Thursday, April 20, 2023

Levi Sieg hired as Linfield men's basketball coach

 
Photo above taken 4/28/2023 by Wildcatville.


 

Levi Sieg hired as Linfield men's basketball coach

4/19/2023 from Linfield Sports Info

 Bringing championship pedigree to his new position, Levi Sieg has been named head men's basketball coach at Linfield University, director of athletics Dr. Garry Killgore announced on Wednesday.

Sieg spent 15 years as a member of the Claremont-Mudd-Scripps coaching staff, rising from assistant coach to associate head coach during his tenure. At CMS, he helped lead the Stags to seven Southern California Intercollegiate Athletic Conference championships, the most recent in 2018.

"We are very excited to have Coach Sieg joining us," said Killgore. "He has a wonderful Division III coaching and playing background that will be fantastic here at Linfield. He is pumped to take a great program and make it even better."

A native of Monmouth, Oregon, Sieg returns to the Willamette Valley after residing in Southern California for nearly 30 years.

First of all, I would like to thank athletic director Dr. Garry Killgore, President Dr. Miles Davis and the entire search committee for selecting me to lead the Linfield University men's basketball program," said Sieg. "I couldn't be more excited, thankful and humbled to be joining the Linfield University family and serve as head men's basketball coach."

Seig attended Claremont McKenna College and played four seasons of basketball, graduating in 2000 with a bachelor's degree in economics.

 Following graduation, Sieg worked with Pacific Finance Group for 2½ years before enrolling in the Claremont Graduate University and earning a master's degree in education and a California teaching credential. He completed a second master's degree in coaching and athletic administration from Concordia University in Irvine in 2011.

Sieg has taught economics and government at Claremont High School for 20 years. During the 2003-04 school year, he served as assistant boys basketball coach at CHS before being promoted to head coach in 2004. He led the Wolfpack to the CIF Southern Section Playoffs each year. Sieg joined the CMS coaching staff in time for the 2007-08 academic year.

"Coaching basketball is not just a job for me, it's a passion and a way of life," he said. "I look forward to building the Wildcat basketball program and helping our student-athletes succeed both on and off the court. Our goal is to compete for conference championships every year."

Levi and his wife Natalie are raising three sons: Mason, Clayton and Nash.

https://golinfieldwildcats.com/news/2023/4/19/mens-basketball-levi-sieg-hired-as-linfield-mens-basketball-coach.aspx

Wednesday, April 19, 2023

Amazing life: McMinnville's John Klaus, 1909-2010



Amazing life: McMinnville's John Klaus, 1909-2010

John Klaus, 100-years-old, died Jan. 2, 2010, at Willamette Valley Medical Center in McMinnville with his devoted son and family at his side.

John was born August 25, 1909, in Bison, Kansas, to Henry and Margaret Klaus. Henry and Margaret were of German heritage and moved to Russia for free land. After unrest in Russia, they moved to a German community in La Crosse, Kansas.

John's older sister Ann died at age 17, his brother at 8, and his mother died when he was 10 years old, most likely from the flu of 1918. Younger brothers Henry and Seighardt and sister Alma survived to old age. They were sharecroppers and John spoke only German when he started school. John was proud that he never missed a day of school through his final year of 8th grade.

In 1925 John's father Henry sold all of their possessions including the dog, but not the family Bible and loaded everyone into a Model T. With John driving for the first time, they made their way toward relatives in the Portland, Oregon area. John recalled driving all day one day without seeing another car.

The family had supported themselves doing various jobs and farming, but all of that ended when milk and egg prices took a free fall in 1929. The depression caused John to join the Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC) in 1934 in Colorado. He learned to be a heavy equipment operator and a Roosevelt Democrat. He met Helen Carr, a waitress working at the David Havin Resort in Colorado, and they were married on October 6, 1940. Their marriage lasted 50 years until Helen's death.

With the outbreak of World War Two, John moved to Anchorage, Alaska to construct an airfield. At the end of the war, John, Helen, and 6 month old son Dean traveled to Seattle, Portland, and south to McMinnville. John stopped at Bill Steel's service station and inquired about work. He was told that Compton's was hiring, and so he decided to stay. For the next 50 years they lived in the same house on South Davis Street that he bought the week he arrived for cash, quite an accomplishment for a man who had lost everything in 1934.

In the following years he worked for Wally Wright Paving and Weyerhaeuser in Molalla. In 1953 he decided that he wanted to be home during construction season, so he borrowed enough money from his sister to purchase a truck from Vinton and Larson's. In 1962, with advice from Linfield track coach Hal Smith, John mixed asphalt with tire recap buffing and produced a running surface that is still used today. By 1967 John had invented and constructed a machine that applied the material to mile running tracks throughout the Northwest, including the University of Washington and most of the High Schools as far away as British Columbia.

