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LEGEND DELPHIC

OREGON EPISCOPAL SCHOOL
PORTLAND, OREGON

VOLUME XIV

EDITOR: BETSY BOSEN

EDITOR: CAROLEE LARSEN

�TABLE OF CONTENTS
3 FACULTY

SPORTS

101

ACTIVITIES

35 DEDICATION 120

CLASSES 6-11

71 INDEX

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SPORTS
3

�The young but agressive boys
varsity soccer team chalked up a
record of three wins, two ties, and
six losses. The year began well
with the team’s triumph at the
Catlin Tournament.
Support and leadership came
from coach Sam Dibbins along
with his assistant Dunkin Brown.
A trio captainship of Scott Nacke,
Steve Eckhardt and Glen Patrizio,
gave strong senior support to their
youthful teammates. ‘The cap­
tains worked well together and
were the best,’’said Dibbins.
Special recognition belongs to
Eckhardt who earned a spot as
first team goalie and fifth best
player in Intra-State. Also sopho­
more Doenecke placed in the sec­
ond team All-Star. Other players
worthy of mention are Nacke and
Patrizio. Nacke portrayed ex­
treme dedication, according to
Dibbins. He was always there
whether it be on top the ball, in the
field, or a daily practice. Nacke
was “perhaps the greatest and
most valuable leader,” the coach
quoted. Patrizio, an outstanding
athlete, also received kudos from
Dibbins because he was the “lead­
er of the fine defense of this year’s
team.
1. Miguel’s concentration is at work as he
centers the ball. 2. Scott goes for the ball. 3.
The captains discuss the plan at hand

B.

4

VARSITY BOYS SOCCER

�1. Carefully protecting the ball, Terry keeps
step ahead of his opponent. 2. Thad bumps
the ball Ouch'

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Top row: Asst. Coach Brown, Eckhardt, Patrizio.S. Nackc, Bamford. Yoshida, Hagland. Nunez, Gcissigncr. Doenccke, Coach D.bbins; bottom row:
Storch, Janncy, Hayes, Dimcnt, E. Nacke, Grover, Chung.

i

5

�GIRLS VARSITY
SOCCER
This year’s team had a “tough” season. They played the
first, third, and fifth placed teams in the state. Coach Kris
VanHatchersaid, “They were a very hard working team.”
The girls really had team spirit; there was a real feeling of
group effort. The highlight of the season was the game
against Lake Oswego. O.E.S. scored the first goal and put
up a much stronger fight than Lake Oswego had expected
They also won their last two games which was a nice
ending for the season.

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Top row: Brown, Highet, Blcaklcy, Givins, Layton; middle row; Parker. Brock, front row: Bronson,
Kcmpton, Smith, Larson, Graham, Mikcworth, Amos.

Melinda grabs the ball.

6

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�1. Sarah yells “charge!" 2. Kim shows her
stuff 3. Helen fights for the ball. 4. Adrienne's
being naturally graceful.

7

�VARSITY
VOLLEY BALL
In a talk with Coach Carla Heckrodt, we learned that the volleyball
team was having the best season she’d
seen in a long time. She told us that
the team was enthusiastic, and
worked well together. There was real
team spirit and dedication.
The team as a whole had a dual
personality, they played in varsity
and junior varsity games by rotating
first year players with the of hands.
Susan Horniman was selected to the
North Valley League second team,
and was voted as one of the top seven
players by the league coaches.

I Top row: Heckrodt, Meyers, Dwyer, Boscn, A. Smith, Foley, Cornell, Kirkman, Iltz; The big decision!
bottom row: Lamalta, Jenny Smith, Knackc, Horniman, Drew, Janis Smith.

8

�..

I. Mirror, mirror on the ball. 2. Good job Marci, but I can do better. 3
Did it really go over the net? 4. “I know that you're trying, but you're not
trying hard enough." 5. Erin practices her Rockcltcs kick.

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9

�GIRLS JV SOCCER
This year's girls jv soccer team didn’t win any games.
but worked hard and had a lot of fun.
The team definitely progressed over the season, and was
constantly improving. Coach Stacy Clark says “the team
worked hard to develop their skills, and overall worked
together to do their best."
The team feels good about the season, but hopes to do
better next year.

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I. Courtney kicks a wonderful corner kick. 2. Melinda Larsen, along
with other teammates, dashes to save the ball

10

�Top row: Crawford, Tobin, Elfuing, Gass, Bcardall, Swinncy, Fcrran
Bottom row: Warren. Judy. Kirkmirc. Dyer, Houslcr, Roberts

MIDDLE
SCHOOL
SPORTS
SIXTH GRADE
SOCCER

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Top row Drinkward, Gebbie. Eklund, Lampert, Horton, Amos, Langsdorf, Gaines, Boatsman, Isa. Ncvan; bottom row: Lew, Dugan.
Boles, Litzenbcrgcr. Green. Price. Carey.
Boatsman, Howard, Jensen. Connolly.

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I Way to go Marilyn Drinkward and Tracia Carey! 2. Greg Crawford, Mike Kirkmirc, and Chris
Judy out to gel ’em!

11

�1

8th GRADE
SOCCER

I. Team picture top row: Somanand, Bcardall,
Barrall, Bishoprick, Karrigan. Yoclin, Peek;
bottom row: MeGough, Shilling, Kerr, Harri­
son. Achilles, Price.

2 Robbie Kerr gets the jump on an opponent.
3. Amy Noyes runs in vain to save the ball.

Boys’ Soccer

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This year’s awesome boys’ eighth
grade soccer team had a terrific sea­
son, winning six out of their ten
games. This year the eighth grade
team played Riverdale, Catlin Gable,
North Clackamas Christian, Colum­
bia Christian, Bush, and Overlake
schools. The main scorers were Tony
Somanand, Kelley Karrigan, Bruce
MeGough, and Robbie Kerr. The
major players on the defense were
Todd Achilles and Kevin Shilling,
and the star goalie was Mathew Har­
rison The team “played excellent
soccer and supported each other,” ac­
cording to coach Kris VanHatcher.

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�Girls’ Soccer
Top row Grover, Ahmad, Highet, McClavc, Isa, Sipple, Simon, Harris, Ellis: bottom row: Meliti,
Broughton, Schula. Kempton, Kirkmire, Noyes, Buttke.
-•

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The eighth grade girls’ team had a very productive season; they worked well
as a team and had a terrific time. Coached by Stacey Clark, the eighth grade
girls’ team played seven games against Catlin Gable, Riverdale, and Overlake
schools. The leading scorers on the team were Chrissy Kirkmire, Susan
McClave, Amy Noyes, and Michele Schons. The defense was led by Sana Isa
in goal and aided by Jennifer Sipple as sweeper. Anne Kempton shined as the
backbone of the eighth grade team.

1 Susan McClave challenges a Parkrose player
to a fist fight. 2. O E.S. dominates the field.

13

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7th GRADE BOYS SOCCER

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The seventh grade boys’ soccer team had good individual skills and “had
more talent than they showed,” according to Coach VanHatcher.
They played more games this year than they did last year. They have great
potential and are looking forward to next year.

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Andy Usher goes down kicking!

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Top row: Service, Stern, Tannc, Usher, Graves,
Vaivoda, Meier, Harris, Me Grath, Garyfallou, Scannell Bottom row; Brady, Moore,
Drake, Coletti, Hayes, Hcdquisl, Wilson

;

�7th GRADE GIRLS SOCCER

The seventh grade girls had a good
season. Amid wins and losses, they
showed a lot of team spirit and sup­
port. They put out great effort while
working hard trying to improve the
interscholastic sport called “soccer.”

]. Way 10 fake 'em out Tim Moore! 2. Nice job
Lisa Diment!

KV'CA':

Top row Bauer, Barrall, Patton, Pirofsky, Dwyer, Achilles, Kosla, Diment, Mauritz, Haub Bottom row. Easly, Chandler, Doran, Wilson, Wall,
Bishoprick, Ransom, Cavanagh, Daack, Froom, Russel

15

�'

7th &amp; 8th
GIRLS VOLLEYBALL

The seventh and eighth grade girls
volleyball teams competed in three
tri-meets with Catlin Gable and Riverdale. They worked hard on im­
proving their skills. Stacey Clark
coached the eighth grade and Carla
Heckrodt coached the seventh grade.
They all provided good support with
such words as “bump! set! spike!, well
done!” and “awesome!”

Top row Bauer, Haub; middle row: Kosta, Pirofsky, Barrall. Cavanagh, Froom, Ransom; bottom
row (in pain): Wilson. Daack, Dwyer, Doran. Chandler, Mauritz, Bishoprick, Furber
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1. “Foot fault,” by Chrissy Kirkmire.
2. “Way to think Jennifer Sipple r-

Top row: Grover, Highet, Sipple, Isa, McClavc, Ahmad, Simon, Ellis, bottom row Buttkc,
Schons, Mcliti, Noyes. Kirkmire, Kempton, Broughton.

16

�SKI TEAM
A fairly new group of skiers is what
makes up the OES Ski Team. Several
freshmen and sophomores turned out
for the team, some who have compet­
ed and some who have not. The
coaches leading these skiers are Stacy
Clark, who conditions them in the
gym, and Suzanne Marter who in­
structs them on the mountain. This
year’s program for the skiers has been
expanded in the area of precondition­
ing. Ms. Clarke has set up a regorous
program of weight lifting, running.
floor hockey, and other aerobic activi­
ties in hopes that good physical condi­
tion will promote good results on the
mountain.

1
Back Row: Hayes, Vcrdicr, Wcnncrberg: Anicker, Docneckc. Front Row: G. Simon, Foley, Tharp,
Bamford, Natl, Miller, Dugen, Alexander.

1 Frosh number I varsity skier Greg Simon. 2
Senior Mcl Murphy in motion. 3. Erin Foley,
Freshmen Number 1 seed races to beat the
clock. 4. Number 2 varsity man, Tom Hayes
cruzin the slopes.

17

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Boys Varsity Basketball
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From row: Hcltcnhaucr, Slorch, Bamford. Back row: Dan Drew, Janney, J Cornell, Nunez. Byrd. Schmitt. Boyles.

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Tyson Slorch imitating a gorilla
Mike Boyles attempting a shot.

18

�“Pccdic-Pic” Janncy demonstrating his flying

skills.

19

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GIRLS VARSITY BASKETBALL

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John Andreas

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The O.E.S. girls basketball team
consisted of eight dedicated girls.
T'hese players had a fun time with
eir new coach John Andreas. John
'&gt; been coaching for five years. This
is first year coaching girls basket. He says that the girls have a
d desire to win and improve, and
i even though they liked to goofund and have fun in practices,
;y have learned a lot. He also adds
;at the hardest thing to get through
o the team is that fundamentals are
important and that the only way you
can get better is to do the same drills
over and over again.

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Back Row. Cornell, Horniman, Bartels, Drew. Front Row; Thorp, McCunc, Neidhart, Popma

�21

��Front row: Wandcl, Kirkman, Nunez, Donavan, Drinkward, Biggs, Cool, Jackson, Cheung, Molitor.

FENCING
TEAM
The Oregon Episcopal School fenc­
ing team faced the problem of being a
team consisting of beginners, but with
the help of manager Mel Murphy the
team had a successful season. The
team fenced against eight schools and
only lost two matches.
With the top two players Nasser
Rassouli and Christine Biggs return­
ing, and the continuing effort of the
rest of the team; the coach, Mrs. 01ney, is looking forward to an even
more successful season next year.

Back row Donovan, Nunez, Cheung; front row: Biggs, Rassouli.

23

�MIDDLE SCHOOL “A” BASKETBALL TEAMS

The 1981-82 Middle School Boys
Basketball “A” Team had a fine 10-6
season coming in 4th place in a twelve
team tournament at the end of the
season. This year's team had no re­
turning starters from last year's team,
yet they matured into a fine team by
mid-season. Four of the six losses
were one point ball games.
The team was led by Matt Harri­
son who scored 394 points, which
breaks the old Middle School scoring
record by 92 points. Toni Somanand,
Kelley Karrigan, and Ricky Bishoprick also played important roles dur­
ing the season. Two 7th graders start­
ed for O.E.S. this year-Matt Service
and Donnie Drake, with Trey Wilson
performing well off the bench. With
six players returning next year, the
82-83 season should be an excellent
one for the Falcons.

Standing Coach VanHatchcr, Meier. Harrison, R Bishoprick, Bassist, Peck, Garyfallou. Kneel­
ing Service, Drake, T. Wilson, Karrigan. Somanand

24
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�Standing: Coach Clark. Schons, S. Isa, Sipple. McClavc. Kneeling: Bultkc, Noyes. A. Kempton.

The Middle School Girls Basket­
ball A Team coached by Stacey
Clark, had an excellent season win­
ning 8 out of their 11 games and rank­
ing fourth in their league. With re­
turning strength of 5 “A” players
from the 1981 season, they played
with style, skill, and enthusiasm to
match their dynamic personalities.
Theirs was a season of dedication,
early morning practices, after game
sodas, and Dairy Queen. This team
found it difficult to lose and glorious
to win with Mr. Kempton as the offi­
cial spectator and team supporter.
The O.E.S. “A”s were highly sup­
portive of each other. They shared in
class practice and were true represen­
tatives of O.E.S. sportsmanship. They
found that the greatest lesson learned
in the season was that personal skills
weren't enough without teamwork
and it was this lesson that gave them
their success. Congratulations Mid­
dle School Girls “A" Team.

25

�•!

BOYS VARSITY TENNIS TEAM
Back row: Bamford, B. Dnnkward. Cheung, Haticnhauer, S. Nackc, R. Crawford. Pagan. Nunez. K. Cavanagh. Coach Dibbins. Front row: Yoshida,
fN 3 tt.

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Tennis Team Earns
Berth at State
For the first time in three years the
OES boys tennis team competed at
state. Thad Bamford and Kevin Ca­
vanagh combined forces to go to the
semi-finals at the tourney after taking
the district title. Seeded fourth at
state, the duo played a three setter
against the top ranked team that was
truly the “finals” in every sense but
the draw. Ron Crawford also repre­
sented OES. Finishing second in the
district singles, unseeded Ron fell
first round to the number one player
at state. Undaunted, he went on to
capture the consolation champion­
ship.
First time competitors were seniors
Mel Murphy and Scott Nacke. They
were joined by Tom Wu and the only
four year letterman, Chuck Warren
Freshman Bill Drinkward was the
most improved player. The promise
for next year is even greater with new
talent coming according to Coach
&lt; . *
Dibbins.
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Left page 1. Punching the ball, Ron works on
perfection. 2. Focusing on his return, Kevin
follows through on his backhand shot. Right
page: 1. Chuck winds up for a smashing serve.
2. Ron prepares for a net volley. 3. Kevin dis­
plays extreme concentration on hitting the
"sweet spot "

27

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GIRLS
VARSITY
TENNIS

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This year we had sixteen people go
out for girl’s tennis; more than ever
before. With the help of our coaches,
Jansi King and Chas Brassfield, we
had a particularly good season, end­
ing up second in the district. Our cap­
tains, Sara Geary and Anne Highet,
led us to a winning season. Memories:
Late nights at Dairy Queens, freezing
our rackets off in Tillamook, driving
through snow, getting lost, yellow
flashing lights, and gossiping in the
back of the van, made it all fantastic.

Top row. King, Alison Smith, Wheeler, Layton, P Cornell, Blcaklcy, Dawn Drew, Kelly Dwyer, Harrison, Overton Bottom row Betsy Lcmatta. A
Highet, Geary, Kirkman, Parker, Courtney Graham. Not pictured Horniman, Brown, Brady, Mencfce.

28

�I Sara psyching up for her serve. 2. And see, !
can caich it in my other hand! 3. Utter confusion on the courts. 4. Balls' Balls! Balls! 5. Anne
going for a swell backhand 6. Hi there, waffleface!

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VARSITY TRACK TEAM

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The 1982 O.E.S. Track Team was
a very young team composed pre­
dominantly of freshmen and sopho­
mores. According to coach Stacey
Clark, it was a year of growth for the
competitiors, and a year of experi­
mentation with the various events.
freshmen
Simon,
cited
Clark
Schmitt, Geissinger, Foley, McCune,
Tharp, and junior Grodem for their
dedication and perserverance during
the season. With almost each succes­
sive meet, personal bests were being
improved upon. With this start, the
only way the team can go is up!

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Jim starts his kick down the straight-a-way

Back row. G Simon, Vcrdier, T Grover, Grodem, Diment, Fromm, Schmitt; Front row
McCune, Alexander. Not pictured: Byrd, Harris, Paulson, Piculell.

30

Carlos Graham, Geissinger, Rassouli, Tharp, Foley,

�1. Coach Clark talks last minute strategy with
Pam. 2. Erin begins the long struggle for first.
3. Jim eyes the finish line. 4. Lee prepares to
release the javelin.

'-dr'

31

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MIDDLE SCHOOL TRACK MEET
The O.E.S. seventh and eighth
grade team came away with a third
place at the annual Catlin spring
track meet. Six schools, four from the
Portland Metro area and two from
Seattle, competed in Catlin’s largest
track meet ever. Susan McClave had
a personal best in the high jump. Oth­
er strong team members were Anne
Kempton, Matt Harrison, and Don­
nie Drake.

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�6th GRADE BASKETBALL
The sixth grade experienced major interscholastic competition for the first
time this year. Both boys and girls played four games, all of which were against

Catlin Gable. Carla Heckrodt and Stacey Clark coached the girls’ team while
Kris VanHatcher coached the boys. It was an enthusiastic group and everyone
participated.
Top row: Green, Boatsman, Lew, Gaines. Dugan. Connolly, Price, Litzcnberger, Carey, Howard;
middle row Amos, Langsdorf. Abbott, Isa. Drinkward. Ncvan, Lampcrt; bottom row: Boles.
Eklund. Jensen, Boatsman, Horton, Gebbic.

Top row. Warren, Roberts, Judy. Dyer, Kirkmirc, Hauslcr, Gass, bottom row: Fcrran, Elfving,
Tobin, Swinncy, Beardall, Crawford.

33

�Standing J. Archillcs,S. Cavanaugh, Bauer, K. Wilson, Doran, Easly, Russell, Katherine Dwyer
D. Barrall. Kneeling. Froom, L. Diment, Isanhart, Ransom, K. Bishoprick. Haub, Furber

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ACTIVITIES

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�CRAZY DAY!
Crazy! Wild! Funny! Outrageous! Far out! It’s a day when you can be
yourself, or whatever you want to be. What’s the topic of discussion? Crazy
Day, of course! Crazy Day seems to have gotten its origin from Halloween and
follows in the same kind of revelry. This year just about everyone had a
costume for Crazy Day. Even some of the teachers dressed

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1 Laura practices her “bat” style for Crazy
Day. 2. Will the real Mr. Dowell please stand
up0 3. This snake seems to have taken a wrong
turn, and ended up on this layout instead of in
Biology 4. Beth, Mike, and Marci clown
around.

36

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1 Todd tests his artistic ability. 2. Tap, tap.
lap. Typing is a lot of fun too. 3. Careful Marci
4 Sandy enters on the computer keyboard

Focus on . . .

Computer Science
Five new Radio Shack self-con­
tained TRS-80 microcomputers and
computer tables were installed in the
Gerlinger science wing last fall. With
this technological advancement, John
Kcrslake began teaching the BASIC
computer language to OES students
as his full time area of concentration.
The new computers and tables were
purchased through a grant given by
the Coordinating Council.

38

�ST

39

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YEARBOOK STAFF

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Left to right top row Crawford, Leon; middle row. Wandel, Natl. Fromm. Warren, Heckrodt, Vincent, Larsen, Bosen, Dwyer, Eckhardt, Brock,
Vandcrvcer. Foley, bottom row: Slorch. Wilson.

■i

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�ADVISOR
CARLA HECKRODT
CO-EDITORS
BETSY BOSEN
CAROLEE LARSEN
BUSINESS MANAGER
KELLY DWYER
PHOTOGRAPHY MANAGER
DAVID NATT
BUSINESS STAFF
KELLY DWYER
ANDREW MOLITOR
LIZ VANDERVEER
STACIA VINCENT
LAYOUT STAFF
TORI BROCK
ERIN FOLEY
HEIDI FROMM
ADRIENNE MIKEWORTH
LAURA NEIDHART
KELLIE RICHARDSON
LIZ WARREN
PHOTOGRAPHY STAFF
RON CRAWFORD
STEVE ECKHARDT
REGAN LEON
DAVID NATT
PETER PAULSON
TYSON STORCH
MARCUS WANDEL
JAKE WILSON

EDITORS’ MESSAGE

MIDDLE SCHOOL STAFF
KATHERINE DWYER
ANN KEMPTON
ALISON LITZENBERGER
BRIAN LITZENBERGER

With thanks to Herff Jones Yearbook, for their co-operation; to Carla
Heckrodt our advisor, for all her extra time, and special thanks to the yearbook
staff, for their work in making this yearbook. Without all of their help this
book would not exist. The editors of the Legend Delphic hope you will enjoy
this book upon receiving it, and even more we hope you will enjoy it many times
again ... for to bring to you future pleasure is its real purpose.

$£ tat/

41

�.

THE AARDVARK STAFF

Left to right, top row: Courtney Graham, Jamie Park; middle row: Chuck Reynolds (advisor), Liz Colctti, Audrey Smith, Christian Boalsman,
Tracey Popma. Malinda Larson, David Wennerberg. Tiffany Sweitzer; bottom row: Billy Cool, Alexander Lynch, David Jackson, Paul Alexander.
Not pictured is Peter Paulson

42

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This year the editor of the OES newspaper, THE AARDVARK, was David
Jackson. His staff included (during the first term) Paul Alexander, Christian
Boatsman, Liz Coletti. Billy Cool, Courtney Graham, Melinda Larson, Alex­
ander G Lynch, Andrew Molitor, Jamie Park, Peter Paulson, Tracey Pipma,
Audrey Smith, Tiffany Swietzer, and David Wennerberg. The PANYC
Newspaper advisor was Chuck Reynolds.
The editor and the advisor planned a rigorous printing schedule for the year.
It was comprised of a total of sixteen four page, bi-weekly issues.
Topics covered by the staff during the year included the school yearbook, the
Student Store, student apathy, OES’s new computer classes, Halley’s comet,
ue Environmental Protection Agency, and the departure of Peter Sipple from
OES.

