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Tuesday, November 13, 2018

Duffy Reynolds, at 90, looking back on a life of learning, teaching




Duffy Reynolds, at 90, looking back on a life of learning, teaching

‘Stopping By’ column by Starla Pointer, McMinnville News-Register 11/13/2018

When Edith Reynolds was a teen, her younger brothers started calling her “Duffy.”

The nickname might have come from a radio comedy popular when she was an adolescent, “Duffy’s Tavern” — a show to which the Reynolds family, being good Baptists, did not listen.

“My brothers were big smart alecks,” the McMinnville woman said. “They were smarting off and teased me with ‘Duffy.’ My mother was horrified.”
Nevertheless, the nickname stuck.

Reynolds, who turned 90 on Nov. 2, still answers to it today. It’s a term of affection used not only by her brothers, Carl of Lincoln City and Gayle of Chico, California, but also by her friends, students she taught at Linfield College and fellow members of the First Baptist Church.

Reynolds was born in Dalhart, Texas, on Nov. 2, 1928. A few years later, her hometown would be called “the center of the Depression,” hit by both the Dust Bowl and, more deeply, by the bad economy.

“Dad had really good crops, but he couldn’t sell them,” she recalled.

So, when she was about 7, her family loaded up their Model A and headed west. She and her two younger brothers joined their parents and grandparents on the trip.

They ended up in Southern Oregon. After several years in the Grants Pass area, they moved to Springfield. Reynolds graduated from Springfield High in 1947.

Since her two best friends were heading to Linfield College, Reynolds decided to go, too. She didn’t know much about the school, other than that it was affiliated with the American Baptist Church. She’d been attending Baptist churches all her life.

She hadn’t considered finances: Linfield cost more than she had available. So she worked to pay for her education, first cleaning staff apartments in Newby Hall, then serving in the cafeteria.

In the post-World War II era, the McMinnville campus was full of men — veterans going to school on the G.I. Bill. “I think it was seven men to one woman,” she recalled.

Many were married, with their wives and young children along with them, too.
The campus was much smaller than it is today.

When she arrived, Pioneer Hall, the original college building, housed the cafeteria, as well as classrooms, offices and dorms. Dillin Hall, the current cafeteria, was built while she was a student; it’s named for Harry Dillin, president from 1943 to 1968, and his wife, Irene.

Several other buildings were constructed during Dillin’s presidency, including Riley, Graf, Renshaw and dorms such as Campbell, Hewitt and Whitman.

Reynolds was especially excited about the construction of Memorial Hall, the combination dorm and stadium.

As she continues to be today, she was a football fan who made sure to attend Wildcat games on Saturdays.

Sometimes it was hard to follow the plays, though. “On rainy days, the field would turn into mud,” she recalled. “By halftime, you couldn’t tell one team from another.”

Today’s artificial turf is a great improvement, said Reynolds, who tries to attend all the home games. She’s enjoying Linfield’s new marching band, too.
As a student, Reynolds lived in Failing Hall, one of three dormitories for girls. 

Her future sister-in-law — both of Reynolds’ brothers followed her to Linfield after they finished their military service — lived next door in Grover Hall.

She and her roommate became “senior girls” in Failing — leaders to whom residents could come with questions or needs. They locked the doors to keep out intruders, and during the day, they made sure boys didn’t get farther than the lounge.

“We thought the younger girls looked up to us,” she said, just as she and her roommate looked up to the housemother, Lula B. Anderson.

She also participated in the Kappa Alpha Phi sorority. “A lot of nice girls” in the group became her friends, she said.

An English major with a home economics minor, Reynolds didn’t have to go far for some of her classes — cooking courses met in the Failing basement.

She chose her minor, in part, because many secondary schools were looking for people to teach that subject.

She’d taken home ec in junior high school herself. “In Grants Pass, boys and girls in seventh grade took cooking and shop,” she said, noting how progressive that district was in the 1940s. “I really enjoyed both.”

Her sewing skills date from that junior high home ec class, too. She hadn’t learned on her family’s old-fashioned treadle machine.

Most of Reynolds’ clothes had been hand-me-downs from other families in their church.

“When I was 14, I got my first store-bought dress,” she recalled. “I was so thrilled.”

She saw the brown-and-white checked, ruffled dress in the window of a store in downtown Grants Pass.

