984 resultados para Zoilus, fl. 4th century B.C.
Resumo:
A Administração Financeira surge no início do século XIX juntamente com o movimento de consolidação das grandes empresas e a formação dos mercados nacionais americano enquanto que no Brasil os primeiros estudos ocorrem a partir da segunda metade do século XX. Desde entãoo país conseguiu consolidar alguns centros de excelência em pesquisa, formar grupo significativo de pesquisadores seniores e expandir as áreas de pesquisa no campo, contudo, ainda são poucos os trabalhos que buscam retratar as características da produtividade científica em Finanças. Buscando contribuir para a melhor compreensão do comportamento produtivo dessa área a presente pesquisa estuda sua produção científica, materializada na forma de artigos digitais, publicados em 24 conceituados periódicos nacionais classificados nos estratos Qualis/CAPES A2, B1 e B2 da Área de Administração, Ciências Contábeis e Turismo. Para tanto são aplicadas a Lei de Bradford, Lei do Elitismo de Price e Lei de Lotka. Pela Lei de Bradford são identificadas três zonas de produtividade sendo o núcleo formado por três revistas, estando uma delas classificada no estrato Qualis/CAPES B2, o que evidencia a limitação de um recorte tendo como único critério a classificação Qualis/CAPES. Para a Lei do Elitismo de Price, seja pela contagem direta ou completa, não identificamos comportamento de uma elite semelhante ao apontado pela teoria e que conta com grande número de autores com apenas uma publicação.Aplicando-se o modelo do Poder Inverso Generalizado, calculado por Mínimos Quadrados Ordinários (MQO), verificamos que produtividade dos pesquisadores, quando feita pela contagem direta, se adequa àquela definida pela Lei de Lotka ao nível de α = 0,01 de significância, contudo, pela contagem completa não podemos confirmar a hipótese de homogeneidade das distribuições, além do fato de que nas duas contagens a produtividade analisada pelo parâmetro n é maior que 2 e, portanto, a produtividade do pesquisadores de finanças é menor que a defendida pela teoria.
Resumo:
O tema desta dissertação é a Avaliação Institucional da Educação Básica. Para tal, faz-se a análise do processo de avaliação, com ênfase no instrumento utilizado pelas Escolas Adventistas de nível básico do estado de São Paulo, considerando que a educação adventista se tornou uma parte consistente dentro da estrutura da Igreja Adventista do Sétimo Dia. Procurou-se, neste trabalho, como objetivo geral, compreender como se configura a prática da avaliação institucional das escolas da Rede Adventista de Educação. O método da investigação incluiu análise bibliográfica dos principais teóricos da área de políticas públicas e do sistema privado bem como da avaliação institucional, seguido de exame documental do instrumento utilizado no processo de avaliação institucional. O estudo resgata a contextualização histórica do desenvolvimento da escola privada, destacando aspectos relevantes de sua relação com o Estado. Também apresenta brevemente a história da Igreja Adventista do Sétimo Dia (IASD) nos Estados Unidos (EUA) e no Brasil, de modo a situar o surgimento do sistema educacional adventista, bem como a sua filosofia de ensino, buscando conhecer as origens desse grupo religioso que há mais de um século atua no cenário educacional brasileiro. Em seguida, aborda aspectos da Avaliação Institucional. Finalmente, apresenta-se uma síntese do processo e uma descrição analítica do instrumento de avaliação institucional das escolas de nível básico da Educação Adventista. Na conclusão do trabalho, não se encontraram indícios de que o conceito adventista de avaliação educacional seja diferente do das abordagens tradicionais. Entretanto, na concepção adventista de avaliação, existe mais fortemente a preocupação de se manter um processo de avaliação contínuo e sistemático.
