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Jumbos Reach Finals at ICSA Open Fleet Race National Championship

Story Links ST. MARY’S, MD (May 28, 2025) – The Jumbo coed sailing team advanced to the finals of the Intercollegiate Sailing Association (ICSA) Open Fleet Race Championship after placing eighth in the Western Semifinals which ended on Wednesday. The top nine teams from the semifinal would advance to the finals. […]

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ST. MARY’S, MD (May 28, 2025) – The Jumbo coed sailing team advanced to the finals of the Intercollegiate Sailing Association (ICSA) Open Fleet Race Championship after placing eighth in the Western Semifinals which ended on Wednesday.

The top nine teams from the semifinal would advance to the finals. The Jumbos began the day in eighth place after their scores from four races on Tuesday. They held their position during six races today to finish eighth overall.

For 10 races total at the two-day semifinal, the Jumbos earned scores of 77 in A division and 108 in B’s for a 178 final.

Junior skipper Ben Mueller led the Jumbos to fifth place in A division for the semis. In Wednesday’s six races, he teamed with sophomore crew Cody Lamoreux for the fifth, sixth, ninth and 10th starts. Sophomore crew Courtland Doyle was on board for the seventh and eighth races. The Jumbos had four top-nine finishes out of their six A races today, with Mueller and Lamoreux posting outstanding sixth, third, fourth and first scores in their four races together.

For B division racing, the Jumbos were ninth as sophomore skipper Kurt Stuebe teamed with senior crew Naomi Pedersen on Wednesday. They had fourth-, fifth- and seventh-place finishes in today’s second through fifth starts.

Stanford University won the Western Semifinal (36-46-82) They will join Tufts, Yale University, Bowdoin College, Boston College, Dartmouth College, Georgetown University, College of Charleston and the University of Miami as the nine teams to move on to the finals out of the Western Semis.

Nine teams from the Eastern Semifinals will join the Western qualifiers for an 18-team, two-day final which will begin on Thursday. The action is scheduled to start at 9:30 AM.

 

–JUMBOS–



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Arcadia’s triple threat: Morganne Dee, Division III 3-sport student-athlete

Story Links If Morganne Dee isn’t busy, she isn’t productive. So what keeps the Arcadia student-athlete busy? Try playing three collegiate sports — field hockey, ice hockey and lacrosse — while maintaining a near-perfect GPA, working a 20-hour-a-week internship and balancing friendships with over 85 teammates. The Lancaster, New York, native had […]

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If Morganne Dee isn’t busy, she isn’t productive.

So what keeps the Arcadia student-athlete busy? Try playing three collegiate sports — field hockey, ice hockey and lacrosse — while maintaining a near-perfect GPA, working a 20-hour-a-week internship and balancing friendships with over 85 teammates.

The Lancaster, New York, native had a childhood filled with competitive dance, softball, soccer, swimming and, eventually, the three sports that would define her college career.

Her mother, Erin, played club rugby, and her father, David, played and coached collegiate hockey. For Morganne and her brothers, Brendan and Cooper, sports were encouraged.

“We always taught her we really didn’t care what accolades she got or how well she did. It was whether she worked as hard as she could and had fun with it,” David said. “She kind of took that and ran with it.”

By the time she finished high school, Dee said she was not ready to give up any of her three favorite sports. She could at least try to play all three, right? 

She narrowed her path to the Division III level, so when the ice hockey coach at Arcadia reached out, Dee contacted the field hockey and lacrosse coaches, too. All three eagerly welcomed her.

Reflecting back, Dee knows she chose the right school for her. “Coaches, teammates, all three sports, it all ended up being perfect. It sounds like too much, but it really was the best fit for me.” Dee began each school year with field hockey, which led into ice hockey season, finishing the year with lacrosse. Though she missed preseason practices and the first few games of ice hockey and lacrosse, her ability to shift from sport to sport elevated her game. 

“My field hockey coaches would say I didn’t play like a typical field hockey player. I play like an ice hockey player, which has its advantages because you can see the field better, you can make smarter decisions because you always have to have your head up.”

Kelsey Koelzer, Arcadia’s women’s ice hockey coach, agreed.

“You would think switching from sport to sport would require an adjustment period, but for Morganne, her endurance and speed that she built during her other two seasons allowed her to hit the ice and step right into the lineup.”

Dee is pictured with her coaches at the 2024 Arcadia athletics award ceremony, where Dee earned Athlete of the Year and Strength and Conditioning Athlete of the Year honors.
Dee is pictured with her coaches at the 2024 Arcadia athletics award ceremony, where Dee earned Athlete of the Year and Strength and Conditioning Athlete of the Year honors.

Dee said playing three sports gave her a mental edge to adapt, manage pressure and stay focused in high-pressure situations. “It made me a better-rounded player and person,” she said. “You’re constantly learning, adjusting and growing.”