“I fell in love, and my mother decided I should have it,” she said. “To see something in the window, then buy it ... I was really thrilled.”

After Reynolds completed Linfield in 1951, she earned a graduate degree in textile science from the University of Tennessee.

Her first teaching job was at Gaston High. Two weeks before classes started, her new boss called and told her he’d given her an additional duty: girls’ P.E.
Reynolds laughed as she told the story. She had neither experience with nor interest in teaching that subject. “But I did my best,” she said.

The next year, she took a home ec teaching job in Helix, near Bend. Then she changed jobs again, this time because one of her Linfield professors was calling.

“Margaret Fisher, the head of the home ec department, said Linfield needed another teacher,” Reynolds said. “She knew me and thought I could handle it.”

She returned to Linfield, and to Failing Hall. “College home ec was more advanced,” compared to the high school classes she’d been teaching, she said. “I had to learn a lot.”

She taught cooking for four years, then switched to teaching clothing construction. In both subjects, she said, “I had really great students.”

Many were interested in becoming home ec teachers themselves. Most were women, but she had a fair number of men, as well.

She recalled one young man who loved to sew, Drake Conti. He had a knack for making clothing, even if he sometimes fell asleep in class. He always apologized, saying, “I didn’t manage my time well.”

One Saturday, she found out what he did with his time outside class. His name was announced at a football game, and it turned out he was a star player.

As Linfield’s overall enrollment, and its number of home ec majors, grew, Reynolds’ department expanded. Potter Hall, the former president’s house, was remodeled to hold home ec classrooms as well as a women’s dorm.

Reynolds was the dorm mother in Potter for a couple years. That was a pleasure, she said. “Most of the women were my students, anyway,” she said.
The best thing about teaching, she said, was developing relationships with students. “Really good kids,” she recalled.

The college closed its clothing department in 1990. Then-president Charles Walker told Reynolds she could switch to another department, but she decided to retire instead. She had taught for nearly 40 years, most of them at Linfield.
Retirement gave her more time for another of her interests, travel.

She went on several excursions with other members of the Linfield community — to England, Scotland, New Zealand and various other countries.

Her favorite destination was Scotland. Reynolds, whose hair was naturally red, joked, “I felt at home with all the redheads.”

Walker, who had by then retired himself, arranged some of the trips. “He liked water,” she said.

One voyage took Linfielders from the Atlantic Ocean to the Pacific via the tip of South America. “We were told where the two oceans meet, it would be very rough, so I asked Dr. Gibson to give me seasick medication,” she said. She didn’t get sick — although some of her companions weren’t as well off.

She traveled to other places with fellow retired educator Sybil Seward, who had taught sixth-grade in Dayton.

In retirement, Reynolds also had a chance to take up watercolor painting.

Her home is decorated with some of her work, including an impressionistic willow tree and realistic depictions of barns. Some of the pieces were painted when she was taking classes with Evonne Cramer.

And, as a retiree, she has plenty of time for volunteering.

Reynolds spends much of her time at the First Baptist Church, the same church she attended in college. She’s been a member there since 1954, when she returned to McMinnville to teach at Linfield.

“My mom told me, ‘Always go to church,’ so I feel guilty when I don’t go,” she said.

In addition to attending services regularly, she volunteers in the church office once a week. Among her duties is replacing the candles in the sanctuary.
She has served on the church board and social team, as well.

The church hosted her 90th birthday party earlier this month. For Reynolds, it was a nice chance to see not only friends from church, but also her brothers and former students.

Many of those students live nearby, anyway, she said.

“A lot of Linfield grads come back here,” she said. “McMinnville is a nice place to live.”
:::::::::::::::

Story includes two photos by Marcus Larson/News-Register:

One photo cutline: Edith “Duffy” Reynolds spends one day a week in the church office, in addition to her other volunteer work. A Linfield College graduate, she’s been a member of the McMinnville First Baptist Church since 1954, when she returned to town to teach at her alma mater.



Other photo cutline: Edith Reynolds replaces the tealight candles in a rack in the First Baptist Church sanctuary. It’s one of her regular volunteer duties. She said people like to light candles in memory of others or as a form of worship.

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Friday, September 21, 2018

HEY, CITY OF McMINNVILLE: WRAP IT UP!




