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He became a legend for the way he played the sport of lacrosse, but Cornell's Eamon McEneaney's impact as a person was far greater than that as a player.
By
Suzanne Eschenbach
Ivy50
February 21, 2007
Articles in The Cornell Daily Sun
By
various authors
The Cornell Daily Sun
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His
Poems Did Not Stop for Death
By
Michelle York
New York Times
January 9,
2005
Poetic
Justice
Family of 9/11 victim gives life
to his verse
By Peter McDermott
Irish Echo Online
October 27, 2004
'Poetry
in Motion'
McEneaney Remembered with Visiting Lectureship
By Jim Roberts
Cornell Alumni Magazine
November/December 2002; Page 2
Honoring
Lacrosse's Loss
Hall of Fame Plans to Memorialize Cornell Legend McEneaney, Dozens of
Others
By Christian Swezey
Special to The Washington Post
Wednesday, September 11, 2002; Page D06
Eamon
McEneaney's plaque is on display at the U.S. Lacrosse Hall of Fame. He
was among several former players killed in terrorist attacks. (Steve
Ruark - AP)
Cornell
University Alumni Class Notes
The Light That Won't Go Out
McEneaney's Memory Lives On, One Year Later
New York Daily News; New York, N.Y.; Sep 10, 2002; MIKE LUPICA
Former Cornell Lacrosse Star
Honored
By JOHN KEKIS
Associated Press; April 29, 2002 Sewanhaka High Establishes Eamon McEneaney Memorial Scholarship Fund
Florida Park Dispatch; March 8, 2002 |