In 1974 he sold the business to Atlas Surfaces of Lake Oswego and went back to his shop to invent and construct the equipment that processed rubber into mats by applying heat. After many failures, including one in his wife's kitchen, he achieved success. He later sold the business that become R&B Rubber, McMinnville's 5th largest employer.

Upon retirement he continued to develop his ideas. From the environment (he dumped his garbage once a year, everything else was recycled) to health (unpasteurized goat's milk and filberts) to new power sources (harnessing wave energy) were either near genius or just ahead of their time. He had unlimited patience with mechanical things, to try and fail and try again.

John and Helen were life long members of First Presbyterian Church, and they were proud of their many friends in the church. John was also a strong supporter of Friends of Yamhill County. His 100 years of life are a testament to his belief in all things in moderation; and his ability to provide for his family, even after his death, is a testament to his Kansas Depression era youth.

John was preceded in death by his wife Helen, his brothers and sisters, and his special Grandson Dustin. His survived by his son Dean, daughter in law Debbie, grandchildren Danielle Bailey (John), Dyreka Wood (Kevin), Dormilee Kiger (Dylan) and Dorian, and three great grandchildren.

A memorial service will be held Saturday, January 9, 2009 at 1:00 pm at the Chapel of Macy and Son. Memorials may be given to McMinnville Wildlife Rehabilitation c/o Macy and Son Funeral Directors.


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John Klaus, pioneer in track & field ovals

By Scott Phoenix, USA Track & Field Newsletter, Nov. 8, 2019

The next Olympics returns to the site of the last Olympics to be contested on a cinder track. Amidst the red splashings in the rain and reddish dust on socks in the dry, nobody in 1964 had any idea what was to come in the world of tracks.

Fifty-five years before, 1909, a baby was born who was destined to become a giant in the world of track surfaces. Due to circumstances of his birth, he only made it through the 8th grade, working this labor job and that, but after the Depression hit and Franklin D. Roosevelt came to be President, the Civilian Conservation Corps was formed and this youth had a ticket out of abject poverty.

Assigned to work in Alaska during WW2, he came after its end to Portland and then McMinnville, where opportunities looked good, and that is how John Klaus came to be an Oregonian.

Eventually he started an equipment business near Linfield College Memorial Stadium/Maxsell Field, which included a modest, 2-man paving effort. About 1963 the then Linfield track coach, Hal Smith, wanted to know if Klaus could produce a softer surface for jumping events, a challenge Klaus accepted. He had equipment to use, but no material to put in it.

He came upon the idea of using what were called buffings, scrapings off the treads of bias-ply tires so that retread surfaces could be applied. Klaus's idea was to combine these bufferings with roofing asphalt, and he used a device of his own making, a 1’x2’ box into which the mixture could be poured so that propane–fueled burners could heat the ingredients and apply them to the ground as the box was dragged along. At first Klaus drove to Portland to bring back 55-gallon containers of bufferings, but as the business expanded, he switched to dumpster loads.

His first track was laid in 1967 in Estacada. For an entire track, a much larger heated screed was needed, so Klaus came up with something six feet wide that could be pulled behind a specially-geared truck to keep the speed at 1 mph. Carrying 1,000 gallons of asphalt and bufferings, the truck made one swath of the track, a day-long operation, then would be driven to Gresham for another load of asphalt to repeat the process three more times.

Klaus improved and improved again his process over the years and eventually put in as many as 14 tracks a year. They included a high school on Vancouver Island, the College of Redwoods, and even the University of Washington! No less a person than Univesity of Oregon men's track & field coach Bill Bowerman commented that Klaus’s track was the fastest of its time. The contract for the Estacada job was $10,000 or about $77,000 in 2019. Klaus basically kept the price for each one at that.

Klaus eventually sold his business to Atlas Tracks of Lake Oswego and turned his attention to making compressed rubber mats that are found in weight rooms and horse stalls everywhere.

Upon the death of his father, Dean Klaus made certain that the Klaus business property that was sold to Linfield bore a plaque in honor of his dad’s contributions to the betterment of track participants everywhere.