Resumo:
A pesquisa tem por objetivo trabalhar o evento da Revolta de Jeú, em conjunto com a Estela de Dã, tendo como ponto de partida para tal, a exegese da perícope de 2 Reis 10-28,36. A história Deuteronomista apresenta o ato da Revolta de Jeú como sendo um feito demasiadamente importante, na restauração do culto a Javé em Israel, a partir de um contexto onde o culto a outras divindades, em Israel Norte, estava em pleno curso. No entanto, a partir da análise conjunta da Estela de Dã, que tem como provável autor o rei Hazael de Damasco, somos desafiados a ler esta história pelas entrelinhas não contempladas pelo texto, que apontam para uma participação ativa de Hazael, nos desfechos referentes a Revolta de Jeú, como sendo o responsável direto que proporcionou a subida de Jeú ao trono em Israel, clarificando desta forma este importante período na história Bíblica. Para tal análise, observar-se-á três distintos tópicos, ligados diretamente ao tema proposto: (1) A Revolta de Jeú e a Redação Deuteronomista, a partir do estudo exegético da perícope de 2 Reis 10,28-36, onde estão descritas informações pontuais sobre período em que Jeú reinou em Israel; (2) Jeú e a Estela de Dã, a partir da apresentação e análise do conteúdo da Estela de Dã, tratando diretamente dos desdobramentos da guerra em Ramote de Gileade, de onde se dá o ponto de partida à Revolta de Jeú; e por fim (3) O Império da Síria, onde a partir da continuidade da análise do conteúdo da Estela de Dã, demonstraremos a significância deste reino, além de apontamentos diretamente ligados ao reinado de Hazael, personagem mui relevante no evento da Revolta de Jeú.
Resumo:
Humans transformed Western Atlantic coastal marine ecosystems before modern ecological investigations began. Paleoecological, archeological, and historical reconstructions demonstrate incredible losses of large vertebrates and oysters from the entire Atlantic coast. Untold millions of large fishes, sharks, sea turtles, and manatees were removed from the Caribbean in the 17th to 19th centuries. Recent collapses of reef corals and seagrasses are due ultimately to losses of these large consumers as much as to more recent changes in climate, eutrophication, or outbreaks of disease. Overfishing in the 19th century reduced vast beds of oysters in Chesapeake Bay and other estuaries to a few percent of pristine abundances and promoted eutrophication. Mechanized harvesting of bottom fishes like cod set off a series of trophic cascades that eliminated kelp forests and then brought them back again as fishers fished their way down food webs to small invertebrates. Lastly, but most pervasively, mechanized harvesting of the entire continental shelf decimated large, long-lived fishes and destroyed three-dimensional habitats built up by sessile corals, bryozoans, and sponges. The universal pattern of losses demonstrates that no coastal ecosystem is pristine and few wild fisheries are sustainable along the entire Western Atlantic coast. Reconstructions of ecosystems lost only a century or two ago demonstrate attainable goals of establishing large and effective marine reserves if society is willing to pay the costs. Historical reconstructions provide a new scientific framework for manipulative experiments at the ecosystem scale to explore the feasibility and benefits of protection of our living coastal resources.
Resumo:
Azomethine ylides, generated from imine-derived O-cinnamyl or O-crotonyl salicylaldeyde and α-amino acids, undergo intramolecular 1,3-dipolar cycloaddition, leading to chromene[4,3-b]pyrrolidines. Two reaction conditions are used: (a) microwave-assisted heating (200 W, 185 °C) of a neat mixture of reagents, and (b) conventional heating (170 °C) in PEG-400 as solvent. In both cases, a mixture of two epimers at the α-position of the nitrogen atom in the pyrrolidine nucleus was formed through the less energetic endo-approach (B/C ring fusion). In many cases, the formation of the stereoisomer bearing a trans-arrangement into the B/C ring fusion was observed in high proportions. Comprehensive computational and kinetic simulation studies are detailed. An analysis of the stability of transient 1,3-dipoles, followed by an assessment of the intramolecular pathways and kinetics are also reported.
