Tuesday, January 24, 2023

They should be Linfield Hall of Famers: Avard Whitman, Billy Maxwell and Steve Thomas


Within the past few years Avard Whitman, Billy Maxwell and Steve Thomas have been formally nominated for the Linfield Athletics Hall of Fame.

It’s said absence makes the heart grow fonder. But, absence makes people forget, too.

All three—Avard, Billy and Steve --  are deceased and those who knew them and their impact are dead or closer to the grave than many people walking this earth.

This is certainly an "out of sight, out of mine" situation.

Ken Williams walked in the footsteps of Avard Whitman (Nov 3, 1899-Oct 14, 1964) as Linfield registrar and NWC/Northwest Conference faculty athletic rep. Ken is in the Linfield Athletics Hall of Fame. Avard, who graduated from Linfield (then McMinnville College) in 1921, is not.

Billy Maxwell (July 22, 1902-Feb. 9, 1976) operated Linfield football and basketball scoreboards. Billy was a consummate Linfield football and basketball fan driving to what seemed to be every road game. Ez Koch and Norm Goss followed him in his scoreboard duties. They are in the Linfield Athletics Hall of Fame. Billy, a 1924 Linfield graduate, is not.

Steve Thomas (April 13, 1918-Oct. 18, 1977) worked tirelessly as a one-person groundskeeper to assure the Linfield campus were top notch. He took loving care of Maxwell Field, where Linfield plays baseball, and the Linfield baseball field which preceded the current Helser/Wright complex. Steve toiled on the Linfield campus from 1948, the year he graduated from Linfield, until he died on the Linfield campus on the job in 1977

=AVARD WHITMAN

http://wildcatville.blogspot.com/2021/01/e-avard-whitman-should-be-enshrined-in.html

=BILLY MAXWELL

http://wildcatville.blogspot.com/2021/01/please-endorse-this-nomination-billy.html

https://wildcatville.blogspot.com/2008/05/billy-maxwell-long-time-linfield.html

=STEVE THOMAS

http://wildcatville.blogspot.com/2019/05/remebering-steve-thomas-linfielder.html




Friday, January 20, 2023

Part of Seattle Times sports column by Eugene H. Russell, sports editor, from Dec. 16, 1952. Sports section. Page 36

Part of Seattle Times sports column by Eugene H. Russell, sports editor, from Dec. 16, 1952. Sports section. Page 36

Students to Debate De-Emphasis of Football

STUDENTS at Linfield College of McMinnville, Ore., have been engaging in a series of debates in recent weeks over a complete de-emphasis of football at Linfield. Dr. Harry Dillin, president of Linfield, described the debates as part of “the quiet revolution” taking place at Linfield and other colleges pointing toward greater de-emphasis in collegiate Sports. Linfield, with 500 students, is a member of the Northwest Conference.

The student debates grew out of a move to shift a greater part of the cost of athletics from the students to the college administration. Paul Little, student-body president,  said 57 per cent of the student activities fee, $17 a semester, foes into the men’s athletic fund, mostly for football. Of this $2, which is matched by the college administration money, goes to pay the annual deficit, estimated at $2,000, and attributed mainly to football. The de-emphasis move is aimed at bringing down the cost of athletics nearer to the amount allowed for other extracurricular activities.

Linfield won two football games and lost three in the past season, ending fourth in the six-member Northwest Conference.


 

 


Monday, January 16, 2023

1857-1928, Melrose Hall



On Jan. 30, 1858, the Baptist College at McMinnville was chartered by the Oregon Territorial Legislature. Later it was named McMinnville College and, after that, Linfield.


The first president of the institution was George C. Chandler. He served from 1857 to 1860.

 

Pioneer Hall, Linfield’s first building, was opened in 1883.

 

Depending on the source, Melrose Hall at Linfield came into being in 1928 or 1929.

