Saturday, September 30, 2023
Tuesday, September 26, 2023
Linfield Football 1962 praised in Sports Illustrated
Linfield Football 1962 praised in Sports Illustrated
SMALL
COLLEGE FOOTBALL received a big boost in Sports Illustrated last week,
for just about the first time in history; and Linfield got in on the gravy.
Under a section about: “The Small Colleges,” entitled “Portraits of a Growth
Industry:" a sub-title included this: “If you haven’t heard of some of the
schools, you may soon. Linfield, Florida A&M and William Jewell are now
small now but getting bigger.
“Pointed
out by the author was the fact that Linfield football teams have, during the
past six seasons, won 43, lost nine and tied four.
The
writer continued: “Linfield has one of the finest built-in recruiting systems
in the country. A liberal arts college, it has a school of education with a
fine course in physical education. Last year there were 174 (204 this year –ed)
graduates coaching, mostly in small schools in Oregon and Washington. In recent
years many of the graduates have sent some of their best players to Linfield.
Actually,
Linfield probably has as many graduate coaches in the large high schools in
Oregon as has any college in the state. For instance, Linfield men coaching at
Portland high schools include: Franklin Mel Fox, Marty Bergan and Marv
Flintcroft; Lincoln, Al Grove and Henry Crawford; David Douglas, Jerry Beier
and Les Pierce; Roosevelt, Bud Gronquist; Madison, Warren Bolin and Don
Gassaway; Jefferson, Jack Riley and Jess Edwards; Wilson, Ole Johnson and Vern
Marshall; Marshall, Walt West; and Cleveland, Art Verment and Ed Warren.
And
scores of former Wildcat athletes are coaching at Class A-1 schools such as
Hillsboro, North Bend, North and South Salem, Ashland and McMinnville, Newberg,
Bend, Tigard, Pendleton and on and on.
Sports
Illustrated also said this about Linfield’s chances this season: “Linfield
(10-1 last fall) can have another spectacular season if good replacement emerge
in the defensive unit, particularly at linebacker. Two defensive backs must be
replaced, but Dave Rohrer, excellent at safety, will anchor the secondary. On
offense, fast, receptive Val Barnes, Pat Thurston and speedy Fullback Dennis
Vitale provide the core of a fine backfield.”
Source: Dodging with Durham by Paul Durham, sports editor,
McMinnville N-R/News-Register, and head football coach, Linfield College,
McMinnville, Ore., in the Sept. 30, 2023, N-R.
:::::::::::::::
PORTRAIT OF A GROWTH INDUSTRY
IF
YOU HAVEN'T HEARD OF SOME OF THE SCHOOLS, YOU MAY SOON. LINFIELD, FLORIDA
A&M; AND WILLIAM JEWELL ARE SMALL NOW BUT GETTING BIGGER
Sports Illustrated, Sept 24, 1962
There
are approximately 500 small colleges in the United States that will field
football teams this year. It is no more possible to generalize about these
schools than it is to compare, say, the American history department at the
University of Texas with the physical education course offered at Springfield
College in Massachusetts. Some of the schools aren't even small. The standards
at one or two are as high as those in the Ivy League. Graduates of others would
have a hard time passing at a good city high school.
No
more is it possible to generalize about the football they play. A majority of
the small colleges would be humiliated by their big neighbors. But a
few—Southern Illinois, Fresno State, Florida A&M, among others—would do
better than the legendary hero of all small colleges, Centre, which defeated
mighty Harvard in 1921, 6-0.
In
this age of standardization, however, it is possible to generalize about the
majority of small-college coaches. Usually easier going than their major
college compatriots, they nevertheless employ the same systems and methods,
they say the same things, have the same mores and accept defeat as gracefully
as a child does a dose of castor oil.