Resumo:
Ethnopharmacological relevance and background: “Dictamnus” was a popular name for a group of medicinal herbaceous plant species of the Rutaceae and Lamiaceae, which since the 4th century have been used for gynaecological problems and other illnesses BCE and still appear in numerous ethnobotanical records. Aims: This research has as four overarching aims: Determining the historical evolution of medical preparations labelled “Dictamnus” and the different factors affecting this long-standing herbal tradition. Deciphering and differentiating those medicinal uses of “Dictamnus” which strictly correspond to Dictamnus (Rutaceae), from those of Origanum dictamnus and other Lamiaceae species. Quantitatively assessing the dependence from herbal books, and pharmaceutical tradition, of modern Dictamnus ethnobotanical records. Determining whether differences between Western and Eastern Europe exist with regards to the Dictamnus albus uses in ethnopharmacology and ethnomedicine. Methods: An exhaustive review of herbals, classical pharmacopoeias, ethnobotanical and ethnopharmacological literature was conducted. Systematic analysis of uses reported which were standardized according to International Classification of Diseases – 10 and multivariate analysis using factorial, hierarchical and neighbour joining methods was undertaken. Results and discussion: The popular concept “Dictamnus” includes Origanum dictamnus L., Ballota pseudodictamnus (L.) Benth. and B. acetabulosa (L.) Benth. (Lamiaceae), as well as Dictamnus albus L. and D. hispanicus Webb ex Willk. (Rutaceae), with 86 different types of uses. Between 1000 and 1700 CE numerous complex preparations with “Dictamnus” were used in the treatment of 35 different pathologies. On biogeographical grounds the widespread D. albus is a far more likely prototypical “Dictamnus” than the Cretan endemic Origanum dictamnus. However both form integral parts of the “Dictamnus” complex. Evidence exists for a sufficiently long and coherent tradition for D. albus and D. hispanicus, use to treat 47 different categories of diseases. Conclusions: This approach is a model for understanding the cultural history of plants and their role as resources for health care. “Dictamnus” shows how transmission of traditional knowledge about materia medica, over 26 centuries, represents remarkable levels of development and innovation. All this lead us to call attention to D. albus and D. hispanicus which are highly promising as potential herbal drug leads. The next steps of research should be to systematically analyse phytochemical, pharmacological and clinical evidence and to develop safety, pharmacology and toxicology profiles of the traditional preparations.
Resumo:
Interleaved second-edition copy of Robert Treat Paine's poem "The Invention of Letters" with handwritten excerpts of 18th century poetry copied by Charles Pinckney Sumner. The excerpts appear to be verses alluded to, or emulated, by Paine in the poem. For example, Paine's verse includes "Beneath the shade, which Freedom's oak displays" and Sumner on the opposite page quoted Alexander Pope's poetry, "Beneath the shade a spreading beech displays." The excerpts include poetry by Alexander Pope, James Thompson, Robert Dodsley, William Falconer, William Hayley, Samuel Rogers, Richard Brinsley Sheridan, Thomas Gray, and John Denham.
Resumo:
Manuscript notebook, possibly kept by Harvard students, containing 17th century English transcriptions of arithmetic and geometry texts, one of which is dated 1689-1690; 18th century transcriptions from John Ward’s “The Young Mathematician’s Guide”; and notes on physics lectures delivered by John Winthrop, the Hollis Professor of Mathematics and Natural Philosophy at Harvard from 1738 to 1779. The notebook also contains 18th century reading notes on Henry VIII, Tudor succession, and English history from Daniel Neal’s “The History of the Puritans” and David Hume’s “History of England,” and notes on Ancient history, taken mainly from Charles Rollin’s “The Ancient History of the Egyptians, Carthaginians, Assyrians, Babylonians, Medes and Persians, Macedonians and Grecians.” Additionally included are an excerpt from Plutarch’s “Lives” and transcriptions of three articles from “The Gentleman’s Magazine, and Historical Chronicle,” published in 1769: “A Critique on the Works of Ovid”; a book review of “A New Voyage to the West-Indies”; and “Genuine Anecdotes of Celebrated Writers, &.” The flyleaf contains the inscription “Semper boni aliquid operis facito ut diabolus te semper inveniat occupatum,” a variation on a quote of Saint Jerome that translates approximately as “Always good to do some work so that the devil may always find you occupied.” In the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, Harvard College undergraduates often copied academic texts and lecture notes into personal notebooks in place of printed textbooks. Winthrop used Ward’s textbook in his class, while the books of Hume, Neal, and Rollin were used in history courses taught at Harvard in the 18th century.
