Tuesday, October 25, 2022

Larry Ward, former Linfield Wildcats ‘voice’ receives award from University of Tennessee Chattanooga


Larry Ward, former Linfield Wildcats ‘voice’ receives award from University of Tennessee Chattanooga

Larry Ward, a former radio ‘Voice’ of Linfield College Wildcats football and men’s basketball, received the University of Tennessee Chattanooga’s (UTC) ‘Harold Wilkes Award ‘Oct. 21, 2022, in Chattanooga during a banquet.

The award was established to honor Wilkes and to recognize a volunteer, coach, staff member or University administrator who has demonstrated exemplary leadership in furthering Chattanooga Athletics.

Wilkes, who died in 2017, was a former UTC head football coach and was UTC athletic director for 20 years, 1970-1990.

Ward is in his 25th year as the voice of UTC women’s basketball team. The long-time play-by-play announcer of the Chattanooga Lookouts (pro baseball team), Ward was recently inducted into the Tennessee Radio Hall of Fame. In 2016, he was honored as being the first broadcaster inducted into the Southern League Hall of Fame,” said UTC Sports Info.

Friday, October 21, 2022

MEMORIES OF 1968 VISIT TO LINFIELD COLLEGE: POETRY READING, SINGING IN RILEY GYM, 'ONE STEP DOWN' VISIT BY ROD McKUEN

MEMORIES OF 1968 VISIT TO LINFIELD COLLEGE: POETRY READING, SINGING IN RILEY GYM, 'ONE STEP DOWN' VISIT BY ROD McKUEN


Rod McKuen Was the Bestselling Poet in American History.

What Happened?

He sold 60 million books and 100 million records.

Why was he forgotten?

--Questions in headline in Oct. 10, 2022, Slate article by Dan Kois.

https://slate.com/culture/2022/10/rod-mckuen-best-selling-poet-songs-what-happened.html

The article does not mention McKuen’s 1968 visit to Linfield College. This posting does.

Rod McKuen read his poetry and sang, too, March 27, 1968, in Linfield’s Riley Gym. (See photo from 1968 Oak Leaves posted here.) After that, McKuen visited the ‘One Step Down’ coffee house (ditto, photo from Oak Leaves) in the basement of Newby Hall.

Below, read the text (slightly edited by Wildcatville in October 2022) of stories by Peter Schenck, Linfield College Class of 1969, from the April 4, 1968, edition of the Linfield Review. Find the same stories as Review “clippings” posted here. Historical note: Linfield Review became Linews on May 2, 1968.

....

McKuen Meets

With Admirers

Young And Old

Linfield Review, April 4, 1968

For many, Rod McKuen ended his performance when he stepped off the stage in Riley gym at Linfield. Not so. McKuen lingered at the college a good hour following his last note in Riley.

First there was the elderly woman, ala "little old lady fame," who compared house pets (cats) with the golden boy poet." After reading your poetry, I know that I'm not the only one with an understanding cat," she said. "Whenever I read your poetry, I think of you and your cat . . . I never thought I'd have a chance to really see you or talk with you," she remarked.

Then there was the young man who traveled across two states to visit his poet idol. "I had to do it now . . . I'm going into the service soon," he remarked on his trek which brought him from Ketchum, Idaho, the one-time home of novelist Ernest Hemmingway.

McKuen busied himself signing posters for young admirers intermittently throughout the time. Most were personalized with quips like "sleep warm."

TIGHT SCHEDULE

Undoubtedly feeling the pressures of a tight schedule which will take him on a swing through several Washington colleges, McKuen craned his neck looking for an end to the line of autograph seekers. Finally he was able to breathe a sigh of relief, wishing his final "take care."

Comments from avid fans on having their books signed by the poet went something like this: "I can't believe that!" and "Talk about these college kids!" blurted by a middle-aged woman from Corvallis upon having her books autographed.

McKuen climaxed the evening of "good" entertainment by signing the wall of Linfield's new coffee house. He then slid back to a normal life on the road, disappearing into the night with his herd of rented 1968 Mustangs.

 ::::

Coffee House

Opens; Student

Support Good

Linfield Review, April 4, 1968

At nine o'clock last Friday night, the ASLC supported coffee house "One Step Down" opened up in Newby cellar.

Weeks of preparation — from painting to installing ultraviolet lighting — went into the final coffee house package. Helping tie together an idea that students did want an on-campus, free action, free thinking, free expression, free admission, free entertainment outlet, were house project leaders Dennis Burkhart and Gary Hunt.