(See two photos of plaque posted here, taken by Mac News on 4/18/2023)

(Plaque located on edge of parking lot on SE Chandler Avenue. Locate plaque with GPS coordinates: 45°12'02.5"N 123°11'46.3"W)

 (Submitted by Scott Phoenix, Certification Chair for the Oregon Association based upon information provided by Dean Klaus, Oct. 29, 2019)

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RB Rubber's parent company sells to Arsenal Capital Partners

By Molly Walker, McMinnville N-R./News-Register, Dec. 28, 2012

Arsenal Capital Partners purchases home-grown company

Harold M. Stuhl Jr., chief operations officer for the rubber group of Dash Multi-Corp, expects it will be business as usual at RB Rubber Products in McMinnville, following the sale of its parent company, Dash Multi-Corp, to Arsenal Capital Partners. The transaction is anticipated to close by the end of December.

Arsenal is a private equity firm investing in middle-market industrial and healthcare companies. In addition to the rubber recycling through its local operation and a tire recycler in Portland, Dash Multi-Corp manufactures formulated polyurethane, vinyl plastisol and specialty coatings through MarChem, its plastics and chemicals business, and is reportedly generating over $100 million in total revenue.

Marvin Wool, Dash’s founder and president, is 84 and was desiring to sell, Stuhl said. The McMinnville operation for RB Rubber employs over 100.

“Arsenal Capital wants to grow the business, make them more successful and is willing to invest accordingly,” said Stuhl. “I’m very excited about this.”

The core business for RB Rubber includes manufacturing tiles from recycled rubber as matting for horse stalls, playground safety tiles and athletic flooring.

The business has been truly homegrown. It started when John Klaus of McMinnville saw old tires as a wasted resource. Crushing the tires into powder, he invented the product that provided RB Rubber’s foundation.

Initially, Klaus marketed products as a track and field surface through his business, J.K. Asphalt Paving. He sold that part of the business to Atlas Track and continued to develop other products from powdered rubber. But a fire prevented Klaus from getting that business really going.

Ron Bogh, who had graduated from McMinnville High School, purchased the operation from Klaus in 1985 and used his initials for the name RB Rubber. At first, he was a one-person business.

He expanded the company to 30 employees by 1990.

Bogh took the business public in 1995 to raise money for an expansion and it subsequently purchased a Portland tire recycler in 1998. Six-months later, Dash, a St. Louis, Mo.-based company, made an offer and Bogh sold his controlling interests. By that time, there were 72 employees.

In 2003, Dash, which was wholly owned by Wool and his family, made a deal to purchase the remaining shares and the company returned to private ownership.

The acquisition of Dash is one of several made by Arsenal during 2012.

“Dash operates in several exciting sectors and our plan is to invest in the business and identify strategic acquisitions to expand its core capabilities and provide more solutions to customers,” said Tim Zappala, a partner at Arsenal who is the co-head for the firm’s specialty industrials group.

Henrik Voldbaek now serves as the general manager for the McMinnville operation.



 

Tuesday, April 18, 2023

What do Penney Pease and Margaret Wiggum have in common?

 What do Penney Pease and Margaret Wiggum have in common?

=Penelope "Penny" Pease, Linfield Class of 1969, hometown Othello, Adams County, Wash., was Linfield College Spring Festival Queen in 1969. She is shown in a photo in the 1969 Linfield Oak Leaves yearbook Spring supplement being crowed in Linfield's Riley Gym by Gary Puckett of Gary Puckett & the Union Gap American pop group.

 


The April 11, 1969, Oregon Journal of Portland, says Penny was queen of the 66th annual Spring Festival. at Linfield. In reality, what was Linfield May Day ran from its beginning in 1904 until its 65th, in 1968, when Sandra Adams was the last Linfield May Queen. The "Spring Festival" was an attempt to extend the former Linfield May Days’ life. In the March 6, 1970, the Oregonian reported tight money and apathy killed off the Spring Festival. “The Linfield Student Senate voted to abandon the celebration because of lack of funds and student interest.”

 





 =Margaret Wiggum, hometown Everett, Snohomish County, Wash., was Linfield College May Queen in 1941. She married Class of 1941 classmate Homer Groenig. Margaret and Homer are prime characters in their son Matt Groenig's "The Simpsons" animated American sitcom. Margaret Groenig's first name was Simpsonized to "Marge." Homer Groenig's first name stayed the same. The last name of "Wiggum" is also used in The Simpsons. Margaret's parents, Mathias, her father, and Ingeborg, her mother, immigrated to the U.S. from Norway. Apparently, Mathias Americanized his name to "Matt." It's assumed Matt Groenig is named for Grandfather Matt.

In the Oct. 4, 1987, edition of the Portland Oregonian newspaper, with special writer Margaret Wiggum byline, she wrote about salads. In it she says, "My mother was Norwegian, brought up to believe that smorgasbord was designed to reinforce the fairytale about the squirrel who stored nuts in the woods. She took everything that was offered and would have hidden it if she could."