David Jackson, the editor of the Aardvark,
talks with one of hts staff, Billy Cool.

43

��1. Everyone’s a ham! 2 One day in the life of a
frog. 3. What? Striking at their age?!

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Coastal Community Building
What is the ultimate learning envi­
ronment? To the seventh and eighth
graders, and the faculty that accom
panied them, it was a beautiful se­
cluded coastal retreat known as
Camp Westwind. It would certainly
be hard to top a learning atmosphere
which was a blend of nature’s finest:
fresh pine scented forest, brisk sea
breeze, crescendos of crashing surf
tides, and warm rays of sunshine. The
overall theme of the time was one of
community building; with attention
focused on peer, peer-adult, and boy
girl relationships. This goal was at­
tained through playful spontaneity
and small group sessions.

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1. The eighth graders enjoy an innertube game
on the beach. 2. Is this a sit-in reminiscent of
the “sixties" or a group session? 3. Adam, Su­
san. and Jennifer show enthusiasm for Father
Pace’s game! 4. A girl and her. . duck0! 5. Is it
a bird? Is it a plane? No . . it’s Yani!

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CAMP WESTWIND:
7th and 8th Grade Retreat

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1. Gwen displays complete ecstacy as the tide
engulfs her. 2. Dinnertime in the lodge rein­
forces a feeling of group togetherness. 3. Who
could resist taking a picture of this cute face?!
4. Symmetry is found in various realms as demonstrated by Shannon and Jill.

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BASECAMP pi
FRESHMAN TRIP
This year s freshmen trip was exciting. All of them were required to go
ut everyone made it a fun experience. The trip was a hike of about twentynvo mdes. It took four days including the first night, in which they only
^^.ed tW0 m,les- There were so many freshmen that thev had
to go on two
different
and, meet
on lhe lasl day- Everyone had a good time, and
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came back in good shape, even though the food was bad, and there
were a
few cases of blisters.
.....

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1. Jimmy Isaak turns the dust in his throat into mud. 2. Half of the freshmen class gathers at a loo
, , eryonc gathcrs at thc sPrin8 'o HU up their water bottles. 4 Tiffany Schweitzer and Susan
Lekas wait patiently for thc water to boil

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�Sophomore Mt. Hood Climb

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This year’s sophomore class had
three climbs, two of which made it to
the summit. The second group had
very bad weather and couldn’t com­
plete the climb.
Each group had about 20 peop.e
climbing. Father Tom Goman lead
two groups and Chuck Reynolds lead
one. With the help of these people and
the advanced climbing team, most of
the sophomores climbed to the sum­
mit and really had a good time doing

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JUNIOR TRIP

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Back row: Chandler, Patrizio, Murphy, Schmitt, Mong, Strcight. Middle row: Courtney Graham, Ncidhart, Mcncfce Front row: Overton, A.
Highet, A Green. Fromm.

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52

�middle school student council
The 1981-82 school year saw a very active Middle School Student Council advised by Eleanor Fass. President Anne
Kempton was very successful at chairing this year’s council. Assisted by Vice-President Chrissy Kirkmire, Secretary
Dori Barrall, Treasurer Justin Hayes, and Sixth grade representatives Carl Elfving and Cindy Gaines, the Council
spearheaded a diverse program of activities for the M.S. population.
A record number of dances were sponsored through the efforts of the group, and “Spirit Week,” a new undertaking,
was a huge success. Spirit Week consisted of “Blue and Green Day, Fifties Day,” “Your Heart’s Desire Day,” and
“Heritage Day.”
The Council also preempted the acquisition of stereo equipment for the Upper Division through the generousity of the
Coordinating Council. Mini-Course Day also highlighted the M.S. schedule.
II ^

Back row. J Hayes, A. Kempton, C. Kirkmire Front row: Elfving, Gaines. D. Barrall.

53

�•&gt;&gt;

SMILE, YOU’RE ON ...
CAROLEE’S CAMERA ... OR CARLA’S ...
OR DUANE’S ... OR DAVID’S ... OR PHIL’S ...
OR STEVE’S ... OR LAURA’S ... OR MARCUS’S
OR REGAN’S ... OR MIKE’S ...
V* OR JAKE’S ... OR ANN’S ... OR JEFF’S ... OR
TORI’S ...

54

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�O.E.S. THESPIANS
PRESENT
“TEN LITTLE INDIANS”

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On May 7th and 8th the humble
academic atmosphere of the Great
Hall was transformed into the humor­
ous setting of “The Curious Savage.”
The play, written by John Patrick,
was co-directed by Terry Hansen and
Pamela Vohnson. The comedy was
about a family trying to commit the
mother to an asylum before she
squandered the family inheritance.
Members of the cast were: Leanne
Amos, Kim Brown, Sharon Chandler,
Pam Cornell, Jeff Cornell, Courtney
Graham, Darrell Miller, Shannon
Mong, Mel Murphy, Peter Paulson
and Jennifer Trudeau.

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FACULTY’S DINNER THEATRE NIGHT

On February 13th at 6:30 p.m. the
Faculty served a delicious dinner for
100 people. The dinner included
Moussaka, Tirapeta, Greek salad,
and Orange Ambrosia. The meal was
followed by an excellent performance
by the O.E.S. Faculty of “12 Angry
People” by Reginald Rose, The cast,
which was directed by David
Streight, included Sam Dibbins, Jack
O’Brien, Suzanne Blanchard, Jansi
King, Paul Barthelemy, Pamela
Vohnson, Eric Kragrud, Katharine
Loggan, Susan Lekas, Terry Hansen,
Ray Cooper, Peter Sipple, David
Pace, and Jeff Hicks. It was a full
house with 180 people attending and
the play raised S507.00 for the 19821983 Financial Aid Program.
wr

60

�INTERNATIONAL
DAY

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With the help of Kate Loggan, the
Upper Division librarian, our sixth
annual O.E.S. International Day
marked another successful tradition­
al event. The decorating of the Great
Hall was done by the Upper School
Students in the morning. This year’s
theme represented the winter holi­
days, particularly the traditional Chi­
nese New Year.
The evening’s agenda consisted of a
speaker from Cambodia, a few hints
on flower arranging and the Japanese
artistic ability, folk dancing, and
Robin Will and friends singing traditional English music. The students
and the faculty contributed to the international flavor by bringing various
types of food from different countries.

61

�DORM LIFE
The dorms are represented by sev­
en countries: Saudia Arabia, Iran, Ja­
pan, Hong Kong, Dominican Repub­
lic, and Mexico. The five states repre­
sented are Washington, Oregon,
California, Iowa, and Alaska. During
the 1981-1982 school year, thirty-six
“dormies” attended O.E.S
1. Yuri and Kcita have a convcrsaiion outside
of their “home away from home ” 2. A second
level view of dorm life. 3. Pam strolls leisurely
to class since she lives only 100 yards away! 4.
“Claymore.” the dorm mascot

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I. Showing his responsible nature. Jeff docs his
dorm job. 2. Work crew? Oh no! What am I
going to tell my parents? 3. Caught by surprise.
4. Do you want some?

63

�CHESS TEAM

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1 Hi Carlos! 2. An aerial view of a chess game
3. Now what do I do? 4. Jeff, such concentralion! 5 Kevin and Jeff battle it out Who will
win?

64

�AWARD SERVICE

�COUNTRY FAIR 1982

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The 25th annual Country Fair was
held on the 24th and 25th of April this
year. The fair included eight rides,
concession stands, a bar-b-que, the
Country Store, the “Nearly New
Boutique”, a treasure sale and many
other shops and sources of entertain­
ment.. With the total effort of Oesian
students, faculty, parents, and friends
behind it, the Country Fair grossed
about thirty thousand dollars.

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1. “The Tilt-a-whirl!” 2. “Don’t you dare!” 3.
They dared. 4 Mr. Sipple’s band joined in the
fun 5. Stop the world I want to get off!

66

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�1 Having lunch at the bar-b-que. 2. A cou­
ple of Highlanders sharing their cultural
heritage 3. Kids are "falling'” for the rides!
4. Billy Cool pretending to be "Bozo the
clown” 5. Bet you can hardly wait for your
break time Sue! 6. Poor Steve ... 7. Pal
Schmitt and Heidi Fromm watching over
the mice.

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�EIGHTH GRADE GRADUATION
Theodore Baker Achilles
Sehar Saleha Ahmad
Paul Allen Barrall
Matthew Perry Bassist
Christopher Alan Beardall
Stanley James Bishoprick
Elizabeth Fraley Broughton
Jennifer Lynn Buttke
Natasha Karena Ellis
Steven Paul Green
Kristin Lyn Grover
Carolyn Eileen Harris
Mathew W. Harrison
Elizabeth Karin Highet
Sana Gloria Isa
Kelley McKernan Karrigan
Anne Catherine Kempton
Robert Mcleay Kerr

70

Christina Estelle Kirkmire
Mark Francis Kissam
Wesley Bart Lematta
Brian Wayne Litzenberger
Susan Elizabeth McClave
Bruce Benjamin McGough
Nadia Kelani Meliti
Amy F. Noyes
Adam Peck
Jonathan Darrel Price
Michele Ann Schons
Molly Suzettc Schula
Kevin Charles Shilling
Jennifer Linder Simon
Jennifer Alice Sipple
Thananan Somanand
Mona Lisa Tierce
Adam B. Yoelin

��JUNIORS
Front row: Laurie; Brady, Betsy Boscn, Helen Givens. Middle row: Christiannc Biggs, Adrienne Green, Cynthia Overton, Dawn Blcakley, Betsy
Lematta, Lisa Wheeler, Michele Raus, Kim Nacke. Back row. Peter Janney.

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1 Laurie Bardy studying away. 2. What did
you say?

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1 Jenny taking a break on the bench. 2. Joe Bird showing us his school spirit. 3. Don’t worry Kathy, it’ll all be over in a few minutes!' 4. HUH-UH. 5.
Don’t you like my Bear? 6. “Come on team, you can do it.”

73

�SOPHOMORES
Back row: Landye, Dugan, Leatham, Anickcr, Colclti, VanBlarcom, D. Smith, Miller, B. Kempton, Donavan. C. Crawford, Chandler. Bamford.
Hayes. Middle row: R. Crawford, McCann, Watson, Horniman, Mchrassa, Bramhall, Amos. Front row: Lamalta, Popma.

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I. Sara Lcatham 2. Sue Horniman and Pardis
Mchrassa 3. Diana Smith 4. Beth Kempton,
Sue Horniman, Jack McCann, Pardis Mehrassa and Tim Dugan in typing class. 5. Tom
Hayes, Greg Simon, and Erin Foley at a ski
meet.

75

�FRESHMEN

Up in the air: Trautmann, Haglund, E. Nackc, Wagner. On the ground. Miers, E. Warren, Tanikoshi, Laird, Jennifer Smith, Hoof, Riedel, Greg Si
mon, Tharp, Fromm, Sweilzer, McCall, Bronson, Geissingcr, Foley, McCunc, M Larsen, Schmitt, Dugan, Storch, Hetzlcr, Daniel Drew, Boyles, B
Drinkward, Wilson, Natl, Park, Slocum.

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Top row: Lematta. Kirkmirc, Somanand, Yoelin. Middle row: Peck, Tierce, J. Simon, McGough, Price, B. Litzcnbcrgcr, Meliti, Kissam, Noyes.
Bottom row: C. Harris, Sipple, Schons, McCIavc, Schula.
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Top row: Bcardall, S. Green, Karrigan, T. Achilles. Kerr. Middle row: K. Grover. Ellis, Broughton, Ahmad. S. Isa, Buttke, E Highet. Bottom row:
Bassist, S. Bishoprick, Harrison, P. Barrall.

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Top to bottom; left to right: Usher, Stern, Pirofsky, Service, Scannell,
Vaivoda, McGrath, Meier, Moore, Mauritz, Patton, Stephenson, Ran­
som, Russell, Kosta, K. Wilson, Isanhart, M. Wall, Tanne, J. Hayes.

�Top to bottom; left to right: Katherine Dwyer, W. Harris, Drake, Haub, K. Bishoprick, Halter,
Graves, Dimcnt, Garyfallou, Furber, J. Achilles, Brady, Chandler, Froom, S. Cavanagh, Daack,
J. Colctti, Hedquist, D. Barrall, Bauer, Easly, Doran.

SEVENTH
GRADE

�SIXTH GRADE
UlZCnbCrgCr- Pr‘Ce'GrCC"- H°Ward'CarCy’ R°bCrlS' KirkmirC'

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Langsdorf. Bot.cn, row:Tobin,

�Top row Swinncy, Connolly, M. Boatsman, Gass, Drinkward, Gcbbic, Lew, Dudan, Isa, Bottom row: Warren, Ferran, Judy, Dwyer, Flfuing,
Bcardall, Lamport, Boles, Platten.

83

�!

Becky Bartells
84

“The Skin Horse had lived longer in the nursery than any of
the others. He was so old that his brown coat was bald in patches
and showed the seams underneath, and most of the hairs in his
tail had been pulled out to string bead necklaces. He was wise,
for he had seen a long succession of mechanical toys arrive to
boast and swagger, and by-and-by break their mainsprings and
pass away, and he knew that they were only toys, and would
never turn into anything else. For nursery magic is very strange
and wonderful, and only those playthings that are old and wise
and experienced like the Skin Horse understand all about it.
‘What is REAL? asked the Rabbit one day when they were
lying side by side near the nursery fender, before Nana came to
tidy the room. ‘Does it mean having things that buzz inside you
and a stick-out handle?’
‘Real isn’t how you are made,' said the Skin Horse, it is a
thing that happens to you. When a child loves you for a long,
long time, not just to play with, but REALLY loves you, then
you become Real.’
‘Does it hurt?’ asked the Rabbit.
’Sometimes,’ said the Skin Horse, for he was always truthful.
‘When you are Real you don’t mind being hurt.’
‘Does it happen all at once, like being wound up,’ he asked ‘or
bit by bit?’
‘It doesn’t happen all at once,’ said the Skin Horse. ‘You
become It takes a long time That’s why it doesn’t often happen
to people who break easily, or have sharp edges, or who have to
be carefully kept Generally, by the time you are Real, most of
your hair has been loved off, and your eyes drop out and you get
loose in the joints and very shabby. But these things don’t matter
at all, because once you arc Real you can’t be ugly, except to
people who don’t understand.”
The Velvetine Rabbit

�Then I can walk beside you, I have come here to lose the smog, and I feel like a cog in
something turning. Well maybe it is just the time of year or maybe its the time of year.
Joni Mitchell

Tori Brock

When the change came and you had a chance to see through me, through me, through the
other side is just the same you can tell my dream is real.
Neil Young
Lately it occurs to me, what a long strange trip it’s been.
Grateful Dead

Dreams beget reality.
Jim Morrison
When the inspiration of one’s own inner voice becomes si­
lenced, the deafness is universal
unknown
Don’t dream it, be it
RHPS

Ellen Bronson
For what is man? A body? Certainly, but anything else? A
personality that includes his mind, memories, and the
propensites that have accumulated from his own unique
pattern of life experiences? This too, but anything more?
Underlying man’s personality and animating it is a reser­
voir of being that never dies, is never exhausted, and is
without limit in awareness and bliss.
Huston Smith

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85

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Kevin Cavanagh

W
When I behold the sacred liao wo1 my thoughts return to those who begot me.
and now all tired. 1 would replay the bounty they have given me, but it is as
the sky: it can never be approached.
A species of grass symbolizing parenthood.

JAMES CHEUNG

86

�!

There are places I remember all my life,
Though some have changed
Some forever, not for better,
Some have gone and some remain.

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All these places had their moments
With lovers and friends I still can recall.
Some are dead and some are living.
In my life I’ve loved them all.
J. Lennon and P. McCartney

To be human is precisely to have that extra circuit of consciousness which enables us to know that we
know, and thus to take an attitude towards all that we experience.
Alan Watts

;

Thanks Mom and Dad for every­
thing! D.D.

DAWN DREW

I

In every winter’s heart there is a quivering spring and behind the veil of each
night there is a smiling dawn
K.G.

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Life is not only a merriment; life is desire and determination.
Kahili Gibron
!
God forbid that I should go to any heaven in which there are no horses.
Robert Graham
Far away there in the sunshine are my highest aspirations. I may not reach
them but I can look up and see their beauty, believe in them and try to follow
where they lead.
Louisa May Alcott

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Everything . . . made by past genera­
tions was, before it’s appearance, a
thought in the mind or an impulse in
the heart.
K.G.

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87

�Today was
yesterday’s
tomorrow.
S.L.E.
I

Nothing will
come of nothing.
William Shakespeare
How
are
you
bud?
S.L.E.

Enjoy life today,
because tomorrow
may never come.
S.L.E.

Steven
Lloyd
Eckhardt

Sarah Ann Geary
I do not have to light all the world, but I do have to light my part of it.
Peter C. Helmintoller
We have to give OES a spirit; the kind of spirit that grows out of love,
Sarah Geary
i

“You can be sure I’ll try, but I have noticed several times that people don’t think I know
how to behave even when I’m trying as hard as ever I can.”
Astrid Lindgren PIPPI LONGSTOCKING

Raisin Power!
” . .. and stuff.”
S.G. &amp; K.N.

88

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Every human being has his soul, he can’t mix it with any other. Two people
can meet, they talk with one another, they can be close together. But their
souls are like flowers, each rooted to its place.
Hermann Hesse

With the help of television, murder
should be brought into the home
where it rightly belongs. Alfred
Hitchcock

:

Ann Highet

t.

Come out, come out and go away
John Barry, you’re not fooling anyone
with you passion for medicocrity.
Page Cook, music critic

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The first man to raise his fist is the
man who has run out of ideas.
Nicholas Meyer, his TIME
AFTER TIME script

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I am not appreciated enough. John Barry, composer
Even a man who is pure in heart
and says his prayers by night,
will become a wolf when the wolfbanc blooms
and the moon is full and bright.
Curt Siodmak, his script for THE WOLFMAN

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Carolee Larsen

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90

�Patric McCally
Singing by itself gives me enormous joy. So does the feel­
ing that 1 am making music.
Luciano Pavarotti

Wheel in the sky keep on turnin’
I don’t know where I’ll be tomorrow.
Journey
1

I like to rock.
April Wine

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Christine
Menefee

“When we were young, and drunk, and nev­
er could die”

91

�ADRIENNE MIKEWORTH

Congratulations Dawn,
Queen Moose,
class of ’83’
MOOSE KISS

There was a man who had just died, and he was receiving
the footsteps that he had taken in his ;ifc. He looked down and
noticed that all over the mountains and difficult places he had
traveled there was one set of footprints, but over the plains
and down the hills there were two sets of footprints, as if
someone had walked by his side. He turned to Jesus and said
“there is something 1 don’t understand. Why is it that down
the hil;s and over the smooth and easy places you have walked
by my side, but over the rough and difficult places 1 walked
alone, for I see in these areas there is just one set of foot­
prints?” Jesus turned to the man and said, “It is true that
while your life was easy I walked at your side, but here when
the walking was hard and the paths were difficult, 1 realized
that that was the time you needed me the most, and that is
when I carried you.”
Unknown

A wise man will hear and increase in learning,
And a man of understanding will acquire wise councel,
To understand a proverb and a figure.
The words of the wise and their riddles.
Proverbs 1:5-6

SHANNON MONG
Don’t question why she has to be so free
She’ll tell you it’s the only way to be.
She just can’t be chained
to a life where nothing’s gained and nothing’s lost
-but such a cost.
Rolling Stones

It is not a garment I cast off this day, but a skin that I tear
with my own hands. Nor is it a thought I leave behind me,
but a heart made sweet with hunger and with thirst.
Yet I cannot tarry longer .. . Fain would I take with me all
that is here. But how shal; I? Alone and without his nest
shall the eagle fly across the sun.
Kahil Gibran
I’m going to get a little high and see if I can hotwire
reality.
When we come to the place where
the road and the sky collide
throw me over the edge and let
my spirit ride.
Jackson Browne

92

Quiero volar en la cola del viento,

�MELVIN MILFORD MURPHY III

I love not man less, but nature more.
-Byron
Earth is here so kind, that tickle her with a hoe and she laughs
with harvest.
-Jerrold
May the roads rise with you; the wind be always at your back;
and may the Lord hold you in the hollow of his hand.
St. Patrick
What is the worth of anything, but for the happiness ‘twill bring.
Richard Owen Cambridge
Let’s eat, drink, and be merry for tomorrow we die. Or who
knows, perhaps even today.
-Agathe Christie
Doubt who you will, but never yourself.
-Bovee
Peace be with you.
-Genesis XLIII 23
Music is the universal language of mankind.
-Longfellow

Imagination is more important than knowledge.
Albert Einstein
Impossible is a word found only in the dictionary of
fools.
-Napoleon

SCOTT NACKE

OUTSIDE THE WALL
-

All alone, or in twos
The ones who really love you
Walk up and down outside the wall
Some hand in hand
Some gathering together in bands
The bleeding hearts and artists
Make their stand
And when they’ve given you their all
Some stagger and fall-after all it’s not easy
Banging you heart against some made bugger’s
Wall

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TILL EARTH AND SKY STAND PRESENTLY
AT GOD’S GREAT JUDGEMENT SEAT
Rudyard Kipling

;—
93

�Laura Neidhart
Don't walk in front of me, I may not follow.
Don’t walk behind me, I may not lead.
Just walk beside me, and be my friend.
Unknown

Glen R. Patrizio

Don’t put off for tomorrow what you can do today,
because if you enjoy it today you can do it again tomor­
row.
Unknown

True courage is to do without; witness everything that
you are capable of doing before all the world
La Rochefoucauld

Blow in my ear and I will follow you anywhere.
Unknown

94

�Tomorrow is a dream t hat
leads me onward, it’s a
chance I’ve yet to take, a
friend I’ve yet to make,
it’s all the talent I’ve yet
to use.
Karen Ravin
To be trusted is a greater
compliment than to be
loved.
George MacDonald
Green grass and hiigh
tides forever.
Outlaws

Kellie Richardson

Turtles make better lo'vers

Audrey Smith

Still round the corner there may wait
A new road or a secret gate;
And though I oft have passed them by
A day will come at last when I
Shall take the hidden paths that run
West of the Moon, East of the Sun.
J.R.R. Tolhien

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Have more than thou showest
Speak less than thou knowest.
King Lear; I, IV, 116 (Shakespeare)

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Janis Smith

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Markus A.
Matt-Wandel

Success is getting what you want,
Happiness is wanting what you get.
Gerald Heard

*

Everything has its beauty but not every­
one secs it.
Confucious
!

