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Dick Edell |
Elected: 2004 |
Towson University |
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Dick Edell is one of the most respected college coaches of all-time. At the time of his induction he ranked fifth among varsity college coaches with 282 career victories and his 17 NCAA Division I tournament appearances ranked second all-time. Edell played lacrosse at Towson and was a head coach at the University of Baltimore (1973-76), Army (1977-1983) and Maryland (1984-2001). Edell was a two-time national coach of the year and led Maryland to the NCAA championship . . .
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Frederick H. Eisenbrandt |
Elected: 1994 |
Duke University |
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A two-time Kelly Award recipient as the outstanding player in the MSA while at Poly, Frederick H. Eisenbrandt, Jr., went on to achieve All-American honors as a mid-fielder at Duke. He played in the 1951 North/South All-Star game before playing for Mt. Washington LC, where he co-captained one of the Open Champion teams. Eisenbrandt then began an officiating career that spanned four decades. He was an active referee for 21 years, and . . .
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Peter H. Eldredge |
Elected: 1989 |
University of Virginia |
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Eldredge played four years varsity at Severn High School where he earned All-MSA honors twice and was chosen as the most valuable player in1968.
As a midfielder at the University of Virginia, Eldredge was a three-time All- American, earning First Team honors in 1971 and 1972, the first Virginia National Title in any sport, and Atlantic Coast Conference titles in 1969, 1970, and 1971. In 1972, Eldredge set a new single season scoring record at . . .
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Charles F. Ellinger |
Elected: 1969 |
University of Maryland |
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Charles Ellinger was born March 2, 1914, in Baltimore, Maryland. Graduated from Baltimore City College High School in 1933 and from the University of Maryland in 1937. He has a Masters Degree in Business Administration from Harvard.
Charlie played lacrosse informally for the Hopkins Bulldogs and then for City and was a member of City's Maryland Scholastic Association Championship Team of 1933. At the University of Maryland, he played on the National Collegiate Championship Teams . . .
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John "Jack" Emmer |
Elected: 2005 |
United States Military Academy |
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Jack Emmer recently retired from Army as the NCAA's all-time winningest coach with 326 career victories. He is one of only two coaches to have guided three teams (Cortland, Washington and Lee, Army) to the NCAA tournament, and he coached the 2002 U.S. Men's Team to the International Lacrosse Federation World Championship. Three times the USILA named him a divisional coach of the year and in 2003 that organization honored him with the Howdy Meyers . . .
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Norman Engelke |
Elected: 2005 |
Cornell University |
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Norm Engelke played midfield on International Lacrosse Federation World Champion U.S. teams in 1982, 1986 and 1990. Following a stellar career at Cornell, where he was a second-team All-American, a North-South All-Star, two-time All-Ivy League selection and Ivy League Player of the Year, Engelke played 13 years of post-collegiate club lacrosse. During that time he won four championships with the Long Island Lacrosse Club and was a four-time all-star in the United States Club Lacrosse . . .
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Milton S. Erlanger |
Elected: 1966 |
Johns Hopkins University |
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Born Baltimore, Maryland, on February 28,1888. Educated at the Marston University School. Entered Johns Hopkins University at the age of 15. Graduated in 1907 with a Bachelor of Arts Degree. While at Hopkins, Milton played lacrosse on the varsity team for three years, and after graduation commuted from New York to play on the graduate team, composed of recently-graduated Hopkins stars. The Hopkins Teams of 1906 and 1907 had the best record in the United . . .
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William W. Evans |
Elected: 1966 |
University of Maryland |
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Moon, as he was known to all his friends and admirers, attended the Business High School, Washington D.C., graduating in 1926. He entered the University of Maryland, graduating with an B.A. degree in 1930, then on to George Washington University for graduate work, receiving his L.L.B. degree in 1934. Moon won freshman letters in football, basketball, and lacrosse, going on from there to win three varsity letters in the same sport, and when he graduated . . .
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