 

Photos show stone engraving “1857-1928” on Melrose. As you face the building, it’s on the far left exterior corner of Melrose.

Jane Claire Dirks-Edmunds, 1912-2003



J

Jane Claire Dirks-Edmunds, 1912-2003

Read more about her: https://digitalcommons.linfield.edu/jcde

A memorial program for Dr. Jane Claire Dirks-Edmunds was Jan. 8, 2004, in McMinnville at the Hillside retirement community where she lived. Two hymns were sung during the service and Charles Walker, Linfield president emeritus read a poem.

She died at age 91 at Hillside on Dec. 29, 2003.

A 1937 Linfield graduate, she taught in the Linfield Biology Dept., 1941-1974.

The youngest of 10 children, she was born June 9, 1912, in Baxter County in the Arkansas Ozarks, daughter of Peter B. and Lydia Gates Dirks.

At about six months old, she and the Dirks family moved to Kansas and lived in several areas of the state. In 1924, the family moved to the Puget Sound area in Washington, then to the Umpqua Valley in Oregon the following year.

She had attended at least eight primarily one-room schools before entering Oregon’s Roseburg High School (Umpqua Valley, Douglas County) and graduating in 1930.

Then, she worked two years in the Douglas National Bank in Roseburg before enrolling at Linfield College in McMinnville in 1932. She graduated magna cum laude from Linfield in 1937 with a bachelor's degree in biology.

She enrolled as a graduate assistant in zoology at the University of Illinois and four years later completed studies for a doctorate in the department of zoology, with a specialization in ecology.

With that, she became in 1941 one of Linfield's first two women graduates to receive doctoral degrees. That fall, at registration time, she responded to a request from Linfield to join the faculty as an instructor in biology and assistant to the registrar, thus becoming the first woman to hold a doctorate on the faculty. It remained that way for 33 years until she retired in 1974 as professor of biology, emerita.

She married Milton Ray Edmunds on Aug. 11, 1944, in Salem while on a leave of absence from Linfield to teach at Whitworth College in Spokane.

He was born in Bandon, Coos County, in 1895, and graduated in 1925 in forestry from Oregon Agricultural College (now Oregon State University) and was a forester in the McMinnville area. During World War I he served in the US Navy.

She returned to McMinnville, and after a leave of a year, started teaching again at Linfield in 1946 as an assistant professor in the biology department.

Dr. Dirks-Edmunds said of her husband: "His knowledge of forestry and interest in ecology was of invaluable assistance in my research and teaching. We shared many delightful experiences, as well as trials and tribulations."

They lived their entire married life in McMinnville. He preceded her in death in 1983, dying at age 88.

A love of nature began in childhood for Dirks-Edmunds. She became fascinated by the majestic ancient forests she found in the Northwest after moving west in 1924. She studied in the Sonora Desert in Arizona in 1967 and again in 1972, and also had a brief introduction to the ecology of Guatemala's Lake Atitlan and tropical forest.

After retiring, she traveled to the Swiss Alps and other places in Europe; New York City and Shelter Island, N.Y.; Bar Harbor, Belfast and Orono, Maine; the Tall Grass Prairie of the Midwest as well as other sites, including many in Oregon.

She found writing, aside from teaching, her most cherished activity. She wrote a variety of short essays and poems, scientific papers and lectures.

"Not Just Trees," the story of her research and life experiences in forest ecology” was published in 1999 by Washington State University Press. Promotional text for the book said, “This gracefully written story—revealed through a meticulous sixty-year study of the flora and fauna in a small parcel of the majestic Oregon Coast Range forest that is selectively logged and finally clear-cut—reveals all that is lost when ancient stands of trees are destroyed.”

In its review, January Magazine said, “Once in a while you encounter a book so special, so steeped in love and integrity that—regardless of the subject—it’s impossible not to be drawn in. Not Just Trees is that sort of book.”

In 1992 she wrote "Roots, Visions and Mission," the 125-year history of the First Baptist Church of McMinnville of which she was a member since 1944.