But playing three college sports didn’t come without challenges.

“I went in headstrong and thought I was invincible,” Dee admitted. “But it got to me. I realized I couldn’t push through everything and expect it to be OK.”

One day, Arcadia’s head athletic trainer, Danielle Duffy, noticed something was off.

Field hockey was in full swing, ice hockey had started and lacrosse was in its fall ball season. While only participating in field hockey, Duffy said Dee felt like she needed to be present at multiple events per day to show her commitment to each program.

“In my head, all I could envision was a Gumby toy being stretched, fully and in so many different directions,” Duffy said.

She remembers pulling Dee into her office, reminding her that her door and ears were always open. When Dee opened up about her struggles, Duffy put things into perspective.

“In that talk, and many after, I told her that nobody — to my knowledge — was doing what she was doing in playing three sports and at such a high level in each. I reminded her that if it was easy, more folks would do it,” Duffy said. “She’s a beast and just because she carries it well does not mean it’s not all heavy as heck.”

For Dee, that conversation changed everything.

“It transformed me as a person, but also in my game, not thinking you can do everything on your own. I learned to lean on my support system.”

Dee also built her support system within the unique cultures on each of her teams. Field hockey was her “girls’ girls” team — nail appointments, board game nights and pasta cook-offs. Lacrosse was the karaoke team, belting out songs even on two- to three-hour bus rides. Ice hockey, where she was part of Arcadia’s inaugural class, felt like a sisterhood, with the team often sitting and talking for hours.

“Each team had its own vibe, and I loved that,” Dee said.

For Dee, the combination of three sports, rigorous academics and strong friendships proved to be a winning combo. By the end of her senior year, she had earned multiple All-Middle Atlantic Conference first-team and Offensive Player of the Year honors in both field hockey and ice hockey, while maintaining a starting position and scoring 142 career goals on her lacrosse team. Her 3.92 GPA in business administration led her to earn the 2024 MAC Field Hockey Senior Scholar-Athlete award.

For Koelzer, Dee is the measuring stick for what a Division III student-athlete can accomplish.

“She is one of the most elite athletes I’ve worked with, all while maintaining one of the highest GPAs on our team,” the ice hockey coach said. “Every single coach couldn’t wait to get her back for the portion of their season that she was eligible to play.”

To anyone considering playing three sports in college, Dee would encourage giving it a try.

“Don’t give it up. It’s hard, but it’s worth it. You’ll be a better player, and person, for it.”



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Ask 411 Wrestling

Welcome guys, gals, and gender non-binary pals, to Ask 411 . . . the last surviving weekly column on 411 Wrestling. I am your party host, Ryan Byers, and I am here to answer some of your burning inquiries about professional wrestling. If you have one of those queries searing a hole in your brain, […]

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Ask 411 Wrestling

Welcome guys, gals, and gender non-binary pals, to Ask 411 . . . the last surviving weekly column on 411 Wrestling.

I am your party host, Ryan Byers, and I am here to answer some of your burning inquiries about professional wrestling. If you have one of those queries searing a hole in your brain, feel free to send it along to me at [email protected]. Don’t be shy about shooting those over – the more, the merrier.

Hey, ya wanna banner?

Night Wolf the Wise is renewing old rivalries:

I read that the Rock and Stone Cold wrestled against each other 10 times. Stone Cold has 7 victories over the Rock. Rock only has 1 win over Stone Cold. The other 2 are no contest. Has any other wrestler in wrestling history won only 1 match in that rivalry? Keep in mind when I say rivalry, I mean they wrestled multiple times like Rock and Austin did. Also tag team matches, fatal 4 ways, etc don’t count. Only one on ones.

With those numbers and with the Rock only beating Austin once, that tells me you’re only counting televised matches, because if you add in house shows and dark matches, the Rock has more victories over Steve Austin than just the one.

If we are only accounting for TV bouts, then I was able to locate one definite example of a feud in which a wrestler only won one of the matches.

Bret Hart versus Owen Hart.

If you look at the televised record between the brothers, Owen’s victory at Wrestlemania X is the only one that he ever picked up the win, though he did also have a non-televised victory in the quarterfinals of the 1996 Kuwaiti Cup tournament.

I am sure that if you reviewed every feud in the modern history of wrestling you could find several more examples, but that is one that came to me offhand.

We’ve given Tyler from Winnipeg the book:

Three part question. Did you read Hardcore Holly’s book? Becky’s? Your top 3 wrestling books?

No.

No.

Mick Foley’s first two books and Chris Jericho’s first book.

Those aren’t exactly unique answers, but sometimes the consensus picks are the best picks.

