Total results found: 7
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 Sterling H. Chadwick Elected: 1992  Washington & Lee University
Sterling H. Skeet Chadwick began his lacrosse career at Towson High School, where he played two years of varsity lacrosse under head coach and fellow Hall of Fame inductee Bill Thomas, and won the Baltimore County Public School Championships of 1969 and 1970. He and fellow Hall of Fame Inductee, Jack Thomas, co-captained these teams.

At Washington & Lee, Chadwick earned First Team All-American honors as a goalie in 1973 and 1974. In 1974, he received . . .

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 Joseph A. Cuozzo Elected: 1992  Cortland State University
Joesph A. Cuozzo attended Yonkers High School in New York, a public school which offered no lacrosse program. While attending SUNY at Cortland, Cuozzo was first introduced to lacrosse. He played two years varsity lacrosse as a midfielder at Cortland State, graduating in 1959.

Upon graduation, Cuozzo played for the Suffolk Lacrosse Club from 1956 - 1964, and officiated high school lacrosse from 1960 to 1966 in Suffolk County.

In 1969, Cuozzo became the head coach of . . .

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 Oren R. Lyons Elected: 1992  Syracuse University
Chief Oren R. Lyons, Jr. grew up on the Onondaga Reservation. Lyons learned his goalkeeping skills by watching his father, Oren Lyons, Sr., knock down shots with some of the quickest hands in the Haudenosaunee (Iroquois) Confederacy.

At 17, Lyons was in the nets against the awesome Angus Thomas, who had been banished for accidentally killing a player with his heavy shot. Thomas, trying to prove he was as good as ever, wound . . .

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 Eamon J. McEneaney Elected: 1992  Cornell University
Eamon J. McEneaney began his lacrosse career at Sewanhaka High School on Long Island, New York. He played varsity lacrosse from 1971 - 1973 under head coach and fellow Hall of Fame Inductee Bill Ritch.

A varsity lacrosse player for three years, McEneaney earned First Team All-American honors at Cornell University in 1975, 1976 and 1977. (At this time, freshmen were not eligible for varsity lacrosse.) He was an attackman for Cornell's National . . .

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 J. Douglass Radebaugh Elected: 1992  University of Maryland
J. Douglas Radebaugh began his lacrosse career at Calvert Hall College High School in Baltimore, where he was a member of the Maryland Scholastic Association Championship Team of 1971.

At the University of Maryland, Radebaugh earned First Team All-American Honors in 1975 and Second Team All-American Honors in 1973 and 1974. As a midfielder for the Terrapins, he played on Maryland's National Championship teams of 1973 and 1975. In 1975, Radebaugh received the Lt. Donald C. . . .

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 Rosabelle Sinclair Elected: 1992  St. Leonard's School
For the first time in its 36 year history, the Lacrosse Hall of Fame inducted a woman. Miss Sinclair taught at Bryn Mawr from 1925 to 1951. Shortly before her death in 1978, she had the pleasure of knowing that an athletic field at the school had been named in her honor. A graduate of St. Leonard's School in Scotland, where woman's lacrosse originated, Miss Sinclair introduced the sport at Bryn Mawr in 1926. Although . . .
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 Ray Van Orman Elected: 1992  Cornell University
Dr. Ray Van Orman attended Ithaca High School where he played on the football team that defeated the Cornell Varsity team in a practise game. He matriculated to Cornell University where he graduated with a degree of Doctor of Veterinary Medicie in 1908.

At Cornell, Van Orman was one of the nation's leading football ends, playing for Coach Glenn "Pop" Warner. From 1911 through 1919, he was an assistant football coach at Cornell.

In 1920, he became . . .

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