Her doctoral thesis, "A Comparison of Biotic Communities of the Cedar-Hemlock and Oak-Hickory Associations" was published in Ecological Monographs for July 1947.

She was a member of the scientific honorary, Sigma XI; a charter member of the Oregon Academy of Science; and an emeritus member of the Ecological Society of Conservancy, the Sierra Club, the Wilderness Society, Save-the-Redwoods League and Defenders of Wildlife. She was listed in "American Men and Women of Science."

Dr. Dirks-Edmunds was survived by sisters Myrtle Hartley of McMinnville, Dorothy Voodell of Ashland and Alice Beck of El Dorado Springs, Mo.; 11 nieces and nephews and numerous grand- and great-grandnieces and nephews, as well as numerous friends and loyal former students.

Memorial contributions may be sent to the Jane Claire Dirks-Edmunds Lectureship at Linfield College, the McMinnville Baptist Church, The Ocean Conservancy and The Wilderness Society. Disposition was by cremation at Little Chapel of the Chimes, Portland.

Photos: Dr. Jane-Clarie Dirks Edmunds (Photo date: 1940). A tree and plaque honoring her planted outside on campus, behind Melrose Hall (Photo dates: Jan. 16, 2023).

Wednesday, January 11, 2023

The Mahaffeys and McMinnville’s Lon Dee Flowers

 


The Mahaffeys and McMinnville’s Lon Dee Flowers

If you’re a Linfielder of the right vintage, you remember the Mahaffeys and Lon Dee Flowers of McMinnville. It was located on Baker Street/99W where Tommy's Bicycle Shop is now.

The Mahaffeys were Marian Mahaffey and her husband, Dr. Roy “Hap” Deane Mahaffey.

He was a 1928 Linfield grad and a long time Linfield College speech and drama professor, forced into retirement from Linfield in 1970 by Gordon Bjork, then Linfield president.

Born in Illinois, he grew up in Colorado and Idaho. Dr. Mahaffey died at age 80 in McMinnville on Aug. 11, 1985.

A 1929 Linfield grad, Mrs. Mahaffey died at age 83 on Nov. 17, 1991, in Portland.

Born in Iowa, she grew up in Spokane and graduated from that city’s North Central High School.

Marian Ruth Karn, 19, and Roy Deane Mahaffey, 23, married Nov. 12, 1927, in Vancouver, Wash.

Mrs. Mahaffey began working at Lon Dee flower in 1941 as a designer and bookkeeper. She – and apparently her husband as a silent partner -- purchased the shop in the early 1960s. She sold the business in 1984.

Mrs. Mahaffey employed Linfield students to work in the shop and deliver flowers in the Lon Dee truck.

Photos posted here of Marian Mahaffey as a Linfield senior from the 1929 Linfield Oak Leaves yearbook thanks to Rich Schmidt and staff from Linfield Archives.

Read more about the Mahaffeys and Lon here (URL link below):

http://wildcatville.blogspot.com/2012/01/mahaffey-on-campus-and-off.html

Tuesday, January 10, 2023

Facets of victory: ‘Hustle, hustle’

 


Facets of victory: 'Hustle, hustle'

Click on photo for a larger rendition. 

Note: This two-page feature -- from the March 6, 1969, issue of LINEWS, Linfield College student newspaper -- does NOT include all players from the Linfield men’s basketball team during the 1968-1969 season.

TED WILSON

Here is the boss of the show

Ted Wilson is his name

And he really knows the game

In the heat of battle

When something goes wrong

He goes to his bench

… singing a song

And while the head man

Has no hair

If things go sour

He just gives the Eagle Stare.