If at first you don't try.
You’ll never succeed.
anonymous
E = mc:

I can’t mean what I say because I can’t say what I mean.
Lewis Caroll
Never let your studies interfere with your education.
anonymous
Never never, never say never: better better, believe in forever.
Styx

96

�I’ve always been crazy in the trouble
that it’s put me through
Been busted for things that I didn’t do
I can’t say that I’m proud of all the
that I’ve done
But I can’t say I’ve never intentional­
ly hurt anyone.
Waylon Jennings

LET’S CRUISE!!! RECR,
WFCC, RMJ, BSS IV, CRW,
SDK
Surrender, surrender but don’t
give yourself away ... Cheap
Trick

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CHARLES R. WARREN

TOM WU
UL:

Without dreams there is no
need to work.
Without work there is no
need to dream.

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97

�SENIORS
1. What’s in the bag Mcl? 2. What do you mean I’m not graduating? 3. Skipping
class? 4. See this pencil ... 5. Looks like Carolcc found an Artesian out in the
woods. 6. Hey Baby! 7. UpChuck 8. Steve posing for “Playgirl ’’

��Top row: Scott Nackc, David Jackson, Jeff Cornell, James Cheung, Mel Murphy, Tomas Wu, Glen Patrizio, Markus Wandcl Middle row: Mr
Dibbins, Shannon Mong, Becky Bartels, Pat McCally, Christine Mencfce, Sarah Geary, Carolcc Larsen, Laura Nicdhart, Kellie Richardson,
Audrey Smith. Bottom row; Regan Leon, Tori Brock.

100

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FACULTY/STAFF

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�PAUL BARTHELEMY
University of Illinois, B.A.
Princeton University, M.F.A.
Nashotah House, M. Div.
Chaplain, Religious Thought
M.S. Religion
BRADLEY BAUGHER
Evergreen State College, B.A.
Chemistry
SUSAN BLANCHARD
Lewis &amp; Clark College, B.S
Lewis &amp; Clark College, MAT
Biology, Oceanography

102

�ELIZABETH BRASFIELD
Whitman College, B.A.
U.S. Math, M.S. Math
Varsity Girls’ Tennis Coach
STACY CLARK
University of Oregon, B.A.
U.S. Physical Education
M.S. Physical Education
J.V. Girls’ Soccer Coach
Varsity Track Coach, Ski Team
Coach
M.S. Coach
REED CLARKE
University of Portland, B.A.
University of Iowa, M.F.A.
Portland State University, B.A.
E.S.L., Foreign Student Advisor

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GARY CROSSMAN
Pomona College, B.A.
University of California/Riverside,
M.A.
U.S. Math, M.S. Math
SAMUEL A. DIBBINS, JR.
University of New Hampshire, B.A.
Salem State University, M. ED.
U.S. History
CYNTHIA DORAN
Wellisley College, B.A.
Brown University, M.A.T.
U.S. College Counselor

104

�JAMES T. DOWELL
Hendrix College, B.A.
New York University, M.A.
Head of Upper Division
THERESA FARRENS
Portland State University, B.A.
M.S. French
ELEANOR FASS
Milwaukie-Downes College, B.A.
Clark University, M.A.
M.S. Geography
Dean of Middle School

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�NANCY FLOERKE
University of Kansas, B.A.
M.S. Government and Social Studies
SHARON FRIEDMAN
University of California/Los Ange­
les, B.A.
U.S. Math, M S. Math
CAROL FURBER
Gaston College, A.A.S.
Maine Med. Center School of Nurs­
ing, R.N.
School Nurse

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106

�TOM GOMAN
University of Puget Sound, B.A.
Harvard University, M.Div.
Claremont College, M.A.
U.S. Geometry, Ethics, Physics,
Chess
TERRY HANSON
Gonzaga University, B.A.
Soph. English, U.S. Drama
GERRI HAYES
Sophie Newcomb College, B.A.
Seventh and Eighth grade English

107

m

�CARLA HECKRODT
Springfield College, B.S.
M.S. P.E., U.S. P.E.. Yearbook Advi­
sor
U.S. Hiking and Backpacking panyc
SUSAN JENSEN
Lewis and Clark College, B.A.
Caligraphy panyc
LORNE JOHNSON
Harvard University, B.A
Art, Art History, O.W.C.I

108

�JOHN KERSLAKE
University of Oregon, B.S., M.A.
U.S. Computer, M.S. Science
JANSI KING
San Jose State University, B.A.
U.S. French, M.S. French
SUSAN LEKAS
University of Puget Sound, B.A.
Frosh. English, U.S. and M.S.
Spanish I

109

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�KATE LOGGAN
University of Oregon, B.A., M.L.S.
Librarian
DENISE LUNDBLADE
Whitman College, B.A.
U.S. Art, M.S. Art
DIANE H. MEADE
University of Minnesota, B.A.
Boston University, M. Ed.
Senior English

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110

�KAREN OTIS
Oregon State University, B.S.
Typing panyc, Secretary of
Division

U.

DAVID PAGE
Oregon State University, B.S.
Church of Divinity School of Pacific,
M. Div.
M S. Religion
U.S. Work Service program head
ROY PETTIT
Stanford University, A.B.
Sixth Grade English

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�EVELYN PRATT
University of Colorado, B.A.
M.S. Science
CHUCK REYNOLDS
Standford University, B.A.
U.S. History
LYNN SADLER
Carlton College, B.A.
University of Wisconsin, M.A.
Junior English

�ALICE SCANNELL
Smith College, B.A.
Union Theology Seminary, M.R.E.
U.S. and M.S. Music
PETER SIPPLE
Yale, A.B.
Harvard University, M.A.T.
Graduate Theological Union, M.A.
University of California/Berkley, Ph.D
Headmaster
PAULA SPOONER
Portland State University, B.A.
Library aide

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113

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Portland State University,
B.A.
Dean of U.S.
U.S. Spanish, Peer Counciling Panyc
KRIS VAN HATCHER
Springfield College, B.S.
Athletic Director
U.S and M.S Physical
Ed./coaching
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PAMELA VOHNSON ^
Portland State University,
B.A., M.A.T.
U.S. French

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�BUSINESS OFFICE, SWITCHBOARD,
HEADMASTER’S SECRETARY
Maurice Horn, Business Manager
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Michcal Cook 2. Lois McAlister 3 Shirley Souvey.

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RECEPTION

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�KITCHEN STAFF
GROUNDS
Peggy Lawson,
Dietician

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I Werner Bertram 2 Fern Hartley 3. Sherrie
Barss 4 Suzanne Tracy 5. Ray Cooper

116

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�MAINTENANCE
John VanBuren

DEVELOPMENT
OFFICE
Betty Holden

.

Betty Holden, Ann Bronson

�UPPER SCHOOL DEDICATION

»

“His life was gentle, and the ele­
ments so mixed within him that na­
ture might stand up and say to all the
world, this is a man.”
We as a class have had the priviledge of knowing such a man. In the
classroom he makes the past come
alive. Students have found his class so
enjoyable that latecomers were often
seen at the locked door of his class­
room with bribes of food and money
in attempt to gain entrance. His
teaching extends beyond the class­
room to all elements of life, adven­
ture, and nature.
As a friend he gives himself com­
pletely to each of us. He shares his
wisdom with honesty and humor His
stories are very entertaining such as
those about his days at boarding
school or his experiences as an out­
ward bound watch officer.
Mr. Sam Dibbins is a recipient of
this years dedication.
The other recipient has been a good
friend to many students. He has pro­
vided countless night time help ses­
sions before his exams. His office is
always open whether it’s to discuss
the tunnel effect or a currently as­
signed English book.
His influences on his students are
“just exceedingly” large. He can help
a doomed calculus student with the
worst of integrals, the truely amazing
thing about that is that the student
usually leaves with an understanding
of it.
He has organized both the sopho­
more basecamp and the advanced
climbing team, giving its members a
chance to scale rocks in the Tatoosh
range.
It is true that many physics stu­
dents have torqued out before the fi­
nal. Some ex-physics students re­
spond only to E mc/2.
The joint recipient is Fr. Tom Goman

118

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MIDDLE SCHOOL DEDICATION

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�A SPECIAL DEDICATION
PETER WARREN SIPPLE

�On behalf of all the O.E.S. Community whose lives you have touched, we
thank you for your gift of love, Peter. For it is with and through love that you
have joyously served O.E.S. and we recognize this. Your spirit shall always be
a part of this school as a parent’s is always a part of his child. Like a loving
parent you have guided and nutured this growing child. Also in this likeness
you have experienced the pains and joys of O.E.S.’s growth and have been a
vital part of this process during the past eight years. Peter we thank you for all
that you have done, for all that you will do, and O.E.S. will always be with you,
as you shall always be with us.

1. I don’t think a Hi Fi stereo system is top
priority in the library, boys. 2. That is not fun­
ny; we are not cousins. 3. Aloha Mr. Sipple. 4.
No, I don’t think I can do that. 5. How do you
do that?

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FINALS
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123

�Journalistic Talents Shine in Yearbook II Staff
Front row: Mehrassa, Dwyer, C. Larsen, M. Larsen, Sweitzer, Back row: Bosen, Natt, Horniman, Boyles, Bronson, Laun.

1. Sue Horniman and Pardis Mehrassa work­
ing hard to finish their layouts, 2. Yearbook
adviser Carla Heckrodt does a final check over
a layout before its submission.

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PARTING
SHOTS ...

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REAL MEXICAN FOOD
FOOD TO GO-LUNCH-DINNER

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126

�PATRONS
Mr. and Mrs. J. R. Bosen
Mr. and Mrs. William F. Byrd Jr.
Dr. and Mrs. John M. Coletti Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert F. Dwyer
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Geary
Dr. and Mrs. Mark T. Hattenhauer
Ms. Carla A. Heckrodt
Mr. and Mrs. Henry G. Laun
Drs. Delores and Fernondo Leon
Mr. and Mrs. Ernest H. McCall
Mrs. Patricia Myers
Mr. and Mrs. Ted M. Natt
Mr. and Mrs. R.C. Owens
Dr. and Mrs. Frank Parker
Mr. John E. Patrizio
Mr. and Mrs. Walter L. Schmitt
Mr. and Mrs. Clay R. Simon
Mrs. Jean M. Tebay
Dr. and Mrs. Joseph B. Vanderveer Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Homer Williams

127

�Mini-Course
Day
Thanks to the efforts of the Middle
School Student Council and Miss Fass,
the second annual mini-course day was a
smashing success! The event was highly
organized and featured such activities as
“Dancersize,” crepe making, rope
courses, golfing, photography and much
more. Every middle school student par­
ticipated and many faculty members
and parents were presenters.
1. The natural way to get high* 2. Ms. Clark’s
super energy and enthusiasm made her danccrsizc
course a favorite. 3. The best part of this class is yet
to come
eating the results!

128

�I

SUMMER
CAMP

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O.E.S. Summer Camp became a
reality in the summer of 1981. For
Headmaster, Peter Sipple, it was a
dream come true. Since observing the
summer camp at a private school in
the east where his father was head­
master, Peter has believed strongly in
the value of such a program. For a
number of years he has been looking
toward the birth of a summer camp at
O.E.S.
Jan Meier, beginning school move­
ment teacher and first grade P.E.
teacher, became the camp’s first di­
rector. Jan had taught one year at
O.E.S. since moving to Oregon from
Iowa where she was the director of a
year round camp for handicapped
children and adults.
Summer camp???? It’s a potpourri
of summer time experiences created
for children in grades one through
five. The children came from 8:303:30 Monday through Friday. There
are eight one week sessions, so some
children came for just a week or two
and others came for the entire eight
weeks.
Summer camp is a summer of mov­
ing, learning and “funning." The
main “ingredients” are sports (soc­
cer, softball, tennis, volleyball and
archery), nature activities, art, can­
oeing, swimming, group singing, and
New Games. Canoeing and swim­
ming are winners with almost every­
one. Add to that field trips to the Ar­
boretum, Clackamas Community
College Environmental Learning
Center, Audubon Society, Mary
Young Park, and a picnic and fun day
with a group of kids from Lake Os­
wego . . . and you have a lot of experi­
ential learning.
All in all, O.E.S. Summer Camp
1981 was a smashing success. We
learn to “Reach Out” to the bigger
world around us in all kinds of ways.
Summer 1982 here we come.

129

■

�THE

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COTTAGE CHEESE

CO.

Portland-Seattle

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Since 1930

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4605 S.W. Scholls Ferry Rd.
Portland, Oregon 97225
Phone: 292-4472
Lumber Abd Bldg. Materials

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uniforms

CONGRATULATIONS
imaginative new styles...a wide
selection of fabrics. Let Dennis design
a uniform especially for you

SENIORS!
Dennis Uniform Manufacturing Co.
135 S.E Hawthorne Blvd .
Portland, Oregon 97214

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Personal stationery at Paper Parlour Ltd. second floor, Galleria

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STUDENT INDEX
-

SIXTH GRADE
Abbott, Kindra 33
Amos, Adclc 11, 33, 82
Beardall, Tim 11, 33, 83
Boatsman, Courtney 11, 33, 45, 82, 83
Boatsman, Meredith 33
Boles, Eden 11, 33, 53, 83
Carey, Tricia 11, 33, 82
Connolly, Samantha 11, 33, 83
Crawford, Greg 11, 33, 82
Drinkward, Marilyn 1 1. 33, 53, 83
Dugan, TracyAnne 11, 33, 53, 83
Dyer, James 11, 33, 83
Eklund, Katherine 11, 33, 82
Elfving, Carl 11, 33, 53, 83
Fcrran, Rene 11, 33, 82, 83
Gaines, Cynthia 11, 33, 45, 83
Gass, Jason 11, 33, 45, 83
Gebbie, Anna 1 1, 33, 44, 83
Green, Erin 11. 33. 44, 82
Hauslcr, Graham 11, 33, 82
Horton, Jennifer 11, 33, 45, 82
Howard, Heather 1 1, 33, 53, 82
Isa, Katie 11. 33, 45. 83
Jensen, Juliana 11, 22, 44, 82
Judy, Christopher 11, 33, 83
Kirkmire, Michael 11, 33, 82, 83
Lampcrt, Wendy 1 1, 33, 82, 83
Lew, Nina II, 33, 53, 83
Litzenbcrger, Alison 11, 33, 44, 82
Platten, Katie 83
Price. Kristina 11, 33, 82
Roberts, Evan 11, 33, 82
Swinncy, Erik 11, 33, 83
Tany, Richard
Tobin, Toby 11, 33, 82, 128
Warren, Frank 1 1, 33, 44, 83

Dwyer, Katherine 15, 34, 46, 81
Easly, Danielle 15, 34, 81
Froom, Aimcc 15, 16, 32, 34, 128
Furbcr, Katharine 16, 34, 81
Garyfallou, Billy 14, 24, 81
Graves, Jeffrey 14, 81
Halter, John 81
Harris, Wil 14, 81
Haub, Kalharina 15, 16, 34, 81
Hayes, Justin 14, 32, 53, 80
Hcdquist, Joshua 14, 81
Isanhart, Laurie 34, 80, 128
Kosta, Jennifer 15, 16, 80
Mauritz, Gwen 15. 16, 34, 47, 80
McGrath, Edward 14, 80
Meier, Timothy 14* 24, 80
Moore, Timothy 14, 15, 80
Patton, Kristen 15, 80
Pirofsky, Jillann 15, 16, 47, 80
Ransom, Alicia 15, 16, 34, 80, 128
Russell, Artie 15, 34, 80
Scannell, Andrew 14, 80
Service, Matthew 14, 24, 80
Stephenson, Leigh 80
Stern, David 14, 80
Tanne, Jason 14, 32, 80 128
Usher, Andy 14, 80
Vaivoda. Yani 14, 32, 46, 80
Wall, Covington
Wall, Meredith 15, 80 ,
Wilson, Katie 15, 16, 34, 80, 128
Wilson. Trey 14, 24, 32

.

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EIGHTH GRADE

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SEVENTH GRADE

Achilles, Todd 12. 70
Ahmad. Sehar 13, 16, 70, 128
Barrall, Paul 70,79
1
Bassist, Matthew 24,-70
Beardall, Christopher 12, 70

Achilles, Jenny 15, 34, 81
Armitage, Shelley
Barrall, Dorilyn 15, 34, 53, 81
Bauer, Hilary 15, 16, 34, 81
Bishoprick, Kelsi 15, 16, 34, 81
Brady, Daniel 14, 81, 128
Cavanagh, Shannon 15, 16, 34, 47, 81
Chandler, Danila 15, 16, 81
Coletti, John 14. 81
Daack, Rachel 15, 16, 81
Diment, Lisa 15, 34, 81
Doran, Katie 15, 34, 81
Drake, Donnie 14, 24, 81

Buttke, Jennifer 13, 16, 25,
Ellisi- faalasha 13, 16, 70 ,
Green, Steven 70, 79
Grover; Kristin. 13, 16. 70
Harris, Carolyn 13, 32, 46. 70, 78
Harrison. Matthew 12, 24, 70, 121
Highet, Elizabeth 13, 16. 46, 70. 79
Isa, Sana 13. 16, 25, 46; 70, 79
Karrigan, Kelley 12, 24, 70, 79
Kempton, Anne 13,; 16, 25, 46, 53, 70
Kerr, Robbie 12; 46. 70
Kirkmire, Christina 13. J6, 46, 53. 70, 78, 79
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�Kissam, Mark 46, 70, 78
Lematta, Bart 46, 70, 78
Litzcnbcrgcr, Brian 70, 78
McClavc, Susan 13, 16, 25, 32, 46, 70, 78, 79
Me Gough, Bruce 12, 46, 70, 78. 79
Meliti, Nadia 13, 16, 70, 78
Noyes, Amy 12, 13, 25, 46, 70, 78
Peck. Adam 12, 24, 46, 70, 78, 79
Price, Johnathan 12, 70, 78
Schons, Michele 16, 25, 32, 70, 78, 79, 128
Schula, Molly 13, 70, 78
Shilling, Kevin 12, 46, 70
Simon, Jennifer 13, 16, 32, 70, 78
Sipple, Jennifer 13, 16, 25, 32, 46, 70, 78, 79
Somanand, Thananan 12, 24, 70, 78, 79
Tierce, Mona 70, 78
Yoelin, Adam 12, 46, 78, 79, 128

NINTH GRADE
Boyles, Micheal 18, 19, 76
Bronson, Phillip 76
Drew, Daniel 18, 48, 76, 125
Drinkward, Bill 23, 76, 125
Dugan, David 48, 76
Foley. Erin 8. 9, 17, 30. 31. 40, 63, 76
Fromm. Heidi 10, 30. 35, 40, 48, 52, 61, 67, 76, 77
Geissinger, James 5, 30, 31, 76
Hattcnhauer, Glen 18
Hetzler, Jeff 76
Hoof. Bruce 76, 125
Isaak, James 48, 125
Laird, Jayne 10, 48, 76
Larsen, Melinda 6, 10, 76
McCall, Ernest 48, 76
McCune, Pam 30, 31. 48, 62, 76
Miers, Roslyn 8, 76
Nacke, Eric 5. 48, 76
Natl, David 17, 40. 76
Park, Jamie 76
Riedel, Christina 76
Schmitt. Pat 18. 30. 48. 52. 67. 76, 77
Simon. Greg 17, 30, 76
Slocum, Schore 48, 64, 76
Smith, Jennifer 8, 76
Storch, Tyson 5, 18. 19, 35, 40, 76, 77
Sweitzer, Tiffany 10, 48, 76, 125
Tanikoshi, Yuri 62, 76
Tharp, Ingrid 17, 30. 48, 76
Thomas. Anne 35, 39
Trautmann, Gene 35, 48, 76, 77
Vincent, Stacia 40
Wagner. Bill 48, 76, 77
Warren, Elizabeth 40, 76
Wilson, Jake 35, 40, 76, 77

TENTH GRADE
Alexander, Paul 17, 30
Amos, Lcanne 6, 56, 74
Anicker, John 17, 49, 56, 74
Bambord, Thad 5, 18, 19, 26, 74
Chandler, Sharon 7, 35, 56. 65, 74
Colctti, Elizabeth 74
Cool. Billy 23, 43, 67
Crawford, Ron 26, 27, 35, 40. 55, 64, 74
Docncck, Scott 5, 17, 35, 65
Donavan, Autumn 66, 74
Dugan, Timothy 17, 74, 75
Graham, Carlos 30, 63
Graham, Courtney 6, 10, 28, 29, 49, 56, 57, 65
Harris, Joseph
Hayes, Tom 5, 17, 56, 74, 75
Horniman, Susan 8, 20, 38, 66, 67, 74, 75, 122, 125
Kempton, Beth 6, 36, 38, 74, 75
Landye, Kelly 65, 74
Laun, Duane 126
Leatham, Sara 74
Lematta, Marci 8, 9, 36, 38, 74, 122
McCann, Jack 74, 75, 122
Mchrassa, Pardis 74, 75, 122, 126
Miller, Darrell 17, 57, 65, 74, 122
Nunez, Miguel 4, 5, 18, 23, 26
Parker, Paige 6, 28, 29, 49, 65, 74
Pettit, Joshua
Piculell, Lee 31, 64
Platten, Melissa
Popma, Tracey 20, 74
Smith, Diana 6, 65, 74, 75
Trudeau, Jennifer 57
Van Blarcon, Scott 74
Verdier. Todd 17, 30. 38, 122
Watson, Karyn 35, 39
Wcnncrberg, David 17
Yoshtda, David 5, 26, 62

