Tuss McLaughry

DeOrmond "Tuss" McLaughry (May 19, 1893 – November 26, 1974) was an American football player and coach.

Of all coaches inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame, McLaughry is the only one with a winning percentage under .500.

McLaughry's coaching career at Dartmouth College was interrupted after two years due to World War II, where McLaughry served as a lieutenant colonel in the United States Marine Corps.

Twenty years after graduating from high school, McLaughry attended night and summer classes to earn his law degree from Northeastern University in Boston, Massachusetts.

McLaughry was instrumental in developing the American Football Coaches Association (AFCA) during his lifetime, even serving a one-year term as President in 1936, and then remaining active with the organization as a volunteer secretary-treasurer from 1940 to 1960.