 


Sources: Memory; Oak Leaves; Oregon Journal, May 20, 1967, and April 11, 1969; Oregonian March 6, 1970, and Oct. 4, 1987.

In 1920, Granville, Ohio, resident Wilike Moody, a McMinnville College alumnus, played in first NFL game







By Kevin Bennett, Newark, Ohio, Advocate, Sept. 18, 2020

With the eagerly awaited advent of another football season, it is worthwhile to note that what has become today’s National Football League (NFL) was “born” in Ohio 100 years ago this fall.

=

On Oct. 3, 1920 a crowd of around 5,000 witnessed two professional teams compete in Dayton, Ohio, in what has been designated as the first game of the NFL.

One of the players competing that day was Granville resident and Denison University alumnus Wilkie Osgood Moody.

The son of missionaries

Long overshadowed by the accomplishments of his wife, noted journalist and author, Minnie Hite Moody, Wilkie Moody led an extraordinary life.

Born in 1897 to missionary parents at Irabo, Belgian Congo, he and his parents barely survived the attack of a cannibal tribe when he was but 6 months old.

Obviously concerned with the safety of their child and resolutely focused on their mission work, Moody’s parents consigned him to the care of grandparents in Canada. Over the remainder of his childhood, Moody and his sister Grace were largely raised by relatives and family friends, sometimes apart.

=

On the average, the Moody children saw their parents every five years. His parent’s single- minded dedication to missionary work spanned over 50 years and earned them personal recognition by King Leopold of Belgium. His mother, Elizabeth Wilkie Moody, died and was buried at her mission in the Congo in 1938.

Wilkie was afforded excellent educational opportunities, attending the Grand Island (Neb) Academy and the Colby (NH) Academy. He attended Linfield College in McMinnville, Oregon before transferring to Denison University for his sophomore year in 1915.

It appears that he had never played organized football until encouraged by legendary Denison coach Walter Livingston to try out for the team for the 1916 season.

At 5-foot-seven, 185 pounds, Moody was hardly an imposing physical presence, yet his agility and toughness earned him a starter’s role as both a guard on the offensive line and a defensive back.

Football standout at Denison University

Wilkie Moody’s gridiron accomplishments helped the 1916 Denison squad to a standout season in which they were Ohio Conference champions.

During this period Denison football competed at a higher level and routinely played against such giants as Ohio State, Miami and Cincinnati to name a few. As such, there was considerable fan interest in the local area and it was rare game in which Deeds Field was not packed with spectators.

Among the admiring fans in the stands that year was Miss Minnie Hite of Granville, who lived with her grandmother and mother at nearby Tannery Hill.  Although she was several years younger than Moody, they began seeing each other socially after the season.

Soldier in World War I

Unfortunately, the events of nations often times interfere with personal lives and the looming involvement of the United States in World War I did so with Wilkie Moody and Minnie Hite. In early 1917 he enlisted in the Ohio National Guard as a Private, quickly rising to the rank of Sergeant in several months.

His military duties being full time, he was absent for considerable periods for training and was forced to suspend his attendance at Denison. In July 1918 he was commissioned as a Lieutenant in the Army While feverishly working to prepare his unit for war, Moody found time to have recently graduated Granville High School student Miss Minnie Hite travel by train to Fort Jackson, South Carolina.

In early September 1918 they were wed at the Post Chapel. After the briefest of honeymoons, the new Mrs. Moody returned to her family home in Granville while Lt. Moody resumed his military duties.

He remained on active duty until discharged in late July 1919. Wilkie Moody returned to his home in Granville and re-enrolled at Denison in early 1920 to complete his degree requirements.

Signs with pro football

His resumption of studies at Denison did not include a return to the football team. With the birth of his first child in December 1919, Moody was faced with the financial responsibilities of supporting his family. Instead of college ball, he decided to use his gridiron talents in the newly emerging professional arena. He signed a contract with the nearby Columbus Panhandles.

This team was one of the charter members of the American Professional Football Association, consisting of teams in 14 different cities.

This league which was initially headed by the legendary Jim Thorpe and was the forerunner of the NFL, changing the league name in 1922. As noted, the first game of the league was played on Oct. 3, 1920 with the Columbus team playing the host Dayton Triangles and losing a 14-0 decision. The site is now marked by an Ohio Historical marker denoting it as the first football contest in the NFL.

=

Wilkie Moody started the game, playing both offense and defense. Primarily a lineman on offense, he also played wingback, carrying the ball twice, netting 7 yards.

Moody played the entire 1920 season with the Columbus Panhandles although they did not enjoy the level of success he experienced at Denison, finishing 13 out of the 14 teams in the league.