Big Al has a new body:

While watching Wrestlemania the other day, one of my in-laws mentioned how John Cena definitely took steroids. However I don’t ever remember hearing about him getting involved in those. That got me thinking, while it’s impossible to know with 100% certainty, who are the most successful wrestlers that we can say most likely did NOT use PED’s? When I say successful, I am thinking multiple time world champions or a years-long push. Just WWF(E) and WCW to narrow it down.

Lance Storm. Given the prevalence of PEDs in wrestling for decades, Storm is about the only person who ever operated in the WWF or WCW that I am 99% confident never did anything. That’s not to say there haven’t been others who were clean, but I just don’t know who they are, and my default assumption is that a wrestler from the 1980s on has at least dabbled in something at some point unless there’s strong evidence to the contrary.

Have you heard the one about Craig?

Has there ever been a main event on a weekly live TV show in which one of the competitors gets seriously injured and unable to finish the match? I remember Triple H got injured at the end of a tag match but let’s say there is a singles match in which a wrestlers are given 15 minutes to wrestle and one wrestler gets injured a few minutes into it and unable to continue. How would the show fill in the rest of the time slot with no wrestling?

I’m not aware of that situation having ever occurred, but the answer to the second half of the question is that there are any number of ways that you could fill out the remaining TV time, depending on the context – perhaps most importantly how much time is remaining.

The first thing you can do, which works if the remaining television time is relatively short, is just pad it out with replays of the injury and footage of the injured wrestler being removed from the ring, and perhaps an interview with the other wrestler who was in the match about what exactly happened.

The second thing to do, which would be an option if you have more time left in the show, would be to just have somebody else on the card cut an impromptu promo or have a couple of other guys on the card wrestle an impromptu match. Wrestling doesn’t have to be planned all that much in advance. True pros can get in there and improvise a promo or call a match in the ring. Granted, those skills may be falling by the wayside given how new wrestlers are getting trained these days, but grapplers with sufficient seasoning should still be able to do it.

GRT is menacingly stroking his briefcase:

Has any title reign started by a Money in the Bank cash in ever been ended by a Money in the Bank cash in? Or is Tiffany Stratton the only current time this could occur?

No, this has never happened before.

If MNMNB‘s friends jumped off a cliff, so would he:

Just learned there was someone named Roger “Nature Boy” Kirby.

How many wrestlers can you find that used the Nature Boy name?

Well, let’s count them:

1. Buddy Rogers: This is the original Nature Boy. I think I’ve told this story in the column before, but the name originates with a popular song that Nat King Cole first recorded in 1948. It has been covered many times since then.

2. Al Oeming: This fellow is an interesting yet sometimes forgotten footnote in wrestling history. He served in the Canadian Navy in World War II and, when he came home from the war, he was broken into wrestling by his childhood friend Stu Hart. This means he would have adopted the nickname “The Nature Boy” around the same time Buddy Rogers did, though it’s not clear to me who used it first. Eventually, Al got into promoting and co-founded Stampede Wrestling with Hart. He also became a noted zoologist and conservationist, wit the CBC making a docuseries about that part of his life in 1980.

3. Tommy Phelps: Phelps was another contemporary of Rogers, wrestling at the same time he did, though Rogers definitely had the gimmick first. After wrestling, Phelps became an evangelist and released a spoken word record about his conversion from grappler to man of god.

4. Chief Lone Eagle: Not to be confused with the little person wrestler who was also called Chief Lone Eagle, this guy wrestled for promoter Jack Pfeffer in Chicago and Ohio in the 1950s and 1960s. Though Lone Eagle was his most commonly used ring name, for some of his bouts he was dubbed the “Indian Nature Boy.”

5. Roger Kirby: The man who inspired this question. Kirby began wrestling in the 1960s and was dubbed “The Nature Boy” due to his physical resemblance to Buddy Rogers, who he was actually friendly with. Kirby wrestled for almost every major promotion during the territorial era of wrestling, and when his career was winding down in the 1980s, he had matches for the WWF, the AWA, and All Japan Pro Wrestling.

6. Ric Flair: When you talk to 90% of people who recognize the “Nature Boy” name these days, they’ll no doubt tie it first and foremost to Ric Flair.

7. JJ Dillon: It didn’t last long, but when the future manager of Ric Flair was wrestling In and around Hallifax, Nova Scotia between 1973 and 1975, he was known as Nature Boy Dillon.

8. Adrian Street: American fans will remember Street using the nickname “Exotic,” but when he started wrestling in his native England, he used the “Nature Boy” moniker in large part because he had been a fan of Buddy Rogers, who his flamboyant character was based upon.

