADONNA has been very busy making new songs and making a new movie. Madonna has broken the first rule of celebrity: that mystery is an essential ingredi- ent of stardom. As we have been able to see, every season brings fresh outrage: the breakup with Sean Penn, the scandal over her Like a Prayer” video, the hint of a lesbian af- fair with Sandra Bernhard, the new scandal over the racy Justify My Love” video, her current ribald interview in The Advocate, a gay biweekly and her revealing Truth or Dare” tour movie. But not everything is scandal in the music world. In fact, musicians such as STING, ERIC CLAPTON, and PHIL COLLINS have been do- ing great and promise to stay around for quite a while with more good music. Another star that Came out of the Dark” is GLORIA STE- FAN, who suffered spinal injuries from an ac- cident and miraculously recovered complete- ly. She has also been doing well with her new album. Fans have definitely played an impor- tant role in her coming back to the stage. In recent years no other film has re- ceived better reviews than Kevin Costner’s Dances with Wolves”. Costner broke all the rules of film-making with his three hour-long western with subscripts. Costner starred, directed, and produced this spec- tacular film which stole the hearts, and also the Oscars, of everyone who saw it, includ- ing the voting members of the Academy of Filmmaking. Dances with Wolves , however, was not the only great film that came out this year. The list includes films such as Ghost”, Home Alone”, Pretty Woman” which brought to stardom the young ac- tress, Julia Roberts, Dick Tracy” which had Madonna as part of the cast, the con- tinuation of the Corleone family saga: The Godfather III”, and many others. Probably the most exciting, as well as scarry film was Silence of the Lambs” with Jodie Fos- ter. Among the foreign films, the most im- portant was Cyrano de Bergerac” with Gerard Depardieu in the leading role. Every year, publishing companies fight for the rights to books. This year, Simon and Schuster was able to buy the rights to the two most controversial books of the year. First to arrive was Ronald Reagan's autobiography An American Life”. In this book the ex-president talks about his roots in Dixon, Illinois. Then he explains the events that shaped his Presidency. Simon and Schuster made money off of Ronald Reagan; and sold over one million copies of the next most controversial book of the year, Kitty Kelley’s book Nancy Reagan: The Unauthorized Biography”. This book is full of stories about Nancy Rea- gan that have no facts to back them up; however, there are other facts that have not been dis- missed by the Reagan's. In another part of the world, Salman Rushdie has emerged from his seclusion now that the Ayatolah Khomeini is dead. He stated publicly that he was sorry about offending the Islamic world, and that he would have preferred not to have written the book Satanic Verses” if he imagined the amount of trouble it was to cause him. 424 The Year In Review Farewell. . . Like every year, 1990-91 was a time to bid farewell to a number of people that have shaped the world that we live in. Sammy Davis Jr., a pioneer in dancing, singing, acting, and comedy was a victim of can- cer. Ryan White, the young Illinois boy who made this nation aware that AIDS can affect any of us, was taken by the terrible disease. Rajiv Gandhi, former Indian Prime Minister, was assassinated in a bomb at- tack while campaigning to regain his office. Armand Hammer, famous American capitalist who opened new political and economic doors to the Soviet Union during his life, will always be remembered. Stevie Ray Vaughhan, one of the world’s greatest rock guitarists, died in a tragic plane crash after a concert in Alpine Mountain, Wisconsin. Stefano Casiraghi, husband of Princess Caroline of Monaco, was killed in a speed boating accident. The great composer, Leonard Bernstein, was taken from us. His music will eternally mark his greatness. STEFANO CASIRAGHI ARMAND HAMMER LEONARD BERNSTEIN AND ARNOLD COPELAND RYAN WHITE The Year In Review Midshipmen Show Hospitality To The World In March, students from the French Merchant Marine Acad- emy at Nantes visited the Acad- emy. The group, which consist- ed of 10 freshmen and sophomores, visited different places in New York City and Long Island, including the Statue of Liberty, World Trade Center and Empire States Buildings, Bennigann’s, The Rusty Nail and Dublin’s. A group of 8 midship- men, along with Capt. Hard, USMS, spent 14 days in France, visiting the French Academy. The midshipmen spent one day in Paris, and the rest of the time at Nantes. Kings Point has been host to many important events during the Academic Year 1990-1991. Probably the biggest one was the First Annual Kings Point Invi- tational Camporee. Boy Scouts from seven Northeastern states were invited for a weekend full of Academy related activities, such as a visit to the engineer- ing labs, monomoy and rainbow racing, seamanship lessons, and even rappeling. The Boy Scouts specially enjoyed a trip on board the MV Kings Pointer, which went all the way to the Statue of Liberty and back. Clockwise from top: Or- ganizers of Camporee. M N dining in Nantes, the Druzhba” ar- riving to New York. 426 One of the most important events that involved Kings Point midshipmen was the visit of the tallship Druzhba” coming from Odessa, Soviet Union. Two Kings Pointers were on board the vessel on that voyage and then more went on the vessel up to Maine Maritime Academy. While in New York, the Soviet cadets visited the Academy and were able to enjoy the hospital- ity Kings Pointers know how to offer. It is the first time Soviet cadets visited the Academy, which is a proof of the improve- ment of relations between the East and West. The Year In Review Special Report TOP LEFT: America's Leader: President George Bush TOP RIGHT: The Stubborn Enemy: Saddam Hussein BOTTOM LEFT: The Aftermath of Battle: A Saudi Refinery burns BOTTOM RIGHT: The Aftermath of War: Still no peace in a troubled land. The Year In Review m 1 Celebrities Roll Of Honor Madonna This 'Material Girl’ is no longer Like a Virgin” in the video market. In this past year she bared all as she alluded to having homosexual relations on latest video, while she 'Justified her Love’. Raphael Donatelo Michaelangelo Leonardo Roseanne Well, this fat lady sang, but it was not over like the old proverb goes. She sang at the opening of the World Series, but made a fool of herself in the process. Per- haps, however, it is over for her singing career. Sinead O’Connor This balding British pop star came out with a new hit single 'Nothing Compares To You’, which reached the top of the charts. She lost the sympathy of Americans when refusing to sing the National Anthem. Too Bad! Milli Vanilli ... Or should we just call them lip-synchers? Could they possibly 'Blame it on the Rain’? They have run into a lot of problems, 'Girl you know its True!’ They only made it big this year as the subject of a parody. New Kids O.T.B. These boys are just sitting pretty or should we say 'Hanging Tough’. Surprisingly enough, posters of them- selves are all over and Barbie dolls have come out- a different one for each of the members of this group. Ninja Turtles Their name sums it up in a nutshell or perhaps a tortoise shell. This past year we have seen a hit TV cartoon show about them and even a morning breakfast cereal. Move over Ghost Busters, the Ninja Turtles will protect you. The Year In Review The Mighty Giants Capture Super Bowl XXV Super Bowl XXV was the most exciting super bowl in recent history. It featured the veteran quarterback Jim Kelly with his hurry-up, no huddle offense against the relatively inexperienced Jeff Hostetler and his slow lumbering Gi- ants. The all-New York Super Bowl featured the Giants and the Buf- falo Bills. In the beginning of the game it looked as if the Bill’s were in command. Jeff Hostetler had to keep picking himself up off of the ground. Then in the third quarter, the Giants began to recover. They drove all the way down the field in 9:29 and exhaust- ed the Bill’s defense. As the Giants took the lead for the first time late in the fourth quarter, it looked as if the Bill’s were dead. But Jim Kelly was able to drive the Bill’s to within the extreme range off Scott Norwood’s foot. And within 8 seconds left, Norwood kicked the ball just wide off the mark and the Giants won the closest Super Bowl in history. It was a game that left the crowd as ex- hausted as the teams. U.S. players try to stop Italy’s Gianninni. United States In Soccer World Cup Who would think that los- ing a game of soccer in the World Cup could gain a team some respect? Well, who would have thought that the United States’ team would only lose 1-0 to the home team Italy? The Americans were expected to lose heavily after they lost to the mediocre team from Czechoslovakia by a score of 5-1. In fact almost nobody gave the Americans a chance. When the Italians scored early in the game, it looked like it would be a rout. Howev- er, the Americans kept the game close. They stopped the Italians from scoring again and they came within inches of evening up the score in the second half. Even if they had won they would not have advanced to the second round because they also lost their third and final game. Even though the Americans lost it was still a good showing. It was the first time in fifty years that the United States had qualified to be in the World Cup. And with the World Cup com- ing to the United States in 1994, it was imperative that some excitement for soccer be built up in the U.S. Very few people play soccer in here, and it is hoped that the World Cup will help bring about new enthusiasm for the sport. Hopefully our team will do much better in 1994. The Year In Review America Goes To Wan The Merchant Marine (EXCERPTS OF AN ARTICLE WRITTEN BY MR. MARTIN P. SKROCKI) Derek Dostie is one of 65 Academy undergraduates who were as- signed for sea training last September to car- go ships hauling military supplies to U.S. forces in the Persian Gulf. They have now returned to the Academy’s Kings Point, NY, campus, while some three score new students have been assigned through February to take their places. They were the sole group of the nation’s college undergraduates whose train- ing takes them to hostile areas. Training at sea is as old a part of the USM- MA’s curriculum as the institution itself, which was dedicated in 1943. Because of the crisis in the Persian Gulf, undergraduates are assigned where they are most needed aboard a range of military controlled cargo vessels, from ships that regularly stand ready in stra- tegic locations to vessels activated from a reserve merchant fleet. Because of the tight security surrounding such voyages, Dostie was not told where the vessel was headed until well into the trip. But it wasn’t too hard to guess,” he says. This was a military cargo vessel and we all knew the situation in the Mideast.” Aboard ship, Dostie says, fire hoses were rigged to spray the decks in case of chemical attack. He and the crew were regularly drilled in using gas masks and chemical suits, and lifeboats were kept partially lowered for fast exit. I felt nervous at the outset of the voy- age,” Dostie admits, but all the precautions we took gave me some piece of mind.” His shipmate on the voyage was another Acade- my student. Jefferson Streeter, of South Windsor, CT. Working below deck as an engi- neering cadet, Streeter nonetheless found the trip exciting. Streeter also helped in a refueling-at-sea op- eration. generally not part of an Academy stu- dent’s routine shipboard training. Our vessel took on fuel from a Navy oiler in the Mediter- ranean,” he says. This is a complex task and everybody helps, from the ship’s officers to the cook and the engineering cadet.” USMMA officials feel that its students’ exposure to danger in Persian Gulf assignments is minimal and balanced by the great shipboard lessons available. Many of the vessels in the sealift are older reserve ships. They require more hands on” care and thus afford students more learn- ing opportunities. Andrew J. Miller, for in- stance. was assigned as an engineering cadet to the ammunition ship CAPE BRETON, a 1960’s vintage vessel that had been inactive for the last few years. During the voyage from California to the Pacific, the ship’s engines failed three times, but the engineering crew was so good that we got the ship underway each time. he says. Miller admits to some apprehension riding a ship loaded with 8,800 tons of explosives. But he mentally adjusted to the assignment. When his vessel entered the Straits of Hormuz, it was met by two Iranian patrol boats. They gave us a quick look and sped away, he says. Steven M. Buckner of Mustang, OK, was assigned last November to the EUGENE A. OBREGON, carrying combat equipment for Operation Desert Shield. During a stop at Rota, Spain, a U.S. Marine Corps team came aboard to combat ready” the cargo. They found that special metal pins for mounting the M60 machine gun on amphibious assault ves- sels inadvertently had not been included in the supplies. The vessel’s chief engineer assigned Buck- ner the task of manufacturing the necessary pins from metal stock on board. Using a lathe and other engineroom tools, the 19-year-old Buckner fashioned the required quantity of machine gun mounting pins. According to Todd P. Hutchinson, a senior maintenance contractor for the Marine Corps aboard the vessel, The quality product that (Bruckner) turned out demonstrates his pro- fessionalism and ensured that the amphibious assault vehicles would depart the vessel with mounted machine guns.” Acta Non Verba The Year In Review America Goes To Wan The Outcome never came. Finally at home in the United States, our nation was once again spared the physical scars of battle, Yet, the all to familiar human scars were evident. American sail- ors, soldiers, and airmen made the ultimate sacrifice to preserve world freedom. TOP: An Israeli apartment building de- stroyed after a Scud” attack. MIDDLE LEFT: Devastation in Iraq. MIDDLE RIGHT: An Iraqi personnel carrier burns outside of the Saudi town of Kafji. BOTTOM: An American family makes the ultimate sacrifice. The war in the Persian Gulf brought devastation to many parts of the region. In Iraq, allied bombs and missies destroyed the nation’s infrastructure. Airfields, highways, bridges, communication centers, factories, and oil fields were all de- stroyed in order to stop Saddam Hussein’s war machine. In Saudi Ara- bia, border towns and oil fields were greatly damaged after an early Iraqi invasion and allied counterstrike. In Israel, Iraqi Scud” missies blindly landed on civilian population cen- ters. The Israeli population lived on the edge during the war waiting for the impending chemical attack that The Year In Review Late Edition For those of you who thought the family in the show Differ- ent Strokes” was a model for everyone, look back again and check the fam- ily’s 'model’ children. Dana Plato was charged with armed robbery-, Todd Bridges was acquited of murder and manslaughter; and Gary Coleman, who by the way, has been surviving by using a portable self-dialysis machine, is suing his parents over the handling of his $18 million fortune. And they are not the only ones in deep trouble. 