Recruited primarily from local men employed at the shops and rail yards of the Pennsylvania Railroad, the team found it hard to compete against those teams recruiting and signing top college players. Unlike the lucrative pro contracts of today, Moody played under an incentive contract: $100 for each win, $75 for each tie, and $50 for each loss. Equipment rental fees were deducted from each paycheck.

Graduating from Denison in 1921 with a degree in physical education, Wilkie Moody signed with the Dayton Triangles for the 1921 season. At Dayton, he joined another noted Denison alumni, George Roudebush, who played an instrumental role in introducing the forward pass into the college game.

After a one year hiatus from the professional game, Moody re-signed with the Columbus team (now the Tigers) for the 1924 and 1925 seasons. Now 28, Moody quit the NFL for good after the 1925 season and took a position as the football coach and instructor at Warren High School in Ohio.

The next year he coached at Clarion State College in Pennsylvania. Following his stint there, he took his family to Atlanta, Georgia where he served until the 1960’s as an instructor, coach and athletic director in the city high schools.

It was also there that his wife Minnie’s career as a journalist and author flourished.

=

Later Years

After his retirement, the “Coach” and Minnie returned to live at the family home at Tannery Hill, adjacent to the Granville Golf Course.

An avid golfer, he was content to let Minnie absorb public attention as a noted columnist with the Newark Advocate while he enjoyed retirement. Wilkie O. Moody passed on Feb. 22, 1976 and is buried along with Minnie in the peaceful and rolling Welsh Hills cemetery outside Granville.

Self-effacing, he appears to have made little mention of his professional football career or his involvement in the historic first NFL game. This hopefully will shed a long overdue spotlight on the life of this remarkable educator, coach, soldier and athlete.

Kevin Bennett is a noted local historian and Granville Township Trustee.

https://www.newarkadvocate.com/story/news/local/granville/2020/09/18/nfl-2020-100-years-ago-granville-resident-played-first-game/5746111002

Monday, April 17, 2023

Connections: LINFIELD FOOTBALL 2023 TO PLAY DENISON IN OHIO


Connections:
LINFIELD FOOTBALL 2023 TO PLAY DENISON IN OHIO

By Tim Marsh, Wildcatville, updated and corrected 4/18/2023

There are two interesting connections between Linfield U (McMinnville, Ore.) and Denison U (Granville, Ohio), which will play football Sept. 9, 2023, in Granville, Ohio. And, there’s another connection between Linfield and Ohio, too.

CONNECTION -- Wilkie Moody, a former McMinnville College student, played in the earliest days of the NFL/National Football League. In fact he played on the first day in 1920 of the xx which would become the NFL.

Wilkie Osgood Moody attended McMinnville College during the 1914-1915 academic year. He transferred from McMinnville College to Denison University in Granville, Ohio, and graduated from Denison in 1920.

If he had wanted to play football at McMinnville College – which later became Linfield College and then Linfield University -- he could not have. McMinnville College did not play football 1906-1921 because the college’s Board of Trustees deemed football too violent. The sport was dropped in the summer of 1906 (McMinnville College) and not resumed until the 1922 season (Linfield College).

But, Denison did have football. The Denison University football media guide shows Moody lettering in the university's 1916 season.

After graduating from Denison in 1920, Wilkie Moody played professional football, between 1920 and 1935, for the Columbus, Ohio, Panhandles, the Dayton, Ohio, Triangles, and the Columbus, Ohio, Tigers. The teams and 12 other teams in other cities were members of the American Professional Football Association, a league that would become the National Football League (NFL).

On Oct. 3, 1920 the first game between two professional teams of the American Professional Football Association, was played in Dayton, Ohio. Moody was a player the Columbus Panhandles which lost 14-0 to the Dayton Triangles.

Although white, Moody is the first African-born player to play in what would become the NLF. Born May 12, 1987, in what is now the Democratic Republic of the Congo, he was the son of Baptist missionary parents.

A veteran of U.S. Army service during World War I, he was coach and athletic director of Atlanta, Georgia high schools from 1929 to 1961.

Willie Moody, an alumnus of McMinnville College (now Linfield University) and a graduate of Denison University, died at age 76 on Feb. 2, 1976, in Newark, Ohio.