Resumo:
Two new Standard pollen diagrams from the raised bog Ageröds mosse in central Scania are presented and discussed. They have been made giving extensive consideration to the NAP and spores also. The new diagrams comprise in the main only the Post-glacial and can easily be compared with the earlier published Standard diagram from the bog (T. NILSSON 1935). The development of the Post-glacial Vegetation in the surroundings is also discussed and compared with the conditions in the southernmost part of the province (Bjärsjöholmssjön, T. Nilsson 1961). One of the new diagrams has been prepared in connection with the study of a core brought up by means of a special borer in order to bring about C14 datings. The core was almost ömlong and had a diameter of 6 cm. It was divided into pieces of 2-6 cm, which were preserved. After the preparation of the pollen diagram, suitable samples were selected for C14 dating. In all 33 samples, comprising the whole Post-glacial inclusive of the youngest part of the Late-glacial, were C14-dated. With the aid of the C14 dates the growth conditions of the bog are discussed. After very slow Sedimentation of predominantly minerogenous deposits in the last part of the Late-glacial, and still slow Sedimentation of gyttjas in the oldest part of the Post-glacial, the rate of growth (primarily of the gyttja) distinctly increased in the first part of the Late Boreal. A temporary retardation of the growth of the sphagnum peat at the end of the Sub-boreal is probably entirely local. The average rate of growth of the really highly humified parts of the old sphagnum peat amounts to 42 mm per Century, that of the slightly humified young sphagnum peat 81 mm per Century or somewhat more. Based on the C14-determinations, the pollen zone boundaries have been given the following approximate dates: boundary Late-glacial/Post-glacial (DR/PB) 8300 B.C., boundary Pre-boreal/Boreal (PB/BO) 7900 B.C., boundary Early Boreal/Late Boreal (BO 1/2) 6800 B.C., boundary Boreal/Atlantic (BO/AT) 6200 B.C., boundary Early Atlantic/Late Atlantic (AT 1/2) 4600 B.C. (?), boundary Atlantic/Sub-boreal (AT/SB) 3300 B.C., boundary Early Sub-boreal/Late Sub-boreal (SB 1/2) 1700-1800 B.C., boundary Sub-boreal/Sub-atlantic (SB/ SA) 300 B.C., boundary Early Sub-atlantic/Late Sub-atlantic (SA 1/2) 650 A.D.
Resumo:
Back Row: Steve King, Ed Pollister, Ed Wojtys, Mike Lantry, Jeff Spahn, Carl Russ, Kurt Kampe, Mark Jacoby, Tom Jenson
8th Row: Rick VanTongeren, Rick Jekel, Glenn Franklin, Lin Hardin, Dennis Franks, Bill Hoban, Roy Burks, Dave Metz, Mark McClain
7th Row: Dave Brown, Dennis Franklin, Gil Chapman, Jeff Perlinger, C.J. Kupec, Greg DenBoer, Steve Strinko, Chuck Heater, Pat Tumpane
6th Row: Norm Long, John Carpenter, Larry Banks, Kevin Masterson, Jim Lyall, Doug McKenzie, Jim Johnston, James Armour, John Thomas
