Article

GREEN JOTTINGS

MARCH 1970 JACK DEGANGE
Article
GREEN JOTTINGS
MARCH 1970 JACK DEGANGE

Grant Standbrook, freshman coach in three sports at Dartmouth since 1966, has been named head soccer coach, succeeding Whitey Burnham, now the assistant director of athletics. Standbrook will continue as freshman hockey coach but will give up freshman lacrosse after this spring.

Burnham's successor as head coach of lacrosse is Dudley Hendrick, 30, an All-American aftackman who played on three national championship teams at the U. S. Naval Academy from 1961 to 1963. Hendrick was a graduate assistant to Burnham for the past two years while attending Tuck School.

Senior halfback Tom Quinn from Massapequa, N. Y., was honored with two awards at the Dartmouth football banquet, which attracted a gathering of 350 to Alumni Hall in Hopkins Center on January 30. Quinn was presented the Bob Blackman Trophy (voted by the coaching staff) for outstanding contribution to the team and also received the Manners Makyth Man Award (voted by his teammates) for outstanding sportsmanship. Co-Captain Ernie Babcock won the Earl Hamilton Varsity Award, while quarterback Steve Stetson won the Earl Hamilton Freshman Award.

While on football, freshman line coach Walt Pierce will rejoin his former coach, Wayne Hardin, at Temple University. Pierce is a classmate of Dudley Hendrick at the Naval Academy and was a linebacker on Hardin-coached teams at Navy from 1960 to 1962. He will be defensive line coach at Temple.

Dartmouth is host for the NCAA Ski Championships on March 5-7 at Cannon Mountain in Franconia, N. H., and also is host for the 30th Eastern Seaboard Swim Championships on March 12-14.

Dartmouth also was host for the United States Track & Field Federation Eastern Regional meet on February 22. More than 300 people competed in over 40 events at the meet.

Soccer Captain Greg Church from Elkhart, Ind., was the recipient of the Norman Grant Clark Award for contribution to Dartmouth's 1969 soccer team. Church was named to the All-Ivy second team as a fullback.

Myles Lane '28, who was the national intercollegiate football scoring champion in 1927 and scored a total of 303 points during three seasons of Dartmouth football, is one of eight former college football stars who will be formally inducted into the National Football Foundation's Hall of Fame on December 8. Lane is now a justice of the Supreme Court of the State of New York. As the Chief Assistant United States Attorney for the Southern District of New York, he prepared the Rosenberg Atom Bomb case and then collaborated with the U. S. Attorney in the prosecution of the case. He also successfully tried numerous cases against organized crime leaders in New York and had a major role in antitrust litigation.