'Child Stars’ from shows such as Eight is Enough”, the Partridge Family”, and One Day at a Time” are also in trouble for things such as drug consumption and alcoholism. Police Abuse” was a hot topic during the first few months of 1991. The whole nation saw in the National news the way Los Angeles’ police members beat savagely Rod- ney King, a construction worker who, according to the officers, had resisted arrest. The scene was filmed by George Holliday, from his apartment in San Fernando Valley. As seen in the video, Mr. King was kicked about seven times, and there were more than 55 blows struck with metal nightsticks. The results of the beating were a cracked eye socket, a fractured cheekbone, a broken right ankle and numerous facial lacerations. The issue raised a storm of criticism against the L.A. Police Depart- ment and many others throughout the country. Buthelezi and Mandela After his triumphant release from jail, Nelson Man.wr dela seems to have created much more division amon ••••: the black South African population than before. Beside: having to cope with the unpleasant trial against his wif Winnie, Nelson Mandela has been unable to apease hi: African National Congress followers from confronting and fighting against the Zulus, who follow the Inkath? leader Mangosuthu Buthelezi. Although they look lik friends in this picture, the reality is quite different There is increasing friction among Zulus and ANC fol lowers and day by day more black South Africans In Iraq the end of Operations De- sert Shield and Desert Storm rep- resented the be- ginning of civil war in this con- vulsed country. Saddam Hussein attempted to ani- hilate his archene- mies: the Kurds. This led to the massive emigra- tion of Kurdish refugees to the Kurdish refugee carrying his dead child. northern mountains of Iraq and areas in Southern Tur key where thousands of Kurdish refugees died frorr lack of food, medications, and proper shelter. The Unit ed States and the United Nations helped to create a resolution declaring all the territories north of the 38th i Parallel as a safe area for all Kurdish refugees to live making it off limits for the Iraqui army. At the time this«fc to article was written Kurdish refugees were beginning leave the northern Iraqui mountains and reoccupying' the Kurdish villages north of the 38th parallel. I I Peru’s critical social and economic crises have in- s' creased with the development of the a deadly epidemy of cholera which began spreading in early 1991. The deadly V. cholera bacterium, brought over on a ship — from Asia and spread by contaminated water, fish and vegetables has infected at least 170,000 people in Peru, of whom more than 1250 have died. In Ecuador, Colom- bia, Chile and Brazil cases have been reported. This will represent a disastrous blow to the export and import plans of the new Peruvian administration, and overall for all South American economies. Bangladesh was recently affected by two cyclones which devastated the coastal area of that poor country. Thousands of people have already died and many more have been left homeless due to the high tides and winds which flooded more than 20,000 square miles. Six Bangla- deshi Air Force helicopters worked around the clock dropping food, water-purification tablets, medicines and rehydration salts. But supplies were reaching only a frac- tion of the victims. When the waters receded, more than 125,000 people were dead and some 9 million left home- less. - k |1 ■ Special Events UNITED STATES MERCHANT MARINE ACADEMY KINGS POINT, NEW YORK 1st ANNUAL ACADEMY SERVICE AWARDS WEDNESDAY, JUNE 5, 1991 1800 to 2000 LAND HALL SERVICE AWARD RECIPIENTS Anthony Holmes COLOR GUARD Cevan LeSieur DEBATE Robert Villa-Lobos DRILL TEAM Juanita Andreas Achille Broennimann EMT Lisa Thurston FANFARE TRUMPETS Shawn Werchan Kim Redmann HONORGUARD Karla Hirdning Chris Smith Lisa Liu Lois Costello MDA Walter Abney PUB Dean Erck PEER COUNSELING PROGRAM INDIVIDUAL AWARD ACADEMY SERVICE AWARDS COMMITTEE Jason Crain Brian Hunt Jo Ann Baldwin Cevan LeSieur Jacqui Gerber Theresa Twaddle RBU SOCIAL COMMITTEE YEARBOOK JOSTENS’ SPECIAL AWARDS for YEARBOOK Benita Sloan Pat Manning Marc Comtois Steven Souza Joe McGuinness Robert Carr Carlos DeLeon Aaron Bresnahan Douglas Price Rolando Rodriguez Merwin Oliveria Spencer Johnson Cevan LeSieur Jacqui Gerber Theresa Twaddle Donald J. Ferguson. Commandant Mary A. Cunningham. Social Director M N Theresa Twaddle, Midships Editor M N Jo Ann Baldwin, RPO RC as a tough plebe Plebe Roommates In Love Top: We Are a Bunch of Cool GuysI Right.- I Am Plebe---------------------Tall and proud 438 Murphy Hall plebes demonstrating proper hand salute”. Boards Day is designed to raise money for MDA by auctioning off senior and officer boards to plebes who don them to become” upper- classmen for one day. Money do- nated range from $10 for zombo” boards to as much as $2000 for RX boards. As the pic- tures reveal, the plebes got more than they bought bargained for. ' J Ring D Ring Dance is a special event. It is a reunion: A-splits and B-splits come togeth- er for the first time since plebe year. It is a clelebration: New friendships are made while old ones are strengthened. It is a turning point: Our last year at the Academy has begun. CHEERSI Girl’s night out. Nice smile, Chuckl Yann: Ready for an exciting evening 7T- A Little Romance . . . i The night has just begun . . . J r t ■ £ - , ' «. Mu r 3 i —- - s V TIME OUT FOR TRADITION: Each year members of the First Class attend the Ring Dance. One of the events dur- ing the dance is the dipping of the ring.” A binnacle is filled with water symbolizing the seven seas of the world. Each Firstclassman dips his or her ring into the water signi- fying a baptism, a formal en- trance into the Merchant Ma- rine. That entrance is celebrated by a traditional kiss given by the Mariner’s date. Dipping of the ring. Acceptance Day During the four years a midship- man spends at Kings Point, certain days stand out in his or her mind. One of these days is Acceptance Day. On this Saturday in early Sep- tember the plebes are