Tuesday, August 31, 2021

Edith 'Duffy' Irene Reynolds (1928-2021)





Edith "Duffy" Irene Reynolds

November 1, 1928 - August 22, 2021

Macy & Son Funeral Directors, McMinnville, Oregon


Edith “Duffy” Reynolds, retired Linfield professor and long-time community member, passed away peacefully the morning of Sunday, August 22, 2021.

 

Edith was born in Dalhart, Texas, on Nov. 1, 1928, to Albert and Vio (Randel) Reynolds. When she was five years old, the family drove with their belongings to California, escaping the Dust Bowl. Edith began her schooling in Pasadena before her family relocated to Grants Pass, Oregon. The family survived the Great Depression by tending their milk cows, gardening, and canning. Edith’s mother wanted piano lessons for her daughter and traded vegetables from her garden for lessons. Edith would often play the piano in the evenings, a brother on either side, and the three of them would sing together.

 

When she was a teenager, the family moved to Springfield, Oregon, where she became close friends with a girl at church who encouraged her to go to college. Edith had always been an excellent student and followed her friend to Linfield. She quickly learned of the prohibitive costs and worked many long hours cleaning and working on campus to pay for her education. Edith enjoyed being at Linfield. She made many lifelong friends, loved her dorm and her classes, took on numerous leadership roles, and became a devout fan of Shakespeare and the Wildcats. Edith was the first person in her family to attend college, graduating in 1951 with a major in English and a minor in Home Economics.

 

Edith taught junior high and high school briefly in Gaston and Helix, respectively, before receiving a letter from the head of the Linfield Home Economics Department asking her to return and join the faculty. Ms. Reynolds was a beloved and sought out professor of Home Economics for more than 30 years. The younger generations of her family who attended Linfield were amazed by the deep affection her students felt for her. Edith invested extra time helping students with their work and encouraged them through the ups and downs of their personal lives. She conveyed to each student her warmth and confidence in their success.

 

She was an artist, designing clothing and historical costumes for Linfield’s theater and opera workshop productions. In addition to sewing and clothing design, she taught weaving and wove beautiful wall hangings on the large looms in the Home Economics Department. Edith received her Master’s Degree in Textiles from the University of Tennessee, choosing this particular program because they were doing specialized research on the color blue.

 

In the years following her career, Edith invested in both Linfield and the McMinnville community. She continued designing and altering costumes for the Linfield theater, while also devoting weekly hours to support young readers at Newby Elementary School and volunteering regularly for church events. Even at 90 years old, she could be found on Mondays helping in the church office; an experience she thoroughly enjoyed. Edith was comfortable with people of all ages and related easily to whomever she was with, talking, laughing, and always being generous and kind. In 1992, she received a Linfield College Alumni Service award.

 

Edith was interested in the world, history, and the arts. She was an avid reader and delved deeply into her own family genealogy. She traveled extensively with Sybil Seward, her best friend of 50 years, who chronically insisted upon mailing oversized and breakable treasures back to the States much to Edith’s chagrin, but all arriving safely. Edith and Sybil shared many wonderful adventures together in this life, frequently trekking to Powell’s bookstore, touring the wine country, attending theater productions, visiting art exhibits, and gathering with family and friends. Edith’s own watercolors were featured in several local showings, and inspired summer visits to Whidbey Island to paint with other artists.

 

Edith will be missed for her warmth, generosity, and integrity. She was the epicenter of her large extended family. She was the dependable big sister who could hold her own with her mischievous younger brothers, and whom they adored forever. Younger generations were always welcome in her home and heart. No matter what awkward phases of life they were whirling through, she always believed in them. Many family values and traditions, like mahjong, Watanabe’s art, traveling, and the piano she continued to play, began with time spent in Edith’s home.

 

Edith is survived by one of her two younger brothers, and many extended family members. A graveside service will be held for her family.

 

Remembrances may be given to Linfield College or First Baptist Church, McMinnville.