ELEVENTH GRADE
Biggs, Christianne 23, 72
Bleaklcy, Dawn 6, 7, 28, 52, 62, 72, 73. 57
Boatsman, Christian
Boscn, Betsy 8, 9, 40, 41, 72, 126
Brady, Laurie 72
Brown, Kimberly 6, 7, 29
Byrd, Joseph 18, 73
Cornell, Pamela 8, 9, 20, 28, 56, 57, 62
Diment. Mike 5, 30, 36
Dwyer, Kelly 8. 28, 29. 40, 125, 126
Givens, Helen 6, 7, 72
Green, Adrienne 52, 72
Grodem, Jon 30

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Grover, Terry 5. 30
Harrison, Katharine 28, 56, 57,
Iltz, Kelly 8
Janney, Peter 18, 19, 72, 73
Kirkman, Jennifer 8, 23, 38, 73
Layton, Beth 6, 28
Lematta, Betsy 28, 72
Lynch, Alexandra
Me Alister, Sandy 38
Molitor, Andrew, 23
Nacke, Kim 8, 32
Overton, Cynthia 28, 52, 72, 73
Pagan. Jose 26
Paulson, Peter
Rassouli, Mahmoud 30
Raus, Michele 72
Smith, Allison 8, 28
Vanderveer, Liz 40
Wheeler. Lisa 28. 72

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TWELFTH GRADE
Bartels. Becky 20. 21, 39, 55, 68, 69, 84, 100
Brock. Tori 6. 40. 51, 55, 68, 69. 85, 98, 100, 123
Bronson, Ellen 6, 55, 68, 69, 85
Cavanagh, Kevin 26, 27, 51, 55, 64, 68, 69, 86
Cheung, James 5, 23, 26, 51, 55, 68, 69, 86, 100
' Cornell. Jeffery 18, 21, 55, 56. 57, 64, 65, 68. 87, 100
Drew, Dawn 8, 20, 28, 55, 65, 68, 69, 87
Eckhardt, Steve 4, 5, 40, 51, 55. 67, 68. 69, 88. 99
Geary, Sarah 7, 28. 29, 51, 55, 56, 57. 68, 69, 88. 100'
Highet, Ann 6, 28, 29, 39, 51, 55, 61, 68, 69. 89
Jackson, David 23, 43, 55, 56, 57, 68, 69, 89, 100, 123
Larsen, Carolce 39, 40, 41, 51, 55. 65, 68. 69, 89, 100, 126
Leon, Regan 40, 51, 55, 68, 69, 90, 100
McCally, Pat 55, 68, 69, 100
Menefee. Christine 51, 52, 55, 68, 69. 97, 98, 100
Mikeworth, Adrienne 6, 7, 55, 68, 69, 92, 98
Mong. Shannon 37, 39, 51, 52, 55, 56, 57, 68, 69, 92, 99, 100
Murphy. Melvin 17. 52, 55, 56, 57, 68, 69, 93, 98, 100
Nacke, Scott 4, 5, 26, 55, 68. 69, 93, 98, 100
Neidhart, Laura 20, 21, 36, 37, 52, 55, 68, 69, 94, 98, 100
Patrizio. Glen 4, 5, 51, 52, 55, 56, 63, 68. 69
Richardson, Kellie 55, 62, 68, 69, 94. 95, 100
Smith, Audrey 51, 55, 68. 69, 95, 100
Smith, Janice 8. 9, 55, 68, 69, 96, 125
Wandel, Marcus 23. 40, 55, 68, 69, 96, 98, 100
Warren. Charles 27, 55. 68, 69, 97. 99, 125
Wu. Thomas 51, 55. 68, 69, 97, 100

v

FACULTY/STAFF
INDEX

\

Avery, Ann 117
Barss, Sherrie 116 •
Barthelcmy, Paul 60 102
Berthram, Werner 116
Blanchard. Sue 36, 60, 65, 102
Brassficld, Chas 103, 125
Bronson, Ann 117
Brown. Dunkin 5
Clark. Stacey 25, 30,103, 122, 125
Clarke, Reed 103, 123
Cook, Michael 115-*
Cooper. Ray 60, '116
Crossman, Gary 79, 104, 119
Dibbins, Sam 5, 55, 60, 104, 118
Doran, Cynthia 104
Dowell, Jim 36, 105
Farrens, Theresa 105
Fass, Eleanor 105
Floerkc, Nancy 55, 106, 125
Friedman, Sharon 106
|Furbcr, Carol 106
Goman, Tom 64, 107, 118, 123 *
Flansen, Terry 60, 107, 122
Hayes. Gerri 79, 107, 125
V
Heckrodt, Carla 9. 39. 40, 108'Hicks, Jeff 60, 63
Holden, Betty 117, 123
Horn, Maurice 55, 115
Jensen, Sue 108
Johnson, Lome 108
V
Kerslake, John 109
King, Jansi 55, 60, 109, 123
Kragrud, Erik 115
Lawson, Peggy 116, 122 _____
Lekas, Jim 109, 122^
Lekas, Sue 48, 60. 10^122
Loggan, Kate 60, 110
Lundbladc, Denise 110
Me Alister, Lois 115
Meade, Diane 110
O’Brien, Jack
Otis, Karen 111, 123
Pace, David 60, 65, 79, 111
Pettit, Roy 45, 111
Pratt, Evelyn 112, 123
Reynolds, Chuck 112
Sadler, Lynne 55, 112
Scanncll, Alice 113
Sipple, Peter 55, 60, 65, 113, 120, 121, 122, 123
Souvey, Shirley 115
Spooner, Paula 113
Streight, David 52, 114, 123 '■
Tarter, Julie 55, 123
•Y
Tracy. Susan 116
Turner, Prcscilla
Van Hatcher, Kris 114, 123, 125 •
Vohnson. Pamela 60. 114

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                  </elementText>
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                <text>This is an OES yearbook from 1982. The yearbooks were published annually after 1925. Yearbooks from 1921-1968 were known as The Delphic and were created by St. Helen's Hall students attending in their high school years. St. Helen's Hall was an all-girls school that pre-dated Oregon Episcopal School. In 1969, the yearbook evolved into The Legend-Delphic with the addition of Bishop Dagwell Hall and male student attendees. After 1986 the yearbook branding begins to singularly list "OES" with a few volumes referencing "The Delphic" or "The Legend Delphic". Yearbooks helped to chronicle the school year's events and activities, in addition to listing each student and staff member.</text>
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        <src>http://archive.oes.edu/files/original/9a4292932e829c2dfd8ce400a7191ade.pdf</src>
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                    <text>Legend Delphic

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We, the Senior Class, found ourselves in a quandary
when it came to dedicating this yearbook. The people of
O.E.S. have done much to help us grow and they are
special to us, but when we thought of who had done the
most for our class we thought of these two women. There
was no way to choose between them. They have both given
of their time, their enerqy, their concern and their caring
To say that Lynne Sadler has been our English teacher
for three years can in no way express the way she has
enriched our minds. To have a class with Mrs. Sadler is to
be challenged, to think about the way an author presents
life, how he creats his impressions, and the validity of the
view. It is to see the characters as ideas about people, to
love and hate them. Rabbit, John Savage, Edna Pontellier,
Gatsby, Finny, Hester, Brett. It is to have an opinion and(
the courage to argue it. It is to develop the ability to
express beliefs and feelings about literature and life.
Besides our classes, she has taken us into her life. We have
watched her with her daughter, even in class sometimes,
mother and teacher the same woman. We have enjoyed*
her farm, sheep, good food and good conversation. We
have been able to see our teacher as a whole, caring
person. She has taught us ways to think and shown us a
way to live.
For all they have taught and all they have been to us,
the Senior Class dedicates this yearbook to Kate Loggan
and Lynne Sadler.
2

I

�Kate Loggan has been our class advisor for four years. She ran many sleepy class meetings, helped us
organize Bake Sales, Canned Food Drives, elections, and activities. She has opened her home to us on many
occasions giving us a chance to be together outside of school, eat each other's cooking, and play wild games of
Telephone. She has come on all of our Basecamp trips, giving encouragement to make it up Mt. Hood, and treating
blisters or singing by the camp fire calmly knitting on the Junior Trip.
As a librarian she's always willing to share her knowledge and her love of books, to find just the thing for the
research paper that's due tomorrow or just a good novel to while the hours away.

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�THE SUNDAY OREGONIAN, SEPTEMBER 14, 1980

IF THEIR actions on the first day of
school are any indication of the year to
come, the senior class at Oregon Episco­
pal School should be known as the Se­
nior Class, with a capital C.
The 29 seniors paid $16 apiece last
week to be chauffeured to school in
four Lincoln Continental limousines
rented from Classic Chauffeur.
The students met early at the school
and were driven to the Portland Center
Red Lion Motor Inn for breakfast. They
arrived back at school in luxurious
splendor “only slightly late" for class.

■

At the beginning of the year we found that O.E.S
had changed during the summer Senior Park had
been paved to become a Middle School playground,
and an addition to the Lower School classrooms was
being built. Fr. Bob Greenfield, Dean of the Cathedral
and former 0 E.S chaplain, was leaving after twenty
years; John Kerslake returned to the Science
Department after a year's sabbatical. Large portable
blocks provided new seating in the Great Hall. A
Beach Day replaced traditional Orientation activities.
But the community spirit and academic excellence
that are the heart of O.E.S. were still to be seen

17

�Freshmen
Backpack In
Mt. Jefferson

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The bionic leaf, Lochsaw, eating peanuts, magic spots, "Oh! That Coyote", hoe down
. Ask any sixth grader
about these and you will open a whole world of happy events. Most of all ask them about E-C-D-C-I-C-A, that
special code that holds all of the secrets to life on earth

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Fresh
Cold
Adventuresome
Near my magic spot,
I would like to have a hawk
Nest in a tree
I wish that I would
Be an eagle, for a day
I wished that 1 owned
A very very wild horse
Adventuresome, adventuresome.
I would wish to have a herd of tamed horses
On my twenty acres,
By the ocean
Fuzzy, Loving, soft and ugly.
To live with a deer
And her friends in my magic spot
Magic and special spot
I wish that I could camp outside,
And look up at the stars all night.
Magic, magic and special spot
I want my magic spot never to be
Discovered
- By Coyote's Class

�International
Day Most
Festive Ever

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Thursday, October 16th, marked
the fourth annual O.E.S.
International Day. Headed by Kate
Loggan, once again it was an
enjoyable sucess. Over 150 people
came to the dinner - many
students and friends of the school.
The evening's agenda included
Japanese Koto music, folk dancing
performed and taught by a group
from the Mittleman Jewish
Community Center, and, of course,
the delicious potluck dinner. Some
of the dorm students prepared
dishes from their countries, and
there are plans to make a
cookbook from the recipes of the
dishes served.
1. Jenny Heynemann,
Jenny Trudeau
2 Amir and Miguel
3. Alex Lynch,
Paige Parker

21

�Students Aid Community

�!

Work Service

Work Service has been a part of O.E.S. for five years. It
provides a chance for students to give part of their time and
themselves to helping others. Many students choose to do
their work service during one of their free periods. Such
services include teacher's aids, grounds work, and kitchen. A
few students seek volunteer jobs outside of O.E.S. such as
candy striping or Outdoor School counseling. Fr. David Pace
coordinates the work service program; Sean Kuni and Benji
Sawyer manage the student store and Eric Hart coordinated
the Outdoor School counselors.

�Highest Turnout Ever For Halloween

The Student Council added a pumpkin-carving
contest to the traditional Costume Day on
Friday, October 31st. Almost all the Middle and
Upper School students came in costume Most
noted were transvestites Sean Kum and Mel
Murphy, voted "funniest"; an entire package of
M-and-M's; Marleine Hofmann's Miss Piggy;
and numerous ghosts, babies, and punk rockers.
The festivities culminated in the "CelebrateSAT'S-Are-Over-And-Halloween Dance"
Saturday night, attended by many in costume

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The Big Splash!

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In 1975 PANYC was
originated as a program to
include the O.E.S. Upper
Schoolers in non-academic
programs. It was thought
that the arts as well as the
academics were important
to a well-rounded person.
One period each day was
set aside for elective
classes.
This year, with the
change from trimester to
semester grading periods,
PANYC was also altered.
Students take two
PANYCs each semester,

cycle 1 and cycle 2
meeting on alternate days.

New PANYC Schedule
A llows Greater Diversity

26

�/
Besides the traditional
P.E., Art, Newspaper,
Yearbook, and Chorus, fall
semester offerings
included Chess, Physical
Conditioning and
Nutrition, Economics,
Typing, Preparation for
the S.A.T., Speech and
Debate. There were
independent studies in
Vertebrate Anatomy and
Dissection, P.E., and
Biological Research. A
computer science PANYC
was begun on the new
computer terminals.

27

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Aardvark Staff Gives
Paper New Look
The 1980 newspaper staff is dedicated to producing
the Aardvark. Our continuing goal is to make each issue
appealing to the students and faculty. Our final goal is
to establish a newspaper that the students will be proud
to say is theirs. A school newspaper should have a
variety of well-written, interesting articles and a look
pleasing to the eye. We believe the Aardvark does It is a
hurried and complicated process to produce such a
newspaper; most of the work required time outside to
produce such a newspaper; most of the work requires
time outside of school. The quality of the Aardvark's
dedicated staff shows in our paper.
- Kathleen Douglas, Editor

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�Art-Lit Magazine
Made Free To All
Led by advisor Terry Hansen, the 1981 Art and
Literary Magazine contained artwork, prose, and poetry
from the entire O.E.S community. The name "Souled
Out" was suggested by a student, and the cover design
of a pair of feet bore out the theme. Especially
noteworthy were creative writing by Tammy Wang and
artwork by Michael Wienecke. Funds from the
Coordinating Council made it possible this year to
distribute the magazine to all students without the
charge that had been necessary in the past.

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Hard Work Brings 1981 Yearbook In Spring

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AdvisorEditor.
Layout

Susan Strauss
Ruthanne Williams
Anna Lisa Fear Head
Jenny Horniman
Tori Brock
Kim West
Adrienne
Mikeworth
Kim Nacke

Middle School Editor:
Melmda Larsen

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Diana Smith
Liz Coletti
Audrey Smith
Adrienne Green
Peter Janney
Alex Lynch
Sean Kum - Head
Photo:
Payman Mehrassa
Carolee Larsen
Peter Paulson
Tim Dugan
Benji Sawyer
Paige Parker
Dick Sadler

�Boys’ Varsity
Soccer Makes
Districts
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The O.E.S Boys' Varsity Soccer team this year was, as
coach Sam Dibbins put it, "really aggressive. They did a lot
of work themselves and their individual support of each
other was fantastic It made the team what it was.
If they lost a game, it was because the other team had
more skills, not because they were sitting back and
watching the ball go by." Dibbins also said he really enjoyed
coaching them Overall, it was a good, and winning season.
Seniors Benji Sawyer and Brad Whitcomb and junior Steve
Eckhardt were named to the league first team All-Stars.

1 Rich Gessford. 2. Scott Nacke 3. The team:
Brad Whitcomb, Benji Sawyer, Sam Dibbins,
Glen Potrizio, Amir Najafi, Steve Eckhardt
Scott Doenecke, Joe Byrd, Terry Grover, Brent
Husband, Peter Janny, Mike Diment, Payman
Menrassa, Nader Rassouli, Joseph Ng, Rich
Gessford.

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Plays Seattle, Faculty

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The 1980 Varsity Girls' Soccer Team was
the strongest in several years Their best
scores were a 7-0 defeat of Forest Grove
and 1-1 ties with Grant and archrival
Catlin, the first game in five years not lost
to Catlin. The Catlin and O.E.S. teams
spent a night in Seattle, playing Liberty
High School and the Overtake School. Each
O.E.S player stayed with a Liberty or
Overtake student. O.E.S. also played its
own faculty, narrowly losing by a 3-2
score Senior Sarah Stephenson and junior
Ellen Bronson were named to the All-Star
League First team. With only three
departing seniors, the 1981 team should
be stronger yet

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Team?
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by one-half of a set of sisters
- Three dedicated seniors
- Best looks in the league
(Anonymous opinion!)
- Four boarders
- Three almost as "far away" day students
- Twelve persevering, supportive young women
mix with one "new" coach, Carla Heckrodt

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1. Kim West. 2 The team Jenni
Cornell, Jenny Kirkman.. Kim Nacke,
Dawn Drew, Janice Smith, Marcialee
Lambiel, Coach Carla Heckrodt, Pam
Cornell, Marleine Hoffman, Jenny
Horniman, Kim West, Betsy Bosen, Sue
Horniman. 3. Marleine Hoffman 4
Carla Hecknodt. 5. OES makes a point

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�The first OES J.V. Volleyball team members
rotated from the Varsity team and played a full
season Participation in girls' athletics this fall
neared 50%, making possible J.V. teams in soccer
and volleyball.

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Preps for
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The 1980 cross-country runners by running four to eight miles a day. Their diligence showed in the meets they
ran in, with senior Chris Cutler winning six firsts. The team won the O.E.S. Invitational by forfeit, a mark of the
respect afforded it by other teams
They cheered on the Varsity Girls' Soccer at Catlin after running a hard course. Their coach was Mike Houck.

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SCHOOL
SOCCER

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Jenny Achilles, Dorilyn Burall, Darcy Barton,
Hilary Bauer, Julie Bawmler, Kelsi Bishoprick,
Michele Boal, Daniel Brady, Rachel Campbell,
Rachel Daack, Katie Doran, Donnie Drake,
Katherine Dwyer, Danielle Easly, Aimee Froom,
Katharine Furber, Billy Gray Fallou, Jeffrey
Graves, John Halter, Erich Harper, Will Harris,
Justin Hayes, Jason Hendryx, Scott Jollymore

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�Edward McGrath, Timothy Meier, Adam
Mishaga, Jeannine Newman, Jillann Pirofsky,
Tracy Reed, Jeffrey Reyndds, Michelle Ritter,
Artie Russell, Kevin Ryan, Andrew Scannell,
Mathrew Service, Leigh Stephenson, Christine
Struckman, Craig Struckman, Jason Tanne,
Stephen Timpe, Covington Wall, Marguerite
Wamsley, Katherine Wilson, Trey Wilson

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Jebediah Boatsman, Elizabeth Broughton, Allyson Brown, Jennifer
Buttke, Natasha Ellis, David Garner, Steven Green, Kristin Grover
Doug Hargreaves, Carolyn Harris, Matthew Harrison, Elizabeth
Hignet, Sana Isa, Jason Johnson, Kelley Karrigan, Anne Kempton,
Robbie Kerr

�Christina Kirkmire, Bart Lematta, Brian Litzenberger, Susan
McClave, Brice McGough, Hall Wewkegin, Amy Noyes, Adam Peck,
Jonathan Price, Sean Rice, Michele Sehons, Molly Schula, Kerrn
Shilling, Jennifer Sipple, Mona Tierce, Adam Voelin

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Jami Allan, Micheal Boyles, Philip Bronson Kevin Bumck, Sarah
Chick, Bill Drinkward, David Dugan, Robert Fletcher, Heidi Fromm,
James Geissinger, Susan Greve, Kim Hallmark, Tim Hohl, Laura
Inkster, James Isaak, Allison Knecke, Melinda Larsen, Jennifer
Layton, Patty Mac Naughton

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�Ernest Mccau, Len McGough, Chris Meier, Regan Moran, Mecia
Muter, Eric Nacke, Theresa Nicholson, Christina Riedel, Robert
Rieland, Patrick Schmitt, Gregory Simon, Tony Somand, Tyson
Storch, Tiffany Sweitzer, Eugene Trautmann, Bill Wagner, Elizabeth
Warren

�Billy Cool, Karen Watson, Courtney Graham, Kelly
Landye, Marci Lematta, John Anicker, Tom Hayes,
Scott Doenecke, Jack McCann, Mike Smith, Brent
Husband, Tim Dugan, Joe Harris, Ron Crawford, Carlos
Graham, Babak Zeighami

�Leanne Amos, Sharon Chandlor, Sue Horniman, Susie
Barker, Pardis Mehrassa, Jennifer Trudeau, Brandt
Peterson, Peter Donahower, Stephanie Stocks, Paige
Parker

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Lematta, Pam Cornell, Jenny Kirkman, Adrienne Green, Betsy
Bosen, Kelly Dwyer, Elizabeth Vanderveer

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Steve James, Terry Grover, Peter Janney, Denise Dennis, Andrew Mulitor Sandra
McAlister, Kim Nacke. Mike Diment, Jessica Raleigh, Laurie Brady, Lisa Wheeler,
Kim Brown, Beth Layton, Peter Paulson

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Lori Brock, Kelly Richardson, Thomas Wu, Steve Eckhardt, James Cheung, Becky Bartels, Tom Geddes, Scott
Nacke, Marcus Wandel, Janice Smith, Sarah Geary, Audrey Smith, Regan Leon. Adnenn Mikeworth, Jose Pagan,
Laura Neidhardt

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Ellison, Mel Murphy, Ann Highet, Jenny Heyneman, Dawn Drew

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Diana Smith
Liz Coletti
Beth Kempton

Not Pictured-FRESHMEN David Haig, Becky Isanhrt, Marcidee Lambiel, Duane
Loun, Sara Leatham, Josh Pettit. Lee Piculell, Melissa Plotten, Anne Thomas,
Angela Vandergiessen, Todd Verdier, Babak Zeighami, Mike Smith,
SOPHOMORES:
JUNIORS Ellen Bronson Kevin Covanagh, Jeff Cornell, Rich Gessford. David
Jackson, Shelly Kerron, Carolee Larsen.

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It is possible that mankind is on the threshold of a
golden age; but, if so, it will be necessary first to slay
the dragon that guards the door and this door is
religion
Bertrand Russell

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life is not
worth living.
-Socrates

There is no royal road to
science

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In my younger and more vulnerable years, my
father gave me some advice that I've been turning
over in my mind ever since; "When ever you feel
like criticizing someone, remember that not
everyone in the world has had the opportunities
you have."
F Scott Fitzgerald
The Great Gatsby

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Go Placidly amid the noise and haste, and remember what peace
there may be in silence
Desiderata

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He tried to tell us that the animals could speak.
Who knows, perhaps they do. How do you know they
don't just because they've never spoken to you7
Michael Murphey

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There is nothing more beautiful
than being with nature
Away from all the frustrations,
confusion, and mad rush
of the modern day world
Slow down, take a look at
the beauty there is around you,
and live a little.
There is a big difference
between existing and
actually living.
J.C.