5th Row: Jon Cederberg, Dave Brandon, Mike Day, Art Fediuk,John Cherry, Greg Koss, Don Warner, Ron Szydlowski,
4th Row: Larry Johnson, Walt Sexton, Craig Mutch, Gary Hainrihar, Doug Trozak, Walt Williamson, Don Coleman, Jovan Vercel, Barry Dotzbauer
3rd Row: Dave Elliott, Tom Slade, Harry Banks, Kevin Casey, Mike Hoban, Paul Seal, Dave Gallalgher, Ed Shuttlesworth, Bob Thornbladh, Tom Drake, Larry Gustafson
2nd Row: John Pighee, Jerry Schumacher, Tom Kee, Tom Coyle, Fred Grambau, Paul Seymour, Clint Spearman, Bill Hart, Greg Ellis, Tony Smith, Clint Haslerig
Front Row: Tom Poplawski, Larry Cipa, John Daniels, Don Eaton, Dave Zucarelli, Gary Coakley, Randy Logan, David (Bo) Rather, Alan Walker, Jim Coode
Resumo:
Back Row: b>Chris Grieves, Bob Franks, Gregg Willner, Dave Goldwaithe, Mark Slaughter, John Mandich, Pat Watts, James Blue, Nick Labun, Tony Woodford, C. Newhof, Jeff Lawley
9th Row: Steve Knickerbocker, Kyron Williams, Stacy Johnson, John Weisenburger, Bob Hollway, Chip Pederson, Dale Keitz, Tim Malinak, Leon Richardson, Rock Lindsay, Lewis Smith, Woody Brown
8th Row: Scott Smith, Mark Braman, Bob Patek, Jon Giesler, Mark Torzy, Curtis Greer, William Jackson, Jerry Meter, Rick Leach, Dave Stavale, Tom Melita
7th Row: Mike Smith, Tom Seabron, Mark DeSantis, Frank Bell, Harlan Huckleby, Gene Johnson, Mark Schmerge, Russell Davis, John Arbeznik, Andy Jackson, Dennis Richardson
6th Row: Joe Holland, Steve Nauta, Kevin King, Max Richardson, Dave Harding, Mike Kenn, Dominic Tedesco, Jim Pickens, Ray Johnson, Phil Brown, Ken Bush, Roger Bettis
5th Row: Roger Szafranski, Dwight Hicks, Scott Corbin, Mark Donahue, Bill Dufek, Rex Mackall, John Anderson, Derek Howard, Greg Bartnick, Walt Downing, Terry Stefan, Asst. Coach Bill McCartney
4th Row: Asst. Coach Paul Schudel, Curt Stephenson, Rob Carian, Phil Andrews, Eric Phelps, Steve Graves, Gerry Szara, Jim Hackett, Pete Traber, Steve Anderson, Bob Wood, Darrell Truitt, Phil Brumbaugh, Asst. Coach Jack Harbaugh
3rd Row: Asst. Coach Gary Moeller, Asst. Coach Tom Reed, Asst. Coach Jed Hughes, Jerry Zuver, Rick White, Jim Hall, Mike Strabley, Jerry Vogele, Jim Smith, Rob Lytle, John Hennessy, Bob Lang, Jim Bolden, John Ceddia, A. Miller, Asst. Coach Dennis Brown
2nd Row: Asst. Coach Tirrel Burton, Asst. Coach Jerry Hanlon, Greg Morton, Tom Jensen, George Przygodski, Mike Holmes, Co-Captain Kirk Lewis, Jeff Perlinger, Steve King, Dan Jilek, Jim Czirr, Bill Hoban, Calvin O'Neal, Chuck Randolph, Asst. Coach Chuck Stobart
Front Row: Mark Elzinga, Jerry Collins, Kurt Kampe, Rick Koschalk, Dave Devich, Co-captain Gordon Bell, Co-Captain Don Dufek, Tim Davis, Keith Johnson, Les Miles, Dave Whiteford, Greg Strinko, Head Coach Bo Schembechler
Resumo:
Back Row: Paul Schmidt, Mike Gittleson, Rick Clark, Vance Bedford, Brady Hoke, Jim Herrmann, Mike DeBord, Fred Jackson, Bobby Morrison, Stan Parrish, Erik Campbell, Terry Malone, Scot Loeffler, Jon Falk, Phil Bromley, Mike Elston