 

Services are private. You can still show your support by sending flowers directly to the family of Edith "Duffy" Irene Reynolds.

 

Monday, August 30, 2021

MESSAGE FROM JOE STUART, ‘VOICE’ OF LINFIELD WILDCAT ATHLETICS (posted 8/30/2021)

MESSAGE FROM JOE STUART, ‘VOICE’ OF LINFIELD WILDCAT ATHLETICS 

(Posted 8/30/2021)

Video message from Joe Stuart, new "voice" of Linfield Wildcat Athletics as the 2021 Linfield football season approaches.

Listen to Wildcat broadcast play-by-play by Joe (Class of 2020) via the Linfield Sports Network/LSN. Links directly below gives more info and direct access to the broadcasts.

=ABOUT LSN/LINFIELD SPORTS NETWORK

https://golinfieldwildcats.com/sports/2017/8/13/sports-broadcasting.aspx

=ACCESS LINFIELD SPORTS VIDEO AND AUDIO WEBCASTS

https://portal.stretchinternet.com/linfield/

Read about Joe Stuart:

=Linfield grad Joe Stuart, whose hometown is McMinnville, becomes broadcast 'voice' of the Linfield Wildcats (posted 8/19/2021)

http://wildcatville.blogspot.com/2021/08/linfield-grad-joe-stuart-whose-hometown.html

=Kaho Akau, Joe Stuart join Linfield athletics communications staff (posted 8/22/2021)

https://golinfieldwildcats.com/news/2021/8/22/general-interest-kaho-akau-joe-stuart-join-athletics-communications-staff.aspx

 

Thursday, August 26, 2021

That’s the ticket: Move from paper to digital divides fans


That’s the ticket: Move from paper to digital divides fans

By Eric Olson, AP/Associated Press Sports Aug 26, 2021. Linfield football ticket photo from Wildcatville.

This story appears on page A9 of the Fri., Aug. 27, 2021, McMinnville N-R/News-Register.

LINCOLN, Neb. (AP) — John Fey was rummaging through a box of old scrapbooks this summer when he came upon a couple lost treasures.

At the bottom of the box, detached from the page they were once glued to, were ticket stubs from Nebraska’s 1971 “Game of the Century” win against Oklahoma and the Cornhuskers’ 1984 Orange Bowl loss to Miami.

Those games are still regarded among the greatest in college football history and those stubs were proof Fey was at both.

“I had flashbacks. Big-time flashbacks,” the 68-year-old from Plattsmouth, Nebraska, said.

For people who keep them, ticket stubs can spark memories of being at a big game in person, cheering on a favorite team or, for a guy like Fey, nearly total recall of time spent with friends and family at a stadium. They are treasured mementos — and they are not going away even as schools transition to cashless transactions for everything from game tickets to food and drink.

Nearly every Football Bowl Subdivision school has gone to mobile ticketing this season, but in a spot check of 30 schools, only Notre Dame said it would refuse to print tickets for fans requesting them.

The other 29? They are willing to print, though most do not publicly offer that option. Illinois was among schools that did give fans a choice, and 74% picked paper. That figure was 64% at Nebraska and 50% at Texas A&M.

Customer service is critical during the transition, said Maureen Andersen of Palm Springs, California, president and CEO of the International Ticketing Association industry group.

 “I have to presume a college-aged kid doesn’t want anything printed ever, so a push on digital is going to be a completely different conversation than it is with an alumnus who graduated college in 1942,” Andersen said. “It takes constant communication and working through a process and talking to the fans. You get pushback when you do an all-or-nothing proposition.”

Traditional tickets on cardstock began fading away in the last decade with the advent of print-at-home tickets and digital, or mobile, ticketing systems where fans have a barcode on their smartphones scanned at the gate.

Digital tickets are eco-friendly, a safeguard against stolen or counterfeit tickets, and they can be transferred online from one person to another. They also allow schools to save hundreds of thousands of dollars in mailing costs. In the pandemic, cashless transactions are more popular than ever for safety reasons.