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Bless the beasts
and the children,
for in this world
they have no voice,
they have no choice.
Bless the beasts
and the children,
for the world can
never be the world
they see
Barry de Borzon and Perry
Botkin Jr

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SONG OF THE SKY LOOM
Our Mother the Earth, Our Father the Sky,
Your children are we, and with tired backs
We bring you the gifts that you love
Then weave for us a garment of brightness;
May the warp be the white light of morning,
May the weft be the red light of evening,
May the fringes be the falling rain,
May the border be the standing rainbow
Thus weave for us a garment of brightness
That we may walk fittingly where birds sing
That we may walk fittingly where grass is green,
Our Mother the Earth, Our Father the Sky!
Tewa

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�Now when all the clowns that you have
commissioned
have died in battle or in vain
and you're sick of all this repetition
won't you come see me, Queen Jane
Bob Dylan

No more the violet by wet black muzzles
will be cropped under- a long silence follows
after the flashing and exultant wing.
Loren Eiseley

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One morning as I stood watching the sunrise,
washing out the blue black, watching the white
crystalline stars fade, my bare legs quivering in the cool
air, I noticed my hands had begun to crack
and turn to dust
Barry Lopez "Desert Notes"

There is no way to peace, peace is
the way.
Eugene V Debs
Man is pliable animal, a being
who gets accustomed to everything
Fyodor Dostoyevsky
I never found, the companion that was
so companionable as solitude.
Thoreau

Once a reporter asked Gandhi what he
thought of Western Civilization,
Gandhi replied:
-I think it would be a good ideaNY city wall

Chris Cutler
59

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Good-bye is a painful word, a reluctant
rehearsal for the time when one really
will say Good-bye
— Unknown

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tomato, we believe. We could be wrong.
— Gustav Eclesten

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Wherever you go and
whatever you do, you'll
find something magic,
in just being you.
—Unknown

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There is no such thing as "best" in a world of
individuals.

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But now abide faith, hope, love, these three;
but the greatest of these is love.

I Cor. 13:13
And lo, I am with you always, even to the end of
the age

Matt. 28:20
Greater love has no one than this, that one
lay down his life for his friends.
John 15:13

On the road of experience
I'm trying to find my own way
Sometimes I wish that I could fly away
When I think that I'm moving
Suddenly things stand still
I'm afraid 'cause I think they always will
And I'm looking for space
And to find out who I am
And I'm looking to know and understand
Sometines I'm almost there
Sometimes I fly like and eagle and
Sometimes I'm deep in despair
All alone in the universe
Sometimes that's how it all seems
I get lost in the sadness and the screams
Then I look in the center
Suddenly every thing's clear
I find myself in the sunshine and my dreams

Wherever I am, there's always Pooh,
There's always Pooh and Me.
"Us Two"
A A Milne
Looking for Space
John Denver

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Gone, love is never gone
As we travel on.
Love's what we'll remember
Kiss today good-bye.
And point me toward tomorrow
Wish me luck; the same to you
Won't forget, can't regret
What l did for love
good-bye OES
A Chorus Line

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The universe is intricate and elegant
We wrest secrets from nature by the most unlikely
routes
Carl Sagan
The Dragons of Eden

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I'm not a child anymore
I'm tall enough to reach
For t he stars
Sleepless child
There's so little time
Fleetwood Mac
My dear you’re going to kiss a
lot of toads before you meet
your Prince Charming
Sam Dibbms
September 1980

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Give me the strength to accept the things I can't change
the courage to change the things I can.
Unknown
and the wisdom to know the difference
0 K.. but what do you want
RKW
How I'd like to take the waters of Titian, under that fume-ridden sky
where the land's blurred by cherry mist
and high above like floating wombs
clouds
tower and swarm raining down primeval
bisque, while life waits in the wings.
-Diane Ackerman
The Planets
Keep pushin' for that golden star of happiness
Life is only once: make those wild crazy illusions reality
- Sharon Kay Wissner

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Take time to work,
It is the price of success.
Take time to think,
It is the source of power
Take time to play,
It is the secret of perpetual youth
Take time to read,
It is the foundation of wisdom.
Take time to be friendly,
It is the road to happiness.
Take time to love and be loved,
It is the privilege of the gods.
Take time to share,
Life is too short to be selfish
Take time to laugh,
Laughter is the music of the soul.
Anonymous

La musique est I'interprete le plus pure et le plus
pathetique
de la poesie, de I'amour, de la douleur.
- Legouve

Live to learn, and learn to live,
Only this content can give;...
- Bayard Taylor

Life is just one damned thing after another.
- Frank Ward O'Malley

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dear7
Out of everywhere into here
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STAR
Go and catch a falling star,
Get with child a mandrake
root,
Tell me where all past years
are,
Or who cleft the devil's
foot,
Teach me to hear mermaids
singing,
Or to keep off envy's
stinging,
And find
What wind
Serves to advance an honest
mind

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THIS IS MY LETTER
This is my letter to the world
That never wrote to meThe simple news that Nature tol&lt;
With tender majesty.

Her message is committed
To hands I cannot see.
For love of her, sweet countryme
Judge tenderly of me
- Emily Dickinson

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We're but little happy,
If I could say how much.
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I know these words sound strangely,
coming from me, but I'm no angel
nor was meant to be.
- Moliere, Tartuffe
Those of you who think you are perfect, are annoying those of
us who are
- Anonymous

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Barthalamew is dead!
M.M.H.
A shoe is like a face with its mouth wide
open
M.L.F.
Have you heard about the penny
candy...it's two cents now
E.R.H
Perfection is a waste of time
S.D.S.

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Let me just go down as saying that I'm
glad to be here
Here with all the same pain and lies
everybody knows...
Ah you and I think life's worth living right
here in
each others arms
I'm here to love you
No more emptiness, no
No more loneliness
I'm here to love you.
The Doobie Brothers
"I'm Here to Love You"
You grow up the day you have your first
real laugh at yourself.
Unknown

Marleine Hofmann

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�This above all, to thine own self be true.
And it must follow, as the night the day,
Thou canst not then be false to any man.
Shakespeare

I wish Pooh were here. It's so much more
friendly with two
A.A. Milnes
Winnie-the-Pooh

Jenny Horniman

Two roads diverged in a yellow wood.
And sorry I could not travel both
And be one traveler, long I stood
And looked down one as far as I could
To where it bent in the undergrowth;

And both that morning equally lay
In leaves no step had trodden black.
Oh, I kept the first for another day!
Yet knowing how way leads on to way,
I doubted if I should ever come back.

Then took the other, as just as fair,
And having perhaps the better claim,
Because it was grassy and wanted wear;
Though as for that the passing there
Had worn them really about the same,

I shall be telling this with a sigh
Somewhere ages and ages hence:
Two roads diverged in a wood, and II took the one less traveled by,
And that has made all the difference.
Robert Frost

�Climb EvVy Mountain
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There was a man . . .
who had just died, and he was reviewing the foot­
steps that he had taken in his life. He looked down
and noticed that all over the mountains and diffi­
cult places he had traveled there was one set of
footprints, but over the plains and down the hills
there were two sets of footprints, as if someone
had walked by his side. He turned to Jesus and
said, "there is some thing I don't understand. Why
is it that down the hills and over the smooth and
easy places you have walked by my side, but over
the rough and difficult places I have walked alone,
for I see in these areas there is just one set of
footprints?" Jesus turned to the man and said, "It
is true that while your life was easy I walked alone
at your side, but here when the walking was hard
and the paths were difficult, I realized that that
was the time you needed me most, and that is why
I carried you."
Unknown

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I LOVE YOU BILLIE

Sometimes I wonder if I'm ever gonna make it home
again, it's so far out of sight.

Lean on me, I'll lean on you, If we reach for stars
we'll see it through.

69

�Payman Mehrassa

To be, or not To be; that is still the question.
Shakespeare with the help of Payman

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Till we are called to rise;
And then, if we are true to plan,
Our statures touch the skies.
Emily Dickinson

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�Rather than love, than money, than fame, give me truth
Thoreau

A friend is a person with whom I may be sincere Before
him I
may think aloud.
Emerson

Fri anbligenbri, Lange leve Suerige

Constantine Petropoulos

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�Mourning the broken balance, the holeless
prostration of the earth.
Under men's hands and their mainds,
The beautiful places killed like rabbits to
make a city...
- Robinson Jeffers

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Fathers, fathers, fathers, hear me well. Call back
your young men from the mountains of the bighorn sheep.
They have run over our country; they have destroyed the
growing wood and the green grass; they have set fire to
our lands. Fathers, your young men have devastated the
country and killed my animals, the elk, the deer, the
antelope, my buffalo . Fathers, if I went into your
country to kill your animals, what would you say? Should
I not be wrong and would you not make war on me7
- Bear-Tooth of the Crows

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There, peeping among the cloud-wrack above a
dark tor
high up in the mountains, Sam saw a white star
twinkle for
a while. The beauty of it smote his heart, as he
looked up
out of the forsaken land, and hope returned to
him. For
like a shaft, clear and cold, the thought pierced
him that
in the end the Shadow was only a small and
passing thing:
there was light and high beauty forever beyond its
reach.
- J.R.R.Tolkien
The Return of the King

Bonnie Potts
74

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Nader Rassouli

'
For life is the mirror of King and slave,
This just what we are and do;
Then give to the world the best you have,
And the best will come back to you
- Madeleine Bridges

This is today's sunset;
That we started with its simple sunrise
But, there is another sunrise ahead
Which is the start of the tomorrow.
- Nader Rassouli

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The best way to come to truth being to
examine
Things as really they are, and not to conclude
they are, as we fancy of ourselves, or have
been taught by others to imagine.
- Locke - Book IV

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75

�Benjamin Sebastian
Sawyer IV

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You believe because you have seen
me But blessed are those who
haven't seen me and believe anyway.
John 20:29

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Walk tall, or then don't walk
at all.
— Bruce Springsteen

Let's Cruise!!
— RECR, WFCC, RIVIJ, BSS
IV, CW, SDK

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Get off this playground in 30
seconds, or you'll find a size
7 loafer between your buns.
—S.A.D.

76

�Born to be wild
—Steppenwolf

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Toby Sawyer

Patience-FaithOpenness, is what the sea
has to teach.
Simplicity-SolitudeEternity . But
There are other beaches
to explore. There are more
shells to find
This is only the
beginning
-Anne Lindbergh

When the change
came( and you had
a chance to see
through me, Though
The other side is just
the same
you can tell
My dream is real.
— Neil Young

77

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MAINE!

Friendship is the shadow of the evening, which
strengthens
with the setting sun of life.
- La Fontaine

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�Live your life as if your life depends on it.
- W.E.

Karin K. Tinning

Whatever you can do or dream you can, begin it.
Boldness
has power and magic in it
Begin it now!
- Goethe

Listen to the MUSTN'TS
Listen to the MUSTN'TS, child,
Listen to the DON'TS
Listen to the SHOULDN'TS
The IMPOSSIBLES, the WONT'S
Then listen close to meAnything can happen, child,
ANYTHING can be.
-Shel Silverstein

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of harmony from time to time
I really do believe
in some kind of tomorrow
when it speaks to me

-Janis Ian

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Aftertones
Sometimes it's all
too much to say aloud
The sound's a shroud
The meaning's crowd
Sometimes the words
are painful to the ear
They disappear
When nothing's clear
Till all that's left
to see are aftertones
I take them home
We live alone
But I remember
Chains of meiody
It pleases me
This song's for free
Within the memories
of our life gone by
afraid to die
We learn to lie
and measure out the time
in coffee spoons
in fading suns
and dying moons
Till all that's left
to see are aftertones
and no one knows
Where meaning goes
But I remember
Chains of melody
It pleases me
This song's for free.

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Tammy Wang

�Brad Whitcomb
That's a skill, damn it!
-S.A.D.

You're never too old to learn.
—Anonymous

Sailors do it out at sea.

So long, OES

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�Mommy, come look at the dragon in the sky1' It
So if you're feeling down and blue
Here's some good advice for you
That medium trim went out today
It's all streamlined hair and Chevrolet
There's no point in looking back
When you're doing ninety down the track
Cos if you want to be where it's at today/
Chicago Boxcar Boston Back

How glorious it is-and how painCii1~to
be an exception^
-Alfred De Musseti'

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Chester I told you

v^ai-.the only one to see the
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was nothing on if but a ting golden Keu,
and Alices ftrst idea was -that thismiant
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but; alas! either the locKs were tools rye
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on the second time round, sne came upon
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The seasons thevj go found and round
and the pain+cd ponies go upanddoum.
Were captive on a carousel of time.
We cant return we can only loot;
behind from where, we came •
And go round and round and round
on the circle game.
Tom Mitchell

84

Alice opened the door and found that
it led into a small passage, not muen
larger than a rat-hole: sne Knelt
doumaml looKed a long the passage info
the loveliest garden v/ou ever saw. Howshe
longed to gedoutof that darK hail t and
wander about among those beds of bright
flowers and those cool fountains,"
Alice In Wonderland
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�Passing through . . . Rhett Fulwider
Shawn Brateng
Bill Brord
Kathryn Campbell
Ted Davis
Mebane Dowd
Karen Ehmann
Charles Fosterling

Robert Leitch

Mark Gilley

Alex Lingas

Wendy Guyton

Heidi Lulich

Ruth Hagemann

Jennifer Miller

Jami Jacobson

John Saunders

Craig Johnson

Mark Stuart

Jack Kent

Ali Tabatabai

Stacey Kesterson

85

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■ Class Prophecy
The OES Class of 1981 ten-year reunion was held June 12, 1991, at Oswald West State Park. Student Body
President Sarah Stephenson, now a Tupperware lady in Akron, Ohio, organized the festivities. Marleine Hofmann
tried to collect a sixteen-dollar refreshments fee from each person, but several deadbeats still have not paid her.
First to arrive were Payman Mehrassa, Drue Fergison, and a class member who was so changed as to be
unrecognizable, who flew in from Iran on Payman's private Concorde Drue, now an ethn musicologist studying
in the Mideast and speaking several languages fluently, wore a tweed jacket and cotton turtleneck of casual
elegance. Payman wore a disco shirt, red pants, and silver shoes. Air Force One pulled up next on the airstrip,
and White House Aide Helen Achilles stepped out, having taken time out from raising kids, animals, and hell in
the White House for the reunion. A true femme d'affaires, she was conservatively well-dressed, unlike Amir
Najafi, who rode his camel in from the nearby nude beach He had been living with his stereo and basketball,
"certainly better than living in the dorm." By far the most distinguished guest present was the Pope, husband of
Jenny Horniman. Dressed in a charming white virginal gown, Jenny explained that their thirty-three "papal
popelets" were at home in the Vatican with a nanny. The Midwestern delegation, comprised of Sarah, her
husband Bob (an ex-wrestler turned Avon man), and Ruthanne Williams, drove up in Ruthanne's VW Rabbit.
They had left Sarah's avocado-green Pinto in Logan, Utah, where Ruthanne was camping out in the Herff-Jones
Yearbooks plant trying to convince them to finally publish the 1981 OES yearbook. Sarah wore "an outfit that
won't let the air in or freshness out," Ruthanne wore jeans and her purple shoes. Ruthanne is now a Blue Bird
leader and a revolutionary working to liberate women and children. Also working with children were Eric Hart
and Bonnie Potts, now married, exhausted, and using the names Rose Prince and Princess. For a living they own
and operate Outdoor School at Camp Rosearia, as well as populating. Their three children, E-C, D-C, and I-C
were to be joined by little A in two months While they teach the seven key concepts of life to a new group of
sixth-grade plebes each week, their dream is to overthrow the Queen of England and act royally in her place.
Wearing rain gear, nametags, passports, and log books, they felt right at home with Toby Sawyer, in her t-shirt,
Levi's, and Dr. Scholls. A dancer, she arrived in her underwater solar-powered plane/car which she had invented
from her home in an underwater metropolis In her extensive travels, she had visited Payman and Khomeini, who
were roommates, as well as Konstantin Petropoulos, living at Versailles. Konstantin was borne into the park on a
litter by Amir, Joseph Ng, and Pat McCally. Married to the King of Arabia's daughter, he is trying to produce as
many children as possible. He autographed a copy of his best-seller, HOW TO SURVIVE THE OES DORMITORY,
for Nader Rassouli, who after ten years still lives on campus Nader, who is working in a hospital as a heart
specialist, wore a scrub outfit to the reunion and rode up on a bicycle. On the other hand, Sean Kum and his
beautiful, kind, and intelligent wife drove up in a BMW M -1. Payman offered to pump gas for Sean any time he
happened to be in Iran. Because people were still covering their bodies after ten years, Sean was clothed. He is a
businessman living in the Pittock Mansion. Another pregnant classmate was Anna Lisa Fear, driving an old Jag
inherited from her husband's father. Now a professor at Oxford researching the genetic biochemistry of cancer
calls, she also dances and takes care of her "dinky apartment in Oxford." When Michelle Fromm, who had finally
quit biting her nails and learned to spel, told Anna of her plan to live "someplace where time doesn't exist, where
everybody wants nothing, and as far away from all physics and history books as possible " Anna immediately
invited her to the castle her husband had inherited with the car. Michelle had also married, having found
someone who was not ticklish. Her usual mode of transport is by electrical waves. The last two arrivals were
Jenni Cornell and Kathleen Douglas, who bicycled in. Although Jenni is an elementary school teacher and
Kathleen a journalist, they found that they have much in common Both have husbands who love children and
the outdoors, and both have one girl and one boy. Both like to dress comfortably and casually. Kathleen was
later seen discussing ways to end the nuclear cold war with our unrecognizable classmate, who had once shaken
hands with Nixon and gone to the moon, and Helen, who has connections in the State Department. Notes of
regret were received from Tammy Wang, staying with her family in Taiwan; Chris Cutler and Brad Whitcomb,
sailing on the East Coast; Karin Tinning, buying her fifth Saab; Lynn Willis, Ann Marcher, and Michaei Wienecke,
touring France; Benji Sawyer, out gallivanting; and Nicole Delman, staying in Israel. At midnight, a bonfire was
held on the beach and a time capsule was sealed to be opened at the twenty-year reunion in 2001.
,

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Upper School Art

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�Kitchen Workers

Wayne Crawford, Suzanne Tracy, Sherri Barss, Fern Hartley, Peggy Lawson, Marva Rowley. Not Pictured Kate Dabulas, Keith Gaudette.. Alice
Campbell, Geraldine Johnson.
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Middle
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Paul Barthelemy
Gary Crossman
David Pace
Stacey Clark
Elizabeth Brasfield
Alice Scannell
Susan Lekas
Gerry Hayes
Nancy Floerke
Jansi King
Denise Lundblade
Susan Strauss
Kris Hatcher
Roy Pettit
Evelyn Pratt
Pam Vohnson
Sharon Friedman

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This year one of the goals of the
Student Council was to encourage Upper
School students to be active in the council.
By encouraging students to come to
meetings we got a much better idea of
what activities and projects the students
wanted. The council planned two dances,
cut down a Christmas Tree for the
cafeteria at the Furber's tree farm, helped
with the canned food drive, and sold
concessions at the girls' and boys'
basketball games. The council also planned
the prom and a mystery spy game in which
the entire Upper School particiapted We
met at 7:30 a m. on Wednesdays
—Ann Highet, Secretary

102

PRESIDENT.

Sarah Stephenson
Sarah Geary
Ann Highet
Michelle Fromm
Babak Abbas-Zadeh, Marleine Hofmann
Rich Gessford, Mel Murphy
SOPHOMORE REPS: Beth Layton, Ruth Preston
FRESHMAN REPS: Courtney Graham, Brandt Peterson

VICE PRESIDENT
SECRETARY.
TREASURER
SENIOR REPS.
JUNIOR REPS:

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"Living in the dorms has taught me to get along with
my friends on not just a day-to-day basis."

"It's an opportunity to live with and re­
late to many different kinds of people."

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"It's a good experience and a
socially challenging place / /

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Tartuffe
A Comedy by Moliere
Mme Pernelle: Sarah Geary
Orgon. Tom Geddes
Elmire: Marleine Hofmann
Damis: Billy Cool
Marlane: Shannon Pettit
Valere: Rich Gessford
Tartuffe: Eric Hart
Dorine: Jenny Heynemann
M. Loyal: Mel Murphy
Police Officer: Terry Hansen
Advisors: Julie Stevens, Terry
Hansen

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Shannon Pettit:
I liked the cooperation of the people. I liked the feeling
of friendship between the cast and between the cast and
the stage people. We all worked together well. I thought
the play turned out very well. Towards the end everybody
ran around like little rats but we all held together. I will
never forget the "geed of dift."

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Traditions Continued

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For many years tradition has called for a SemiFormal Christmas Dance put on by the Dorm
Students Part of the traditional decoration for
the dance has been a Christmas tree. The students
spend one morning decorating the grand ol'fir.
This year the band for the Semi-Formal was
"Velvet", playing a combination of funk and jazz.
The Caroling Service was held again this year
after a one-year lapse. Each Upper School student
was paired with a Lower School student for
chapel. The group sang carols and heard a talk by
Fr. Paul.

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The 0 E.S. Middle School is comprised of a small group of special teachers to fit the needs of each student as
an individual, each with their own unique abilities.
We, the Middle School, have chosen a teacher whose special efforts and care have helped mold us into mature
individuals.
So we, the Middle School, are proud to dedicate our section of the 1981 Yearbook to Mrs. Gerry Hayes.