accepted in the regiment and sworn in as Mid- shipmen, USNR. For most plebes this day is the first time that they have seen their parents since they left home in July. The day begins with an impres- sive Colors ceremony with the raising of the number I ensign. The day continues with the Accep- tance Day Revue in the morning and the traditional football game in the afternoon. Spirit is high and memories are made during this special fall day of a rough plebe year. — ■■ A Day To Remember Top: The Class of '94 takes the oath. Middle Left: The plebes try to build a pyramid. Middle Right: The 5th Company plebes march on. Bottom Left: The Mariners score against the pumpkin heads. Bottom Right: The Colors march by. Ball 1990 Above: The ball in full swing on the dance floor. Above: Christmas couple Left: Even older couples experience Christmas warmth at the ball The Twelve Days Of Christmas This year’s Christmas Ball theme was creatively presented as shown below with Three French Hens” and Maid s) Maid s) a Milking.” nMi Though the context of the theme’s song may re- veal the pleasure of receiving gifts at Christmas time, it is the tradition of giving gifts that is charac- terizes our winter ball. The lower left-hand corner shows the tree with gifts Midshipmen bring as to- kens” of payment. These tokens are later delivered to the needy children throughout the area. Thus, Christmas magic, fun and spirit are evident at every winter ball. Top left: What’s Christmas or a Christmas ball without a Santa? Above: plebes with their dates. Pat Manning and date during a tender moment. New Third Mates running to ring the bell All smiles now that it's over Getting started with a pitcher, Mike? Joe can’t wait to have some. Dave and Disch: Are you guys ever separated? v _n® Chris: Ready for fun. 100 Nights is a ___________________ celebration few would miss as it marks one hundred nights to go until graduation It’s a party to remember with beer, a band, and friends. f ; 's a man with a mind of his own. Martin has the right idea. Scott and Jim enjoying the moment Look what a few beers can do to you. 454 Senior The Senior Send-Off is a reception given by the USMMA Alumni and Foundation for the graduating class. The send-off allows first classment to talk with past graduates about the industry, jobs, etc. Light fare is available, and a raffle of prizes is conducted. The illustrious hostess. € 7P— ‘V'. - ' On Saturday morning of June Weekend, first classmen of the Regiment of Midshipmen pass in review for the last time. At this parade, the second classmen as- sume command of the regiment from the second rotation officers (Thank Godl). So quiet, so still TWWrWi nfa fa;,; | I ' ;!!i?'l First classmen running for the traditional jump in the pool. Lois refuses to be last «r v ’ Jhj A P . . • V r •_ I Pool Party fune Ball Shfy.tn rd o| fcpmw of iSvt liaifexL §tat«A 9lLa ifv QjtaAc ny xju iloAa iiu uwiox o| tJ-CHVt. pteAdlC cdiL QfuuLuatian oB ait an §atuxday, un« S’ifteer.tA ninetlen ftumLiexL «vinei -anc ai nin a’ctaei in t t 462 i , S Lawn Party Every year during June Week- end the Admiral throws a lawn party where parents, graduates, and faculty staff can get to know each other. This year the party was held before the change of command ceremony and offered guests a light breakfast and cof- fee. Prelude Mr. Cusumano Processional Fanfare Processional Hymn UsMSMMA Fanfare Trumptets Invocation Chaplain Bennett Vocal Solo Brendan McMillin Old Testament Lesson Jonathan Cullum Choir Anthem Mariner Chorus New Testament Lesson Hymn Jean Jacob Prayer For Graduates Rabbi Stern Anthem Mariner Chorus Sermon RAdm Koeneman Presentation Of Bibles RAdm Krinsky Benediction Recessional Hymn Chaplain Leone Postlude USMMA Brass and Organ Spirit Of The luxury liner, Spirit of N.Y Steve and sis Tray and Jeff enjoying the N.Y. skyline Heading home. Lois and family Duane relaxing? Exercises Administering Of Oaths Radm. Faigle Presentation Of Graduates Radm. Krinsky Alma Mater Midshipman Band Benedication Lcdr. Bennett Graduation Cheer Class President Recessional Midshipman Band A new beginning. A bittersweet end. Graduation is a day for which we all have waited: sometimes with impatience, to leave the regimental system of the Academy; and sometimes with dread, afraid of the world that waits outside Vickery Gate. Today the' waiting is over . . . Graduation -V ■u. ==f=T Michelle Anne James Missy (Bo-Bo).- We Took A Piece Plastic Clay, And Idly Fashioned It One Day, And As Our Fingers Pressed It Still, It Moved, And Yielded To Our Will. We Came Again When Days Were Past, The Bit Of Clay Was Hard At The Form We Cave It Still It Bore, But We Could Change That Form No More. We Took A Piece Of Living Clay, And Gently Formed It Day By Day, And Molded With Our Power And Art A Young Child’s Soft And Yielding Heart. We Came Again When Years Were Gone, It Was A Woman We Looked Upon; She Still That Early Impress Wore, And We Could Change Her Nevermore. Remember May, 1987?: Successful Are Those Who Dream Dreams And Are Willing To Pay The Price To Make Them Come True. ” You Are A Shining Light” In Dad’s Heart And A Warmth In Mom’s Life. You’ve Come Along Way, Baby!! We Love You Always, (MOM AND DAD) - Dave Gardner DAVE— WE ARE SO PROUD OF YOU! WE LOVE YOU !! MAMA AND GRANDMA Aaron Gordon Bre$nahan V Dear Aaron, We Are Proud Of You For Accomplishing The Goal You Set Out For Yourself Four Years Ago. Your Achievements Flave Been Many And We Rejoice With You Now, As You Receive Your College Degree. You Are Now Entering Upon A New Beginning And We Give You Love, Encouragement, And Support For Your Future, Along With these Gifts Of Scripture. Isaiah 40:31 They That Wait Upon The Lord Shall Renew Their Strength; They Shall Mount Up With Wings As Eagles; They Shall Run, And Not Be Weary; And They Shall Walk And Not Faint Isaiah 41:10 Do Not Fear; For Am With You; Do Not Anxiously Look About You, For Am Your GodI Will Strengthen You, Surely I Will Help You, Surely I Will Uphold You With My Righteous Right Hand, ” Love, MOM AND DAD JAMES CUMPIAN TREVINO This is the day the Lord has made, we will rejoice and be glad in it. ” May the Lord in Hi$ goodness continue to bless you in all of your endeavors. In our Lord we trust and praise Him for giving you wisdom and understanding in fulfilling your goal. Congratulations are in order from all of us who love and miss you, and are very proud of you. Love, Dad, Mom and family: Richard and Beatrice C. Trevino, Raymond, Cynthia, Andrew James, and Cristina Nicole Escobedo, Richard, Dorothy and Richard Trevino, Rene, Jacqueline, and Rene Gonzalez Jr., and Kim C. Trevino. Grandparents: Romulo and Santos Trevino, Adolph and Anna Cumpian. John Morganti DEAR SON, WHERE DID THE TIME GO? WE WATCHED YOU GROW FROM CHILDHOOD TO MANHOOD. YOU HAVE ENRICHED OUR LIVES AND MADE US PROUD PARENTS MANY TIMES OVER. WEIL ALWAYS REMEMBER THE THRILLS, FOOTBALL, BASEBALL, BOWLING, AS WELL AS YOUR ACADEMIC ACHIEVEMENTS. WE PRAY YOUR LIFE IS FILLED WITH HEALTH, HAPPINESS AND PROSPERITY. LOVE ALWAYS, MOM, DAD, GINA, AND YOUR GRANDPARENTS Karla Hirdning Karla Kay You have made mom, Kelly and me so proud, So along with