Via the URL link below read about Wilkie Moody in a Newark, Ohio, Advocate story from Sept. 18, 2020:

https://wildcatville.blogspot.com/2023/04/in-1920-granville-ohio-resident-wilike.html

CONNECTION-- A. M. (Arthur Marion) Brumback taught at McMinnville College and Denison University. One source says, “Player/coach A.M. (Arthur M.) Brumback organized Linfield's first football team in 1896. He coached for five seasons before being appointed college president in 1903, a position he held for two years (1903-1905). Brumback taught natural sciences at the college.” According to one write-up, "Brumback had a passion for sport, playing center on and coaching the college’s first football team. While enormously popular with students" he was not successful in dealing with Linfield's financial crisis. He left Linfield in 1905, to take a position at his alma mater, Denison College, in Ohio. At Denison, he was that college's first chemistry professor.

CONNECTION -- Linfield Athletics Hall of Fame member Henry Lever was born in Loveland, Ohio, near Cincinnati, Oct. 4, 1883. (Loveland is about 120 miles from Granville, home of Denison.) According to Lever’s biography, “He survived a near fatal burst appendix at age 15 with a life-saving operation on the kitchen table of his family's farm home.”

Lever Street (running behind Memorial Stadium at Maxwell Field/Catdome) on campus is named for him. And, in 1998 he was in the first “class” to be enshrined in the Linfield Athletics Hall of Fame. In 1930, Lever came to Linfield as coach of all sports (football, basketball, baseball, track & field) and athletic director was the start of Linfield Athletics as it's known today.

During Lever’s years, 1930-1949, at Linfield he coached/guided hundreds of Wildcat athletes and positively influenced them and others – athletes, coaches, faculty, staff, family and friends -- on or off the field, court or track. Among the many Linfield students he coached was Paul. He later hired Durham as Linfield football coach. That done, Lever served as athletic director one more school year and then turned the program over to Durham in 1949.

………………

Arthur Marion Brumback was born 7 Dec 1869 in Boise, Ada County, Idaho, and died 12 Aug 1916 (aged 46) in Granville, Licking County, Ohio. Buried at Maple Grove Cemetery in Granville, Licking County, Ohio.

 

 

Arthur Marion Brumback information

Arthur Marion Brumback was born 7 Dec 1869 in Boise, Ada County, Idaho, and died 12 Aug 1916 (aged 46) in Granville, Licking County, Ohio. Buried at Maple Grove Cemetery in Granville, Licking County, Ohio.









 

McMinnville College Annual Catalogue 1900-1901

 Special Announcement

 CHANGE OF ADMINISTRATION. -- - At the mid-year meeting of the Board of Trustees of the College, held in Jan. 1903, Pres. H. L. Boardman resigned the presidency to take effect at the end of the current school year, June 3o, 1903, being the close of seven years of service in this capacity. At a special meeting of the Board held May 1st, 1903, Prof. Arthur M. Brumback, head of the Department of Sciences in the college, was unanimously elected to the presidency of the college. He accepted the position and enters upon his work as president, July I, 1903.

The election of Prof. Brumback to the presidency has given the greatest satisfaction to the friends and patrons of the college without exception. He is well known to the institution, having been for seven years professor of Sciences in the college. As a teacher he has exhibited the best ability; and as a scholar, executive, and Christian gentleman he leaves nothing to be desired.

Arthur M. Brumback was born in 1869 at Boise, Idaho. He graduated from the High School of that city in 1886, and from Denison University, at Granville, Ohio, with the degree of A. B. in 1892. He was married in 1893 and taught in Boise High School during a part of 1894. 

He was principal of Grace Seminary at Centralia, Wash., 1894-1896, from which position he came, in the fall of 1896 to the professorship of Sciences in McMinnville College. Here he taught consecutively for six years. He was granted a leave of absence for the year 1902-3 which was spent in the further prosecution of his studies at the University of California, from which institution he received the degree of Master of Arts at the close of his year's work. 

It thus appears that the new president of the college is a western man by birth and training, in this regard being peculiarly well fitted for the administration of a western college. McMinnville College has made healthy advancement during the past seven years. This has been due, in no small degree, to the efficient service of Professor Brumback. The outlook for the future of the college under the leadership of President Brumback is very auspicious.





‘Wildcats’ vs. ‘Big Red: Linfield Football will travel to Ohio to play Denison in opening game of 2023 season


‘Wildcats’ vs. ‘Big Red: Linfield Football will travel to Ohio to play Denison in opening game of 2023 season

Kickoff 7pm Eastern time (4pm Pacific time) in Granville, Ohio, on Sat., Sept. 9, 2023

“Granville is a village in Licking County, Ohio, United States. The population was 5,646 at the 2010 census. The village is located in a rural area of rolling hills in central Ohio. It is 35 miles east of Columbus, the state capital, and 7 miles west of Newark, the county seat.” - Wikipedia

(Story below from Linfield Sports Info 4/17/2023)

The Linfield football program has added Denison University to its 2023 and 2024 football schedules. The Wildcats have agreed to play the Big Red Sept. 9, 2023, in Granville, Ohio. In return, Denison will visit McMinnville next fall for Linfield's season-opening game Sept. 7, 2024.