�In Memory of Billie Bootsma
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Class of 1980

■

One important thing that I do remember and I'll never
forget is my friends. I was never alone. From the minute
they found out, I had someone by my side constantly They
decorated my room to make it tolerable, they threw par­
ties for me, they waited patiently while tests were being
done, and one important thing, they overcame their own
fears to help me handle mine

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{ !
Let me not pray to be sheltered from dangers, but to be fearless in
facing them.
Let me not beg for the stilling of my pain, but for the heart to con­
quer it.
Let me not look for allies in life's battlefield, but to my own strength.
Let me not crave in anxious fear to be saved, but hope for the pa­
tience to win my freedom.
Grant me that I may not be a coward, feeling your mercy in my suc­
cess alone;
But let me find the grasp of your hand in my failure.
Tagore Fruit-gathering

.

The world rushes on over
the strings of the linger­
ing heart making the
music of sadness.

S

Tagore Straybirds XLIV

8

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CLOTHING AND
ACCESSORIES
FOR INFANTS,
CHILDREN AND
YOUNG JUNIORS

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imaginative new styles...a wide
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a uniform especially for you.

Dennis Uniform Manufacturing Co
135 S.E. Hawthorne Blvd.,
Portland, Oregon 97214

233-7123

120

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Parr Lumber Co.
50th Anniversary
Serving the Portland
area home owner
and builder
10 convenient
locations
in the Tri-Met area

Quality services
and low prices

�Bollons § Poss, Inc.

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REALTORS
Industrial &amp; Commercial
Real Estate &amp; Insurance

MILK—-ICE CREAM
COTTAGE CHEESE

Yeon Building
522 S.W. 5th Ave.
Portland, Oregon 97204
227-2534

GROUER
£lcc&amp;Uc (UuC ’Ptumdoty SufifUy (?*.
21S WEST FOURTH RTRErT

CARL w. POSS, JR.

Vancouver. Wash. 98660

JOHN H. BOLLONS
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RADIO CAB

Fryer Tuck
6722 S.W. Capitol Hwy.

COMPANY

246-7737

THE

GOLDSMITH
CO.

Portland-Seattle

121

�Sponsors

I

Mr. and Mrs. Bosen

Mr. and Mrs. Harris III

Dr. and Mrs. Parker

Mr. and Mrs. Nozel

Mr. Goemann

Mr. and Mrs. Lynch

Mr. McClave

Mr. and Mrs. Fergison

Mr. Rieland

Mr. and Mrs. Diment

Richard Gessford

Mr. and Mrs. Grover

Mr. Fletcher

Mr. and Mrs. Byrd

Mr. and Mrs. Larsen

Mr. and Mrs. Johnson

Bassit Corp.

Mr. and Mrs. Geary

Dr. and Mrs. Isaak

Dr. and Mrs. Ellison

Lome Johnson

Mr. and Mrs. Achilles

Lillian Douglas

Mr. and Mrs. Stephenson

Mr. and Mrs. Landye

Mr. and Mrs. Leon

Mr. and Mrs. Raleigh

Mr. and Mrs. Coletti

Mr. and Mrs. Lemotta

Gordon Fromm

Ruth Jackson

Dr. and Mrs. Vanderveer Jr.

122

�.1

PIZZA
AND
ROCK-N-ROLL!

Marleine Hofmann
is a
crazy driver

Best Wishes
Seniors
—A Friend

Support the
Donut Boycott
NO 35C DONUTS!

Congratulations
Eighth Grade
—from a happy

Message to the
Eighth Grade1
Pax Vobiscum1

Aardvarks
Eat
Falcons

Mom and Dad

Mrs H

ROCK
LOBSTER

MAXIMUM BUST

Mozzarella
is on
Gene's roof'

Illigitimus
Non
Carborundum

(Calvin Klein
Goodbye OES

juxtapose
corlen
immutable
lethargic
dearth
ubiquitous

Credits
ARTWORK

Cover Michael Wienecke
Fall Title Melissa Platten
Yearbook staff. Ruthanne Williams

OUTSIDE PHOTOGRAPHY
Ann Bronson
Thomas Wu
Hose Pagan
Ralph Fear
Brad Whitcomb

Jenny Kirkman
Sue Blanchard
Kate Loggan
Lynne Sadler
Jim Lekas

123

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REAL MEXICAN FOOD
FOOD TO GO-LUNCH-DINNER

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8640 S.W. CANYON ROAD
PORTLAND, OREGON 97225
503 292-8416

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DON'T FORGET YOUR

SPRING SUPPLEMENT

AVAILABLE AT O.E.S.

SEPTEMBER 1981

BANKER□
RESIDENTIAL REAL ESTATE SERVICES

6990 S.W. Beaverton-Hillsdale Highway
Portland, OR 97225
Bus. (503) 297-1561 • Res. (503) 648-3670
Branch Office

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Call
Mary Coletti
Saleperson
Specializing in
country properties

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��</text>
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                  <text>This is a collection of yearbooks from the Oregon Episcopal School (OES). The bulk of the yearbooks are from St. Helen's Hall, with yearbooks also from the Junior College as well as Bishop Dagwell Hall. The title for the OES yearbook evolved from The Delphic to The Legend-Delphic. The title for the Junior College Yearbook was The Scintilla.</text>
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                  <text>1921-1923; 1931-1995</text>
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                    <text>�LEGEND DELPHIC 1979-80
OREGON EPISCOPAL SCHOOL
PORTLAND, OREGON

VOL.XII

�/

UPPER DIVISION DEDICATION

■

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!

In the fall of '75, the OES dorm was graced with the
presence of a new and different sort of man. He looked
kind of "preppy", but what would one expect from a
Harvard grad? The real question at the time was
"What's he like?" He was, and still is a man of patience,
understanding and non-stop humor.
While he was dorm supervisor, he showed a unique
understanding of the growing-pains of the students he
resided with. He was once a student in a dorm also. As
a teacher, he is demanding in his own right, but gives
one a true feeling of accomplishment, even if it's taken
a lot of time to get one's views across. As an advisor he
is patient. Listening to the goals and problems of the
students, he works for their best interests.
When he was the yearbook advisor for two years, he
taught us well on the finer arts of a yearbook and

2

watched over us like a mother falcon to make sure no
one stood in the way of our goals. And still as a learned
photographer, he is "inspiring" to those who seek his
help in perfecting their own talents.
As a friend, he is easy. Although not easy to find,
once found, he is easy to talk with. To share ideas or to
critique last Saturday night's Monty Python, he is
always willing to give the time.
And finally as this year's senior class advisor, he
started to prepare us for the year to come by showing
up at the junior trip campsite, deep in the woods ten
miles south of Bonneville Dam, and asking us, "What
does it mean to you to be a senior?"
To you Lome Johnson, we, the 1980 graduating class
of OES, dedicate this book.

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THE WAKING
I wake to sleep,
and take my waking slow.
I feel my fate
in what I cannot fear.
I learn by going
where I have to g°-

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What is there to know?
I hear my being
dance from ear to ear
I wake to sleep, and
take my waking slow.

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I wake to sleep, and take my waking slow.

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And, lovely, learn
by going where to go.

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-Theodore Roethke
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�Costume
carpet. ^ "Where's the circus?” 5. Julie
Stevens out for blood

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WORK SERVICE
Scraping tater tots and catsup off the lunch plates,
tutoring English as a Second Language with pen in hand,
leading eight sixth-graders on an Outdoor School held study,
or rushing to tell someone that the copier ate the English
handouts again, OES students serve the school or community
for several hours each week. Mr. Roy Pettit directs the Work
Service program, assisted by Outdoor School Coordinator Eric
Hart and Student Store Managers Mike Shepherd and Russ
Janney.

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1. Roy Pettit, who puts it all together 2. Brad Whitcomb and
Chuck Warren prepare the plates for the eager lunchtime
crowd. 3. Brenda Graves makes a sale. 4 Lindsay Horniman
selects paper for a Lower Division bulletin board 5
Konstantine Petropoulis rakes the grounds. 6 At the Raleigh
Hills Care Center, Margo Lalich shares an affectionate moment.
7. Drue Fergison helps Katsumi Yamamoto improve his
English.
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�"It's a lot of fun. I've learned to file papers and
answer the telephone." -Dawn Drew, Lower division
office aide

"I went to ODS because it's important. Those kids will
be tomorrow's adults and the time to make them aware of
the earth's fragility is now. The kids learn and enjoy. The
counselors learn and enjoy. YAY Outdoor School!" -Puffin
Potts, Outdoor School counselor
"I like working in the kitchen at lunchtime, having food
fights and singing songs. Once when I was standing by the
disposal, they turned it on and it sprayed food all over me.
I was so mad! It was funny, though." -Liz Cohn, kitchen
worker

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�1 Mike Shepherd puts in his time at the
Student Store. 2. Jenni Cornell pauses
from grounds duty. 3. Don't you dare
throw that salad at me, Liz! 4. Carolee
Larsen minds the Upper Division desk
during Sue Hulley's lunch break. 5
Behind the window, Chris Cutler
scrapes the trays. 6. The Outdoor
School Counselors: Killdeer, Sunshine,
Beemer, Bumblebee, Puffin, and Slime
E-C-D-C-I-C-A

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25

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BOYS VARSITY SOCCER
The OES varsity soccer team had a
fantastic preseason; unfortunately
the rest of the main season was
successful but inconsistent. Though
the team members were supportive
of each other throughout the season
they lacked the teamwork which
brought them to victory earlier on.
Coach Sam Dibbins was most
impressed with what the young men
offered him, both as individuals and
as a team. After the season finished
and the results came back from the
Metro League, OES' Todd Husband
(senior) was voted to the first string
Metro team, and Benji Sawyer
(junior) was voted to the second
string. Better luck next year.

1) Steve directs defense 2) Left to RightWhitney Crookham, Ramin (Ramond Kalikali)
Khalkhali, Joseph Ng, All Tabatabai, Steve
(Stud) Ritchie, Benji (Buns, Feet. Schuckers)
Sawyer, Paul Lyshaug, Terry Grover, Geoff
Fanning, Steve (Lippy) Dibbins, Steve
(Whipped) Eckhardt, Kevin Berg, Lower left,
Coach Sam (Mighty Mite) Dibbins, not
pictured, Jeff Kohnstamm, Todd Husband, Rich
Gessford 3) Benji puts the moves on 4) The
defense hustles 5) Over the defense 6) Rich
makes ready for a chip shot

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1) Left to right; Coach Chuck
Reynolds, Amir Najafi, Nader
Rassouli, Alan Reaume, Katsumi
Yamamoto, Glen Patrizio, Peter
Janney, Konstantine Petropoulis,
Payman Mehrassa, Paul D'anneo,
Babek Abbas-Zadek, Chris Young.
Not pictured; Joe Byrd, Naser
Rassouli, Asst Coach Jim Lekas,
Khody Sirossi, Marc Gilley 2) The
Ref gives the team a halftime
"shakedown" 3) Payman goes for
another cliff-hanger

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CROSS COUNTRY
MB

This fall's OES Cross Country
team was coached by Work
Service Coordinator, Roy Pettit.
Mr Pettit was described as a
"very helpful and patient
coach", but above all,
"supportive".
Mother Nature tried to throw
everything she could at them,
from horses on the trail to
ankle deep mud and standing
water. Such was the situation
at the last race at Catlin Gable.
Despite the driving rain and icy
cold, OES' Jim Moore came in
first and Chris Cutler came in
third Though the season wasn't
their best, it was very
enjoyable.

1) Left to right; Ali Tabatabai, Coach
Roy Pettit, David McKinnon, Barry
Daigle, Babak Abbas-Zadek, Ramin
Khalkhali, Amir Najafi, Whitney
Crookham, Regan Leon, Chris Cutler,
Jim Moore

29

�i

GIRLS VARSITY SOCCER
The girls' soccer team scored more goals in
their first two games than had been scored
during the entire 1978 season. Even though
their wins were all posted during pre-season,
their skills were admirably honed by the last
games. Sarah Stephenson, who will return next
year as a senior, made the Metro All-Star
second team. Carrie Loar and Ruth Hageman
double as goalies. The girls were most noted for
their rowdiness and the trenchant shouts of
"MOOSE POWER!" from the fullback line.

1) Mary Lee stops opponent. 2) Top row: Coach Hatcher,
Toby Sawyer, Ruth Preston, Sarah Stephenson, Annette
Koenig, Jennifer Kennedy, Adrienne Mikeworth, Tori Brock;
Middle row: Ruth Hageman, Sarah Geary.. Dawn Bleakley,
Ann Highet, Ellen Bronson, Front row: Ruthanne Williams,
Jennifer Heyneman, Mary Lee Goldsmith; Not pictured:
Shelly Kerron, Carrie Loar

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�VOLLEYBALL
Although the spirit and dedication of the girls'
volleyball team were not reflected in its scores, each
player enjoyed the season. "We had some good
times, and a few real criers, too," said first-year
coach Sylvia Montague. "Betsy Bosen and Carolee
Larsen were probably our most improved players."
Ashley Kirkman was voted to the All-Star League
first team; Lindsay Horniman and Jenny Horniman
received honorable mentions. While the team won
few games, the ten players learned to appreciate
other sometimes-overlooked rewards of sports.

1) Ashley saves one 2) Coach Sylvia Montague and
crew 3) Jenny loves her serve 4) winning shot 5)
conference 6) Good shot Brenda!

32

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�1) Irresistible Chuck Warren 2)
Watch out Hatcher! 3) Hello
there Denise 4) See? I told you
my nose isn't as bent as this 5)
Darn! They forgot the Lacrosse
scores again 6) Ready for a
centerfold 7) Cute, really cute
8) Now what do I do?
;

35
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You come to OES and are handed
your schedule. There amid those
impossible-sounding classes, in the
space "10:20-11:10", is written
"PANYC." What, you ask, is PANYC
(pronounced "panic")? You grab people
who look as if they were here last year.
No, it is not the time to rewrite your
English paper that's due next period,
although it is often used for that. Nor is
it for running around in the halls
reciting all that homework you have to
do tonight. Don't those teachers know
you have a soccer game in Northern
Siberia? "PANYC" is an acronym for
"Physical education, Art, Newspaper,
Yearbook, Chorus." It's that period
when you forget your academic troubles
and have a little fun.
The fall PANYCs included Yearbook,
Newspaper, Chorus, Physical Education,
Ceramics, Physical Conditioning and
Nutrition, Chess, Design, and
Economics.

36

�I

TOP: Niloufar Khalkhali, floor
hockey goalie. FAR LEFT: Father
Tom Goman and Amir Najafi
contemplate the next move.
CENTER: Lome Johnson assists
Carolee Larsen in Design. RIGHT.
Jennifer Kennedy's circle
weaving passes inspection.

37

�NEWSPAPER

thr
THE PALIMPSEST, this year's
student newspaper, finally achieved
the quality and responsibility that
should exist in every good newspaper
The five issues produced were lengthy
and interesting, including such
columns as "Khody's Soccer
Suggestion" and a series of senior
profiles. This fine work is due to staff
advisor Julie Stevens, editors Laura
MacGregor and Carrie Loar, and the
staff.
1 Editor Laura MacGregor and Katie
Taylor, the inseparables. 2. Glen and
Ellen, stop looking at the camera and
get to work! 3. An Enthralled
newspaper staff. Toni Gudish, Laura
MacGregor, Glen Patrizio, Ellen
Bronson, Shannon Pettit, Alex Lynch,
Julie Stevens, and Christian Boatsman
Not Pictured: David Jackson, Carrie
Loar, Khody Sirossi.

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�CHORUS
Chorus has been a part of the OES
curriculum for two years, thanks to
director Sandra Fairbrook. It gives
students a chance to get away from hectic
days and wax in song. This fall's chorus
production was GODSPELL, a beautiful
assembly and relaxation for the rest of us.
Chorus members Jeff Hearn and Eric Hart
were selected for the All-State Choir.

1. Eric Hart-"You've gotta be bright to be the
light of the world " 2. "Prepare ye the way of
the Lord," sing Mike Shepherd and Steve
Dibbms. 3 Mixed emotions in the practice
room.

�YEARBOOK ..

�1. A frolic. 2. Toby and Anna Lisa
captivated by Russell's speech. 3.
Snap! Chuck's on assignment. 4.
Deadline tomorrow—Lindsay and
Annelise work frantically. 5. The
sterling staff: Russell Janney, Barry
Daigle, Chuck Warren, Liz Draper,
Anna Lisa Fear, Whitney Crookham,
Adrienne Green, Kathy Harrison,
Annelise Wamsley, Toby Sawyer,
Lindsay Horniman, Ruthanne
Williams, Gerald Sun, Betsy Bosen,
Mary Lee Goldsmith, Sharon Moore
Tori Brock, Liz Vanderveer, Peter
Paulson. Photographer: Brenda
Graves.

.. NO COMMENT
41

�faculty

1 "Next time I'll jump 13 Greyhound buses." 2. There must be a way . .
3. Silence in the library is mandatory.

42

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4 "Where are those dirty pictures?" 5. "I can also
make a moose " 6 A new formula has been born.

MATH
43

�HISTORY

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1. "Another shovel!" 2. "We will sell no wine before its time." 3. Sweet
dreams. 4. "Where did I hide it?"

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45

�FOREIGN LANGUAGES
1. Laurie Crossman explains
grammar to her Spanish class. 2.
Pam Vohnson enroute to French
300. 3. El Streight. 4. Madame
Jansi King, s'il y a un mot
"lointain," pourquoi pas un mot
''prestain"?

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�1. Physics are no match for
Father Tom. 2. Susanne
Blanchard with one of her
biology specimens 3. Perry, the
classroom aide

SCIENCE
47

�library, college
COUNSELOR,
AND RELIGION

HATUst

48

�1) Assistant Librarian, Paula Spooner. 2) Kate
doesn't know. 3) Cynthia Doran reading senior
comments. 4) Friendly David Streight. 5) Fr.
Paul with his daily fix. 6) Fr. Tom a bit
puzzled7 7) Denise Lundblade and Jennifer. 8)
Lome Johnson and Carolee 9) Sandy
Fairbrook.

ART AND MUSIC

�ADMINISTRATION
1. Patty Zerbe checks the Business Office engagement calendar. 2. Lois
McAlister, master of the front desk. 3. Buz Horn handles the school's
weighty financial matters. 4 Sam Dibbins scampers to the desk, stands
on the chair, and scribbles a note. 5. Shirley Souvey explains earnestly to
a visitor in the Business Office, fe. "Eureka!" 7. David Streight reclines in
his Dean's Chair. 8 Sue Hulley, manager of the Personal Message Board.
9. "Mr Sipple? I'd like to order an OES tie just like yours, please.
10. Nurse Carol Furber cares.

I

■

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�51

�Student Council
Elizabeth Draper, first Student Body President
of a new decade, led Student
Council, which started a lot of new activities for the Upper School
rJhenePreSentatlVeS; eleCted by their Classes' were seniors Brenda Graves and
Chuck ST' JUni°^SfChr's Cutler and Jami Jacobson; sophomores Sarah Geary and
Chuck Warren; and freshmen Dawn Bleakley and Betsy Bosen
he Council sponsored several dances, including the first dance of the year and the
popular masquerade at Halloween. It held a sale of Dunkin' Donuts every Friday
the heZM y,Sa,ah Geary' and 3 "Turkey L&lt;?9S" competition at Thanksgiving Having
the best legsfgirls were included in contest), Paul Lyshaug won the prize bird1

i

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I

I

52

�KITCHEN, BUS BARN, AND GROUNDS
1) Our kitchen staff. Ann Husten,
Barbara Erickson, Janice Cowen, Fern
Hartley, Naomi Moennich, Betty
Goertsen. 2) John van Behren. 3)
Transportation Director, Bob Reagan,
and Emo. 4) Gerry Castle. 5) Ray
Cooper.

��55

�Art- Lit magazine, was produced
in a PANYC class directed by
Terry Hansen. Silkscreened
posters designed by Jennifer
Kennedy invited students and
faculty to contribute original
poems, drawings, short stories,
and other literary efforts.
Entries for publication were
selected by class membersChristian Boatsman, Anna Lisa
Fear, Toni Gudish, Kathy
Harrison, Jennifer Kennedy,
Jack Kent, Carrie Loar, Laura
MacGregor, Peter Paulson,
Shannon Pettit, Bonnie Potts,
Katie Taylor, Petra Wandel,
Tammy Wang, and Mike
Wienecke.

ART-LIT

56

Hansen are Toby
Sawyer, Petra Wandel,
Christian Boatman,
Shannon Pettit, and
Tom Gudish. 2 Terry
Hansen explains to
Jennifer Kennedy.

�Anna Lisa Fear
represented O.E.S- in a
novice speech meet at
Beaverton High School in
October. She gave a serious
interpretation from Maxwell
Anderson's ANNE OF THE
THOUSAND DAYS, and
among her scores were
several firsts.
The members fo the
Speech PANYC spoke in a
meet at St. Mary's of the
Valley on February 16th.
Kathleen Douglas, Adrienne
Green, Ashley Kirkman, Karin
Tinning, Annelise Wamsley,
and Kim West developed
confidence speaking before
others and learned to
communicate effectively.
1. Annelise Wamsley, Adrienne
Green, Kathleen Douglas, Ashley
Kirkman, Kim West, Karin Tinning,
and Anna Lisa Fear debate whether
the seniors should participate in
Beach Day. 2. Kathleen Douglas
listens to Julie Stevens’ suggestions.
3. Ashley Kirkman and Kim West
take notes.

57

�STATE

|Pi
SHELLJ
m'm
k

FARM

INSURANCE

The Driver's Education students committed themselves to
Jason Gervich for in-class discussions of rules of the road and
alcohol abuse. Each student also completed six hours behind
the wheel and observed the driving of others In the two
years that OES has operated its cooperative drivers' ed
course with Jesuit and St Mary's of The Valley High School,
many students have found it a conveniece and have met
amusing people.

DRIVER S ED.

�COMMITTEES
The Forum Steering Committee, composed of both
faculty and students, brought various speakers to the
Upper School. Most regularly attending its lunchtime
meetings were Chris Cutler, Bonnie Potts, Karin
Tinning, Tammy Wang, Tom Goman, Chuck Reynolds,
and Jim Dowell. This year's schedule provided an all­
school Open Period Thursday mornings, to make
assemblies possible Among the presentations were
one by Mr. Sokhom Sin concerning the Cambodian
refugee crisis, and a film from the Hunger Project,
whose purpose is to educate people about world
hunger.