your classmates take a bow. You kept up with your books and sports, Checked out N.Y. City and took road trips of all sorts. You baked lots of chocolate chip cookies for the boys, Eating those cookies must have been one of their joys. Graduate from an Academy (USMMA) you did, Just as you said you would when just a kid. With friends like Joe, Sean, Rob, Deb, Missy and Pete, You say it wasn’t that hard of a feat! Love you Kar, Mom, Dad and Kelly 476 Walter B. Abney Benita L. Sloan IT IS WITH GREAT PRIDE WE SALUTE OUR SON WALTER B. ABNEY” FOR HIS DRIVE AND DETERMINATION. WE ADMIRE HIS DEDICATION AND DEVOTION TO FAMILY, FRIENDS AND GOALS. HE HAS WORKED HARD, SACRIFICED AND ACCOMPLISHED MUCH. WE ARE EXTREMELY PROUD TO CALL HIM OUR SON. WE LOVE YOU MOM AND POP WE RE PROUD TO CALL HIM OUR BROTHER, TOO. LOVE, ROB AND MONICA Benita God Bless You. This Is Only The Beginning. Love, MOM This One Is For Dad! Achille Broennimann John Cullan Congratulation Achille. Your Hard Work And Determination Paid Off. We Are Very Proud Of You. For Your Future We Wish You The Best. Love, MOM AND DAD Congratulations, John- We Are All So Proud Of You. (Happy Sails) (Love,) (DAD, MOM, CHRIS, PETE, £ JAM!) JACQUI GERBER LORI LUNDIN There’s Nothing Left For Saying Now That Any Words Can Say. The Fields That You’ll Be Playing Now Are Suns And Seas Away. And Not For Us To Choose The Road You’ll Follow Out Of Sight, Nor Ours, If You Should Lose The Road, To Set You Compass Right. With Great Wonder, Love, Joy And Pride In Your Outstanding Achievements So Far. MOM § DAD Roses Are Red, Violets Are Blue, We’re So Gosh Darn Proud That You’ve Made It Through! (Terri Made Us Write That) But Seriously, Lori, You Mean So Much To Us And Will Always Be Our Shining Light. We Admire Your Perserverance And Your Many Achievements, And We Have Confidence That j You Will Always Meet Success In Life. Most Importantly, Lori, Never Give Up Your Search For Happiness, For Life Is What You Make It. We Wish You Smooth Sailing As You Embark Upon The Great Adventure Of Life. (Mom Made Us Write That!) Love Always, MOM, DAD. TERRI AND WENDY JAMES P. BELL TROY J. GRECO Congratulations On Your Graduation Day! We Were Proud Of You When You Graduated From Kindergarten. Can You Imagine How Proud We Are Of You Now?! It Has Been A Long, Hard Struggle And You Did What You Had To Do. Happy Sails To You, Carlos, Hal”, Rick And Tracy. We Wish You All The Very BestI Love, MOM AND DAD STEPHANIE AND TIM Troy, We’ve Always Been Proud Of You But Even More So Now. All Winners Have Constant Goals And Purposes They Live For And Work For, Daily, Monthly, And Yearly. Congratulatons On Achieving One Of These Goals That You Set When You Were Very Young. Remember When We Can’t Be There, God Will Be There. We Thank Him For You, Remember To Thank Him For Your Blessings. We Love You Son. MOM DAD Phil Reichert John D. Schampera WE ARE PROUD OF YOU. WE ARE HAPPY FOR YOU. NOW - HAVE SOME FUNI CONGRATULATIONS WITH LOVE MOM, DAD, KEELEY, § HEIDI GRANDMA GRANDPA, TOO! Phil, Though We Are So Proud Of Who You Have Grown To Be, You'll Always Be Our Little Boy. All The Hard Work And Sacrifices Will Not Go Unrewarded, For Your Future Will Hold Many Blessings. As You Embark On A New Course May Your Future Be Filled With Success And Happiness. We Love You. God Bless! MOM AND POP P.S. Smooth Sailing From The Reichert Clan Rowdy Joseph E. Morrissey (Los Rios, R.P And East Hampton) TREY RASMUSSEN The Morrissey Family Congratulate Joseph On Graduation, June 17, 1991. His Overall Achievements, Including The 2nd Place Winner Of The Captain We Are Very Proud Of You. Congratulations, With Love, MOM, DAD, AND DOUG Garrison Connor Award Has Made Us Very Proud. We Wish Him Good Luck And Smooth Sailing In Following The Sea Going Tradition Like His Dad - Joe, USMMA '60, Or Whatever Field Of Endeavor He Chooses. DAD, MOM, NOELINE, BRENDA Richard Reynolds You May Be 19 To Your Team, But You’re 1 With Us Congratulations Love MOM DAD DOUGLAS C. PRICE DISCHMOND SPURRIER Doug, We Are Very Proud Of All Your Accomplishments! Thank You For Sharing Your Experiences With Us. You Have Given Us Great Memories. With All Our Love And Much Pride, MOM, DAD AND GREG Dischmond Spurrier Congratulations Buck! We are very proud of you. We love you. Mom, dad, grandma, Jay, Butch, Karen and relations RICHARD D. SCHILLING ERIC N. SHINE Rick- You Continually Make Us Very Proud Of You And Your Accomplishments. Continue To Soar High And Sail Smoothly! From YOUR ENTIRE FAMILY With Love. Congratulations Eric! You Did It One Day At A Time! Love MOM § DAD WILLIAM B. BLAINE HOWARD W. HOOVER Congratulations, Bill, On Your Outstanding Efforts At Kings Point And At Sea From 1987- 1991. May This Be Just The Beginning Of A Rewarding Life And Career. MOM, DAD. BARBIE. BRENDA, MATT AND MARK ARE REALLY PROUD OF YOU. Congratulations to the Class of 1991, to First Company, and especially to Howard Hoover. We are proud of your perseverance and diligence, and we wish 1 you the best in the future. With pride, Dad, Mom, David, Han 1 Nang, Lorraine, Deacon 1 ROBERT A. SASSO JAMES C. HOLLY Robert A. Sasso- 1 On The Field And In Our Hearts. We Are Very Proud Of You. Congratulations! Love, MOM, DAD, AND MATT James C. Holly - We are so very proud of you and your accomplishment. We wish you health, happiness, and all the best that life has to offer. Love always, Mom, Dad £ Kim 480 Congratulations To The Class Of 1991!!! From: ALAN L ARRIGONI MR. AND MRS. GERALD ARRIGONI KEVIN S. CICHON MR. AND MRS. STEPHEN J. CICHON, JR. MARC ALLEN COMTOIS MARCEL JANE COMTOIS THOMAS M. GRASSO MR. AND MRS. JOHN C. EASTLACK, SR. JAMES PENNY MR. AND MRS. S. PENNY Thank You To All The Parents Who Contributed To This Section. __________________________ 1991 Midships Staff Smooth Sailing during your remaining time at Kings Pointlll Class Of 1992 TO: FROM: Martin Francis Arriola Antonio Rivera 3 Teresita Arriola Tam mi L. Budach Lynn M. Budach Andrew J. Busk Mr. 3 Mrs. James A. Busk Daniel Cluxton Mr 3 Mrs. James Cluxton Trevor S. Delew Bruce and Louisa Delew Jon Michael Doyle Mike 3 Dolores Doyle Bill Fish Du ffield Phyllis and Bill Duffield Russel J. Ford Lauchlan 3 Mary Ann Ford David J. Harriss Capt. D.J. Harriss USN(Ret) Karl Hill Pete $ B.J. Hill Jimi 3 Brian Homan Jim 3 June Homan Jason Allen Ivey Joe 3 Pat Ivey Kimberly Kantner Mom 3 Dad Jeffrey Hans Kristensen Hans, Dawn, Tom (Class of 95), 5 Ryan John W. Langley Bill Langley '66 James Keoki Martin Mom, Dad, 6 Family (Doug 3 Mala Martin) Christopher W. May Mary Beth 3 Nick May Ian Me Donald Barbara and Dennis Me Donald Michael G. Me Vay Marion 3 Russell Me Vay Donovan R. Murray Mr. 3 Mrs. Gilbert C. Murray Mike Murray Dennis 3 Joanne Murray Travis Neale Phil 3 Pat Grove Marie Bernadette Neubecker Elinda 3 Charles Neubecker M n Jon L. Nix Mr. 3 Mrs. Claude H. Nix Craig D. Pepoon Jeanette 3 Steve Bell James 3 Wanda Pietila Jeffrey A. Pietila Eric Pikiewicz Bill 3 Debbie Pikiewicz John E. Reeder Mr. 3 Mrs. Melvin J. Reeder, Jr. M n Louis B. Reimer Carol 3 Lou Reimer Sean K. Ritchie Eric, Raye, and Mark Ritchie Matthew T. Secrest Mr. 3 Mrs. L.T. Secrest Jim Urbanic Jack 3 Gerry