 

 

DAN BEESON

Here is centerman Dan Beeson

He just won't listen to reason

Up he goes, down he comes

Sometimes he scores just for fun

But needing two points in a pinch

We pass to "Beese" for the cinch

When Beeson pumps and sometimes jumps

Someone's goin' to collect their lumps

 

 

GARY DONNELL

He moves with such grace

And is deadlier than mace

That's Gary Donnell The Wildcat's chief ace

When he rises into the sky

And casts off his pumping, jumping

Looper

It's for sure a straight in scooper

With his great speed and reflexes

He puts on the opponents, many hexes

 

 

JOHN VENEMON

He's tall and he's lean

Just like a string bean

They call him the snake

He's a man of action

And will not break

When the "Beese" gets tired

It's Venemon they call

To handle the ball

 

 

LARRY SAPP

He's like that stuff that

Oozes out of trees

It's Sapp who's sticky on defense

And a branch on offense

Who limbs out to snatch that

Ball and scores while

He runs Rusty Rae into

The wall.

 

 

LOREN BRUNER

Loren Bruner is his handle

Of his sweeping hooker

Nobody can hold a candle

Scoring with a run, and a jump

Just watch he doesn't pump

He passes and cuts

And steals the ball

Maybe someday we'll see

His picture on the wall

 

 

MIKE CONKLIN

Up and down the court he roars

And sometimes even soars

That's Mike Conklin on the run

He takes the ball and is the gun

He bounces up and down the court

And if he misses gives a snort

But when he scores

The crowd just roars.

 

 

PAT SMITHEY

Hi ho, Hi ho

It's Patrick Smithey on the go,

He fakes to the left

And drives to the right

Sometimes, man, he's out of sight

He takes the ball,

And moves it so cool,

He makes the defensive man look

Like a fool

 

 

ROSS PETERSON

Slow on the starts

But fast with his eye

Ross Peterson can't die

His shot from the corner

Is so accurate

If he misses it, it must be fate

A home grown guy

The limit's the sky

He casts off again

As the baskets start to rain

 

TERRY MILLER

Then there's Terry Miller

Standing strong like a pillar

He's not so tall,

Some would even call him small

But give him the ball

And he's got gall

From the outside

He is deadly as sin

He just shoots

And it's in.

 

From LINEWS, Linfield College student newspaper, probably in a March 1969 issue.

Note: This two-page feature does NOT include all players from the Linfield men’s basketball team during the 1968-1969 season. 

Photos by Rusty Rae and Dennis Burkhart

Layout by Dennis Burkhart

Verse by Rusty Rae and Tim Marsh

Thanks to Linfield Archives, Rich Schmidt and company, for vital assistance in 2023.


Own your own copy of the history of Linfield University and the legends that created the ‘winning with class’ tradition

 

Own your own copy of the history of Linfield University and the legends that created the "winning with class" tradition. The book is a detailed account of the greatest athletic success story in Linfield's storied history. Send $24.95 plus $5.00 postage to the address below. MAKE CHECK OUT TO

KAREN ROHLFFS
193 SW BLUE HERON CT.
MCMINNVILLE, OR 97128

503-887-9438


Monday, January 09, 2023

Why Linfield fans should cheer for TCU


 

CHEER FOR TCU ‘HORNED FROGS’ vs. GEORGIA ‘BULLDOGS’

Tonight, Mon., Jan. 9, 2023, in Inglewood, Calif., is the national college football championship game between defending champ University of Georgia and Texas Christian University.

 Here is why you, a Linfielder, should cheer for TCU football. There’s a Linfield connection.

HENRY LEVER

 Linfield Athletics Hall of Famer Henry Lever -- later to become Linfield coach of "all sports," including football, and athletic director -- was Texas Christian University head football coach in the 1911 season. He coached TCU baseball in 1912.

 

Sunday, January 08, 2023

The ‘Eagle Stare’ of Ted Wilson, Linfield College head men’s basketball coach, 1961-1981

 

The ‘Eagle Stare’ of Ted Wilson, Linfield College head men’s basketball coach, 1961-1981

There are some excellent (Linfield men’s basketball 1968-1969) basketball photos in Linfield’s student newspaper Linews taken by students Rusty Rae and Dennis Burkhart.