To be
sure, these are not the ways of Dr. Norris Patterson (above), the enormously
successful head coach at William Jewell College in Liberty, Mo., 15 miles
northeast of Kansas City. But then conformity never was. For instance:
Patterson worries during the summer as much about how to make football more fun
for his players as he does about recruiting. This year he is thinking of
changing his offense to the split T because everybody else is giving it up. He
believes that watching film is virtually useless in sizing up promising high
school players. He would prefer not to give NCAA-type full athletic
scholarships, even if he had them to give. He refuses to use weight and
isometric conditioning programs and would quit coaching if he had to use them.
What
has this oddball approach to coaching meant to Jewell since Patterson arrived
there 12 years ago? Wins—87 of them, to be exact—against 23 losses and seven
ties. Under Patterson, Jewell has won three Missouri College Athletic Union
championships, shared three and been runner-up three times.
Patterson
earned a doctorate in education at Columbia in 1958. Behind every one of his
seeming idiosyncrasies lies a well-reasoned argument. Of his permissive
practices, for instance, he says: "It doesn't follow that the
grimmest-looking football squad is going to be the most successful. I've been
to pro camps and you'd be surprised how much fun they have.
"Football
coaches, in fact, are finally getting educated. They have more knowledge of
science and of the physiology of the human body. As a result we don't have as
many stale players as we once did. I try to make a game out of work. I let my
linemen play soccer and have them play touch football during the season.
"The
trouble with football is that we coaches are losing our creative abilities.
Everybody uses the same terms and has the same drills. My older brother Cecil,
who is one of the most successful high school coaches anywhere [at Kansas
City], won't read a book on football. He does his own thinking and
creating."
Patterson
is one of a splendid minority of fine football coaches in small colleges today.
Some others: Carnie Smith at nearby Pittsburg (Kansas) State College, Edgar
Sherman at Muskingum in New Concord, Ohio (102 wins, 34 losses and seven ties
in 17 years), John Potsklan at Albright in Reading, Pa. (23 wins, three losses
and a tie in the last three years) and Paul Durham at Linfield College in
McMinnville, Ore., 40 miles southwest of Portland. Smith at Pittsburg has won
two NAIA championship bowl games. No other small-college coach in the country
can make that statement. In his 13 years at Pittsburg, Smith has won 91 games,
lost 33 and tied five. Currently Pittsburg is on a 15-game winning streak.
Like
most other successful small-college coaches, Smith recruits football players,
but almost entirely in his own area. Like others, too, he can't offer much in
the way of scholarships and relies mostly on graduates and friends to direct
promising boys his way. The best, of course, go to the big schools, but Smith
gets the next best, some of whom eventually far outshine the most sought-after
prospects.
Paul
Durham at Linfield lost one game last year—to Pittsburg 12-7 in the Camellia
Bowl game in Sacramento. In his last six seasons, Durham's teams have won 43
games, lost nine and tied four. Linfield has one of the finest built-in
recruiting systems in the country. A liberal arts college, it has a school of
education with a fine course in physical education. Last year there were 174
graduates coaching, mostly in small schools in Oregon and Washington. In recent
years many of the graduates have sent some of their best players to Linfield.
While
Pittsburg and Linfield were best among the small colleges last year, they will
have plenty of competition in 1962. Following are regional reports on the most
likely candidates.
(Regional
Reports not provided by Wildcatville).
Sunday, September 24, 2023
Linfield football plays named for Linfield professors Gebauer, Mahaffey
In the early 1970s, I lived in Milton-Freewater. Linfielder Brian Carter was head football coach at that city's Mac-Hi (a.k.a. McLoughlin Union High School). I went to a football practice and was surprised to hear offensive plays being called with familiar Linfield names. One play was the "Gebauer." I asked Coach Durham. It was named for Paul Gebauer, Linfield College anthropologist. Coach said another play was the “Mahaffey.” It involved acting. Hap Mahaffey was an actor and head of Linfield dramatic arts and speech. (Walt Gebauer, son of Paul and Clara Gebauer, played football for Paul Durham-coached Linfield teams.) (Photo of Paul Gebauer by William P. Galen.)