Hunt attributed the house's opening night success "to many people, from students to administration" whom he did not try to name since he would "probably forget someone."

 

THE ASLC SUPPORTED

HOUSE "ONE STEP DOWN"

IS OPEN BOTH

FRIDAY AND SATURDAY

NIGHTS FROM 9 P.M. to 1:15 A.M.

Successful is probably an understatement for the "One Step Down" opening. Conservative estimates range from 200 to 350 people in a four hour period.  

In fact the standing room only crowd was so big that at one point Burkhart found it easier to get in and out of the house through the opened windows.

Entertainment for the evening was provided by Alden "Baldy" Sawyer's voice and guitar, Bruce Maurier's bass, and Jackie Anger's vocal work. The Five Hawaiians — Mike Achong, Larry Hall, John Sadowski, Al Imamura, and Dennis Okimoto — presented a series of audience pleasing island songs.

Since Linfield is a tradition bound NO SMOKING college, an interesting part of the opening night activity was the actual little smoking that occurred when the smoking ban — in accord with "One Step Down's" 'free' policy —was dropped. For perhaps the first time in the college's history, students have a place (besides their rooms or living unit lounge) where they can smoke without college ruled 'regret'.

Students in attendance had various reactions to the house. One couple, Mike Shannon and Jenny Johnson, called it "great" and thought that it "would bring the students together," since currently "the campus is dead socially."

One girl, who worked on the house project from start to finish, was surprised. "I never thought it would go over as good as it did."

:::

Wildcativille contacted Peter Schenck (Peter V. Schenck of Los Altos, Calif.) by email in October 2022. Peter confirmed he wrote the Linfield Review stories  which, for some reason, had no bylines. He said:

“Rodney Marvin Woolever died in Beverly Hills in 2015 at age 81 (of pneumonia) and was survived by his partner Edward and four cats. He had a varied and successful career as an actor, poet, and songwriter, though he suffered bouts of clinical depression at times.

“Indeed, he did appear at Linfield College in April of 1968 just before he departed for a period of years in France during which he lived and collaborated with the French Artist, Jacques Brel.

“In McMinnville, he left behind an angular caricature of himself and his pseudonymous signature as Rod McKuen (on the coffee house wall) along with the impression that his poems spoke of special loves on Stanyan Street (and other quarters) which most of the youthful audiences of the day likely assumed, were female. It would seem they were in error.

“Linfield Journalism Professor Charlotte Filer would have urged a deeper look before conclusions were drawn in print but those were days when journalism was loathe to engage in sanctioned projection so the whole sidebar would likely have been red-lined instead -- and the question left open.

 “He was a nice guy …”

 

Thank you to Rich Schmidt, Linfield archivist, for locating and scanning the Linfield Review stories posted here.

Thanks also to Rod McKuen and Peter Schenck for making this posting possible. And, Wildcatville also thanks Peter for one of the great story endings:

 

Poet Rod McKuen “slid back to a normal life on the road, disappearing into the night with his herd of rented 1968 Mustangs.”

#






 

Sunday, October 16, 2022

Engraved tile in American Football Coaches Association ‘Plaza of Influence’ honors Linfield Coach Paul Durham

 


Engraved tile in American Football Coaches Association ‘Plaza of Influence’ honors Linfield Coach Paul Durham

(This story was issued by the Wildcatville blog and Facebook page on Oct. 18, 2022, the anniversary of Paul Durham’s birth. He was born Oct. 18, 1913, in Portland and died at age 93 on June 22, 2007, in Honolulu.)

When Dale Newhouse (Linfield College Class of 1966) and Tim Marsh (Linfield Class of 1970) learned Paul Durham (1913-2007, Linfield Class of 1936) was not in the College Football Hall of Fame in Atlanta, Georgia, they were disappointed.

But they also learned the American Football Coaches Association in Waco, Texas, has a “Plaza of Influence.” The plaza is described as a “special place where football coaches can be honored by those whose lives they have inspired.”

There was no doubt in their minds that Paul Durham, a long-time Linfield football coach (1948-1967) and athletic director (1949-1968) deserved a tile in the plaza. So, this summer (2022) they donated a total of $500 to the American Football Coaches Foundation to buy a tile with this inscription:

PAUL DURHAM
LINFIELD COLLEGE
ATHLETE COACH ATH DIR
STARTED THE STREAK
RENAISSANCE MAN
HIS POSITIVE IMPACT
WAS FAR REACHING

Because they already bought the tile, you can't contribute to its purchase. But you can, as they each did in concert with the tile purchase, make a donation to the Linfield Top Cat Club. The club supports Linfield’s NCAA Division III varsity sports teams and Wildcat student athletes.

https://linfieldtopcat.com/sports/2020/11/23/support-the-topcat-club.aspx

Dale played Wildcat football for Coach Durham. As a student, Tim served an academic year as Linfield Sports Information director.