9. Nature Boy: This is a true oddity. In David McLane’s all women’s promotion GLOW, one of the wrestlers who only had a handful of matches was called Jungle Woman, doing a Tarzan-esque gimmick. She had a male valet who wore a loincloth and was lead to the ring on a leash. He was called “Nature Boy,” with no other name given. In reality, Nature Boy was portrayed by Tony Cimber, and this is an example of somebody behind the scenes being given an on camera role. Tony Cimber is listed as an associate director in GLOW’s credits, and his brother Matt Cimber is listed as a director and a producer. In more trivia, the Cimber brothers are children of Hollywood legend Jayne Mansfield, which makes them half-brothers of Law and Order star Mariska Hargitay. So, David McLane is one degree of separation away from Mariska Hargitay.

10. Ricky Fuji: This one is also going to be a bit of a story. Fuji is a long-time Japanese indy wrestler, starting in 1990 and continuing through today. His most notworthy run was with FMW in the mid-to-late 1990s. He was a huge Rock n’ Roll Express fan and patterned a lot of his style on them. Another Japanese indy wrestler, Men’s Teioh (who had a cup of tea in the WWF as part of Kaientai), was known early in his career as Terry Boy because of his extreme Terry Funk fandom. For a couple of tag matches in 2011, Teioh reverted to his Terry Boy persona, while wrestler Great Kojika joined him as Dory Boy (based on Dory Funk), and Fuji rounded out the trio as Nature Boy (based on Ric Flair). It wasn’t his full-time gimmick or anything, but he did use the name.

11. Lance Idol: This journeyman wrestler debuted in 1978 and his career ended when he died of a heart attack in 1991. He had a ton of ring names during his career. He never used “Nature Boy” with the name Lance Idol to my knowledge, but he wrestled as Nature Boy Austin for a time. Interestingly, he was also Steve Austin for a time – before he would’ve known about the wrestler who ultimately became Stone Cold – so he has shared names with two of wrestling’s greatest.

12. Buddy Landel: Probably the third most notable Nature Boy on this list behind Rogers and Flair, most fans reading this will know that he overlapped with Slick Ric in the gimmick and feuded with him over the rights to the name for a time – including while he was managed by JJ Dillon, another Nature Boy from this list.

13. Tito Senza: Another 1970s and 1980s journeyman. I’ve listed him as Tito Senza because that was his most widely known ring name – including the name he did some WWF enhancement work under – but he was never “Nature Boy” Tito Senza. Instead, his alternate ring name was Nature Boy Nelson, which he used from the mid-70s through the early 80s in Nova Scotia.

14. Verne Siebert: This is another example of a journeyman wrestler having many names. Siebert is his most recognizable one, but he was also Nature Boy Sweetan when he wrestled in the late 80s in . . . Nova Scotia? Why was this gimmick so popular in eastern Canada? (Yeah, yeah, I’m the guy that answers the questions . . . I shouldn’t be asking them . . .)

15. Paul Lee: In the late 1980s and early 1990s, Paul Lee did what was essentially a Ric Flair tribute act on southern independents, and he was respected enough that he was brought in as an enhancement wrestler on shows for Jim Crockett Promotions, WCW, and, later on, Smoky Mountain Wrestling. He’s also had several matches in the 2020s, including one in 2023 against Joey Janela.

16. Charles Robinson: Robinson, the referee who refuses to age, was involved in an angle in late 1990s WCW in which he was a Ric Flair fanboy and was dubbed “The Little Nature Boy” or “Little Naitch” for short. Though he’s a referee and not a wrestler, the Little Naitch run did see him have a couple of matches, including an infamous bout in which Randy Savage caved his chest in with a flying elbow.

17. Rik Ratchet: A New Jersey indy fixture from 1994 through 2022, Ratchet didn’t do much of interest that I could find, but his final match was a singles bout against Jerry Lawler, which is a great note to go out on.

18. Kevin White: Trained by Bill Dundee, Mr. White was referred to as the “New Nature Boy” and made numerous appearances on the Tennessee independents from the early 2000s through 2015.

19. Barry Ace: Based out of Massachusetts, Barry Ace is a 20+ year indy veteran who also has quite a few small film roles to his credit. Though he currently calls himself “The Mill City Samurai,” at an earlier phase of his career he was the “New Age Nature Boy.” He’s still active, and you can see his website here.

20. Scoot Andrews: Scoot was a northeastern indy wrestler who competed from 1994 through 2022 with his greatest exposure coming in early Ring of Honor during its Feinstein era. He was actually known as the “Black Nature Boy” because, well, he was Black. It probably says something that we had to specify he was a “Black” Nature Boy when the entire origin of the Nature Boy gimmick was with a song recorded and popularized by a Black performer.

21. Gary Gold: This fellow is a Massachusetts-based independent wrestler who began wrestling in 1981 and continued through 2017. In an interesting side note, if you poke around on YouTube, you can find several episodes of a public access talk show about professional wrestling that he hosted during the 2020s.