The verse written in for each player is stretching a poetic license, but here's a sample:

(Ted Wilson, head coach)

"Here is the boss of the show

Ted Wilson is his name

And he really knows the game

In the heat of battle

When something goes wrong

He goes to his bench

                  singing a song

And while the head man has no hair

If things go sour

He just gives the Eagle Stare.”

Congratulations, by the way, to Wilson and crew for a successful season and best of luck at Kansas City next week.

 Source: “Off The Top” column by Tim McAlister, (then) managing editor of the McMinnville N-R/News-Register, March 8, 1969

 Photo of Coach Ted Wilson, Linfield College men’s basketball, 1961-1981, by photographer Rusty Rae. Used with permission of RR in 2023. Ted Wilson died in 1996. Bio info: 

https://wildcatville.blogspot.com/2015/08/ted-wilson-biographical-info.html


Linfield ATO house in November 1968 and March 1969

 


All photos from McMinnville N-R/News-Register. 

Top photo from 16 Nov 1968. 

Photos below from 12 March 1969.


Sept. 4, 1968 (McMinnville N-R): Linfield football starts pre-season drills for new head coach Ad Rutschman

 If the story images are hard to read, 

click on each one to read a larger version. 

Linfield beat Boise State, 17-7, in Boise.







Wednesday, January 04, 2023

SLIDESHOW: Tom Rohlffs’ book: Linfield College 1966-1967 ‘miracle season’ men’s basketball team reunion, 1/3/2023, downtown McMinnville

Tom Rohlffs, Linfield Class of 1969, presented his book, ‘Linfield College and the Miracle (men’s basketball) Season’ during a 1/3/2023 evening reunion in downtown McMinnville of the 1966-1967 Linfield men’s basketball team. Want to buy a copy ($25 each) of the book? Email Tom driving1223@hotmail.com Slideshow by Wildcatville

Tuesday, January 03, 2023

HOWARD GLENN: The first former Linfield College football player to play pro football and the first AFL/American Football League player to die from injuries sustained in a regular season football game.


LINFIELD COLLEGE’S HOWARD GLENN: The first former Linfield College football player to play professional football and the first AFL/American Football League player to die from injuries sustained in a regular season football game.

=Born Sept. 26, 1934 in Louisville, Winston County, and Mississippi.

=Died at age 26 on Oct. 9, 1960, in Houston, Harris County, Texas.

Howard Glenn had connections to:

--Mississippi, where he was born, grew up, and graduated from high school …

--Vancouver, Wash., where he lived and attended two-year Clark College and was a track & field athlete; Clark didn't have football when he attended …

--Aberdeen, Wash., where he attended and played football for two-year Grays Harbor College …

--McMinnville, Ore., where he attended Linfield College, and played football and participated as a track & field athlete ... Glenn lettered playing football for Linfield in the 1955, 1956 and 1957 seasons ...

--Hamilton, Ontario, Canada, where he played for the Hamilton Tiger-Cats of the professional CFL/Canadian Football League

--New York City, where he played for the American Football League's New York Titans. (That team is now the New York Jets of the NFL/National Football League.) He was injured playing for the Titans in a game on Oct 9, 1960, in Houston, Texas, against the AFL Houston Oilers. Later he was taken to a Houston hospital where he died. (The Houston team is now the Tennessee Titans of the NFL/National Football League.)

 

READ about Howard Glenn:

http://wildcatville.blogspot.com/2018/07/howard-glennfootball-player-louisville.html

SEE PHOTOS of Howard Glenn:

http://wildcatville.blogspot.com/2018/07/late-1950s-howard-glenn-linfield.html

READ "The Tragedy of Howard Glenn:”

https://talesfromtheamericanfootballleague.com/the-tragedy-of-howard-glenn