Urbanic Carl D. Weber Mr. 3 Mrs. C. Darwin Weber Timothy D. Duane L. and Mary Jane Weber R. Kelli Wynne Mr. 3 Mrs. Raymond L. Wynne Smooth Sailing during your remaining time at Kings PointHI Class Of 1993 TO: FROM: Chad M. Assenmacher Mr. 8 Mrs. James Assenmacher Coary R. Brown Sheldon S Jacque Clark Adam Cooper man Mr. S Mrs. Jack Cooperman Michael Drieling Mom 8 Grandma Robert Enright Mr. 8 Mrs. John C. Enright Kevin G. Fitzpatrick Barbara Edward Fitzpatrick Alex R. Richard 8 Kathleen Fry Rick Hartwig Dick 8 Jan Hartwig William C. Hunter Stephan G. 8 Janet C. Hunter Virgil R. Klepper, Jr. Mr. 8 Mrs. Virgil R. Klepper, Sr. Matthew J. Libby Mr. 8 Mrs. Matthew J. Libby Christopher Marlow ’Proud” Dad Marlow R. Gregory Mensching, Jr. Mr. 8 Mrs. Robert G. Mensching Sr. David J. Mieczynski Chet 8 Maria Mieczynski Andrew J. Miller Helen Miller Mark Mitchell Ryan Peter 8 Elizabeth Moran Michael J. Murphy Dan 8 Suzanne Murphy Richard O’Ben Richard 8 Joan O’Ben Jon E. Preble, Jr. John 8 Dayna Preble John William Pritchett Carmon 8 Laurie Pritchett Jonathan S. Spaner Donna Spaner 8 Kelly James Michael VanNorman Joseph 8 Joyce VanNorman Brant W. Wrieth June 8 Henry Wrieth Pa trek E. Zapolski Ray 8 Cathy Zapolski Smooth Sailing During your remaining time at Kings PointIII Class Of 1994 TO: FROM: Darron Layne Biddle Thomas H. Blenk Seiho Brown Robert P. Christoff Michael Robert A Foringer Matthew T Hartzell Harry Henderson Scott Robert Hendrickson Ken Kuras Matthew D. Nemcic Derek C. Paschal M n Scott Quartuccio Ed Quinn Angela Jean Roselle Rick Edward Schultz Paul Thomsen Alexander James Venetiou M n Anthony S. Wolbert Randall J. Wroblewski Michelle L. Wysocki Emerson C S Patricia Biddle Anne 3 Arthur Blenk Yoshiko 3 James Brown Mr. £ Mrs. Victor Christoff Sal 5 Marge Croce Alex 3 Vicky Rich Ted 3 Sylvia Hartzell Randy, Judy, 3 Heidi Henderson Mr. 3 Mrs. Forest Hendrickson Mom 3 Dad Steve 3 Gail Nemcic Dr. and Mrs. Bill Paschal Mr. 3 Mrs. Charles Quartuccio Ed 3 Kathy Quinn Mom 3 Dad Donal 3 Linda Schultz Steen Thomsen Mr. 3 Mrs. Demetre G. Venetiou Mr. 3 Mrs. James D. Wolbert Devon 3 Linda Wroblewski Tom 3 Mary Lou Wysocki Advertisement • Advertisement • Very High Tech. You’ll find it at GE-Knolls Atomic Power Laboratory. perated by General Electric Company exclusively for the U.S. Navy and the Department of Energy, KAPL is one of the world leaders in the develop- ment of naval applications for advanced nuclear propulsion systems technology. As the largest of all GE labs, KAPL has helped to launch thousands of successftil engineering careers in the process. 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For immediate consideration, please submit your resume, indicating salary history and areas of interest, to: Carol Shartrand, Lead Specialist, Professional Recruitment, Knolls Atomic Power Laboratory, P.O. Box 1072, Schenectady, NY 12301. COLLECT: (518) 395-6047. Knolls Atomic Power Laboratory An equal opportunity employer Era I ath Iron Works can offer you the opportu- nity of a lifetime. And a lifestyle beyond imagination. Tb begin with, BIW is in the forefront of naval shipbuilding. Ibday we’re budding AEGIS guided missile cruisers and destroyers—the two most technically advanced surface combatants in the world. And our current naval contracts will keep our yard at full speed into the 21st Century. What’s more, our long list of employee benefits makes working at BIW even more attractive. Benefits like full medical coverage, a company-matching savings plan (401k), paid vacations, 12 paid holidays and a pension plan. But if that doesn’t convince you, this will: Our location. In a beautiful Maine town by the coast. You’ll find beaches, sailing, lobster, seafood, golfing, mountains, fishing, hiking, hunting, skiing, art, culture, education and astounding scenery all nearby. All of which makes Bath Iron Works your best choice for a valuable job. And a rich life. US. citizenship required Must lie 18 years or older An equal opportunity employer M F V H Great white fleet, ltd. Best Wishes From The Great White Fleet Chiquita Brands Gregory Barnett '81 Donald Crews '81 Frederick Hartung '80 Theodore Knight '80 James Parker '65 Michael Samaritano '85 Chiquita Brands, Inc. 250 East Fifth Street Cincinnati, Ohio 45202 (513) 784-8000 Congratulations 1991 Graduates We Salute You! 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U.S. military sealift assets operated by private sector U S -flag firms and manned by civilian American seafarers—a reliable combination for U.S. defense in a national emergency DISTRICT 2 MARINE ENGINEERS BENEFICIAL ASSOCIATION —ASSOCIATED MARITIME OFFICERS AFFILIATED WITH THE AFL-CIO MARITIME TRADES DEPARTMENT 650 FOURTH AVENUE BROOKLYN. NEW YORK 11232 (718) 965-6700 RAYMOND T. McKAY PRESIDENT JOHN F. BRADY EXECUTIVE VICE PRESIDENT Marine Chartering Co, Inc. Ship Operators and Brokers Special project brokers and consultants. Headquarters: 781 Beach Street San Francisco, CA 94109 TEL: (415) 441-3100 FAX: (415) 776-7166 Specialists: U S West Coast. U S Gulf. Mexico, Central and South America Worldwide and domestic charters arranged for part or full cargoes. Members The Baltic International Maritime Council. Caribbean Shipping Association Please call for brochure Worldwide leader in marine engineering, design and production. Specializing in sophisticated naval combatant ships, Ingalls is the foremost designer of U. S. Navy destroyers, cruisers, and amphibious assault ships. 14.800 Pascagoula. Mississippi Excellent professional opportunities available to experienced graduate engineers. U. S. citizenship required. Responsibilities include total ship system design from development of a medical gas system serving hospital spaces to a fuel oil system serving the main propulsion turbines. Engineers are called upon to utilize all of their educational background in developing fully detailed designs involving effort in fluid mechanics, fluid dynamics, thermodynamics, stress analysis, machine design, and materials engineering. Engineers define basic design concepts, refine concepts by calculating basic performance parameters, resolve problems which may arise during construction, and support system testing and subsequent operation aboard ship. Litton______________________________ Ingalls Shipbuilding P. O. Box 149. Pascagoula. MS 39458-0149 Contact: Professional Employment Congratulations! Wishing You A Successful Career. BAY TRANSPORTATION CORPORATION d b a ST PHILIP TOWING TAMPA, FLORIDA AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER Steer Your Own Course Your future begins today and your success hinges on the choices you make at the beginning of your career. Each member of the International Organization of Mas- ters, Mates Pilots is backed by more than 100 years of respect and tradition in the maritime industry as they advance to the top. The MM P holds a number of vertical-manning con- tracts and has access to numerous engineering and other shipboard positions in addition to our licensed deck officers. This makes for limitless opportunities on the way to the top of your field of expertise. Begin steering your own course to success with