Nebraska fan Tom Reischlein of Omaha said he has used mobile ticketing at venues with no problem but chose paper football tickets at the suggestion of his wife, who said they might want them as a souvenir if they see a memorable game.

“I think it’s a good idea that they’re kind of easing into it and giving people the choice,” said Reischlein, 58. “I’ve seen a lot of the older folks, either they don’t have a cell phone or they have trouble navigating through it when there’s a bunch of people lined up behind them.”

Another Nebraska fan, Katherine Crawford of Lincoln, said her family has owned season tickets for three generations and will go digital this year.

“We had a huge discussion,” said Crawford, 27. “My grandma was very much against it, but she’s not a huge technology person so it would have been quite difficult for her. My mom and I agreed it would be a nice option to have, a convenience.”

Mark Townsend of Columbia, Maryland, a collector who runs the website TicketsFromThePast.com, said paper tickets bring about a sense of nostalgia.

Stubs from historic NFL, NBA and Major League Baseball games have the most monetary value, Townsend said, noting that a less-than-mint condition stub from Jackie Robinson’s first game with the Brooklyn Dodgers recently was sold for $40,000.

College football ticket stubs tend to hold greater sentimental value, Townsend said, because of the strong emotional connection of alumni and fans.

Without paper tickets, he said, “You lose that piece of history and memory of where you’ve been, where grandpa’s been, or ‘Me and my dad went to the ballgame and we’ve got our ticket stub still,’” he said. “It’s more your moment in time and the pleasure that the game gave you. It ignites things in your head that makes you remember things.”

In Fey’s case, his ’71 Game of the Century stub leads him to reminisce about his surprise when his dad told him he was able to get hold of the tickets, the flight to Norman, Oklahoma, in a small private plane that needed its tires pumped before takeoff, and Johnny Rodgers’ 72-yard punt return for a touchdown that was the signature play of the Cornhuskers’ 35-31 win.

“He was 10 yards in front of me when he crossed the 5-yard line,” Fey said. “I swear to God if I would have had a cell phone I would have taken a picture.”

Fey said he had stuffed the ticket stub in his pocket after he went through the turnstile, put it in his scrapbook when he got home and forgot he had it until he was going through some boxes last month.

Same with the stub from the ’84 Orange Bowl. The husband of a woman Fey worked with had an extra ticket and asked if Fey wanted to join him and three others on a guys’ trip to Miami.

Fey remembered the long van ride from Omaha to Miami, with a stop in Jacksonville to watch Iowa play Florida in the Gator Bowl, and unexpectedly bumping into his parents in a concession line at the Orange Bowl stadium.

“What are you doing here?” Fey remembered his dad asking.

Most memorable, of course, was one of the defining plays of Nebraska coach Tom Osborne’s career — the late failed two-point conversion pass that left the Huskers with a 31-30 loss when an extra-point kick probably would have secured his first national championship. Fey watched the play unfold from the opposite end of the field.

In the moment, Fey said, he was inclined to throw away that ticket stub.

 “But I must have thought, ‘Well, someday I might want to look back on this,’” he said. ”Now if they get blown out 48-0, that’s one thing. They were behind and it was a hell of a comeback and had that pass not been tipped, maybe he would have got it.

 “I’m glad I didn’t throw it away.”

Wednesday, August 25, 2021

Linfielder Gary Cox, who played baseball and football for the Wildcats, died in July 2021



=Gary Bruce Cox

Dec. 21, 1943 – July 3, 2021
Philomath News July 15, 2021

Mr. Cox is a legacy. Coach Cox, a true Warrior with a gift for making everyone feel good about themselves. Gary Cox, a man of faith known for his humor. A role model and inspiration. A hero to many and a father figure to others. A mentor with a beacon of kindness and compassion. He is a voice of wisdom and positive influence with willingness to extend tough love. Gary is a rock solid class act that etched a permanent spot on our hearts. He has great enthusiasm for all things Warrior “Once a Warrior, Always a Warrior.”