22. Dylan Eaton: His career was pretty short in the grand scheme of things, lasting only three years in the 2000s, but Dylan Eaton came into the sport with quite the pedigree. He was the grandson of Bill Dundee and the son of Bobby Eaton, who was married to Dundee’s daughter. Interestingly, despite being related to two other wrestling legends, Dylan was a “Nature Boy” in tribute to Flair for a time as opposed to being a “Superstar” or “Beautiful.”

23. Ricky Landell: Trained by Steve Corino and debuting in the early 2000s, Rick Landell’s early career largely consisted of following Corino around wherever he was going and acting almost as a “young boy” in the Japanese tradition. When Ricky was allowed to start showing some personality of his own, he did take up the “Nature Boy” mantle for a time.

24. Chic Canyon: No, not Chris Kanyon. Active in the late 2000s through the early 2010s on the indy circuit in Kentucky and deep southern Illinois, Canyon referred to himself as the “Strong Style Nature Boy.”

25. Johnny Dynamo: Still wrestling in Michigan today after a career that has lasted over 20 years, Mr. Dynamo took up the mantle of the “New Nature Boy.”

26. Reid Flair: We all remember the tragic tale of Ric Flair’s younger son, who had a sold amateur career and seemed likely to follow in his father’s footsteps, even touring with All Japan Pro Wrestling in 2013. During his unfortunately brief career, he was called “The Third Nature Boy,” with the first two presumably being Rogers and his father . . . though many more were obviously disregarded.

27. Kyle Brooks: This Canadian independent wrestler is still active, mostly around Ontario, after having debuted in 2019. Though he used the Nature Boy for a period of time, more recently he has adopted the moniker “Brother Earth” and started doing an environmentalist gimmick. Go buy his t-shirt if you’re so inclined.

28 & 29. The Nature Boyz: This entry is a little bit different, as it’s a tag team. In 2022 and 2023, trainees Jonny Lyons and Dylan Fliehr were put together as a tag team called “The Nature Boyz” in Booker T’s Reality of Wrestling promotion.

And there you have it. I was able to count 29 Nature Boys.

I would be remiss if I didn’t mention that there are also two “Nature Girls” that I became aware of in my research. One his Charlotte Flair, for obvious reasons, though it’s not a moniker that really stuck with her on the main roster of WWE.

The other is a more interesting case. Adela Antone was a lady wrestler in promoter Billy Wolfe’s troupe for less than a year between 1951 and 1952, where she used the nickname “Nature Girl.” That’s not the interesting part, though. The interesting part is that, according to a 1995 newspaper clipping unearthed by When It Was Cool, Antone was once asked to be involved in a murder plot. A man named Harry Washburn was accused of killing a woman named Helen Weaver with a car bomb. According to Antone, Washburn also once offered her $10,000.00 to kill Harry Weaver, the husband of Helen Weaver.

I don’t believe that had anything to do with her being a Nature Girl, though.

We’ll return in seven-ish days, and, as always, you can contribute your questions by emailing [email protected]. You can also leave questions in the comments below, but please note that I do not monitor the comments as closely as I do the email account, so emailing is the better way to get things answered.

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Beyond the Byline: Like the flood mud, the memories still stink

WILKES-BARRE — Gone — everything was gone. And it would never come back. It will be 53 years since Hurricane Agnes swept away most of the memories I had of life before June 23, 1972. The mid-1960s to that fateful June day in 1972 really are difficult for me to even want to try […]

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WILKES-BARRE — Gone — everything was gone.

And it would never come back.

It will be 53 years since Hurricane Agnes swept away most of the memories I had of life before June 23, 1972.

The mid-1960s to that fateful June day in 1972 really are difficult for me to even want to try to remember. My mom died on the day before Mother’s Day in the year I was to graduate from high school — 1968.

Those were extremely difficult times. My dad and I were lost. We really didn’t know how to cope without my mom around.

So one day my dad asked how I felt about moving out of the only home I had ever known. It was difficult to be in that house after my mom died. Everywhere we looked there were memories — lots of memories that were partially saved in several photo albums we had.

There was the kitchen where my mom cooked and baked and served meals.

And there was the living room where she would hang Christmas garland made out of red-and-green construction paper.

And there was my bedroom where she would serve me ice cream on most mornings before school.

There was the little stand where our black dial telephone sat and where my mom would call Jack’s Market to order that evening’s dinner.

There was her sewing machine in one corner and her jewelry in a drawer by her dressing table.

There was the screen door that led to the front porch where she would sit under the shade of our big maple tree and talk to neighbors across the street.

Too many nights crying myself to sleep, always hoping I would wake up from this nightmare and Mom would be there — for me and Dad.

So we decided to move off the hill, down to Main Street. Before long, as we continued to put our lives back together, the sirens blared on this June night. We went to Aunt Betty’s house on East Shawnee Avenue and waited.