the best in the industry. For more information, contact Cap- tain F. Elwood Kyser at 301 850-8700 or write to the below address. ROBERT J. LOWEN F. ELWOOD KYSER International President International Secretary-Treasurer International Organization of Masters, Mates Pilots 700 Maritime Boulevard, Linthicum Heights, MD 21090 Tel: (301) 850-8700 • Cable: BRIDGEDECK, Washington, DC -Telex; 750831 The Essence of our Objectives in 1862 2 romo con (dfecuwYy fdife and dPro ierf'if a Cf ea Has Been Perpetuated and is Amplified TODAY in our Continuing Services to the Marine and Offshore Industries CLASSIFICATION AND CERTIFICATION STANDARDS (RULE) DEVELOPMENT DESIGN AND SPECIFICATION ANALYSIS ADVISORY SERVICES FOUNDED 1862 AMERICAN BUREAU OF SHIPPING A AFFILIATED COMPANIES Offices m 159 Maior Ports Corporate Headquarters 45 Eisenhower Drive. Paramus. New Jersey. USA 07653-0910 Telephone 201-368-9100 Cable RECORD Telex ITT 421966 Telex RCA 232099 Telex MCI 620353 FAX 201-368-0255 Class of 1991 Graduates United States Merchant Marine Academy Kings Point, New York We Salute You! Matson Navigation Company, Inc. 333 Market Street San Francisco, California 94105 ...the leader in ocean cargo transportation to Hawaii for over 100 years. Matson Navigation Company w APEX MARINE CORP. 2001 Marcus Ave. Lake Success, New York 11042 CAPTAIN LEO V. BERGER, '43 (516) 775-6700 The world's most versatile shipbuilder. 243 RESEARCH VESSEL 16$ PC CUN B£AT 1 0 PGC GUN BOAT I % - r.r 224 MCM MINE COUNTERMEASURE 192 “SO MINESWEEPER P Our quality ships have been built for military and commercial customers throughout the world. We cordially invite your inquiries for ships in aluminum fiberglass steel wood. Tel. (414) 743 55 74 i i PETERSON BUILDERS. INC ■ SHIPBUILDERS ■ STURGEON BAY, WIS. M lC USA £ J 7'town President Telex 26-3423 Fax 414-743-6089 498 Moran Towing Corporation Two Greenwich Plaza Greenwich, Connecticut 06830 (203) 625-7800 FAX: (203) 625-7857 TELEX: (TWX) 710-474-0051 Ocean, Coastal, and Harbor Towing; Ship Docking Services; Barge Towing; and Oil and Bulk Transportation. Serving the Ports of: Portsmouth, N.H. New York New Jersey Philadelphia Baltimore Norfolk Hampton Roads Jacksonville Port Arthur Hawaii’s finest fuil-range cargo handling service. • STEVEDORING • CLERKING • CONTAINER BREAK BULK OPERATIONS • CONTAINER CHASSIS MAINTENANCE Modern Management Modern Equipment Modern Methods Hawaii Stevedores, Inc. 965 NIMITZ HWY. P.O.BOX 2160 HONOLULU, HI 96817 HONOLULU, HI 96805 (808) 527-3400 Stolt-Nielsen First in bulk liquid distribution ■ The largest fleet of parcel tankers, operated on worldwide trade routes. ■ About three thousand intermodal stainless steel tank containers. ■ Bulk liquid storage terminals. ■ Inland tanker, barge, rail and truck transportation, for a full logistics package. ■ Experienced people in 21 offices around the world. M Stolt-Nielsen Inc. Stolt-Nielsen Building Telephone (203) 625-9400 8 Sound Shore Drive Facsimile (203) 661-7695 PO Box 2300 Greenwich. CT 06836 USA Other oflices in Asia. Australia. Europe. North and South America 500 the 1991 Graduates of the United States Merchant Marine Academy GRUMMAN : A registered trademark of Grumman Corporation SIOT TRANSPORT, ESC. ’,.i ' fa.lintbekmt.i vx: -m§ • ■ £_: I ;. I The Most Modern and Progressive U.S. Fleet of Self-unloading Vessels on the Great Lakes. Vil j-j- v i i •• ••• : -v. ?’ t . . . ;: ; .; •.: s X :• t American Steamship Company CLASS OF 1968 CAPTAIN HAROLD L. ELLWANGER Manager Ship Operations Sun Transport Inc V.f I- A TRADITION OF MARINE MANAGEMENT £ 'i 3200 Marine Midland Center, Buffalo, New York 14203 (716)854-7644 A subsidiary of GATX Corporation 1 r- - 2 K-' ! ’. ' .HP 32 ,HOi ! Y. L Merchant Vessel Machinery Replacement, Inc. TURBINES, PUMPS, VALVES, STEAM BLOWERS, COMPRESSORS, DECK MACHINERY, MOTORS AND CONTROLLERS NEW SURPLUS 214 LAKME STREET WILMINGTON, CALIFORNIA 90748 213-830-0461 FAX - 213-830-8355 V.M. RICHARDSON, JR.’43 Telephone (212)986-1960 Cable Address: BULKTRANS, N.Y. OMI Corp. 90 PARK AVENUE. NEW YORK, N.Y. 10010 502 GOOD NEWS FOR MERCHANT MARINE ACADEMY MIDSHIPMEN ■ Now, you are eligible to obtain Personal Property Floater insurance from Armed Forces Insurance. ■ Basic policy for midshipmen cadets provides $3,000 protection for your personal valuables for only $27 a year. ■ This is comprehensive coverage (the best you can buy) and applies not only in the U.S. but anywhere else in the world, (at no extra cost) ■ Insures against loss from all the standard perils (fire, wind, theft, vandalism, etc.) and also protects against simple loss of property, including cash to $250. ■ More than 3,000 midshipmen cadets at the Nation's other service academies (West Point, Annapolis, Air Force and Coast Guard) now carry this policy. ■ Examples of property protected: Jewelry Watches Furs Uniforms Civilian Clothing Stereos Even Your Computers Fiancee's Luggage Engagement Ring For the whole story, write or call, toll free 1-800-255-6792 PO BOX G FORT LEAVENWORTH. KANSAS 66027-0428 SERVING THE MILITARY PROFESSIONAL . . . SINCE 1887 Congratulations Best Wishes Sealift Inc. 68 West Main Street Oyster Bay, New York 11771 (718) 895-8100 (516) 922-1101 VECOM VECOM HENRIC-VECOM USA LTD. CHEMICAL PRODUCTS AND TECHNICAL SERVICES TO SHIPPING AND INDUSTRY WITH COMPLIMENTS ANDREW H. FRANZO SR. President MAIN OFFICES 236 ST. GEORGE A VE. 1201 CORBIN ST. (2ND FLOOR) NEW ORLEANS LA 70121 PORT ELIZABETH, ELIZABETH, NJ 07201 TEL OFF. (201) 965-0625 • FAX (201) 965-2164 • TELEX: 139071 • FAX (504) 734-1686 You can tell the good craftsmen by the way they use their tools. They do the job carefully and precisely, without haste or waste. The most important tools at Todd aren't found in our craftsmen's hands, but on their shoulders. Seattle, Washington Your ship repair resource. OCEAN SERVICES Designer Fabricator of Synthetic Rope Assemblies Stocking Warehouse for Rope Related Hardware 5718 Armour Houston, TX 77020 713-224-5082 FAX 713-225-3615 • 24 Hour Service • ; • 11:111:111111 0o«'P mM' q, MATTIONI, MATTIONI MATTIONI, LTD. Counselors At Law To Faculty and staff of the United States Merchant Marine Academy Kings Point, New York ■■!!!!!■! In recognition of the many decades of dedicated excellence in graduating young men and women to positions of responsibility and leadership in the United State Merchant Marine, its related enter- prises and to the furtherance of continued strength of our nation in times of peace and during world wide emergencies. 