8th Row: Tim Murphy, Dave Dean, Dr. Edward Wojtys, Dr. C. Daniel Hendrickson, Danielle Tiernan, Steve Connelly, Dwight Mosely, Scott Panique, Kirk Moundros, Tad Van Pelt, Mike Sajdak, Pete Clifford, Rob Abin, Rick Brandt, Mark Ouimet, Kelly Cox, Eric Dean, Buster Stanley, Jim Schneider
7th Row: Daydrion Taylor, Todd Howard, Walter Cross, Evan Coleman, Julius Curry, Justin Fargas, Hayden Epstein, Larry Foote, Shawn Lazarus, Victor Hobson, Dave Armstrong, Deitan Dubuc, Jonathan Goodwin, John Wood, Dennis Baker, Jason Ptak, Kyle Froelich, Paul Tannous
6th Row: Aaron Richards, Cyle Young, P.J. Cwayna, Jeremy Miller, Michael Manning, Jake Malacos, Brodie Killian, Gary Rose, Rudy Smith, Joe Denay, Bennie Joppru, Dan Rumishek, Dave Petruziello, Drew Henson, Dave Terrell, Marquise Walker, Cato June
5th Row: Patrick McCall, James Whitley, William Peterson, Anthony Thomas, Ray Jackson, Bill Seymour, Shawn Thompson, Kurt Anderson, Jason Brooks, Ben Mast, Adam Adkins, Todd Mossa, Bob Fraumann, Eric Brackins, Eric Rosel, DeWayne Patmon, Anthony Jordan
4th Row: Manus Edwards, Chris Roth, Dan Williams, LeAundre Brown, Eric Wilson, Chad Carpenter, Ian Gold, Marcus Knight, Eric Warner, Maurice Williams, Jake Frysinger, Grady Brooks, Cory Sargent, Ryan Parini, Andy Sechler, Jeff Del Verne
3rd Row: Brent Washington, Kevin Bryant, Jeff Smokevich, Mark Bergin, Kenneth Jackson, Jeff Holtry, David Brandt, Steve Hutchinson, Jeff Backus, Jason Kapsner, Tommy Hendricks, Dhani Jones, Jared Chandler, Tate Schanski, Brandon Kornblue, Matt Johnson
2nd Row: Jay Feely, Darren Petterson, Jason Vinson, Noah Parker, Aaron Shea, James Hall, Steve Frazier, Chris Ziemann, Jeff Potts, Tom Brady, Josh Williams, Patrick Kratus, DiAllo Johnson, Rob Renes, Kraig Baker
Front Row: Head Coach Lloyd Carr, Marcus Ray, Andre Weathers, Nate Miller, Sam Sword, Juaquin Feazell, Mark Campbell, Jon Jansen, Jerame Tuman, Clint Copenhaver, Tai Streets, Scott Dreisbach, Chris Singletary, Clarence Williams
Resumo:
Back Row: Paul Schmidt, Mike Gittleson, Mike Elston, Teryl Austin, Brady Hoke, Jim Herrmann, Mike DeBord, Fred Jackson, Bobby Morrison, Stan Parrish, Erik Campbell, Terry Malone, Scot Loeffler, Jon Falk, Scott Draper, Phil Bromley, Jim Schneider
8th Row: Tim Murphy, Dr. Edward Wojtys, Dr. C. Daniel Hendrickson, Kevin Undeen, Mark Borgman, Brian Smalls, Michael Kaselitz, Joe Ghannam, Tommy Huff, Dave Eklund, Rick Brandt, Bob Bland, Mark Ouimet, Kelly Cox, Dennis Coyle, Zach Adami
7th Row: Jason Clyne, Brandon Williams, Greg Brooks, Shantee Orr, Jeremy LeSueur, Carl Biggs, Dave Pearson, Ronald Bellamy, Tyrece Butler, John Navarre, Andy Mignery, Andy Brown, Grant Bowman, Courtney Morgan, Phil Brabbs*, Kyle Blerlein, Chris Roth