Friday, September 22, 2023
Scott Carnahan: Missed Linfield home football game for first time since 1984 (Originally posted by Wildcatville on Oct. 16, 2010)
Scott Carnahan:
Missed Linfield home football game for first time since 1984
Originally posted by Wildcatville on Oct. 16, 2010
When Linfield athletic director/Linfield College grad Scott Carnahan, former Linfield head baseball coach, missed the Oct. 2, 2010 Willamette at Linfield football game on Maxwell Field -- Wildcats won 35-7 -- it was a milestone event for him.
Up until that time, he had not missed a Linfield home football game since returning to Linfield as its baseball coach in 1984. He became the college’s athletic director in 1996. One of his athletic director duties is home football game management.
His reason for missing the game was for a wonderful reason. He and his wife, Linfield grad Cathy Carnahan, principal of McMinnville’s Duniway Middle School, were in Washington, D.C. She was honored there on Oct. 1, 2010, as 2010 National Middle School Principal of the Year during an awards banquet kicking off National Principals Month.
Both Scott and Cathy are members of the Linfield Class of 1973.
CATHY PHOTO
http://www.principals.org/Content.aspx?topic=2011_MetLife_NASSP_National_Middle_Level_Principal_of_the_Year
SCOTT PHOTO
http://www.linfield.edu/sports/sports-administration.html
Sunday, September 17, 2023
Randy and Barbara Jelinek
George Randall ‘Randy’
Jelinek,
1927-2001
McMinnville
N-R/News-Register Aug 25, 2001
Born 21 Nov 1927 Three Rivers, St. Joseph County, Michigan
Died 22 Aug 2001
(aged 73) McMinnville, Yamhill County,
Oregon
George
Randall “Randy” Jelinek of McMinnville died Aug. 22, 2001, in his home, from
complications of chronic lymphocytic leukemia. He was 73.
Mr.
Jelinek was chairman of the Linfield College art department from 1965 to 1980.
A
memorial celebration with art and music will be held from 1 to 5 p.m. Sept. 15
in Renshaw Hall at Linfield College, McMinnville.
He
was born Nov. 21, 1927, in Three Rivers, Mich., and raised in Grand Island,
Neb.
He
and Barbara Fincher were married Aug. 23, 1953.
Mr.
Jelinek studied in Vienna, Austria, in 1956-57. He then returned to the United
States and earned a bachelor of arts degree from the Art Institute of Chicago
and a master of fine arts degree from the University of Washington. He lived in
Illinois, New Jersey, and Everett and Renton, Wash., before moving to
McMinnville.
After
retiring as chairman of the Linfield art department, he did free-lance
commercial art work, including creation of logos for the city of McMinnville
and Yamhill County.
He
and his wife lived and worked in Scotland in 1983, in Zimbabwe in 1995 and in
China in 1998.
Mr.
Jelinek was a founding member of the McMinnville Art Association, which later
became the Arts Alliance of Yamhill County. He had exhibited his work in the
Arlene Schnitzer Gallery, Portland, and recently contributed to a retrospective
show honoring Portland artist Jack McLarty.
He
also was active on the Yamhill County Democratic Central Committee, serving as
a precinctperson. He was a supporter of Gallery Theater, McMinnville, and other
cultural groups.
Survivors
include his wife; two daughters, Julie Baird of Jackson Hole, Wyo., and
Victoria Jelinek of Los Angeles; a son, Gregory Monnix Jelinek of Seattle;
three brothers, Donald Jelinek and David Jelinek, both of Grand Island, Neb.,
and Howard Jelinek of Jacksonville, Fla.; and three grandchildren.
PHOTO
black & white from Linfield Archives, circa 1979-1979. Professor Randall
Jelinek is
captured in a candid moment during class. Jelinek was chair of the art
department from 1965 to 1980. He was also a founding member of the McMinnville
Art Association, now called the Arts Alliance of Yamhill County. Photo likely
by Reid Blackburn.
PHOTO
color added by Sheri West.