The late addition of Denison to the upcoming schedules became necessary when Simon Fraser University announced recently it is dropping its football program, effective immediately. Simon Fraser had been scheduled to host Linfield on Sept. 2.

The loss of Simon Fraser, located 360 miles north in Burnaby, Canada, left Linfield with just eight games on its 2023 and 2024 schedules.

Locating a suitable and willing opponent on short notice was a difficult chore for Linfield coach Joseph Smith, who said several other regional schools situated within a day's drive turned down the Wildcats' invitation for a home-and-home series.

"Going (to Ohio) and playing a strong opponent will be a stiff challenge for us. Losing the game versus Simon Fraser this late in the year was a difficult blow. But it was not nearly as difficult as it was for the players and coaches at Simon Fraser. Our hearts go out to their program, as no one with a heart can help but feel for their loss," said Smith.

"I am grateful to Coach Hatem and Denison for being willing to help us out of the very difficult situation we found ourselves in. We were seriously facing the possibility of an eight-game schedule. I am grateful to our administration for allowing us to schedule this home-and-home agreement. I know it will be expensive, but I also know the experience our student-athletes will receive will be something that impacts them for years to come. I know it will be the same when the student-athletes of Denison are able to travel out to Oregon next year."

Denison, a member of the North Coast Athletic Conference, has enjoyed regular success in football in recent years. The Big Red has recorded 10 consecutive winning seasons on the gridiron, including an 8-2 mark last season. Denison's most recent NCAA Division III playoff appearance came in 2018.


Smith sees an obvious benefit from playing a fellow Division III affiliate, rather than a Division II or NAIA program.


"Playing Division III opponents is greatly desired by selection committees. I see this helping both programs as it did last year with our game versus Huntington. This fall, the Linfield football team will get to see a part of Ohio that almost no one in our program has ever seen or stepped foot in. Furthermore, we will get the opportunity to meet a team that we know nothing about and stand before them on their home field and be measured."

The matchup will mark the first head-to-head meeting between the two schools in any sport.


"We are looking forward to the amazing opportunity to go play a high-quality opponent in a new part of the country," said Smith. "Denison is known to be well-coached, very physical and difficult to play."

Denison Sports Info story:

https://denisonbigred.com/news/2023/4/17/football-denison-football-announces-home-and-home-series-vs-linfield.aspx

Friday, April 14, 2023

The pleasure of the Linfield plaques (McMinnville N-R 4/14/2023)


The pleasure of the Linfield plaques': Back, and Forth column by 
Kirby Neumann-Rea,  managing editor. 
McMinnville N-R/News-Register  April 14, 2023/ 

Not all archives are dusty documents in some closet or digital files stored in the cloud.

Some archives you find at your feet, in the form of brass or marble markers, and when it comes to Linfield University’s ample number of such stones and plaques, I am happy to know I’m not alone in celebrating them.

I don’t know about Willamette or Pacific or other similar-sized schools, but I would hazard a guess that they do not rival Linfield for its wealth of historic markers.

Not long after arriving in McMinnville, I took regular walks around my alma mater, taking note of the commemorative plaques placed on pedestals or buildings, or next to trees. In some cases, the trees have grown over parts of the plaques installed 80 to 100 years ago, a poignancy I never fail to feel when I walk by them.

After making inquiries about some of the markers with the folks at Linfield, they put me in touch with Gretchen Freeman, who, with her husband, Mike, had in 2020 documented every Linfield-sponsored commemorative plaque on campus. Some are new and prominent; others are old, yet visible. Still others you have to look for, like one on the side of Melrose Hall and another down in the Cozine ravine, aka Storey Park.

But there is no need to go looking, for Freeman has done the work and she will be speaking about her project on Tuesday, April 18, in the latest Hillside Retirement Community speaker series, “Adventures in Learning.” Freeman’s talk, “Tracking Plaques on Linfield Campus: Sleuthing and Stories” will be at 2 p.m. in the Hillside Manor activity room. Admission is $5.

I’ve seen most of the plaques for myself, and have wondered about other objects on campus that may or may not be significant. Case in point is the stout old fountain in the Oak Grove directly across from Melrose. Today, it’s in such rough condition the birdbath-shaped object looks like it was dipped in an acid bath.

I figure that thing must have had a plaque on it at one time. It’s not alone in appearing neglected; Freeman’s project did not include public art pieces such as the one in front of Renshaw, large beams that hold a plaque rendered unreadable long ago by time and weather.