The flood waters came, staying there for days. Finally, the water began to recede. I vividly remember the brownness of the streets and the lawns.

And I clearly recall the stink. It was awful.

Now came the time to return to our apartment on West Main Street. I remember walking in and seeing how everything was just gone. What was left — which wasn’t much — was covered in mud, soaked in river water.

And everything had that stink.

All that was important to us was gone.

Gone were my record albums — of the sixties, man.

Gone were my baseball cards — Mantle, Mays, Koufax, Aaron, Clemente, all the stars of the sixties.

Gone were all my clothes, my diplomas, baseball gloves, sneakers, even my underwear.

It was all gone.

And also gone were all those photo albums. The ones that contained all my connections to my past — the photos of the O’Boyles and the Kraszewskis — all the people I knew growing up and those who were around before I was born.

Pictures of my mom.

All were gone.

All was lost.

And just four years after my dad and I lost the only person we felt we couldn’t live without.

Every street in the floodplain had piles of flood mud-covered garbage stacked out front, waiting for the Army Corps of Engineers to take it to a landfill. Every day, this process continued as everybody’s lifelong memories were piled into dump trucks and taken away.

So don’t be surprised when I tell you that I, for one, cannot celebrate the 53rd anniversary of Agnes.

Not at all.

Living through the Agnes Flood of 1972 was — and still is in a word — humbling.

Here we were, my dad and I, living in a trailer, faced with the task of putting our already broken lives back together.

Never did we miss 210 Reynolds St. as much as we did in the aftermath of Hurricane Agnes.

One more thing that I lost in June 1972 and will never get back is that feeling of security — the feeling of safety found in a mother’s arms. The feeling that no matter what, everything will be okay.

That’s what I lost in May 1968 and then again in June 1972. That’s what most victims of Agnes lost.

I just can’t feel like I did before Agnes — no matter how hard I try.

The brown, muddy, smelly river water clearly showed me the reality of loss.

And like that smell indelibly embedded in my memory bank — it stinks.

Reach Bill O’Boyle at 570-991-6118 or on Twitter @TLBillOBoyle.



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Penn State Hockey Lands Commitment From Potential First-Round NHL Pick Jackson Smith

Penn State men’s hockey is turning its first run to the Frozen Four into a potential title run next season. The Nittany Lions received a rapid-fire pair of commitments from 5-star players, including top prospect Jackson Smith. The defenseman announced his commitment to Penn State on social media, generating further buzz around coach Guy Gadowsky’s […]

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Penn State men’s hockey is turning its first run to the Frozen Four into a potential title run next season. The Nittany Lions received a rapid-fire pair of commitments from 5-star players, including top prospect Jackson Smith. The defenseman announced his commitment to Penn State on social media, generating further buzz around coach Guy Gadowsky’s next team.

“I am excited to announce my commitment to play NCAA Division 1 hockey at Penn State University for the 2025-2026 season,” Smith wrote in an Instagram post. “I want to thank my family, friends and advisors who helped me through this process. I can’t wait to get started in Hockey Valley!”

Smith joins fellow 5-star prospect Pierce Mbuyi in committing to the Nittany Lions recently. Mbuyi was the Ontario Hockey League’s rookie of the year after totaling 52 points (29 points, 23 assists) for the Owen Sound Attack as a 16-year-old. He was a finalist for the Canadian Hockey League’s rookie of the year award. It’s unclear when Mbuyi will begin playing for Penn State.

Smith, 18, is a highly prized prospect of the 2025 NHL Entry Draft. He recorded 54 points (11 goals, 43 assists) for the Tri-City Americans of the WHL. The 6-3, 190-pound Smith played 130 games for Tri-City over the past two seasons, totaling 18 goals and 83 points.

Smith ranks 10th among draft-eligible prospects, according to ESPN, which projects his ceiling as a top-four defenseman in the NHL. Elsewhere, Smith is a consensus top-15 draft prospect, according to his Elite Prospects profile, which ranks him sixth overall and scouts him as a two-way force.

“Smith’s skating, combined with his handling skill and creativity, often lead to some truly incredible plays,” according to the Elite Prospects draft guide. “He spins off the forecheck, takes the middle, and launches a cross-ice pass through the next layer for a chance. From the point, he steps in, fakes, explodes across, and walks inside for a chance. With seemingly endless creativity, he pulls pucks through defenders’ legs, cuts off the wall, and capitalizes on backdoor passing lanes as they open.”

Since the NCAA announced that CHL players will be eligible to compete this season, Penn State has been active in the market. Smith became the eighth CHL player to commit to the Nittany Lions, according to Sportsnet. And the Nittany Lions might not be done, as they have been linked to Gavin McKenna, the potential No. 1 overall pick of the 2026 NHL Entry Draft.