:::
Barbara Fincher
Jelinek,
1933 - 2022
McMinnville
N-R/News-Register September-October 2022
Student,
teacher, traveler, writer, activist and actress, Barbara Fincher Jelinek died
September 25, 2022, in Seattle, Washington, having moved there in 2015 after 51
years in McMinnville, Oregon.
Born
March 23, 1933, in Steger, Illinois, to Laura Monnix and Joseph Victor Fincher,
Barbara received a bachelor’s degree from the School of Speech and Drama at
Northwestern University in Evanston. In the years that followed, Barbara went
farther afield, studying in Vienna, New York and Mexico City, ultimately
completing a master’s degree in Education from Linfield College, after
following her husband, Randall Jelinek, to McMinnville in 1965 when he was
appointed Chair of the Art Department there.
While
her children were young, Barbara was an editor and writer for Linfield
College’s various publications, an adjunct teacher of English at the college,
and a freelance writer for the News-Register. In 1968, she received state and
national awards for a series of articles in that newspaper about the need for
separate facilities for mentally ill adolescents, at the time housed with the
elderly in the State Hospital in Salem. Phil Bladine, publisher, distributed
copies of the series to all members of the Oregon State Legislature, which led
to their establishing Poyama Land, a treatment center for children in Polk,
Marion, and Yamhill counties.
Simultaneously,
Barbara held various positions in Yamhill County’s Democratic Central
Committee, including the role of chairperson, and was the candidate for state
representative in 1983, the same year she was invited to the White House to
meet President Jimmy Carter.
Barbara
continued to support civic projects and cultural organizations throughout her
life, such as the Linfield Chamber Orchestra, the Arts Alliance, and Gallery
Theater. The latter was so named because it started in 1968 with summer
performances in what was then the Linfield art building’s art gallery.
Beginning
with that summer of 1968, Barbara had leading roles in numerous Gallery plays,
such as The Glass Menagerie, A Streetcar Named Desire, and The Lion in Winter.
More recently, she was Maria Callas in Master Class and a woman struggling to
recover from a stroke in Wings, by Arthur Kopit. She also directed numerous
plays at Gallery, at Sheridan High School and at McMinnville High School, in
collaboration with her fellow drama teacher and dear friend, Carol Burnett.
Over
the course of her lifetime, Barbara taught drama and English in Illinois, New
Jersey, Washington state and Oregon and was awarded two Fulbright Scholarships
to teach in Scotland and Zimbabwe, respectively. Even after retiring from
McMinnville High School, Barbara continued to teach drama and English as a
Second Language in China.
A
companion throughout her adventures, Barbara’s husband died August 22, 2001, a
day before their 48th wedding anniversary. They are survived by their children,
Julie Baird and Gregory Monnix Jelinek, both of Seattle, and Victoria Jelinek
Jensen of Chamonix. Her grandchildren are Daniel Jelinek, Kaya Baird, Finnegan
Jelinek, Zoe Jelinek, and Sebastian Jensen.
Barbara
claimed the best summing up of one’s life is an epitaph she once read
containing the remains of a young woman at a cathedral on Scotland’s principal
Orkney Island:
She
lived respected
And died regretted.
In
lieu of a festive gathering to honor Barbara at this time, people are asked to
donate to the Zoe Jelinek Memorial Fund on www.gofundme.com. Tragically,
Barbara’s granddaughter Zoe died in a sudden accident earlier on the same day
that Barbara had the stroke that would send her to intensive care and
ultimately conclude her own life.
……………………………
This
is an abbreviated version of Barbara’s obituary from September because there
will now be a memorial service and reception to honor Barbara’s life. Those who
knew Barbara, in one way or another, are invited to join her family to
reminisce, chuckle, lament, and enjoy the opportunity to celebrate a unique
woman’s life.
Thursday,
13 April, 2023, 2 p.m., the Gallery Theater, 210 N.E. Ford St., McMinnville,
Oregon.
Student,
teacher, writer, activist, actress, Barbara Fincher Jelinek died September 25,
2022, in Seattle, Washington, having moved there in 2015 after 51 years in
Oregon. Over the course of her lifetime, Barbara taught Drama and English in
various states and countries, and was a founding member of the Gallery Players
Theater in the 1960s.