The Film Selection Committee's members were
David Jackson, Peter Paulson, and Christian
Boatsman. With the assistance of Kate Loggan, they
brought to OES a screening of Zefirelli's ROMEO
AND JULIET. The evening presentation in the chapel
was attended by both Oesians and Catlin Gable
students. The audience was entertained by Zefirelli's
interpretation of Shakespeare's play.

The message board Committee was responsible for
overseeing the messages on the message board in the
entry hall and making sure that they were frequently
changed. Sarah Geary, Ruth Preston, and Ruthanne
Williams were on the committee, while Denise Dennis
contributed frequently. Secret codes, Name That
Tunes, obscure quotes, and almost - straightforward
news announcements greeted the visitor to OES
across from Mrs. McAlister's office

59

�-M\

■

'

’

1) The racers
wait their turns
on the
mountain. 2)
Racers Brad
Whitcomb, Anna
Lisa Fear, and
Eric Hart with
fan Christian
Boatman. 3)
Paul Lyshaug
narrowly
clearing the
pole. 4) Anna
Lisa Fear makes
her turn, 5) Eric
Hart tears along
the
straightaway.

T’* v

The OES skiers enjoyed the season and scored
strongly despite small turnouts and lack of bus
service, which made team practice impossible
Because each team must have at least three racers,
junior Anna Lisa Fear, raced against boys, with
senior Paul Lyshaug, and junior Eric Hart. This first
co-ed team in league history scored weil for OES, and
even hoped to go to state. Suzanne Marter coached
the team.

SKIING

�,

!
i

"Alors! En garde! Allez!"
were likely to be heard in this
year's fencing PANYC, taught
by Alex Bigoniet, a French
fencing master Twelve Upper
School students mastered the
techniques of foil fencing.
Payman Mehrassa, Babak
Abbas- Zadeh, and several
others competed in city meets.
Although not quite ready for
world - class competition, the
fencers improved their poise,
balance and assertiveness, just
as their master had promised.

Payman Mehrassa
and Amir Najafi
practice. 2) Fencing
team Advisor.
Mohammed
Rassouli, Charles
Fosterling, Amir
Najafi, Babak
Abbas-Zadeh, Reed
Clarke, David
McKinnon, Brad
Whitcomb, Drue
Fergison, Chris
Cutler. Payman
Mehrassa.

FENCING

l

:

�The 1979-80 Oregon Episcopal School's Boys
Varsity Basketball team was one of the most
successful and team-oriented teams in recent
history. Being a very inexperienced group of
players, they molded well together and started off
the season very well. The preseason record of 3-3
included a 98-18 romp over the Delphian School,
which is a school record in scoring, and third place
in the O.E.S. tournament, losing by two points to
Perrydale and beating Jewell. In the first game of
the regular season O.E.S. came from behind to
beat Columbia Christian by one point on Kevin
Berg's last-second shot. The rest of the season
proved to be successful also
The team only returned five lettermen this
season. Returning were seniors Todd Husband
(3rd year), Jeff Kohnstamm (2nd year), Russell
Janney (2nd year), Barry Daigle (2nd year), and
Ali Tabatabai (2nd year). Four new players, from
J.V. Steve Eckhardt and Steve Ritchie, and new,
Amir Najafi and Kevin Berg, came together well
under the coaching of Gary Crossman (head
coach) and Kris Hatcher (assistant coach).
The Boys Varsity and J.V. teams would like to
thank Toby Sawyer, Tori Brock, Toni Gudish and
Shannon Petit for their time, effort, and support
throughout the season in managing the teams.

BOYS’ VARSITY
BASKETBALL

�.. • •

1. Kevin shoots a fade away over taller opponents. 2 Barry
gets tip. 3. Textbook form 4. The team Top row: coach Gary
Crossman, Amir Najafi, Barry Daigle, Steve (stud) Ritchie,
Steve Eckhardt Bottom row: Kevin (K.B ) Berg, Russell
Janney, Todd Husband, Jeff Kohnstamm. Front: Ali
Tabatabai. 5. Russell Janney drives for layup. 6. Amir forces
up shot. 7. Jeff Kohnstamm ready to pass to Russell.

63

�I

JUNIOR VARSITY BASKETBALL
This year's O.E.S. Junior Varsity Basketball Team, like
the varsity, had one of the better win-loss records in
recent history. Under new J.V. coach David Sellers the
team improved upon past records, obtaining six wins
this season. The team consisted of many people who
had not played much organized basketball and some
who had not even played basketball before. But
throughout the season these players ignited a game and
brought the team back.
This year's team consisted of freshmen Geoff
Fanning, Peter (Petie-pie) Janney, Joe Byrd, Paul
D'anneo, and Mark Whittaker, Sophomore Jeff Cornell,
juniors Amir Najafi and Babak Abbas-Zadeh, and
seniors Jim Moore and Gerald Sun. This season has
been one of the most satisfying in many years.

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1. Amir rips down another rebound. 2 Geoff lets one fly. 3. Joe shoots over the defense 4. The
team: Coach David Sellers, Geoff Fanning, Amir Najafi, Joe Byrd, Babak Abbas-zadeh, Jeff
Cornell, Jim Moore, Gerald Sun, Peter Janney, Paul D'anneo, Mark Whittaker. 5. Petie-pie
pumps. 6. Joe shoots again. 7. Mark at the free throw line.

■

•. v-

�GIRLS BASKETBALL
OES's Girls Basketball Team this year has been one
of frustration and little satisfaction. The team returned
only four members of last year's team and there wasn't
a great response from the other girls in the school to
join the team. But the girls who did join the team
enjoyed it very much. Though the team did not win very
many games, some of the players said that just
participating was rewarding.
Returning lettermen from last year were Michelle
Fromm, Ashley Kirkman, Sarah Stephenson, and Carrie
Loar. New players were Jenny Cornell, Seyayesh Sanjar,
Dawn Bleakley and Annelise Wamsley

1 Sarah puts up shot 2. Michelle looking for an opening 3
Team rebounding 4. The team, top row: Coach Carla
Heckrodt, Ashley Kirkman, Sarah Stephenson, Carrie Loar,
Jenny Cornell, Setayesh Sanjar, manager Sandy McAlister.
Middle row Michelle Fromm, Dawn Bleakley, Annelise
Wamsley, manager Denise Dennis. 5. Michelle shoots over
opponent. 6 Michelle and Ashley on the fast break. 7
Jenny at the freethrow line

66

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67

�DORM LIFE

Newest Beauty Treatments from Cosmopolitan

Stealing Silverware

Good Friends

68

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Musical Dormies

Mental Stimulation Watching T V.

Carrie, during her transition to Wonder Woman

"What evil lurks in the minds of men, - only the shadow
knows"

69

�!

Sue Jensen and Ann Marcher study in the lounge
Jenny laughing life away.

70

�Billie, jabber-talky.

A potential bust7

Lovable dorm supervisors: Wendy Poss, Susan Lekas, Jim Lekas, Sue Jensen, and Bob Sherman.

71

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Kevin Cavanaugh, Ann Highet, Angel Ellison, Chuck Warren, Steve Eckhardt,
Glen Patrizio, Ellen Bronson, Jeff Cornell,

��Democrat For

Nixon

Fear's
geneological
sampler by
Kathleen
Douglas 4)
"Woodstock”, a
collage by Jack
Kent 5) Toby
Sawyer's
"Southern
Cross”

Confederate
battle flag 6)
Two models:
John F.
Kennedy's P.T.

boat by

U.S. History
"non-literary
projects”, done
in the middle of
the junior year

and displayed in
the Great Hall:
Amir Najafi's
"Cutty Sark”, 2)
Tammy Wang's

embroidered
Sioux Indian,
Babek AbbasZadeh's P-38,
and Anna Lisa

Konstantine
Petropoulis, and
"Pappy”
Bennington's
Corsair by Benji
Sawter.

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�Michael Wienecke, Anna Lisa Fear,
Eric Hart, Jack Kent, Sean Kuni,
Ruthanne Williams, Kathleen
Douglas, Charles Fosterling, Bonnie
Potts.

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��Well the lush separation enfolds you
and the products of wealth
push you along the low wave
of their spiritless undying selves.
And you press on God's waiter your last dime
as he hands you the bill.
And you spin in the slipstreamstideless-unreasoningpaddle right out of the mess.
= My God =
-Jethro Tull

Billie Bootsma

And the love that I feel
is so far away; I'm
a bad dream that I
just had today-and
you shake your head
and say it's a shame.
-Jethro Tull

And now that it's all over.
The birds can nest again.
I'll only snow when the sun comes out.
I'll shine only when it starts to rain.
And if you want a drink,
just squeeze my hand
And wine would flow into the land
And feed my lambs.
For I am a mirror
I can reflect the moon.
I will write songs for you.
I'll be your silver spoon.
I'm sorry I took your time.
I'm the poem that doesn't rhyme.
Just turn back a page,
I'll waste away.
I'll waste away.
I'll waste away . . .
-Bernie Taupin
Elton John

- I FINALLY MADE IT!
85

�rown

I am somebody. I am
somebody.
Protect me. Never
neglect me.
My mind is a pearl.
I can learn anything in
the world
I am somebody.
-Rev. Jesse Jackson.

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86

�I

And he went back to meet the fox.
"Goodbye," he said.
"Goodbye/' said the fox. "And now here is my secret, a very simple secret:
It is only with the heart that one can see rightly; what is essential is invisible to
the eye "
"What is essential is invisible to the eye/' the little prince repeated, so that he
would be sure to remember
"It is the time you have wasted for your rose that makes your rose so
important."
"It is the time I have wasted for my rose-" said the little prince, so that he
would be sure to remember.
"Men have forgotten the truth," said the fox. "But you must not forget it.
You must become responsible, forever, for what you have tamed. You are
responsible for your rose .
"I am responsible for my rose." the little prince repeated, so that he would be
sure to remember.
Antoine SE Saint-Exupery
THE LITTLE PRINCE

J3LEL

Cliziibedi Colm

87

�Whitney FitzCharles Crookham
When I was a child, I spake
as a child, I
understood as a child, I thought
as a child, but
when I became a man, I
put away childish things.
1 Corinthians 13:11

bego0tr,"s “ '°Z1 “*
chnniH

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'.that wh°soever believeth in him
no perish but have everlasting life. For God
sent not his Son into
that the world through him° mlg^Vbe^saTed it, but
John 3:16-17

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G/ve me a place
to stand . . .
a lever
and a rock and
I
will
move
the
earth.

Ayatullah WHO!7!

-Archimedes

Blow up your T.V.
Throw away your paper,
Move to the country,
an build you a home

Plant a little garden.
Eat a lot of peaches.
Go an7 find Jesus,
all on your own.
-John Prine

88

x.

�The year was 2081, and everybody was finally equal.
They weren't only equal before God and the law. They
were equal every which way Nobody was smarter than
anybody else. Nobody was stronger or quicker than
anybody else. All this Equality was due to the 211th,
212th, and 213th Amendments to the Constitution, and
to the unceasing vigilance of agents of the United
States Handicapper General.
-Kurt Vonnegut Jr.
HARRISON BERGERON

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. If a child lives with encouragement,
He learns confidence . . .
. . If a child lives with approval,
He learns to like himself . . .
-Unknown

Act only on the maxim which
you can agree, as a matter of
reflective policy, to have made a
guiding law for the action of
everyone else.
-Kant (trans. by Fr. Tom)

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Happiness is the exercise of
one's vital abilities along lines of
excellence in a life that affords
them scope.
-Anonymous Greek

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I will not play at
tug o'war
I'd rather play at
hug o'war,
Where everyone hugs
Instead of tugs,
Where everyone giggles
And rolls on the rug,
Where everyone kisses
and everyone grins,
And everyone cuddles,
And everyone wins.
-Shel Silverstein

i:
Know what it is?
It is fun
It is laughter
It is love
It is life
It is now!

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-Corita Kent

:
;

Love yourself
for no one can be
share more time with you
be patient and
yourself
value your attributes
appreciate your gifts
let go of the past
retaining only its
wisdom
remain aware
for you are now
new

1
.

-Corita Kent

90

"For what is life? To me it is
Christ/'
Philippians 1:21

�I
Melanie Ellison

Now this is not the end.
It is not even the beginning of the end.
But it is, perhaps, the end of the beginning.
-Winston Churchill

91

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Smile, always srqile^ l jlj
have a smile^eady^Cj
Even though soJhetinfeiS
it hurts,*
'
Grab all the happiaessJj
you can—
y*
Don't let even"a wee-bJ
slip past you.
. ,
Live,'above all things
live.
Don't simply exist.
-unknown* ?
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They can because
. they think .they'tap
.Virgj);,

eye
and painted on a smile.
"Here", I said, "take a part of mine".
,

It's nice to be important.
But it's more important to be nice.

up

When you think you've found the key.
the door just slips away.

��For long you'll live and high you'll fly
Smiles you'll give and tears you'll cry
And all you'll touch and all you'll see
Are all your life will ever be.
-Pink Floyd

Toni Gudish

It's alright letting yourself go
As long as you can let yourself
back.
-Mick Jagger
When you are gone tears come to
my eyes so others when I look at
the ocean, When I pick flowers,
when I go to sleep. I don't think I
ever realized how very much you
mean to me.
I can't wait to come back
-Susan Polis Schutz

The permanent temptation of life
Is to confuse dreams with reality.
The permanent defeat of life is when
dreams are surrendered to reality.
-Anonymous

Experience is not what happens to a
person. It is what a person does with what
happens to him.
-Aldous Huxley

We are all Free. To do.
Whatever. We want. To do.
-Richard Bach

I can resist everything except
temptation.
-William Prowse

Time it was.
And what a time it was .
-Paul Simon

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There's a starman in the
Sky
He'd like to come and see
us
But he's scared he'd blow
our minds.
-David Bowie

�Modesty is for those who have no
talent . . .
-Unknown

We cross our bridges when we come to
them and burn them behind us, with
nothing to show for our progress except
a memory of the smell of smoke, and a
presumption that once our eyes
watered.
ROSENCRANTZ AND GUILDENSTERN
ARE DEAD
A play by Tom Stoppard

Jeff Heam
I

. for one human being to love
another that is perhaps the most
difficult of all our tasks; the ultimate,
the last test and proof, the work for
which all other work is but preparation.
Rilke

i

This above all, to thine own self be true
-William Shakespeare

The tourist huddles in the station
While slowly night gives way to dawn
He finds a certain fascination
In knowing all the trains are gone.
Ogdred Weany

�Lindsay Homiman

Night is drawing nigh For all that has been - Thanks!
To all that shall be - Yes!
-Dag Hammarskjold

The best things in life are
either immoral, illegal, or
fattening
-Anonymous

As you sit on the hillside, or lie prone under
the trees of the forest, or sprawl wet-legged on
the shingly beach of a mountain stream, the
great door that does not look like a door,
opens.
-Stephen Graham
So many different places
A million smiling faces
Life is so incredible to me.
-John Denver

"Contrariwise", continued Tweedledee
"if it was so, it might be; but as it isn't,
it ain't. That's logic".
-Lewis Carroll, ALICE IN
WONDERLAND

96

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/ '••'***. - *.

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�Todd Husband

Beyond the Avant-Garde.
-Hilton Kramer

"I'll bet I know something you don't
know, Schoeder."
"What's that?" he asked
"Beethoven now comes in spray cans."
-Charles M. Schultz

All that is gold does not glitter; not
all that wander are lost.
J.R.R. Tolkin, THE FELLOWSHIP
OF THE RING

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97

�Russell Janney

Time runs through your fingers,
you never hold it at all till it's gone
Some fragments just linger
hang'in on.
like snow in the spring
-Al Stewart

j
i

Today is the tomorrow you worried about
yesterday.

i

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Let's CRUISE!!!!!
C.W , B.S., W.C., R.E.C.R., R.J.

98

&lt;j/

�Jennifer Kennedy

Well I was born in the sign
of water,
And it's there that 1 feel
my best.
The albatross and the whales,
they are my brothers.
It's kind of a special feeling when
you're out on the sea
alone.
Little River Band, "Cool Change / /

1
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99

�Ramin Khalkhali

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�I

Ashley Kirkman

101

�Annette Koenigto
Nobody knows what the experience is worth, but
it's better than sitting on your hands, I keep telling
myself.
-Richard Brautigan

To Autumn Sun

To Wily Quail
To Rod and Gun
To Golden Ale
Give me silence, water, hope
Give me struggle, iron,
volcanoes.
-Neruda

Tyger! Tyger! Burning bright
In the forest of the night,
What immortal hand or eye
Could frame thy fearful symmetry?
-William Blake

"There are more things in Heaven and Earth,
Horatio, Than are dreamt of in your
philosophy/'
-William Shakespeare
HAMLET, PRINCE OF DENMARK

102

jilSlml

�I

Jeff Kohnstamn

Baby we were Born to run.
-Bruce Springsteen

Too much Lateral Drift.
-Robert M Pirsig
ZATAOMM

I'm very fond of stupidity. I think it's probably the most
important and least understood aspect of American life.
American society . . has a concept of coolness and cuteness . .
Both are factors of stupidity . . Now that we've established
diplomatic relations with China . . . those people are ready for
coolness, cuteness and stupidity . . It's not getting any smarter
out there . . You have to come to terms with stupidity . . and
make it work for you.
-Frank Zappa

'

103

�FOR THE COUNTLESS CONFUSED,
ACCUSED, STRUNG- OUT ONES AN'
WORSE, AN' FOR EVERY HUNG- UP
PERSON IN THE WHOLE WIDE
UNIVERSE
-BOB DYLAN

Margo
to Lalich

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WHAT IS THIS WORD "EFFICIENCY?"
SOMETIMES IT SEEMS A CLOSE COUSIN TO DEATH,
WE ARE ENCOURAGED NOT TO LINGER, NOT TO ENJOY
LIFE,
TO HURRY UP AND GET IT DONE SO WE'LL HAVE TIME
FOR SOMETHING ELSE
SOMETHING ELSE?
WHAT?

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EFFICENCY THE DESTROYER, MILLIONS UPON
MILLIONS OF LIVING DEAD DONE BY THE ELECTRIC
CAN- OPENER AND THE AUTOMOBILE
PROGRESS IS OUR MOST IMPORTANT PRODUCT,
BABIES ARE OUR BUSINESS,
TIME IS MONEY,
LIFE IS CHEAP.
MODERN TECHNOLOGY, MODERN BUSINESS, THE
MODERN STATE GIVE US EVERYTHING WE NEED
EXCEPT BREATHABLE AIR, DRINKABLE WATER,
EDIBLE FOOD, MEANINGFUL WORK, FREEDOM FROM
FEAR; FREEDOM TO LOVE, FREEDOM TO BE
OURSELVES, COURAGE, PRIDE, FRIENDSHIP, HOPE
THE MORAL OF THE STORY IS: DON'T BE IN SUCH A
HURRY.
SLOW DOWN AND LIVE.
-Paul Williams, DAS ENERGI

COME MOTHERS AND
FATHERS THROUGHOUT
THE LAND, AND DON'T
CRITICIZE WHAT YOU
DON'T UNDERSTAND.
-BOB DYLAN

EVERYBODY HAS TO
FIND HIS OWN WAY
TO BE FREE.
-BOB DYLAN

104

�I

Movin' ahead so life won't pass me by . . .
-J. Croce

You know he'd be a poorer man
if he never saw an eagle fly.
J. Denver.

Carrie Loar

It turns me on to think of growin' old.
-J. Denver.

MOOSE POWER!!
-C.L.

105

�Paul Lyshaug

106

�I
Laura MacGregor

If we're treading on thin ice,
then we might as well dance
Tesse Winchester

None are fools always, though
every one sometimes.
Thomas D'Urful

107

�&lt;r.

James Moore

Beyond a Misty Hill
Some people never go there
Perhaps they never will
There's an unmarked road
To a silent grove
Beyond a misty hill.
They don't send invitations,
I doubt they ever will
You walk alone
To a place I've known
Beyond a misty hill
Most will never find it,
It might not be a thrill.
But the ones like me
Find a kind of peace
Beyond a misty hill.
There are no maps describing,
Nor is it found by skill.
It's an unmarked road
To a silent grove
Beyond a misty hill.
It's an unmarked road to a silent grove
Beyond a misty hill.
James Kavanaugh
WALK EASY ON THE EARTH

�Cathy Owen

109

�J

Hal Pfingsten

!
i

110

�Hope I die before I get old.
-Pete Townshend

He who knows nothing love nothing.
He who can do nothing., understands nothing.
He who understands also loves, notices . . see .
the more knowledge is inherent in a thing the
greater the love . . Anyone who imagines that all
fruit ripens at the same time as the strawberries
knows nothing about the grapes.
-Paracelsus

Society's biggest joke
is its own reflection.
-anonymous

No damn cat, no damn cradle
-vonnegut

�s?
&lt;1

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J £•

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God's gift to you is your talent. What you do with it
your gift to God.
Kalhil Gilbran

CDB!
D B S A B - Z B.
0, S N - D !
-William Steige

f

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Mike Shepherd
m0^ •

112

'*

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�Funny peculiar, or funny ha-ha?
-John hay Beith

Khody Sirossi

The female of the species is more
deadly than the male.
-Kipling

Real feeling is always vulgar.
-W.D. Howells

Sanity is a madness put to good
uses.
-George Santayana.

113

�TinrPiNEss
Is

:■

.• :

Fun , Joyful
7

mm m m mmmm •

I love you all, girls!

The fire in leaf and grass
so green it seems
each summer the last summer.
The wind blowing, the leaves
shivering in the sun
each day the last day.
A red salamander
so cold and so
easy to catch, dreamily
moves his delicate feet
and long tail. I hold
my hand open for him to go.
Each minute the last minute.
-Denise Leverton

shoot for your goal
And make a basket!
from the solar man

114

Gerald Sun

�■m

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-

■■■:•:

Ali Tabatabai

115

�Katie Taylor

116

�I

Uber Allen Gipfeln
1st Ruh
In alien Wipfeln
Spurest du
Kaum einen Hauch;
Die Voglein schweigen im Walde.
Warte nor balde
Ruhest du auch
-Johann Wolfgang von Goethe

L'homme n'est ni ange ni bete.
-Pascal

Meeresstrand
Ans HafF nun fiiegt die Mowe
und Dammerung bricht herein;
uber die feuchten watten
spiegelt der Abend schein

Petra Wandel

Groves Geflugel huschet
Neben olem wasser her;
Wie Troume liegeln die Inseln
Im veleln auf dem Meer.
Ich hore des gorenden Schlommer
Geheimnis vollen Ton,
Einsomes Volgelrufenu,So war es immer schon.
-Theodor Storm

117

�Everything you don’t know, and don’t really want to know,
about the 1980 seniors.