Penn State has been riding a hot streak since January, when the team rebounded from a winless start to the Big Ten season to make the Frozen Four for the first time in program history. Gadowsky left St. Louis, site of the Frozen Four, energized about the program’s future.

“I think we’re more hopeful because of the lesson that the program learned,” Gadowsky said at the Frozen Four. “And the lesson that we learned isn’t something you can read about and just say, ‘OK, we got it.’ You can’t. You really need to go through it. And the fact that we were so far back, so left for dead and came back to make the Frozen Four, is something I don’t think any of these guys are ever going to forget. I know I’m not. I’m really grateful to be part of this group because of that lesson.”

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Livvy Dunne shows true colors with custom Paul Skenes jersey at College World Series

Livvy Dunne had joined LSU Tigers fans to watch their College World Series showdown where they defeated Arkansas, falling in love with baseball since beginning her relationship with Paul Skenes Charlie Wilson US Sports Reporter 05:22 ET, 16 Jun 2025 Olivia Dunne and Paul Skenes have been in a relationship for two years(Image: paulskenes/Instagram) Olivia […]

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Livvy Dunne had joined LSU Tigers fans to watch their College World Series showdown where they defeated Arkansas, falling in love with baseball since beginning her relationship with Paul Skenes

 Olivia Dunne wants someone to find Paul Skene's MLB card
Olivia Dunne and Paul Skenes have been in a relationship for two years(Image: paulskenes/Instagram)

Olivia Dunne donned a custom-made Paul Skenes jersey with his LSU Tigers and Pittsburgh Pirates colors combined while showing support for her college team.

Dunne and Skenes both met at LSU, where she became the superstar name she is today while competing on their gymnastics team. Skenes emerged as one of college baseball’s best pitchers in recent history – going on to win the National Championship with the school.

Skenes was drafted into the MLB with the first overall pick by the Pirates, and Dunne could now be moving to be closer with her boyfriend, having recently finished her final year of eligibility after graduating from the school.

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Dunne travelled with fans from LSU up to the game in Omaha, Nebraska, while rocking the jersey, and showed it off on her social media platforms.

Dunne, who has more than 13 million followers across her TikTok and Instagram accounts, posted an image showing the front and back of her jersey, with the caption: ‘Party in the front business in the back’.

The college gymnast turned model and Sports Illustrated cover star has been at a number of games in support of Skenes, who has quickly blossomed into one of the best pitchers in all of baseball, and current NL Rookie of the Year.

The couple started dating in June 2023, when Dunne posted a TikTok wearing Paul’s jersey, but didn’t confirm their relationship until August 2023, when the pitcher confirmed it to the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette.

Olivia Dunne sporting the custom jersey

A more reserved personality, Skenes has admitted that he has had to get used to eyes being on him since becoming a baseball superstar and being in a relationship with an a-list model.

While Dunne attends baseball games as often as she does, she has been said to find it difficult at times due to fan attention being on her.

“I do wish she could come to a baseball game and just enjoy it. It does irk me,” Skenes said to the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. I don’t have any control over it. She really doesn’t either. I’m sure it’ll get better as I go up levels, but that’s something I want for her,” he added.

Just last month, Dunne had openly spoken on having to deal with stalkers. She said on her social media platforms: “I think I’m being stalked and I don’t know what to do. It’s got to the point every single time I go to the airport, there’s a group of at least 10 middle-aged men waiting for me, and they harass me.

“It’s these men that want my autograph. They have a stack of 40 pictures of me or my magazines and they will run after me down the TSA PreCheck line and yell at me if I don’t give them my autograph, it’s insane.

“But they will yell at me and make a scene and the people around me are scared. It’s crazy. Even this morning was a terrible experience.”

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Sophie Zemianek makes worldwide connections through hockey and lacrosse | Sports

Norwich University student and BFA-St. Albans graduate, Sophie Zemianek, closed her junior year with the Cadets women’s lacrosse team, who made a historic run in playoffs. Zemianek, who also plays hockey for Norwich’s women’s team, supplemented her hockey season with a trip to Las Vegas, NV, to play for the Puerto Rican women’s team in […]

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Norwich University student and BFA-St. Albans graduate, Sophie Zemianek, closed her junior year with the Cadets women’s lacrosse team, who made a historic run in playoffs. Zemianek, who also plays hockey for Norwich’s women’s team, supplemented her hockey season with a trip to Las Vegas, NV, to play for the Puerto Rican women’s team in honor of her grandmother’s heritage.

Q&A with Sophie Zemianek

What will you remember about the historic playoff run with Norwich? Last year, we won our play-in game to get to the quarters for the first time in 10 years. This year, we bounced back higher, and instead of having the play-in game, we got a bye as the No. 2 seed in the Great Northeast Athletic Conference is split into north and south divisions, and we’re in the north. We were the No. 2 seed in the north for the GNAC.