Gary Bruce Cox died July 3, 2021 at his home in Redmond, OR surrounded by family.

Born on December 21, 1943 in Cottage Grove, OR to Tom and Mary Cox. He grew up in Drain, OR and graduated from Drain Union High School in 1962. After graduation he married his high school sweetheart on August 16, 1963. He went on to attend college at University of Oregon, Columbia Basin Junior College and then graduated from Linfield College in 1968.

Gary and Diana moved to Philomath in 1968 where they made their home for 36 years. Gary began his career with the Philomath School District in 1968. The couple had two children, Christina Cox Rosborough and Kathi Cox Sollars. After 30 years as teacher, coach and athletic director, Gary retired in 1998. Gary started as a volunteer firefighter with the Philomath Fire Department in 1972 and retired in 2003 after 31 and a half years of service. Gary and Diana were members of Suburban Christian Church for 33 years and most recently of Redmond Christian Church.

Throughout the years, Gary was recognized for:

• NAIA Baseball Championship, 1966.

• 4A Athletic Director of the Year, 1991.

• Al Neet Educator of the Year, 1998.

• Inducted into Linfield College Athletic Hall of Fame (Baseball), 1999.

• Inducted into State of OR Sports Hall of Fame.

• Inducted into Linfield College Athletic Hall of Fame (Football), 2010.

• Inducted into the OR Athletic Directors Assoc. Hall of Fame, 2012.

• Philomath Fire Department Most Inspirational Firefighter and Firefighter of the Quarter.

• Philomath Community Service Award.

• Philomath High School Legend Club.

• Founder of the Warrior Scramble.

• Board of Directors for PYAC.

• Recently honored by having the PHS/Gary Cox Hall of Fame named after him.

 

He enjoyed spending his time fishing, golfing, gardening, camping, traveling, sports and attending his grandkids school and sport activities.

Survivors include: Wife, Diana Cox, daughter Christina Rosborough (husband Todd) of Oregon City, OR, daughter Kathi Sollars (husband Shad) of Lahaina, HI. Brother Steve Cox (wife Sharley) of Medford, OR. Four grandchildren and 3 great grandchildren, nephews and nieces.

Preceded in death by his parents Tom and Mary Cox.

Gary will be laid to rest in a private burial at Comstock Cemetery in Curtin, OR.

A celebration of Life will be held August 7, 2021, 1:30 pm at Suburban Christian Church located at 2760 SW 53rd St. Corvallis, OR 97333.

In lieu of flowers, donations can be made In Memory of Gary Cox to:

Philomath Youth Activities Club (PYAC)

PO Box 1358

Philomath, OR 97370

 

or online

Venmo: @PhilomathYouthActivitiesClub

#

=Coach Cox at Philomath: ‘He’s a legend around here’

By Brad Fuqua, Philomath News, July 20, 2021

 

The late Gary Cox and his impact on Philomath

 

Strike up a conversation about Gary Cox and a common theme starts to present itself — mentor, caring, modest, passionate.

 

“He was a great friend for so many things, but he was a good coach and mentor,” said family friend Marcia Gilson, who first met Cox at a Philomath Booster Club meeting — her as the parent of a student-athlete and him as the athletic director.

 

“He was good at bringing your strengths out in you, so he was a good coach and just a very caring person,” she added. “I can’t think of anything bad about him, except maybe he was too humble.”

 

Another longtime friend, Blake Ecker, said simply, “He’s a legend around here — no doubt about it.”

Cox, former longtime athletic director, teacher and coach, died on July 3 at his home in Redmond. He was 77.

 

“He’s always been kind of that mentor,” said Ecker, who is Philomath High’s varsity boys basketball coach. “When I was a JV coach, he was still the athletic director and I looked up to him … just a world of a guy. It’s hard talking about him because it’s pretty emotional.”

