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PLU Athletic Hall of Fame
1996 Inductees
(Inducted Oct. 11, 1996)
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Dr. DAVID OLSON
(Athletic Director)
Dr. David Olson built Pacific Lutheran University
athletics into one of the premiere small college programs
in the United States during his 28 years at the school. Dr.
Olson served as athletic director and dean of the School of
Physical Education from 1968-96. During Olson’s tenure,
PLU athletic teams won nine National Association of Intercollegiate
Athletics championships, including three each in football
and women’s soccer, two in softball and one in women’s
cross country. At the same time, PLU garnered 167 conference
titles and 25 conference all-sports awards, while increasing
from 12 to a combined 19 men’s and women’s intercollegiate
sports. He was president of the NAIA from 1985-86, president
of the NAIA Athletic Directors Association from 1991-92, and
chairman of the NAIA Council of Athletic Administrators from
1992-94. He was inducted into the NAIA Hall of Fame in 1989.
Dr. Olson represented the United States as an administrator
at the World University Games in Sofia, Bulgaria (1989), Sapporo,
Japan (1991), Zakopane, Poland (1993) and Jaca, Spain (1995).
In 1984, he was one of only five U.S. educators invited to
the International Olympic Academy in Greece.
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EVANS
“RED” CARLSON
(Football and Basketball)
Newspaper clippings of the time refer to Evans
“Red” Carlson as “speedy,” “fiery,”
“sensational” and “red-headed lightning.”
Apt adjectives to describe this early 1930s multi-sport star
who was arguably the first outstanding player in a lengthy
tradition of Pacific Lutheran gridiron greats. Carlson played
for legendary Coach Cliff Olson, who later would name the
speedster to his All-Time Lutes first team. Carlson, who earned
his nickname for his wavy red hair, was a true “triple-threat”
football player known for his dazzling long runs, a fine passing
arm and pinpoint punts. Carlson, states Olson in the book,
The Gladiators, “was one of the greatest runners we
ever had, a streak of light.” In addition to his football
exploits, Carlson, barely 5 feet 10 inches, played center
on the Pacific Lutheran basketball team and consistently used
his great leaping ability to outjump taller opponents for
rebounds.
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NINA (ANDERSON) LARSON
(Women's Athletics Pioneer)
Nina (Anderson) Larson was a pioneer in women’s
athletics at Pacific Lutheran College during the late 1930s.
Long before women’s sports was officially recognized
at the intercollegiate level, Nina showcased her great athletic
ability in four intramural sports: captain ball, volleyball,
basketball and baseball. During her freshman and junior years,
Nina played all four sports and was on the honor team in each.
As a sophomore, she was on the board of the Women’s
Athletic Association and was chosen to head the basketball
program which precluded her from participation that year.
Her participation helped set the stage for the development
of Pacific Lutheran’s women’s sports programs
through the following decades.
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EARL LUEBKER
(Sports Writer)
Earl Luebker, a sports writer for the Tacoma
Morning News Tribune, first wrote about Pacific Lutheran when
the athletic teams were the Knights, and closely followed
the school throughout its nickname change to Lutes. His coverage
kept the school’s athletic teams on the local and regional
sports pages throughout his 34-year career at the newspaper.
Luebker started as a sports writer in 1949 and worked through
the ranks, becoming the associate sports editor and later
the sports editor in the 1980s. He retired from the Tacoma
News Tribune in 1983. He joins former Tacoma News Tribune
sports writer and associate David James (inducted in 1993)
in the Pacific Lutheran University Athletic Hall of Fame. |
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TOM WHALEN
(Men's Basketball)
Tom Whalen, a 1960s men’s basketball
standout, holds the Pacific Lutheran single-season scoring
record with 656 points and a 24.2 scoring average during the
1963-64 season. He is one of only two Pacific Lutheran players
to score at least 600 points in a season, and with 537 points
and a 19.2 average during the 1962-63 campaign, is one of
only nine to score at least 500 points in a year. With 1,193
career points in only two years, he ranks 14th on the school’s
career scoring list. Whalen scored 41 points in a game as
a senior, second on the single-game scoring list. The lanky
6-5 center, known for a sweeping hook shot, earned numerous
honors while playing at Pacific Lutheran College, including
the following: two-time first team All-Evergreen Conference;
two-time NAIA District I Player of the Year; NAIA second team
All-America; honorable mention UPI All-Coast; and honorable
mention AP All-America.
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ZAMBERLIN
(Football)
John Zamberlin played in the National Football
League for four years with the New England Patriots and two
years with the Kansas City Chiefs. The Lute linebacker earned
first team NAIA All-America and Associated Press Little All-America
honors as a senior in 1978, and was named 1979 PLU Senior
Athlete of the Year. During an outstanding four-year career,
Zamberlin compiled 184 unassisted tackles among his nearly
300 total stops, and also had 10 interceptions and six quarterback
sacks. Three times he earned all-conference and all-district
honors. His number 56 is the only retired PLU football jersey.
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