We played the quarter game against Dean with a home advantage for the first time in many years and won 18-6. It was the first time we’d won a quarter since 2012. We went to Johnson and Wales and lost in the semis, which was the first time since 2012 that we’d played in a semifinal.

We had a lot of big firsts, including conference titles, our coach was Coach of the Year for the conference–accolades the school hadn’t seen in a while.







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Sophie Zemianek played hockey and lacrosse for Norwich University, contributing to the team’s success in a historic playoff run.




What did you enjoy about being able to make an impact in the playoff run? I was happy to be there and contribute to the team’s success. I scored at least three goals in the game against Dean, but didn’t play as much against Johnson and Wales because of injuries. It’s more about having the opportunity to do something the program hasn’t done for a while and to see the growth. We’ve been focused on building the program step by step and year by year.

What do you enjoy about playing college lacrosse? It’s a great way to reset after hockey season. Hockey is so much fun, but it’s a lot. Lacrosse lets me stay in good condition, meet new people, and keep playing a game I’ve loved for so long. It’s great to stay active and to stay involved with the school.







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How do you manage the intensity of the end of the year with lacrosse playoffs? Weather impacts lacrosse with reschedules, so we end up playing into finals week. Last year, we played our final game on graduation day. It got intense with the work on the field, the games, and finals. You have to keep up with lacrosse and be mindful of your timing with everything. The weather also improved, which was really nice. It is nice to step away from finals and be able to get out, take a break, and focus on something else. It can be overwhelming to have the work to do, but the break is good. You have to find the work balance and work it all out. I’ve been able to manage it well with my major. I feel for the nursing and engineering majors who are dealing with clinicals and intense finals.

What did you enjoy about the season as a whole? We lost three games total this season, including playoffs. As a hockey player, I don’t get into the season until halfway through. Of the 19 games played, I played in nine or 10. One of the biggest things about this year was that the team was so welcoming. Even though the hockey players came in late, it felt like we never missed a beat. We were close-knit and enjoyed one another’s company on the field and in the locker room. It was a high-energy team, and it was fun. It was so easy to get to know everyone, and they were so outgoing and happy to play lacrosse. That made it a lot more fun and the hard times easier. Everyone had such a positive perspective on everything.

Why were you also playing hockey in Las Vegas this year? I play hockey for the Puerto Rican Women’s National team, which we’re building. I’ve been part of the team for two years. My older brother Jake did some Puerto Rico lacrosse and then hockey. He told me he thought I’d like getting into it. It’s an opportunity to represent our heritage through our grandmother. My brother Tomas has done some of the showcases, and my older brother Luke is also getting into it. They’re all looking to go to a tournament in August.

I’ve played all over the country– in Florida, New York, Chicago, Vegas, and New Jersey. There are a couple of international events coming up that I may be involved in this year.

The team went to Brazil this year, and we may be returning to South America again; I’d like to go to that one.







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What do you enjoy about your Puerto Rico Women’s hockey team teammates? We have athletes from Puerto Rico and those from the United States. You have to have 25 percent Puerto Rican heritage, which I do through my grandmother.

How have the last three years of athletics expanded your worldview? With all of these opportunities to play, I’ve been able to travel much, which I’m grateful for. I’ve had teammates from Canada, Sweden, Austria, France, and the United Kingdom. I have friends who span across the world. Experiencing pieces of those countries through knowing these people gives me a different perspective of what else is out there. Girls bring back food from their home country that we share, and even that gives exposure to a different culture. When you get to know these people personally and work with them daily, it gives you a different perspective of what’s going on around the world.

I gave a University of Vermont puck to one of the girls who lives in Puerto Rico. She tried to give it back to me, but I told her I wanted her to have a little piece of Vermont. She sent me a picture with the puck on a Boogie Board, and it was awesome.







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The Puerto Rican National hockey teams pose for a photo during a tournament. Sophie Zemianek has been part of helping to build the women’s team over the last two years and hopes to see the team affiliated with the International Ice Hockey Federation.




What have you enjoyed about representing your grandmother’s heritage? It’s a lot of fun and has allowed me to travel. It’s given me a greater appreciation of my heritage. When I tell people I play for the team, I get questions. We’re working on becoming an affiliate with the International Ice Hockey Federation and getting an ice rink in Puerto Rico, which would help us become an affiliate. When asked if I’m Puerto Rican, I say yes. I don’t look like it, but my grandmother was born and raised there, and my grandparents live there now. I have a lot of fun with the opportunity, and I’ve met so many people nationally and internationally.

In these tournaments, we’re playing other international teams–Greece, Lebanon, Chile–– and meeting those people has given me connections and friends all over the world.





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