 

Steve Bennett, a teacher and himself a former coach and AD, first met Cox during the fall of 1991. That was the year he came on board as an assistant basketball coach. They knew each other for several years through their association with athletics and teaching and then in 2012, Cox was inducted into the Oregon Athletic Directors Association Hall of Fame.

 

“He invited me to that and that’s when our friendship really took off and I got to know him and his family a little bit better,” Bennett said. “It turned into lots of phone calls and texts and fishing over the last 10 years.”

 

Ah yes, the fishing. It’s another common theme among those who can share stories about him. Or, baseball — he enjoyed going to Arizona and watching spring training and Oregon State. And his passion for sports never waned with a continued interest in Philomath High as well as a love for watching his grandchildren play.

 

“These last few months, he was able to watch his granddaughters play volleyball and I gave him a link to watch all of our basketball games,” Ecker said. “It was good that he was able to see those things.”

 

Before Philomath

 

Cox experienced exceptional success in high school athletics at Drain, a small community located about 40 miles south of Eugene. Graduating with Drain Union High School’s Class of 1962 (the school did not become North Douglas until 1968), he earned 12 varsity letters.

 

In football, Cox led the Warriors as their star quarterback to an 8-2 record and an appearance in the Class A-2 state playoffs during his senior season in the fall of 1961. The following summer, he played in the Shrine All-Star Game, which at the time was held in Pendleton.

 

Cox played catcher on Drain’s baseball team and hit .500 in league play as a senior. The Warriors advanced to the A-2 state playoffs and ended up sharing the title with North Catholic. Drain opened the playoffs with a 3-2 win over Riddle and then downed the defending state champions, Serra Catholic (a now-defunct Salem school), 1-0. In a pitchers’ duel, the Warriors won the game despite getting only one hit — an infield single in the sixth inning by Cox.

 

Drain advanced to the championship game, but unfortunately, all of the state title games in 1962 were rained out and never played.

 

Cox also played American Legion baseball in the summer and appeared in the State-Metro All-Star Baseball Series. He earned all-state honors in both football and baseball.

 

Following high school, Cox continued his education at the University of Oregon. In 1963, he headed to Columbia Basin College in Pasco, Washington, and then moved on to Linfield College in McMinnville, where he earned a degree in 1968.

 

Cox married Diana Becker, a high school classmate, in an evening ceremony on Aug. 16, 1963 in Drain. Later, during their 36 years in Philomath, Cox and his wife had two children — daughters Christina and Kathi.

 

In 1966, Cox was a catcher on Linfield’s baseball team that won the NAIA championship. The Wildcats barely qualified for the playoffs as a No. 8 seed and then won four straight games to claim the title. Linfield defeated Lewis, 15-4, in the championship game to finish 26-9 and earn the first national title in the school’s history.

 

Always a Warrior

 

Cox arrived at Philomath High School in 1968 as a 24-year-old head baseball coach, replacing Cecil Ira who had resigned after the 1968 season. That spring, Cox had been a student baseball coach at Linfield. He also was immediately involved with the PHS football and basketball programs as an assistant.

 

Beyond coaching, Cox was hired as a social studies and boys physical education teacher at the junior high.

 

In 1973, Chuck Vaughn moved from athletic director into an administrative position at the middle school. Cox officially became the AD on July 1, 1973 and at the time was still involved in coaching baseball, football and basketball.

 

Cox resigned as the baseball coach following the 1976 season. The Warriors had won the Emerald League championship in 1975. In eight years, his coaching record was 99-75. Frank Hernandez took over the job in 1977.

 

In the following years, Cox was involved in several efforts, such as raising money to improve athletic facilities, among those a major $63,000 track renovation in 1978. In 1997, he helped raise more than $30,000 to send the school’s Shining Stars dance team to Washington, D.C., to appear in President Bill Clinton’s inauguration parade. Those are just a few examples of projects he helped support.

 

Gilson explained how Cox would approach people to become involved in something for the school or students.