6th Row: P.J. Cwayna, TommyJones, Tad Van Pelt, Dwight Mosley, Scott Panique, Stephen Baker, Blake Nasif, Joe Sgroi, Tony Pape, Demeterius Soloman, Norman Boebert, John Spytek, Phil Brackins, B.J. Askew, Charles Drake, Brent Cummings, Ryan Beard, Jon Shaw
5th Row: Aaron Richards, Jason Ptak, Todd Howard, Walter Cross, Julius Curry, Justin Fargas, Bennie Joppru, Dan Rumishek, Dave Petruziello, Shawn Lazarus, Victor Hobson, Dave Armstrong, Deitan Dubuc, Cato June, John Wood, Kyle Froelich, Kirk Moundros
4th Row: Mark Bergin, Cyle Young, Bob Fraumann, Kurt Anderson, Todd Mossa, Rudy Smith, Evan Coleman, Hayden Epstein, Larry Foote, Joe Denay, Drew Henson, Dave Terrell, Marquise Walker, Gary Rose, Michael Manning, Jeremy Miller
3rd Row: Matt Johnson, Ryan Parini, James Whitley, Bill Seymour, Anthony Thomas, Shawn Thompson, Adam Adkins, Jake Frysinger, Ben Mast, Eric Brackins, Eric Rosel, DeWayne Patmon, Dan Williams, Cory Sargent, Brandon Kornblue
2nd Row: Tate Schanski, Jeff Smokevitch, Kevin Bryant, Eric Wilson, Grady Brooks, David Brandt, Steve Frazier, Steve Hutchinson, Jeff Backus, Jason Kapsner, Andy Sechler, Eric Warner, Ken Jackson, Jeff Del Verne
Front Row: Chris Ziemann, Josh Williams, Tom Brady, Patrick Kratus, DiAllo Johnson, Rob Renes, Head Coach Lloyd Carr, Dhani Jones, Ian Gold, Marcus Knight, Tommy Hendricks, Aaron Shea, James Hall
Resumo:
4th Row: (12) Nick Alexander, Jeff Van Sickle, Mike Seestedt, David Parrish, Rob Bobeda, J.J. Putz, Bryan Cranson, Joe Young, Brian Berryman, John Papp, Ryan Kelley, Vince Pistilli.
3rd Row: (12) Trainer Rex Thompson, Jason Alcaraz, Pete Martay, Brian Bush, Robbie Reid, Matt Herr, Luke Bonner, Mike Haskell, Bryce Ralston, Bobby Scales, Dan Sanborn, Student Trainer Rich Wright.
2nd Row (12) Derek Besco, Mario Garza, Jr., Mike Hribernik, Tyler Steketee, Brian Steinbach , Assistant Coach Chris Harrison, Head Coach Geoff Zahn, Assistant Coach Matt Hyde, Brian Kalczynski, Mick Kalahar, Mike Cervenak, Bryan Besco.
Front Row: (11, Sitting) Student Manager Josh Taft, Seth Greene, Kevin Quinn, Bill LaRosa, Scott Tousa, C.J. Ghannam, Stephen Lenick, Andy Hood, Mike Norkus, Student Manager Jeff Singer, Groundskeeper Erich Keil.
Resumo:
4th Row: (12) Trainer Joel Pickerman, Nick Alexander, Vince Pistilli, Nate Wright, Kirk Taylor, Phil Lorbert, Jeff Trzos, Nick Bellows, Joe Young, Jeff Sandor, Mike Sokol, Student Trainer Jaye Peterson.
3rd Row: (12) Rob Bobeda, David Parrish, Bryan Cranson, Dan Sanborn, John Papp, Robbie Reid, Luke Bonner , Ryan Kelly, Pete Martay, Andy Hood, Bryce Ralston, Student Trainer Todd Sonquist.
2nd Row (11) Mike Seestedt, Brian Bush, Jason Alcaraz, Mike Cervenak, Assistant Coach Chris Harrison, Head Coach Geoff Zahn, Assistant Coach Matt Hyde, Assistant Coach John Edman, Bobby Scales, J.J. Putz, Bryan Besco.
Front Row: (10, Sitting) Student Manager Josh Taft, Bobby Korecky, Jay Dines, Scott Tousa, C.J. Ghannam, Kevin Quinn, Bill LaRosa, Dan Dombos, Aaron Wilkens, Student Manager Jeff Singer.