“Sharon Shepherd, probably the greatest woman athlete to ever attend Linfield …” said Paul Durham, Linfield athletic director, in “Northwest Round-Up” column by Clayton Hannon in March 28, 1960, Oregon Journal/March 29, 1960, Oregonian.
Opportunity Knocked For Gal Shot Putter
By Charlotte Filer, Statesman McMinnville Correspondent
Oregon Statesman, Salem, Ore., Oct. 18, 1958
McMINNVILLE (Special) - Opportunity has knocked in an unexpected fashion for me, but if it just keeps on knocking until 1960 I'll be satisfied," says Linfield's Sharon Shepherd, the young Mapleton, Ore., women's field star who toured Iron Curtain and European countries last summer with the United States track and field team.
The Linfield junior is looking toward the Olympic Games in Rome in 1960 when she hopes to be a member of the American team. This summer she competed in the women, shot put division during meets in Russia and Poland where she placed fourth and in Hungary and Greece where she won second place.
Sharon has never regretted the time and energy she has spent on athletics and says that athletic competition is an important, part of her life. She adds that she has always wanted to excel in some form of athletics and spend much time in athletic competition, but that she never thought it would be in track.
Part of last summer Sharon spent in Salem working in recreation and physical education at the Hillcrest School for Girls.
Right now Sharon is resting up from her exciting summer and playing field hockey on the Linfield intercollegiate women's team besides her regular college studies. She's not exactly loafing though because she still exercises and lifts her weight daily. After hockey season she plans to begin daily shot putting again.
To any young gals with the 1964 to 1968 Olympics in mind she advises that "you have to keep going and working to develop your talents and even when you don’t feel it you have to tell yourself to go on."
She points out that American athletes must help uphold the level of United States prestige aboard. Whatever we do, wherever we go and however we act we’re always representatives of the USA and are being watched as such, she says.
She thinks the language barrier kept any real friendships from being. The Russians are good sports, she adds, but during the practices, they didn't want an American audience. However, when the American team took to the field for practice, the Yankee contestants had a large gathering of the Russian athletes looking on.
Sports in Russia are more important than in America because their athletic competition is all the people have, Sharon observes. Both young and old participate actively or as spectators in athletic contests.
Sharon says that she had no qualms about going to Russia even though the trip occurred at the height of the Lebanon trouble this summer and when the East and West were on the verge of locking horns in more than verbiage.
Sharon would like to see more American women enter athletics. She says the women owe it to themselves and their country to develop all their natural talent and to keep mentally and physically fit. "Athletics can certainly help there," she adds. She also feels that few American women know if they have athletic ability and what enjoyment they can gain from this ability once it is realized