399 Market Street Second Floor Philadelphia, PA 19106 (215) 629-1600 iiibiiI || §|| 111! (I HHHHHH aiiiiiB Impact. It means making a difference. Improving something by virtue of your unique abilities. And extending your own abilities to affect change. At PRC Inc., formerly Advanced Technology, Inc. and Planning Research Corporation, our people go to work with this in mind every day. That’s why we continue to impact vital are as in business and government and strengthen America's place as a technical leader. We do it with the right tools. The latest technologies. The best people. And a unique perspective that keeps a keen eye out for new opportunities. Like our involvement in: • Cargo Handling Systems • Marine Engineering — Gas Turbine Propulsion — Logistics Engineering — HM E Maintenance • Naval Ship Acquisition • Business Development • Project Management PRC Inc. Dept. PW-02 2121 Crystal Drive Suite 200 Arlington, VA 22202 An equal opportunity employer. At PRC Inc. making an impact is part of the challenge. We at PRC Inc. congratulate you and wish you much success in your future endeavors. nnc i kV mm mm, mi Mf Phibro Energy AMOCO TRANSPORT COMPANY ROBERT J. LAVINIA 1970 MITCHELL E. TUBLIN 1976 JOHN D. WEIS 1979 ROBERT W. McGRATH 1980 600 STEAMBOAT ROAD GREENWICH, CT 06830 (203) 629-8900 200 East Randolph Drive Chicago, Illinois 60601 506 Wc offer opportunities in engineering, Naval Architecture, rinancc (MdAJ, Computer Science, Human Resources, and many other professions necessary to the management of a major defense enterprise. To apply in confidence, please send your resume to: Supervisor, Technical Recruiting, Newport News Shipbuilding, Code MSY, 4101 Washington Avenue, Newport News, VA 23607. An equal opportunity employer. Newport News Shipbuilding A Tenneco Company The sea’s the limit. STELLAR CHARTERING AND BROKERAGE, INC. Salutes The Class Of 1991 Congratulates The U.S.M.M.A. On Its 50th Anniversary Stellar Chartering Brokerage, Inc. 277 Park Ave. New York, N.Y. 10172 (212) 207-5100 OVERSEAS CARGO TRANSPORTATION SHIP AGENTS Headquarters: Branches: 11740 Clifton Blvd. Pittsburgh Detroit Cleveland. Ohio St. Louis Chicago Cincinnati Syracuse TEL: (216) 228-7676 TWX: 810-421-8499 TELEX: 85-8185 CABLE: WORLDSHIP CV TELEFAX: (216) 228-5921 Congratulations Graduates! MOAC Marine Office of America Corporation One Continental Drive, Cranbury, NJ 08750-0001 The largest marine insurance underwriter in North America Serving the men and women of the American Merchant Marine around the world since 1942 Bremerhaven • Casablanca • Diego Garcia • Guam • Inchon Manila • Naples • Pusan • Okinawa • Yokohama Congratulations Graduates UNITED STATES MERCHANT MARINE ACADEMY CLASS OF 1991 United Seamen’s Service One World Trade Center • Suite 2161 New York, New York 10048 (212) 775-1033-4 Cable: UNSEASER Telex: 222146 UNS UR OCEAN SH1PH0LDINGS, INC. SHIP MANAGEMENT, MARINE ADVISORS. MARINE TECHNICAL SERVICES 13105 Northwest Freeway, Suite 700, Houston, Texas 77040 Telephone: (713) 460-8200 Telex: 790628 Telecopier: 713-460-0216 OCEAN CARRIERS, INC. OCEAN SHIP MANAGEMENT, INC. OCEAN CHEMICAL CARRIERS. INC. OCEAN SHIPS. INC. OCEAN CHEMICAL TRANSPORT. INC. OCEAN TECHNICAL SERVICES. INC. Ceres ‘Term Incorporated Make the oceans a safer place. Couple your seamanship and engineering experience with your maritime academy degree and become part of the Coast Guard team. As an officer in our extensive marine safety program your skills will allow you to gain immediate responsibility and authority. YouT also receive an excellent salary and benefits package. To find out more talk with your Career Counselor or Coast Guard Representative today. Learn why the Coast Guard is a world leader in the maritime community and ... Be Part of the Action! Officer In Charge USCG Recruiting Office 1905 Hempstead Tpke. East Meadow, NY 11554 (516) 794-0373 The Coast Guard is committed to equal opportunity. Minorities and women are encouraged to apply. Smooth Sailing from MARINE TRANSPORT LINES Ships For The Future Since 1816 150 Meadowiand Parkway Secaucus, NJ 07094 (201) 330-0200 Congratulations Best Wishes From ETC, The World's Largest LNG Fleet. Over 1,900 voyages completed - Over 230 million cubic meters of LNG cargo delivered. LNG AQUARIUS LNG ARIES LNG CAPRICORN LNG GEMINI LNG LEO LNG LIBRA LNG TAURUS LNG VIRGO Energy Transportation Corporation 1185 Avenue of the Americas New York, New York 10036 (212) 642-9800 Telex: 427864 (ETC Ul) Fax: (212) 642-9890 TWX: 7105812723 AMERICAN OVERSEAS MARINE CORPORATION A General Dynamics Subsidiary SHIP OPERATION AND MANAGEMENT Maintaining a high state of readiness in support of our Nation's needs through operation of: • Maritime Prepositioning Ships • Aviation Logistics Support Ships • Ready Reserve Force Ships 116 East Howard Street Quincy, Massachusetts 02169 (617)786-8300 Telex: 174065 Symbol of Service Around the World Sea-Land Service Sea-Land Service, Inc. • P.O. Box 800 • Iselin, New Jersey 08830 • (201) 632-2000 510 USAA KEN MASON USAA FIELD APPRAISER ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA Pioneering innovative products and URDER Of Business services is a USAA tradition. In order to serve our members better, we’re utilizing new portable computers that allow us to provide them with faster and more efficient service.” For almost 70 years, USAA has been driven by the philosophy that superior service is the key to customer satisfaction. That’s why we’re always among the first to develop new ways of doing business. Take, for instance, our new automated on-site appraisal program—one of the few of its kind in the insurance industry. Using portable computer workstations, our field appraisers have direct access to claims information from anywhere in the U.S.. So, they’re able to provide members with accurate damage assessment and repair cost appraisals within minutes of seeing your car. As a result, repairs start sooner, saving you time and money. What's more, in most cases, they can issue a check right on the spot. That’s how fast and simple we make it. But, that’s exactly what our members have come to expect. So whatever your needs—insurance, investments, banking or merchandise— you can count on USAA to provide the very best. Because at USAA, service is our first order of business. EXCLUSIVELY FOR MILITARY OFFICERS AM)THEIR FAMILIES Banking Services nol available in Pennsylvania. CALL 800-845-0507 L. JOSTENS Tell America . ♦ . erica ♦ ♦ ♦ Tradition is an important part of the Academy, and every midshipman comes to know it intimately. Rituals such as saluting the Battle Standard and War Memorial, turning the pages in the Roll of Honor, and reciting the Alma Mater continually serve to remind us of days long past.” These reminders plant seeds of pride and sense of duty in the heart of every midshipman. After completing four years at the Academy, the seeds flower, and honorable Americans emerge. They are these Americans that the nation will see, that the nation will judge. They are these Americans that will show the nation the standards of excellence and tradition that are maintained within the gates of the Merchant Marine Academy. Acta Non A Challenge 4« Verba Clockwise from left: Older model sex- tanti Cadet on bridge watch; Midship- man heading to classi Graduation Day( the Academy motto, Acta Non Verbal Sea year - MSC underway replenish- ment. L. Dedication . ♦ ♦ XIV The 1991 Midships Is Dedicated To All Those Merchant Mariners Who Gave Their Lives In Service At Sea. i U«s .«ttercUotrt jSl RPLL TO THE OLOKt Of OOQ of those w o wvaic We s up re me samtvc e m We cause of freedom m We F1RST and StCOWt) WORLD WA S In Memory Of Captain Cohen, USMS. His Service To The Midships And The Merchant Marine Academy Will Not Be Forgotten. a 1661
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