This is not about wrapping up the Hill Road project or landscaping median planters on Hill Road and Second Street.

This is about the utility boxes abutting sidewalk in area (eventually to be landscaped) on Adams Street near McMinnville Public Library.

Even with landscaping likely help obscure them, these boxes will still be eyesores.

There’s a remedy: Wrap them up.

A website says, “More and more often cities, municipalities and towns are turning to utility box covers (made of vinyl and other materials) to eliminate the eye-sore factor from these inescapable necessities of … life.”

The same website says, utility boxes can be wrapped in “any high resolution image or artwork. Choose from photos of flowers or bushes to camouflage the box, or choose abstract artwork if that is more your style.”

Are you unhappy about these utility box eyesores? If so, City of McMinnville can wrap them.

….
Mac News photos: Utility boxes 9/2018 near McMinnville Public Library and a wrapped utility box 5/2018 in Pullman, Washington.

Friday, August 10, 2018

McMinnville's Fred G. Cooper, famous graphic artist (1883-1961)



  
Frederic Goss Cooper (Fred G. Cooper)

Born 29 Dec. 1883, McMinnville Ore.
Died, age 77 on 15 Nov. 1961, Pasadena, Calif.
Buried at Masonic Cemetery, McMinnville

--Obit from Fri, 17 Nov. 1961 edition of The Courier-News of Bridgewater, New Jersey

--Mr. Cooper died 15 Nov. 1961. Apparently the last LIFE magazine cover he designed was its 2 Feb. 1962, edition featuring Astronaut John Glenn.

An illustrated history: McMinnville native made an indelible imprint on the graphic arts

Source: Article by Tom Henderson, McMinnville, Oregon, News-Register staff writer in the News-Register Aug. 9, 2018 edition

McMinnville’s most influential artist never saw his work displayed in a local gallery, but his style is indelibly etched on the American consciousness.

You know it when you see it.

His characters, drawn in simple lines with exaggerated features, were ubiquitous in the first quarter of the 20th century and practically defined commercial art in America during the Jazz Age.

Many famous people can claim a connection to Yamhill County. There’s animator Will Vinton, author Beverly Cleary, journalist Nicholas Kristof, physicist Raemer Schreiber and even President Herbert Hoover.

Fred G. Cooper doesn’t even have a Wikipedia page. Few people outside graphic art circles remember his name.

Our forebears in the 1920s would find that strange. It would be as if society forgot all about Dr. Seuss.

Cooper was in the same league back then. People saw his work whenever they picked up the current issue of Life magazine. He frequently drew the entire cover — right down to the lettering of the logo.
His work was inescapable.

Even the advertisements that weren’t drawn by Cooper were heavily influenced by him. Characters from the era with little cartoon bodies and gigantic heads? Those were the work of one of McMinnville’s most prominent, yet least remembered, native sons.

He was born in McMinnville in 1883, the son of Paralee and Jacob Calvin Cooper. His father had run away from home at age 14 to fight for the Union Army during the Civil War. By the time his superiors realized he was underage, it was too late to send him home.

So they trained him as a spy, hoping his youth would allay suspicion. After the war, he became a wheelwright in San Francisco and met Paralee Spillman, whose ancestors had come to America to fight in the Revolution alongside the Marquis de Lafayette.

The couple married in 1867. They lived in San Francisco for a time, where the new bridegroom made as much as $1 a day — enough to eventually relocate to McMinnville.

They had eight children, including the artistically inclined Fred on Dec. 29, 1883. His interest in illustration surfaced early.

Leslie Cabarga, the author of the 1996 book “The Lettering and Graphic Design of F.G. Cooper,” reports that Cooper spent his school days doodling in his textbooks and drawing mustaches on image of various historic characters.

According to Cabarga, one of the earliest samples of his work was a wood-framed slate board filled with chalk drawings.

His mother, adept at bookbinding, encouraged his artistic impulses. So did his father, a part-time surveyor. Cooper adored his parents and never forgot their support, Cabarga wrote.

Cooper left McMinnville in 1890 to move to San Francisco, where his older sister Ina was living. He spent one day at the Mark Hopkins Art Institute before deciding he got a better education working and sketching on San Francisco’s fishing boats and docks.

His first major paid art gig was a 1,400-page catalog of hardware and farming machinery.

