Sunday, March 08, 2020

LINFIELD COLLEGE in McMinnville, Oregon, banned football in 1906, but resumed playing in 1921

LINFIELD COLLEGE in McMinnville, Oregon, banned football in 1906, but resumed playing in 1921

Story originally posted Sept. 19, 2011, at Wildcatville blog.
Linfield College, soon to become Linfield University, is located in McMinnville (Yamhill County), Oregon, south of Portland (Oregon’s largest city) and north of Salem(Oregon’s capital city).

The Linfield College Wildcats compete in the Northwest Conference in the NCAA Division III.

Linfield has won national collegiate sport team titles in football, baseball and softball.

The Linfield College Athletics online football record book year-by-year scores includes the fact (see quotes in parens below) that between 1906 and 1921, McMinnville College did not play football by direction of the college’s board of trustees. In 1922, at the same time the college was renamed Linfield, the trustees resumed the sport.

“(Football suspended by the Board of Trustees in the summer of 1906. No football that year or until it was resumed in 1922.)”

A story (link below) in the April 25, 2008, Linfield Review student newspaper by Jordan Jacobo, provides interesting information about the time when football was banned by the college.

During the time football was banned it was a “very different sport, Dave Hansen, then Linfield dean of students told the Review. “It was very rough and tumble, and they didn’t have the same level of protective gear. I think even President Theodore Roosevelt had some misgivings about whether it should be a proper sport.”

The article includes:
According to the 1922 edition of the Oak Leaves, student yearbook, “After 16 years, football will again be played at Linfield. Sixteen years ago, the roughness of the game and the death of one student here coming as a direct result of football, caused the administration to put a ban on the game until such time as the rules had changed sufficiently to warrant the reinstatement of the sport.”

That year, the board of trustees and McMinnville College President Leonard Riley decided to approve two intercollegiate football games to be played in the fall of 1922.

There is no other mention of the death that had brought the college’s football program to a halt.

“It would be hard to envision Linfield without football today,” Athletic Director Scott Carnahan said. “When you put an athletic team on display, it represents the institution; it’s a valuable part of our recruiting process.”

“In Bricks Without Straw,” an early history of the college written in 1938 by former professor Jonas A. Jonasson, he said football was “the most popular of all college sports.”

Jonasson describes how football was banned at Linfield: “The president of the college did not share this enthusiasm. On the contrary, he felt that the game as played in America tended to develop rowdyism and brutality, besides exposing players to the danger of permanent physical injury.”

On March 27, 1906, the board agreed to prohibit football indefinitely.

For the next 16 years, students frequently pleaded for the reversal of the decision; however, in 1915 Riley went as far as recommending to the Association of Independent Colleges of Oregon that all intercollegiate football programs be abolished.

In the spring of 1921, a group of athletic directors and student representatives petitioned the McMinnville College Board of Trustees for a reversal of the ban, according to Jonasson, asking for a broader athletic program.

In “Linfield’s Hundred Years,” written by former history professor Kenneth L. Holmes, the student activism is shown to have paid off.

Riley announced a special afternoon chapel on Jan. 10, 1922.

“(The students) felt sure what the surprise was going to be,” Holmes wrote. “They were right; football was again to be a college sport.”

But Riley’s second announcement eclipsed the enthusiasm of the 16-year football ban reversal. He told the students of Frances Ross Linfield’s decision to leave the college her properties in Spokane, Wash., estimated to be worth $250,000.

Riley said in honor of her gift, McMinnville College was to be renamed Linfield College.

Thus, Linfield and its football program were born together, re-created on the same afternoon.

The 1923 Oak Leaves reflects on the first season of football after its reinstatement: “The turn-out was large but most of the men had very little experience. But what was lacking in experience was made up with fighting grit, stick-to-it-iveness and the indomitable Linfield spirit.”

