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PLU Athletic Hall of Fame
1994 Inductees
(Inducted Oct. 7, 1994)
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DOUG HERLAND
(Men's Crew and Coach)
Doug Herland's story is interesting not only
from the perspective that he was an Olympic medalist, but
that he also suffered from Osteogenesis Imperfecta, also known
as brittle bones disease. Through courage and determination,
he pursued his athletic interests at Pacific Lutheran, where
he became a coxswain, and later, coach of the program. In
1984, he not only earned a spot on the United States Olympic
team in his seventh try, he took home the Olympic bronze medal
in the pairs with coxswain event at the Los Angeles Games.
Herland's interest in rowing continued after the Olympic Games.
With grant money funded through the Department of Education,
his "Rowing In the Mainstream" program became successful
at the national level. Herland traveled across the country
for clinics, teaching physically-challenged and able-bodied
people to row and to set up their own rowing programs. Herland
died on March 26, 1991, at the age of 39.
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HARRY
McLAUGHLIN
(Men's Basketball, 1946-50)
Harry McLaughlin, who played from 1946-47
until 1949-50, was arguably the first "great" in
Pacific Lutheran men's basketball annals. He was a bit of
Magic Johnson and the Harlem Globetrotters while on the court,
combining excellent ball-handling skills with showmanship
to give the audience a real show. McLaughlin ranks third on
the all-time PLU scoring list with 1,783 points. He averaged
17.0 points per game as a freshman, his highest per-game average,
and never averaged less than 12.9 per contest. In addition,
he twice earned Evergreen Conference All-Star honors. Since
leaving Pacific Lutheran, McLaughlin, himself an American
Indian, has been involved in Indian affairs in South Dakota.
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ELMER PETERSON
(Football)
When Elmer Peterson played college football,
there were no facemasks, and players stayed on the field throughout
the game, playing both offense and defense. Peterson started
his collegiate career with the great PLC Gladiators teams
of the early 1940s. After a stint in the military during World
War II, Peterson returned to Pacific Lutheran College and
collegiate football. He was an all-conference guard, coached
by his former teammate, Marv Tommervik. Peterson was the starting
left guard on the 1947 PLC team that finished with a 7-0-2
record and won the Pear Bowl in Medford, Oregon.
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| KRISTY
PURDY ARMENTINO
(Women's Cross Country and Track & Field)
Kristy Purdy set a number of firsts in Pacific
Lutheran women's athletics. She was the first woman in PLU
track and field history to win a national championship, taking
the 10,000-meter title at the AIAW Division III nationals
in 1982. She also was the first-ever PLU All-American in track
and field, placing fifth in the 10,000 at the AIAW nationals
in 1981. Both performances earned her first team All-America
accord. Purdy earned first team All-America honors three times
in cross country, including a personal best fourth-place finish
at nationals as a junior in 1982, and twice in track &
field. She was named Pacific Lutheran Woman of the Year in
Sports in 1983. |
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LARRY GREEN
(Football)
Defensive tackle and team co-captain Larry
Green was the first of football coach Frosty Westering's 21
first team NAIA All-America performers. Green, a 27-year-old
Vietnam veteran, earned All-America honors in 1975 after compiling
48 tackles, including 34 unassisted stops, in nine games.
That same year, he was named to the Northwest Conference,
NAIA District 1 and Little All Northwest first teams, and
was co-winner of the team's Most Valuable Defensive Player
award. His performance helped the Lutes to a 7-2 record and
the No. 10 ranking in the final NAIA national poll. During
the 1974 season at PLU, his only other as a Lute, he was a
unanimous Northwest Conference all-star selection.
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