After nine years in San Francisco, he became engaged to Josephine Kendall Normand and saved enough money to move to the East Coast. He was 21 when he hit New York City. He immediately made important friends such as Charles Dana Gibson.

Gibson (1867-1944) was another great graphic artist of the early 20th century. He was best known for creating the iconic Gibson Girl, the embodiment of beautiful and independent American womanhood of the era.

Cooper grew to similar prominence after creating ads for the New York Edison Company as well as propaganda posters during World War I.

He began his association with Life magazine in 1904, and it lasted through the early ‘30s. By then, he was the publication’s art director, with Gibson as publisher.

Life featured Cooper’s small cartoon characters — or “cartoonettes,” as he called them — scampering about the pages. Magazine professionals at the time called such characters “type warmers.”

However, Cooper’s typography hardly needed warming. He was obsessed with typography, although he would have hated it being called type. He preferred “lettering.”

His wartime propaganda posters, in particular, were noted for their all-lowercase letters that conveyed a sense of warmth and character. Cooper’s lettering, like his other graphic work, is often instantly recognizable to people who have never given a second thought to where it originates.

Fellow artists respected his work, with some even asking him to create unique monogram signatures for them.

A couple of such requests came from Rube Goldberg, known for his improbable cartoon inventions, and Milton Caniff, creator of the comic strips “Terry and the Pirates” and “Steve Canyon.”

Another came from President Dwight D. Eisenhower.

In addition to his work for Life magazine, Cooper designed the logos for Liberty and Collier’s magazines. The lettering he designed for the Society of Illustrators can still reportedly be seen, etched in stone, at 128 E. 63rd St. in New York.

Newspaper tycoon William Randolph Hearst once offered Cooper $50,000 (roughly $250,000 in today’s money) if Cooper agreed to never work for anyone else.

He declined, not caring for Hearst’s politics and preferring to be a freelancer.

Hearst was having a bad string of luck with Oregon cartoonists. Political cartoonist and Silverton native Homer Davenport was lured away from Hearst in 1904 by the New York Daily Mail.

Cooper was a Renaissance man of his time. He belonged to the Amateur Astronomers Club and the Poets Society of America. He was also reputedly a mathematician and expert in English usage as well as a landscape architect.

He was also one of the founding members of the American Institute of Graphic Arts.

One of Cooper’s more famous Life magazine covers, from April 22, 1926, featured a hand-drawn logo and a calico cat with a woman’s face.

Cooper died in 1962, shortly after the cover of Life — by that time featuring its iconic red-and-white logo — spotlighted astronaut John Glenn 18 days before he made his historic three orbits of Earth.

Times had changed. Cooper, who was 20 years old when the Wright brothers took their first flight at Kitty Hawk, North Carolina, witnessed a lot of history and drew a few lines of it himself.

The lines have faded over the past century, but they are still there — still part of the backdrop of daily life for those who look hard enough.







Sunday, July 29, 2018

Salem S-J covers (with 4-inch story bylined by its entertainment reporter) a McMinnville band Sunday edition 7/29/2018


Yes, Salem Statesman-Journal covered (with 4-inch story bylined by its entertainment reporter) a McMinnville band in its Sunday edition 7/29/2018.
Headline calls it a "local" band. So, does the Salem S-J consider McMinnville local?
Covering McMinnville is an exception rather than rule for the Gannett-owned S-J.
A case in point is sports. The S-J covers Amity and Dayton High Schools (both in Yamhill County) sports, but not McMinnville (also in Yamhill County) sports.  However, as this is written, the S-J has whittled down its already tiny sports staff. So, maybe coverage of Amity and Dayton sports will be out the window starting with the 2018-2019 school year? Stay tuned.
If you want good coverage of McMinnville for news and sports, it's in the McMinnville (also known as "Yamhill Valley") News-Register. It's not in the Salem S-J.

Monday, July 16, 2018

McMinnville baseball team takes 2nd in state in a game played 7/15/2018 in Lebanon, Oregon



McMinnville baseball team takes 2nd in state in a game played 7/15/2018 in Lebanon, Oregon
8 Lincoln - Richardson
7 McMinnville - Foster
JBO Junior National


See photos/video clip from the game at the 'Mac News' Facebook page:

https://www.facebook.com/groups/920491941397720