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Below is info (a book review, link below, in the Aug. 14, 2011 New York Times) which provides a tenor of the time/1906, when Linfield suspended football

“The Big Scrum: How Teddy Roosevelt Saved Football,” John J. Miller’s informative account of Roosevelt’s impact on the sport’s early years, readers are taken back to 1876 and a contest between Harvard and Yale. It was the first game Roosevelt, then an 18-year-old Harvard freshman, ever attended, and it propelled him into a lifelong love of the sport. Its physical dangers, he thought, helped build character. See info here. (link below)

The Times article includes Roosevelt taking center stage in the fall of 1905, when he convened a White House summit with football’s leading coaches and thinkers; even Elihu Root, the secretary of state, attended. Miller argues that this was the moment when Roosevelt put his stamp on the sport by imploring the men to crack down on dirty play and reform the way the game was coached. With Roosevelt’s encouragement, Miller says, a series of rules changes was set in motion — among them, increasing the number of referees and strengthening penalties for unsportsmanlike conduct — that ultimately quieted the critics enough to allow the colleges to play on...

Roosevelt is pictured with this article.
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The American Intercollegiate Football Rules Committee met at the Murray Hill Hotel in New York City beginning January 12, 1906, to create measures “for squelching brutality and all forms of unnecessary roughness.”[3] Numerous changes were made, the primary one being the legalization of the forward pass.
Source: Wikipedia

109 years ago, some universities banned football, and its very survival at the college level nationally was in jeopardy. In the fall of 1905, there were reports of at least 18 deaths from football games at the college, high school and sandlot levels. Even President Theodore Roosevelt’s oldest son, Ted Jr., was injured that fall playing for Harvard’s freshman squad. At the time, there was none of the protective equipment used by players today, and penalties for brutality were hardly, if ever, enforced. Mr. Roosevelt convened a White House meeting on football. (Link below.) The college presidents in attendance agreed to changes to improve safety after he told them, “I demand that football change its rules or be abolished.” The meeting helped lead to the precursor of the N.C.A.A. the next year and essentially saved what is now the country’s most popular sport.


Source: New York Times' Daily Briefing on Nov.  28, 2014

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'Popular Mechanics magazine' - Jan 1906

"'SOCKER" FOOTBALL.— The appalling list of 19 deaths and 132 serious accidents during the American football season of 1905, has called forth the demand from press, public and college presidents for an immediate and radical change. "Socker" football is suggested as much less strenuous."

(Comment from 2018: Spelled "socker" then, it's "soccer" now.).
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Friday, March 06, 2020

Running Memorial Stadium steps 3/3/2020

Running Memorial Stadium steps at Maxwell Field/Catdome on the campus of Linfield College in McMinnville. 

(Wildcatville video clip 3/3/2020.)
Running Memorial Stadium steps 3/3/2020 from Wild Catville on Vimeo.

Wednesday, March 04, 2020

In memory of CF/Charlotte Filer, March 2020



In Memory of CF/Charlotte Filer, journalist, teacher, editor, adviser and friend. Born March 7, 1932, and died, March 24, 2015, in McMinnville. Grad of Dayton High, Linfield College and University of Iowa. Please consider making memorial donation to Charlotte Filer Linfield College Journalism Scholarship. Photos of CF’s grave in Dayton by ‘Mac News’ on 3/3/2020.

Friday, February 14, 2020

Thursday, February 13, 2020

Linfield College video slideshow Feb. 2020



Slideshow posted at YouTube:
https://youtu.be/tiahfH9jpMM

Sunday, February 09, 2020

In 1966, Ricardo Sardina joined Linfield College faculty. Retired from college in 1985.



Ricardo Sardina joined the Linfield College faculty in 1966 and retired from the college in 1985.

·      The story directly below is from the Eureka, Calif., Humboldt (County) Times, Oct. 17, 1965. This was prior to when Sardina joined Linfield. At that time he was a teacher at Arcata, Calif., High School.

·      A story from Dec. 22, 1969, Salem, Ore., Capital Journal is about Sardina continuing his work with “Cuban refugees and former migrant workers, including 14 who are now, have been or soon with be Linfield College students." 