 

“If he came in and asked you if you would work on a project or if you would do something, he had thought about that for a long time,” she said. “He realized you would be able to do it but he was encouraging you and giving you the opportunity to turn him down. But he didn’t plan on you turning him down, he’d work on you.”

 

Cox was the AD when Tami Maida of “Quarterback Princess” fame wanted to play football in 1981 and he came to her defense.

 

“In my opinion, anyone who walks onto the football field — whatever the sex — would be treated the same. We’re not going to take it easy on girls. And on the other hand, we’re not going to ‘rip city’ them either,” he told the Philomath School Board.

 

Cox ended up taking over the baseball program as the head coach again in 1980. He coached baseball five more seasons before resigning after the 1984 campaign.

 

In all, Cox worked in the Philomath School District for 30 years — 25 as the athletic/activities director. He was honored with an open house celebration on June 13, 1998.

 

“It was a great day and each and everyone contributed to the greatness,” Cox wrote in a letter to the editor following the event. “I wish I could say thanks to everyone personally, but I might miss someone, so again I say thank you from the bottom of my heart.”

 

Involved, appreciated

 

The Philomath School District’s Al Neet Educator of the Year honor went to Cox in 1998 and his career at Philomath High earned induction in 2012, as earlier mentioned, into the OADA Hall of Fame.

 

Athletic directors and coaches don’t see eye-to-eye on occasion — it’s just part of the relationship. Bennett said the coaches respected him.

 

“Everybody always respected Gary because his heart was in the right place,” Bennett said. “It gets you through any kind of challenge or tough times when you are in those situations because you have so much respect for the person. You know even though you might not agree on things sometimes, his heart’s in the right place and doing the right thing for kids.”

 

Several other honors came along through the years, including OADA’s Class 3A Athletic Director of the Year (1991), State of Oregon Sports Hall of Fame (in 1999 as part of Linfield’s 1966 team), Linfield Athletic Hall of Fame (1999 for baseball, 2010 for football), PHS Legend Club (2012) and many others. He also served on the Philomath Youth Activities Club’s board of directors.

 

Cox joined the Philomath Fire Department as a volunteer firefighter in 1972 and remained active for the next 31 years.

“He’s everything positive that there is about Philomath,” said Gilson, who was also with Philomath Fire & Rescue for many years.

 

Ecker first met Cox while he was still in high school. Ecker’s freshman year on the baseball team was Cox’s final season as head coach and he became good friends with his daughter, Christina, who later married one of Ecker’s best friends, Todd Rosborough.

 

“We started fishing together and doing things together probably since college and then more and more as I’ve gotten older,” Ecker said about his friendship with Cox.

 

Ecker shared a pleasant memory about the last time they went crabbing together. It’s common to put names on crab pots for identification purposes. Ecker said he has one with Cox’s name on it, adding, “We’ll leave his name on there.”

 

Cox retained that special connection to Philomath through sports, friendships and other activities.

 

“He would always make it to Legend Club meetings and any inductions that we had,” Bennett said. “And he made it to the graduations forever.”

 

As mentioned earlier, Cox was inducted in 2012 into the PHS Legend Club, an organization that honors those who have gone above and beyond to support student-athletes. Bennett said that for years, Cox wanted to do something to recognize others that didn’t fit into the induction criteria of a student Hall of Fame or Legend Club.

 

“We never had anything for alumni, coaches, there were some pieces like that missing,” Bennett said. “So for the last year and a half or so, we’ve been working on that and it’s going to continue on even without him. But that was really his baby and he was really passionate about it.”

 

Cox always wanted to make sure others knew how much their contributions were appreciated.

 

“He was always about honoring people, thanking people, giving recognition to people,” Bennett said, “And he was about being involved in the community, whether it was a firefighter or with his church.”

 

The family planned for a private burial at Comstock Cemetery in Curtin, a small town northeast of Drain in Douglas County. A Celebration of Life event is scheduled for Aug. 7 at Suburban Christian Church (2760 SW 53rd St., Corvallis) with a start time of 1:30 p.m.