"I am so proud to be a part of acknowledging THE Man, Paul Durham, who made me the teacher and coach I became. I just cannot thank him enough," said Dale.

Honored in the “Plaza of Influence” with an engraved brick is College Football Hall of Fame enshrine Ad Rutschman (Class of 1954). Durham coached Rutschman, then a Linfield student, in football and basketball at Linfield. The brick was funded by Mike Riley, a former Linfield assistant football coach on Rutschman's staff and longtime college head football coach. The brick inscription:

AD RUTSCHMAN
LINFIELD COLLEGE
COACH & FRIEND

#

Questions? Contact:

 Dale Newhouse
7triple@earthlink.net
(925) 528-9146

In a philosophical, almost poetic, Linfield Commencement address, poet and L&C prof William E. Stafford, told grads ...

 


LINFIELD 1970 COMMENCEMENT

 In a philosophical, almost poetic, commencement address, May 17, 1970, Dr. William E. Stafford, Lewis & Clark College English professor, told Linfield graduates it is an "advancing presence we all inhabit" in that we have to "learn from events and from what keeps happening."

The nationally known poet said each person is growing toward a more complete self and "the encounters of four years are being celebrated today by you 185 graduates and your families.

"We keep learning; we're all the class of 1970," he reminded his audience.

The professor-poet drew on happenings for four years ago when the graduating class was just completing high school to remind them of the growing complexities of life.

Linfield gave the Rev. Samuel B. McKinney of Mount Zion Baptist Church, Seattle, baccalaureate speaker, the honorary degree of doctor of divinity and Dr. Stafford the honorary degree of doctor of letters.

The sunny weather made for a perfect commencement day and large crowds on the campus. For the first time in the school's history both baccalaureate and commencement were held outside among the campus oak trees.

–Source: Linfield College Oak Leaves 1970, page 175



 

Friday, October 14, 2022

From McMinnville N-R print edition 14 Oct 2022

 


 



Linfield looks to extend 'The Streak'

 

Linfield looks to extend 'The Streak'

By Dylan Wilhelm, Sports Editor, McMinnville N-R/News-Register 10/14/2022

When Linfield takes the field on Saturday in Forest Grove to take on the Pacific Boxers, it will be business as usual for the Wildcats.

Linfield (4-0, 2-0 NWC) is looking to continue its dominance over the Boxers (3-1, 2-0 NWC), who the Cats have beaten 41 of the last 43 times they have played, including 13 straight.

While a win would help Linfield in its quest for a NWC championship and an automatic berth into the NCAA Division III postseason, it would also extend a streak that has been alive since before a man landed on the moon.

A win on Saturday would secure Linfield’s 66th consecutive winning season, which is the longest streak at any division or level of college football. The next closest streak is 42 years, by the Mount Union (Ohio) Raiders.

Since Linfield’s streak began in 1956, the Wildcats have posted an astounding .837 winning percentage in the regular season.

They have won or shared 43 conference titles and have posted 22 undefeated regular seasons. They’ve won four national championships, finished as national runner-up three times, and have made seven trips to the national semifinals across NAIA Division II and NCAA Division III.

Every year the number grows, it becomes more mind-boggling to those who know of it, except for those on the Linfield campus. For them, it is simply the standard.

“It’s the expectation, not the goal,” said Joe Stuart, Linfield play-by-play announcer and Broadcast Operations Coordinator. “The goal is winning the conference and contending for a national title.”

Stuart is a McMinnville native and a Linfield graduate, so he is versed in the culture that is instilled in not just the football team, but Linfield athletics as a whole.

“The standard is excellence,” Stuart said. “Literally the words in the hallway across my office, it says ‘Culture of Excellence.

“You’re a part of something a lot bigger than yourself that, at this point, thousands of people have put a ton of hard work into sustaining. Which is a pretty cool thing to be a part of when you kind of zoom out with a wide lens.”

Coach Joseph Smith has been a part of the football program for over 25 years, first as an All-American defensive back, then as an assistant, and now as the head coach in his 17th season as head coach.

“It means a lot,” Smith said of the streak. “The values and the principles that coach (Paul) Durham and coach (Ad) Rutschman founded this program and steeped it in have held true. We’ve held on to those through coach (Ed) Langsdorf and coach (Jay) Locey and now my staff and I. I’m really proud of that.”