·       Another story, from the Salem, Ore., Statesman Journal, June 19, 1977, is about Sardina, Cuban exile, recalling effort to get aid from President Kennedy, the Bay of Pigs fiasco in 1961.

·        A story after Sardina (born in Cuba in 1918) died in Flordia at age 81 in 2000 is posted here. It’s from Miami Herald, Feb. 29, 2000.

·     Another source indicates his full name might have been Ricardo Rafael Sardina-Sanchez. Nothing posted here related to that. 

Arcata, Calif. (Humboldt County) High School Teacher Exchanges Cuban Invasion Guns For Spanish Classroom

Eureka, Calif., Humboldt (County) Times, Oct. 17, 1965

It all seems such a long time ago.

And, to Dr. Ricardo R. Sardina, the road from the Bay of Pigs, Cuban invasion disaster, to his Spanish Language classroom at Arcata High School, has been a difficult one.

But invasions and international politics are no longer a significant part of Dr. Sardina’s life.

It was a different story less than five years ago when Dr. Sardina was the executive secretary — leader — of El Frente Revolucionario Democrático.

Dr. Sardina, a former classmate, friend and revolutionary leader with Fidel Castro, had had his fill of the Cuban Revolution for he had come to recognize it as Communist infested and directed.

Dr. Sardina. 47, was born in Matanzas, central Cuba. At the University of Havana, he entered the School of Law where he met and became a friend of Castro, now the Cuban dictator.

Dr. Sardina said he knew Castro was seeking a new political force for Cuba. He had heard Castro was seeking Communist support in Mexico for a Cuban revolution.

"But, I didn’t know for certain then, and I’m not even sure today whether Castro is an absolute Communist.” Dr. Sardina said.

He said he knows Castro is political opportunist and one who today, if it served his purposes, might disavow communism to curry U.S. favor or that of any other country or group of countries.

But, when the Castro revolution was successful, Dr. Sardina was made president of the Sugar Growers’ principal economical association in Cuba.

He said of the job:

“… But I lasted on three day on the job, because I saw almost immediately Castro’s land reform movement was unconstitutional.

“Land was expropriated from Sardina said, the owners without compensation.”

He said in May and June of 1960, he used the Cuban radio and television to speak out against Castro’s land reform program.“

I could do that at the time because Castro had not yet consolidated his power 'to stop the broadcasts,” Dr. Sardina said.
As the Cuban dictatorship tightened its control, Dr. left for Miami, where he continued his attacks on the Cuban Revolution by radio and writing.

He wrote a book, "Seis Minutos de Tragedia Cubana ", exposing the Castro revolution for what it had become.

But, writing and radio broadcasts were not enough for Dr. Sardina. He became an important part of the movement to mount a counter-revolution to free the Cuban people from the Castro-Communist grasp.

The movement, El Frente Revolucionario Democtraties, included five top leaders with Dr. Sadrina as the principal one.

It was El Frente’s aim to organize the various Cuban exile groups into a counter-revolutionary army strong enough to retake Cuba

Dr. Sardina traveled throughout South America contacting Cuban exiles and attempting to get financial and military aid for the planned Cuban invasion.

He said, had free nations supported the invasion army with military aid weapons and supplies, there is no doubt the invasion could have been successful.

There was some aid from “friends” in various nations.

“But,” said Dr. Sardina, “I knew more than a month before the invasion was scheduled to be launched it was doomed to failure for lack of fighting weapons.”

It was for that reason Dr. Sardina resigned his position as executive secretary of the counter-revolutionary movement.

“But, I did not resign from the movement. I planned to go with the invasion force as a solider, even though I knew it was doomed.”

He said lack for communication between the movement headquarters in Miami and the invasion force training in Guatemala, kept news of his resignation and his reasons from reaching the invasion army.

Dr. Sardina resigned on April 5, 1961, 12 days before the invasion.