The Freemans did extensive research, including interviewing former President Charles Walker, and Marvin Henberg, author of the definite pictorial history of Linfield “Inspired Pragmatism.” Both vetted the inventory.

Gretchen explained to Linfield alum Tim Marsh, who authors the Wildcatville blog: “It grew from our countless walks on campus during the first year of COVID restrictions, when there were no students around. It led to about 60 hours of research to compile the documentation of 34 plaques. We also did narrated walking tours for groups of friends. All very interesting discoveries.”

The oldest plaque in the study is from 1895 — across the sidewalk on the north side of Pioneer. There, a horse chestnut still stands, planted that year as class tree. The newest, from 2017, honors student Parker Archie Moore, who was stabbed to death in 2014. It’s in addition to a bench across from Maxwell Field.

A few of my personal favorites are those partly overgrown by tree roots, dedicated to Harry Boardman, the first president of newly named McMinnville College (formerly Baptist College) and a similar ground-level one for Professor Ralph Storey, from the same turn of the 19th-to-20th-century era. The Boardman plaque is in the center of the Oak Grove, the Storey about 200 yards east, near Campbell Hall. I also like the Storey plaque in the Cozine ravine. While the trail is accessible from the north for those in sturdy shoes, fallen oaks from years ago effectively block anyone taking the full path. But the Storey plaque is easy to find, on a large boulder at the southwest corner of the meadow, and is a highlight of the Camas Festival walking tour. The second annual festival starts at 10 a.m. on Friday, May 5.

I enjoyed communicating with the Freemans about another marker, the Class of 1922’s engraved stone at the far northwest corner of the Oak Grove, just off the Baker Street sidewalk. Obscured for many years by undergrowth and moss, it is now easily visible and worth a stroll across the grove.

“We trimmed, scrubbed and de-mossed the 1922 monument in 2020 during our pandemic plaque project. It looked very neglected when we found it,” Gretchen told me in 2021.

“We turned over the attached document to the Linfield archives in November 2020 — it represents about 60 hours of work to locate, clean, photograph, research and document 34 plaques and honorees.” I consider it a fascinating insight to the history of the college-turned-university.

I knew nothing about any of these plaques when I was a student 44 years ago. No one mentioned them, and I never noticed them, at least not that I recall. I think the university should make the Freeman inventory available to all incoming freshmen as part of orientation, to help foster a sense of history in the place they have chosen to spend the next four years of their lives.

We grizzled alumni have our memories, such as they are, to look back upon, and our yearbooks. Perusing my father’s 1949 Oak Leaves recently, I found in its pages other vestiges of McMinnville history. The advertisers that year include a short list of businesses that are still going: Funeral Director Mr. Glen Macy, for one; his legacy endures at Macy & Son. First Federal is still here, as are Buchanan Cellers and Farnham Electric.

The Freemans note that it was Waldo Farnham who installed the classic lampposts on the Cozine trail — they are still there, still illuminated every night. I can recall a visit to Linfield with my dad in the 1960s and the footbridge that used to span the creek, later replaced — information also from the Freemans — with the bed of a truck. It’s the bridge that is there now.

I see Oak Leaves ads for both the Paragon Room coffee shop and Oregon Hotel, now McMenamins Hotel Oregon. And, of course, the News-Reporter, which would later be part of what is now the News-Register.

With the ads, I noticed a message from the Director of Admissions, a page containing a photo of something akin to the plaques. What’s shown in the 1949 photo is a bronze sundial. It’s an object I’d love to quiz Gretchen and others about. “Time is one of the valuable investments which the young person is making in a college education,” the admissions ad reads.

The sundial is a truly timeless symbol — the south face of Murdock Hall features one — but I have not seen the one in the photograph anywhere on campus. By its weathered surface, it looked like it was decades old in the mid-1900s.

I wonder what became of it. The sundial sat on a heptagonal pedestal, and its surface bore this inscription: “My face marks the sunny hours/What can you say about yours.”

The question mark is missing, either forgotten or deemed unnecessary. More of a statement than an inquiry, and with the lack of punctuation, the pithy 12-word saying reads like a Teddy Roosevelt-era meme.

Contact Kirby Neumann-Rea at kirby@newsregister.com or 503-687-1291

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CUTLINE for photo (posted here) included with this News-Register story. The Freeman project did not include public art pieces such as (this) ... one in front of Renshaw, large painted red iron beams that hold a plaque rendered unreadable by time and weather. It honors Tom Zwald, Linfield College Class of 1953.  It was donated in an unknown year by Trevor Smith and another person whose name is not readable on the plaque. Photo taken in 2022 by Wildcatville.