A
companion throughout her adventures, Randall, Barbara’s husband, died Aug. 22,
2001. They are survived by their children, Julie Baird, Gregory M. Jelinek, and
Victoria Jensen. Their grandchildren are Daniel Jelinek, Finnegan Jelinek, Kaya
Baird, and Sebastian Jensen. Sadly, a fifth grandchild, Zoe Jelinek, is
deceased.
#
Wednesday, September 13, 2023
GENE ‘ACE’ FORMAN: Passed Away Surrounded by Friends
We're sure you knew Gene 'Ace' Forman had been in a car accident in August before his senior year and that he spent many months in the hospital and had been told he would never walk and living 45 years would be a goal.
(He died at age 79 on Aug. 20, 2023.)
He had always wanted to be a football coach but many questioned the feasibility of that, being in a wheelchair. He would prove everyone wrong as he coached over 40 years. His players would learn so much more than just football. They learned to live a life of purpose and values of loyalty, tolerance, perseverance, and the importance of having a positive at attitude.
What can we tell you about our best friend Ace? Did you know
he earned 12 varsity letters in high school, and played tuba?
Did you know he was an All American football player for
Linfield and after his accident Bob went to visit him in the hospital and Ace
asked him to wear his number until he could come back? Bob did and took his
position as well.
Did you know Linfield established the Gene Forman
Inspirational Award?
You probably know he was respected and loved by his players.
One said, "He was dealt a bad hand but he played it the best he
could." We learned that whatever you do give it your best. "Coach
knew from experience you could triumph over adversity and he would help many
players who were going through a difficult time."
Did you know he was a collector of friends? If you were his
friend you would be his friend for life. His address book had so many names and
many had 4 different addresses and new phone numbers. He never wanted to lose a
friend. A huge number of players kept in contact with him. Some thought of him
as their Dad.
Did you know that one of those players who considered him his
Dad went to Linfield and Ace helped financially? Now a retired principal, he is
coaching at Geo Fox who we play for Homecoming. He was there for Ace's last
day, holding his hand.
Did you know he was a Godfather and a Great Godfather? Many
friends had their children call him Uncle Ace. He was the most admired man we
ever knew.
If you knew him you loved him. Do you know how many are going
to miss him? We don't either but we know we will, Nan and Bob
From Nan for Linfield Homecoming October 2023
Photo of Ace from Linfield Homecoming September 2022
Tuesday, September 12, 2023
CELEBRATION OF LIFE AND TRIBUTE TO HONOR BELOVED GENE ‘ACE’ FORMAN WILL BE HELD ON McMINNVILLE CAMPUS AFTER OCT. 14, 2023, LINFIELD HOMECOMING FOOTBALL GAME
CELEBRATION OF LIFE AND TRIBUTE TO HONOR BELOVED GENE ‘ACE’ FORMAN WILL BE HELD ON McMINNVILLE CAMPUS AFTER OCT. 14, 2023, LINFIELD HOMECOMING FOOTBALL GAME
A Celebration of Life for Gene 'Ace' Forman will be held on Linfield University's McMinnville campus on Sat., Oct. 14, 2023, after the Homecoming football game.
He died at age 79 on Aug. 20, 2023, in Salem, Oregon.
The Celebration will begin about 4 o'clock in the afternoon in Jonasson Hall, which is on the ground floor of Melrose Hall.
Included in the Celebration will be socializing while looking at photos and memorabilia. Afterwards there will be a buffet dinner and a Tribute for ‘Ace.’
Divided into four quarters, all are encouraged to add their memories during the Tribute:
1st quarter: Ace and his sports career.
2nd quarter: His high school coaching career and Ace's impact on his athletes.
3rd quarter: Ace's high school teaching career and relationships with colleagues and students.
4th quarter: His love of friends and how Ace was loved.
'Ace' was a friend to everyone and now it's our turn to show up to honor him.
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