On the same day, he and three Cuban counter-revolutionaries, including Miro Cardona – who was elected to take Dr. Sardina’s place as executive secretary – were to leave by plane for the invasion force.

“But, a strange thing happened,” said Dr. Sardina,” The plane which was to take us (to) Guatemala from a place in Florida never arrived and communications between invasion headquarters and the invasion forces were cut.”

Dr. Sardina said the force was left almost leaderless except for Manuel Artime, who had left headquarters a month before for Guatemala.

Dr. Sardina said he doesn’t know who gave the final invasion order. “…. But the decision was criminal, the invasions has no chance for success.”

All the world knows the invasion result.

More than 1,500 Cuban exiles were landed on the beaches in the Bay of Pigs.

Without sufficient military supplies and air cover, the counter-revolutionaries were left stranded to be overwhelmed in three days of Castro’s superior military force.

“I could do that at the time because Castro had not yet consolidated his power 'to stop the broadcasts,” Dr. Sardina said. He said:

“There is a time for everything. In 1961 it was the fine for invasion. But not now.”

He said Castro a year ago had more than 200,000 militiamen keeping control in Cuba and 40,000 Russians and Red Chinese soldiers making certain the militiamen remained “loyal.”

“There will be no invasion now,” Dr. Sardina said.

Queried why Castro had promised to allow Cubans wanting to, to leave Cuba, Dr. Sardina said the move is a “political measure.”

He said Castro first gives the world the impression he has a tight grip on the Cuban people.

Secondly, Dr. Sardina said, the Communists don’t care if even 45 per cent of the Cubans leave the country. They control the country and the remaining Cubans provide for their material wants.

Dr. Sardina will be the guest speaker during a luncheon meeting Tuesday sponsored by the Arcata Soroptimists’ Club.

It will be held in the Dinner Bell restaurant, on the Plaza in Arcata.

:::Photo cutline: Dr. Ricardo R. Sardina, Spanish language teacher at Arcata High School, explains His book, "Seis Minutos de Tragedia Cubana " It tells of the Cuban exiles' ill-fated attempt to retake their country from Dictator Fidel Castro.:::
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Saturday, February 08, 2020

OONEY RIDES AGAIN!


“That darned Ooney Gagen is at it again! Linfield received an incredibly generous gift in the area of $20,000 to support Linfield Athletics from none other than Ooney Gagen,” said Debbie Harmon Ferry, special assistant to Linfield College’s president.


In email on Feb. 7, 2020, Debbie said, “We have shared the news with Athletic Director Garry Killgore who is over the moon that the Ooney Gagen Endowment for the Support of Athletics continues to grow. Gifts like that will help Killgore to find the resources he needs for things like uniforms, gear, coaches’ salaries, team travel and more.”


“I think Paul Durham ’36 would be glad to know that his legacy is well protected and supported by folks like Ooney. It’s a great day to be a Wildcat!,” said Debbie.

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Tuesday, February 04, 2020

IN 1965, LINFIELD LOST FOOTBALL GAME 20-14 TO HUMBOLDT STATE, CALIFORNIA

On Saturday, Oct. 16, 1965, in Arcata, Calif., Linfield College lost a football game to Humboldt State College (of Eureka, Calif.), 20-14.  This post includes coverage of the game in 2019 and 1965 from The Humboldt Times of Eureka. 










THROWBACK THURSDAY: JACKS UPSET HIGHLY FAVORED LINFIELD COLLEGE IN 1965

By Heather Shelton, Times-Standard newspaper, Eureka, Calif. Nov. 14, 2019

A year ago this week, the Humboldt State University Lumberjacks traveled to British Columbia, Canada, to play against Simon Fraser University’s football team, marking the Jacks’ last game of the season and the final game of the university’s football program. (HSU won 23-16.)

While it’s been a year since football fans have been able to watch HSU play on the gridiron, plenty of memories of the popular team live on in people’s minds and through a bevy of images and write-ups about the squad.