Smith also mentioned that the values instilled in the program have always been about doing things the right way, on and off the field.

“What I’m most proud of is, you know, it means a lot to our graduates, they’re really neat young men. They go out and they’re very successful afterwards,” Smith said.

“I think winning on the field is really a byproduct of how we go about doing things every day - the core principles of the program.”

While a win on Saturday would officially extend the streak, Stuart says that it is just another box to check as they continue through the season.

“It definitely means something to re-clinch the streak every year,” Stuart said. “But I would say for the most part, it’s not some super major part of the season, because at the end of the day, what’s going to matter is how far these guys can go in the playoffs.”

A win over Pacific would leave them and Pacific Lutheran as the only unbeaten teams in the conference. Pacific Lutheran takes on Whitworth on Saturday. Linfield hosts Pacific Lutheran next Saturday in McMinnville.

Kickoff for Saturday in Forest Grove is set for 1 p.m., and the game will be broadcast on Linfield’s website at golinfieldwildcats.com/watch.

#



Tuesday, October 11, 2022

High flying Connor McNabb


Linfield's Connor McNabb hurdles during Linfield at Whitworth football game 10/8/2022 in Spokane/Mead/Country Homes, Wash. Linfield won, 35-17.
(Wildcatville photo)

Linfield at Whitworth football slideshow 10/8/2022

Linfield at Whitworth football video clips 10/8/2022


Monday, October 10, 2022

Did this McMinnville N-R headline on Nov. 1, 2019, about Linfield College becoming Linfield University. ROCK the campus and community?

Did this McMinnville N-R headline on Nov. 1, 2019, about Linfield College becoming Linfield University. ROCK the campus and community?



Saturday, October 01, 2022

Jane McIllroy plaque dedication/Celebrate Linfield women's athletics 10/1/2022

Jane McIllroy plaque dedication/Celebrate Linfield women's athletics 10/1/2022

See video https://youtu.be/Al6vJUPAdAc

Plaque (see photo) text reads:



“Dr. Jane S. Mcllroy
Professor of Health and Physical Education
Director of Women's Athletics
1950-1982

“Dr. Jane Mcllroy was a pioneer in every respect.

"From the moment she joined Linfield College in 1950, she was a persistent advocate for women's opportunities in academics and athletics. For 32 years, she served as professor, Director of Women's Athletics, coach and mentor, and laid a foundation of courageous and authentic leadership that continues to this day. Her name and spirit live on in the Mcllroy-Lewis sports award given yearly to the most competitive institution in the Northwest Conference.

“Mcllroy was a World War II veteran, sailor and climber of mountains personal, professional and topographical.”


Born in October: Linfield Football coaches Henry Lever, Paul Durham, Ad Rutschman


Born in October: Linfield Football coaches Henry Lever, Paul Durham and Ad Rutschman 

Three former Linfield football coaches have their birth month in common. It's October.

 · Henry Lever, Oct 1, 1883, Loveland, Ohio

· Paul Durham, Oct 18, 1913, Portland, Oregon

· Ad Rutschman, Oct 30, 1931, Hillsboro, Oregon

Lever was Wildcat football coach for 12 seasons, 1930-1938 and 1940-1942. Durham was coached by Lever and succeeded him as coach, serving 20 seasons (1948-1967). Rutschman was coached by Durham and succeeded him as coach. He served 24 seasons (1968-1991).

All of those named in this posting are deceased except Ad, Ed, Jay and Joe.

 

LINFIELD FOOBALL COACHES, DATES OF BIRTH

Source: Wildcatville

Arthur Marion Brumback, Dec 7, 1869

David Morton Waddell, June 5, 1880

John McBride, Aug 22, 1832

Hubert* Lee Toney, Dec 21, 1878

William Lair Thompson, Jan 1, 1880

Maurice Earl Pettitt, Sept 27, 1889

Lawrence Warren “Larry” Wolfe, Dec 29, 1899

William Henry "Heinie" Sielk, March 7, 1899

Henry Work Lever, Oct 1, 1883

Wayne Maurice “Tiny” Harn, Sept 25, 1911

Paul Henry Durham, Oct 18, 1913

Adolf Donald “Ad” Rutschman III, Oct 30, 1931

Edward Vernon “Ed” Langsdorf, Dec 23, 1944

Jay Alan Locey, Feb 3, 1955

Joseph William “Joe” Smith, Feb 1, 1971

 *First name might be Herbert