For instance, how many remember this game? Fifty-five years ago, Humboldt State College (as it was called then) pulled off an upset over highly favored and nationally ranked Linfield College. Humboldt State fullback Mel Oliver scored all three touchdowns to lead the Jacks to a 20-14 victory over the Wildcats of McMinnville, Oregon.

According to the Oct. 17, 1965, edition of the Humboldt Times newspaper, a crowd of some 5,000 packed the Redwood Bowl (in Arcata, Calif.) on Oct. 16, 1965, as HSC unveiled its effective “Fullback I” offense which, in addition to Oliver, included blocking by guard Anthony Kehl and fullback Bill Hook, a senior with All-Far Western Conference honors to his name. Other key players in the game were Humboldt State College’s safety Dave Minor, end Carl Del Grande, quarterback Joe Sarboe and punter Gary Gans.

After the win, Humboldt State coach Phil Sarboe (Joe Sarboe’s father) told the Humboldt Times, “We feel we beat a fine football team and were very fortunate in doing so. It’s always a pleasure to play a Paul Durham-coached club — they’re alert and they play the game smartly.”

Following the win over Linfield, the Jacks — with a 4-1 record — headed to San Francisco State University on Oct. 23 to open the Far Western Conference campaign in Cox Stadium. (HSC lost that game.)

...

--PHOTO CUTLINE: Carl Del Grande, right, Humboldt State’s leading catcher, caught a pass from Jacks quarterback Joe Sarboe in an October 1965 game against Oregon’s Linfield College. (Times-Standard file photo)

--PHOTO CUTLINE: Humboldt State College Lumberjacks quarterback Joe Sarboe (No. 11) helped lead his team to a victory on Oct. 16, 1965 against the highly favored Linfield College. (Times-Standard file photo)

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FOR YOUR INFO, HERE's LINFIELD 1965 SEASON FOOTALL GAME SCORES

17-0 over PLU

10-7 over Cal Poly SLO

38-20 over L&C*

20-14 loss to Humboldt State

61-12 over Whitman*

40-6 over Pacific*

40-6 over C of I*

26-6 over Willamette*

(* Northwest Conference game. Linfield won 1965 NWC Championship.)

30-27 over Sul Ross State of Texas, played in Midland, Texas (NAIA playoffs)

33-0 loss to St. John's of Minnesota, played in Augusta, Georgia (NAIA championship game)

....

This game featured starting QBs who were sons of head coaches: Linfield QB Terry Durham/coach Paul Durham and Humboldt State QB Joe Sarboe/coach Phil Sarboe.

Saturday, February 01, 2020

1971 HITCHHIKING RESEARCH BY LINFIELD STUDENT WALT VALENTINE




LINFIELDER WALT VALENTINE: FROM THE PLAINS OF NEBRASKA TO THE PACIFIC OCEAN (FIRST IN HIS HEART, BUT SECOND IN HIS OCEAN VISITS BOOK) OF OREGON


Before transferring to Linfield College in 1970 from McCook (Nebraska) Junior College, the farthest trip Walt Valentine (Linfield Class of 1972) made from his native Nebraska (hometown Arthur, Neb.) was some 275 miles to Boulder, Colorado, on a high school band trip. (Walt says, "I played the trombone, poorly.") Or, northwest Iowa (about an hour from Sioux Falls, South Dakota, where his mother’s brother lived). "I had traveled through southeast South Dakota and gone to northwest Kansas to drink 3.2 beer,” says Walt. (It was beer with 3.2% alcohol … 18-year-olds could legally drink in Kansas as long as they were drinking 3.2 beer.). But, where ever Walt went, it was “nowhere close to any ocean” until he got to Linfield College which, as you know, is about 50 miles from the ocean. “Oops I forgot,” confessed Walt, who lives in Omaha, Nebraska, with his wife, Linda Murray Valentine, Class of 1974. “The summer before Linfield I flew with a church group and snorkeled off a wonderful warm beach in Haiti. I guess the Pacific was second (ocean I enjoyed).”