Billie Bootsma:
Ambition: to enjoy life
Probable Outcome: insanity
Pet Peeve: sanity
Heard most often saying-, "you bet", "Garsh!", "I gotta
go do my warsh".
Idol: Humphrey Bogart &amp; Marilyn Monroe.
Favorite Pastime, drugs, sex, &amp; rodk-n-roll, &amp; also
. . being hit with a black whip!
Llysa Brosn:
Ambition: to inherit a multi-million dollar fortune
Probable Outcome: become a bum on Burnside
Pet Peeve: fingernails down chalkboard
Heard most often saying: "OK", - "Bizarre-"
Idol: anyone with a great ambition for life
Favorite pastime: having a good time with friends.
Liz Cohn:
Ambition: to be the first woman non-Catholic pope.
Probable Outcome: swinging single.
Pet Peeve: smacking
Heard most often saying: "How d'ya do, I. . ."

Idol: T.C.

I

Favorite Pastime: R.H
Whitney Crockham:
Ambition: owning a 1927 Rolls Royce, Straight 8, with a
convertible rear and duo-tone in cream and black.
Probable Outcome: owning my fifth Vespa
Pet Peeve: filling out these polls, twice!
Heard most often saying, four letter words, (work, copy,
test!!???)
Idol: Mr. Rogers (He's special)
Favorite pastime: Getting away!!!!

118

Barry Daigle:
Ambition: D.V.M.; long life
Probable Outcome: long life
Pet Peeve: The Ayatollah
Heard most often saying most anything that comes to
mind
Idol Tom Goman
Favorite Pastime water skiing, reading, listening to
music
Elizabeth Draper:
Ambition: Brain surgeon
Probable Outcome: making people get confused, when
learning and discussing arithmetic and biology
Pet Peeve: listening to people crack their knuckles and
watching people take out their false teeth.
Head most often saying, "sure, take care,- poop brain "
Idol. Jesus Christ
Favorite Pastime: being mischievous, playing basketball,
bicycling

Melanie Ellison.
Ambition: Orthopedic surgeon
Probable Outcome- Orthopedic Surgeon
Pet Peeve: people who are two-faced
Heard most often saying: "Give me a break"
Idol: Father Tom's intellect
Favorite Pastime. Driving my car
MaryLee Goldsmith:
Ambition: To become a commercial artist, or work in the
field of design, somewhere in California
Probable Outcome: to have an art related job
Pet Peeve: not finishing what I set out to
Heard most often saying. "So where's the party
tonight?"
Favorite Pastime: drawing, social activities, and listening
to music.

�I

Russell Janney:
Ambition: be on Bruce Sprigsteen road crew
Probable Outcome: bum
Pet Peeve: AM radio
Heard most often saying: "No the store is NOT open";

Brenda Graves:
Ambition: to find a wife for
Snickerdoodle (rabbit)
Probable outcome- no cute bunnies!
Pet Peeve: being on time!!!!
Heard most often saying: "just kidding"
Idol: Bugs Bunny.
Favorite Pastime: Meiosis!
Toni Gudish:
Ambition, to be a creator of structural and irrational
concepts
Probable Outcome: a recording studio engineer, or a
writer of structural and irrational concepts
Pet Peeve hypocritical authority
Heard most often saying: "Grrr", "I wanna go home to
California".
Idol. n. 1 any object of ardent or excessive devotion.
Favorite Pastime: partying on the beach with good sun,
good music, good wine, and good friends.

Jeff Hearn:
Ambition: to be somebody
Probable Outcome: enrollment at the Western College
of Business
Pet Peeve: Stupidity
Heard most often saying- anything from "The Book of
Famous Quotes"
Idol a brass structure of a goat bought on a street
corner in Mexico City
Favorite Pastime.- staring blankly into space
Lindsay Hormman:
Ambition: Physical therapist
Probable Outcome: Dirty old men's masseuse.
Pet Peeve: DIETS
Heard most often saying: "H - e - I - p !"
Most hated objects: skinny women------ who eat!!!
Favorite pastime; Traveling, running, riding, skiing,
reading, being with family and friends

"Yeah"
Idol: Mark Agquire.
Favoirite Pastime: going to Hawaii, basketball, and
tennis.
Ashley Kirkman.
Ambition: to do my best in everything I do
Probable Outcome: I'll go crazy.
Pet Peeve: hypocrisy.
Heard most often saying: "Well, that depends . .
People most respected: Jesus and Gandhi
Favorite Pastime: tennis, talking, reading, and being in
the mountains or on the beaches.
Annette Koenig
Ambition: Computer technician
Probable Outcome: part-time wrestler, and part-time
student
Pet Peeve: being jostled out of bed too early in the
morning; mushrooms, and spiders.
Heard most often saying: "I feel kinky!!"
Idol: Grandfather and Jesus Christ.
Favorite Pastime being lazy, talking, watching Star
Trek, and horror flicks, listening to music, and playing
sports.
Carrie Loar:
Ambition: To become a well-known author
Probable Outcome.- a housewife with two kids
Pet Peeve, mathematics, and questionnaires.
//
Heard most often saying: "Oh, s
Idol: Tigger
Favorite Pastime: R.R.&amp; S. (reading, 'ritmg, and soccer)
Paul Lyshaug:
Ambition: To graduate (college)
Probable Outcome: Succeeding
Favorite people: out-going, adventureous, perceptive
and modest
Favorite Area: Mt. Hood
Idol: Neil Young, Stenmark.
Favorite Pastime: Skiing, back-packing.

,

■

119

�Laura MacGregor:
Ambition: To be an author
Probable Outcome: a housewife, and mother of five
awful children
Pet Peeve: Pepper, and Christine Mennefee
Idol: Bruce Springsteen, Hie Nastase
Favorite Pastime: "Getting down"
Jim Moore:
Ambition: To have a steady, secure job, and a
comfortable standard of living
Probable Outcome. See ambition
Pet Peeve: my feelings.
Heard most often saying. "Pretty Good"
Idol: Mon pepe
Favorite Pastime: Thinking
Steve Ritchie
Ambition: Make bucks
Probable Outcome: Have bucks
Pet Peeve- No bucks
Heard most often saying. "Need bucks"
Idol: Buck Henry
Favorite Pastime: Spending bucks

¥

Mike Shepherd:
Ambition: To be the Executive Producer of the Hobo
Kelly Show.
Probable Outcome: President and owner of General
Motors
Pet Peeve: Beaverton Honda, and Kawasssssssski
Heard most often saying: "If you ask me one more time
why the store is closed, you're gonna get hit".
Idol: "Bucky Fuller, Ansel Adams
Favorite Pastime: Graduating
Khody Sirossi:
Ambition: Help stop all wars in the world
Probable Outcome Get killed in a war
Pet Peeve: People making fun of other people, and
teachers giving me low grades, and all Ayatollahs
Heard most often saying "Boo - boo," to girls, and
"Shut-up", to boys.
Idol My picture on the mirror.
Favorite Pastime: Playing soccer with a balloon.

Gerald Sun:
Ambition: To be a famous person
Probable Outcome: A famous building designer
Pet Peeve: Pink Panther
//
Heard most often saying: "Hey, do you know
Idol: Myself
Favorite Pastime. Playing Basketball, badminton, and
chess
Listening to Bee Gees, or riding my bike.
Petra Wandel:
Ambition. To become a successful writer
Probable Outcome: Very competitive
Heard most often saying: "I don't understand math"
Idol: Rainier Maria Rilke
Favorite Pastime: Swimming

120

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Kriste Gustafson, Linda Brown

Scott Keller, Gerri Hayes, Karin Goodell
Carlos Graham, Ron Crawford, Scott Chernoff, Brandt Peterson

The Middle
School

122

�After Westwind, the seventh and eighth grades.

Sharon Chandler, Paige Parker

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Scott Keller
Scott Doenecke

123

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Congratulations to the Class of 1980.
- In honor of the Rolling Stones

J.K.

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244-4253

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BEST WISHES SENIORS

McU&amp;ui Scuut&amp;uf' SeAAuce
SPECIALIZED DROP BOX SERVICE
Contract — Monthly

CARL R. MILLER

7764 S.W. Capitol Hwy.
Portland, Oregon 97219

I
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PRODUCTS COmPPRY

Building, Transportation, and Industrial
Products and Services

MILK—ICE CREAM
COTTAGE CHEESE

129

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5

Bollons § Poss, Inc.
REALTORS

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uniforms

I

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imaginative new styles...a wide
selection of fabrics. Let Dennis design

Industrial £ Commercial
Real Estate &amp; Insurance
Yeon Building
522 S.W. 5th Ave.
Portland, Oregon 97204

a uniform especially for you

Dennis Uniform Manufacturing Co.
135 S.E. Hawthorne Blvd.,
Portland, Oregon 97214

233-7123
T

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WEST END
Ltd

227-2534
CARL W. POSS, JR,
JOHN H. BOLLONS

128 N.W 23rd Ave .
Portland, Oregon
97210
Phone 224-2600

!

WOMENS APPAREL

Best Wishes Seniors
Uptown Hardware
27 NW 23rd Place

130

�Oregon

Since 1930

Portland Frozen Foods
4Uiuli&amp;Hal

AREA CODE ' 503 &gt;

PARR LUMBER COMPANY

INC.
227

1766

1965 N W UPSHUR STREET
PORTLAND OREGON 97209

4605 S.W. Scholls Ferry RD
Portland, Oregon 97725
Phone- 292-4472
Lumber and Bldg. Materials

131

�;

H

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132

�EXTECH LTD.
5319 S.W. Westgate Drive
Portland, Oregon

Export Marketing and Consulting

292-9219

WILHELM
TRUCKING CO.
GROUER

Oregon, Washington, Idaho, California

Stcct-Uc W “
PlumAiKy Supply (2*.
218 WEST FOURTH STREET
Vancouver. Wash. 98660

Compliments of
Hal Ritchie Tire Co.

Wishing the best to
the 1980 Senior Class.
— The Paper Parlour

133

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��'

LEGEND DELPHIC 1978-79
VOL. 11

OREGON EPISCOPAL SCHOOL
PORTLAND, OREGON

�For the past four years this man has been an integral part
of many peoples' lives, especially the class of '79. Whether
it was Canned Food Drives, Bake Sales, or Treasure Hunts
he was nothing but a big help. He has a family, teaches
Spanish, Religious Thought, supervises the dorms, and at
the same time, in his own amazing way, always finds time
for his students. In 1977, when there was no one to run
the dorms, he stepped in and became director. With
thirty-nine more kids in his family, this man still had time
to listen and help anyone with anything.
He is kind, loving, honest and determined to give his ail. He
won't command you, he'll only ask you. There's nothing
better than to start the day off with a smile. HE always
has one. Then came class meetings and it was nice to have
someone in charge who respected you and whom you in
turn could respect.
He is challenging towards his classes, but willing to
understand when something can't be done. There is no
one personality so full of life, love, and self-determination,
as this incredible soul, it is so very hard to put into words
what Mr. Streight means to so many of us.
To this man the only sincere act of kindness that the body
of O.E.S. can do for him is to dedicate this book, with
deepest love and warmth, to him. To you Mr. Streight, this
book, to you David Streight, our unending love.

Upper School Dedication
2

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7
1

We all knew, from the moment we first saw him almost two years ago, that
he was special. He is young, innovative, and well-informed about the
subjects he teaches. But he's more than that He is the kind of guy who is
always free for a talk about anything. Whether it's about trouble you're
having in one of his classes, or if you're interested in who was on Saturday
Night Live last week. He has a great sense of humor, and will laugh at all
of your jokes - even if they're not funny. (He's very tactful.) It's hard to be
both a teacher and a friend. Some teachers don't even try. But this man
tries - and really succeeds. Whether it's the Junior Varsity basketball
team, or the C.L.B.'s - he's thought of in highest regard. So that is why
the Middle School Yearbook section is dedicated to our beloved Mr. C Gary Crossman.

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O.E.S.?”
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'GETTING OUT OF SCHOOL,
DOING SOMETHING
MAGNIFICENT, NOT A CHECKER
IN A GROCERY STORE.”

7

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�O.E.S.”

"A DIVERSE
CURRICULUM.

9 9

9

�"WHY DID YOU COME
HERE?"

"HERE IT LETS A PERSON
WORK AT THEIR OWN PACE AND
HAVE OPPORTUNITIES IN
WHATEVER.
9 9

�"TO
ENRICH
MY MIND.”

"IT’S
WUNDERBAR.”

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"TO GET PREPARED FOR
COLLEGE.
9 9

11

�12

�"ONE BIG HAPPY
FAMILY; I’VE ALWAYS
LOVED MY FAMILY
MEMBERS."

13

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A
P
E
R

Top A graduate of UCLA's
School of Typing.
Center: Editor Cathy Leitch
listens patiently to a reporter
explain why an article is late.
Lower Left: Julie Stevens
dreams of more romantic
days.
Lower Right: Sarah Geary
searches for something to
write about while . . .

Like the city of Portland gets its news through The Oregonian,
The Oregon Journal and others, the O.E.S. student body is
blessed with their own newspaper. The O.E.S. newspaper staff
gets out all the latest news, along with who's who, crossword
puzzles, speeches and an assortment of art work. The paper's
editor, Cathy Leitch, is hard working and active. She puts in late
nights writing her extensive and informative articles, editing
someone else's hard work, or typing up articles for the next
deadline. Advisor Julie Stevens assists tremendously in the
running of the paper. The dedicated reporters, their editor and
advisor are responsible for putting out what is, in many people's
minds, one of the finest papers yet.

�PANYC
FANATICS

X*~

Upper Left Liz Cohn
diligently creates
Upper Right; Markus
Wandel learns the finer
points of typing
Center; Jane Synder
weaves a composition
Bottom Left: Susan
Eckhardt, builder of The
Tower of Time
i

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18

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Upper Left: Payman
Mehrassa at work.
Upper Right. President
Richardson at his daily
volleyball game.
Center: Rich Gessford and
Chuck Warren anxiously
await All Tabatabai's
serve.
Lower Right: Unidentified
student practicing her
penmanship.

19

�YEARBOOK

If you ever find yourself wandering through the halls
downstairs, near Dr. Sipples' office and the Mary
Rodney room during PANYC.. do not become terrified
by the screams of frustration or howls of enthusiasm
"I need a pencil/'' "Are the contact sheets in the dark
room?", "We don't have copy for this page, someone
do it now!", "You guys, the deadline was yesterday,
get to work, toute-de-suite1".
General Manager Rob Holden spends most of his
time doing those tedious editor jobs like worrying
about finances, making the seniors are on time for
pictures, and generally encouraging the staff that
"Yes, there will be a yearbook." Helen Yeaton, head
technician and chief, is constantly organizing the
staff and making sure we met the deadlines.
Constantly with pen in hand, she's either "oking"
layouts, making lists, editing copies or assigning
"fun" jobs and errands Lome Johnson, our fearless
leader, deserves much credit for putting up with us
and being the great overseer that he is

20

�Opposite Page Top Left Helen Yeaton
and Brenda Holman do the tango
Top Right Advisor Lome Johnson gives
his killer look.
8ottom Left: Editor Helen Yeaton gives
us that "You lost the payout?" look.
Top Left 'The deadline was
yesterday9"
Top Right "I've had enough of this!"
Middle Todd husband and Russell
Janney learn the basics.
Bottom Right Craig Storch is out to kill

21

�f
WORK
SERVICE

Upper Left: Mr Work Service-Roy
Pettit.
Upper Right Library assistant Ladan
Zeighami looks over the merchandise
Lower Right Annette Koenig gives Mrs
Morrie a breather

f

�Upper Left Regan Leon, Sarah Geary, Susan Denman and Tori
Brock congregate in the Student Store.
Middle Brenda Graves watts for an assignment from College
Counselor Cynthia Doran.
Lower Left: Sarah Stephenson instructs a Beginning Schooler

23

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��DORM LIFE

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26

�Opposite page
Upper Left: Ali Omoomy, Hossein Tabatabaeian and Shahram
Bahmanyar concentrate
Upper Right: A typical dorm meeting.
Lower Left Hossein Tabatabaeian and Ali Tabatabai enjoy the
Oregon Coast.
Lower Right: Sharon Moore caught off guard . . .
This page
Top Hilary Holman and Norma Dulin discuss the GREAT ESCAPE!
Middle: An exciting highlight of life at school enjoyed by dormies.
Bottom. Mahmood Sabahi working hard ... at nothing

27

�UPPER LEFT "Get yourself over here
right now",
MIDDLE- Jeff Hearn grabs a few winks,
LOWER LEFT: Mother Courage writhes
in pain;
LOWER RIGHT The priest conjures up
his magic potion.
I

MOTHER
COURAGE

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�During the fall of 1978 the students and faculty of OES
were treated to an afternoon performance of Brecht's
"Mother Courage and Her Children." Father Paul
organized that successful assembly as he did others
throughout the year. The assemblies, which sparked a
sometimes boring day, were beneficial and enjoyable for

all.

UPPER LEFT: Katrm tries on new hat, while
Mother Courage shows her contempt for the
soldiers;
MIDDLE Mother Courage and the Priest,
BOTTOM. Dramatic stage action glues the
attention of Carrie and Ruth

29

���EDITOR'S LETTER
Taking on the task of being the Yearbook Editor was the
biggest responsibility I have had to date. I loved doing it. I
learned a lot, not only about how to put a book together but
I also learned more about other people, especially in tense
situations.
I really want to take this opportunity to thank all the people
who did more to put the book together than I did. I love ya'

all!
Now that I am moving on to continue my growth in other
places and in other ways, I realize how much this school has
done for me. I now can take on all the responsibilities of my
life and direct myself to where I want to go. The things I
learned while doing something such as being editor of this
yearbook, will always be a cherished experience. No one can
relate to what goes into something like this until they step in
my shoes and follow my footprints and of all those before
me.
My gratitude is never ending to those who helped me
through this experience of being editor. Special thanks to
Lois McAlister for putting up with all that extra typing.

k

Now it's time for me to take my leave. I hope I left
something for the School to benefit from - what it is, I don't
know. Take all that you as students and faculty and all
others have here at OES and use it to make a life worth all
the living possible.
Thanks and love always,
Helen Yeaton
1978-79 Yearbook Editor

i

Compliments of

HOFFMAN CONSTRUCTION
COMPANY
32

�STUDENT
COUNCIL

Energetic and determined President Clenton
Richardson led this year's Student Council to new
heights in the realm of school politics The student
body enjoyed another Crazy Day, an extremely
successful Can Food Drive and several dances.
Deciding that this was the year to do something
about school spirit, the Student Council held a Pep
Rally, a school color day and sold "Mean Green
Falcon Power" buttons. It was a successful year for
the Student Council and the students who benefited
from the Council's wish to be more active in the
school's life

Top Left Liz Draper reviews sensitive
documents while Eric Hart fights for his
constituents' rights
Top Right: Sarah Stephenson and
Susan Eckhardt attempt to spark
enthusiasm in the student body while
President Richardson and Eric Hart
wait anxiously for the results.
Center: The Council; Chuck Warren, Liz
Draper, Clenton Richardson, Sarah
Stephenson, Eric Hart, Sarah Geary,
Kevin Fromm, Susan Eckhardt, and
Margo Lalich
Lower Left: President Richardson
pleads with the Council for their
support and understanding
Lower Right Mr Pres and Sarah Geary
mentally prepare themselves for the
Pep Rally

�34

��MIDDLE
SCHOOL
PLAY

V

Upper Left: Jack McCann sings from atop the
ladder as the rest of the cast joins in the
refrains
Upper Right: Paige Parker (Mrs Rabbit) sings
a lullaby to her litter as Jack McCann (Noah)
listens.
Right: Joe Brockert and Pam Connor (Mr. and
Mrs. Peacock) discuss the possibilities of
cruising aboard the Ark with Ruth Preston and
Jack McCann (Mrs. and Mr Noah).

36

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SPORTS
ACTIVITIES

37

�BOYS VARSITY SOCCER TEAM.

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TOP: Tim prepares to score
MIDDLE LEFT: Fromm eyes his next victim
MIDDLE RIGHT Hey Ramin, which way did he go??!1"
BOTTOM: Buns ''Hangs Loose”

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The Boys Varsity Soccer team was a mixture of groans, smiles, laughter and
depression. The team started off the season on fire by winning four, out of
their first five games which included a first place trophy won in an eight team
tournament. In that tournament, O.E.S. beat a team 2-1 which proceeded to
advance to the state finals in that same season. But unfortunately, the team
soon lost its momentum as the season progressed.
The team included some great individual talent, namely Tim Dibbins and Todd
Husband who were some of the best material in the state. The season also
marked the entrance of Portland Timber forward, Willie Anderson as co. coach, joining Mr. Dibbins on the staff His respect between the team.

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BOTTOM Top Row; Rob Holden, Shahram
Bahmanyar, Steve Ritchie, Rhett Fulwilder,
Tim Dibbins, Pat Ferguson,Todd Husband,
Sherman Gossett, Dave Duff, Middle Row;
Ramin Khalkali, Brad Whitcomb, Ali
Omoomi, Buns Sawyer, Kevin Fromm, Mike
Fry, Jeff Kohnstamm. Ground Level; Coach
Sam Dibbins
TOP LEFT: Willie gets into the game.

39

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GIRLS VARSITY
SOCCER
TOP: Norma and Hillary prepare 10 sandwich opponent
MIDDLE: Phoebe prepares to let out with a good one
BOTTOM. Top Row- Jennifer Kennedy, Phoebe Mckinney. Cathy Lietcn, Helen
Yeaton, Annette Koenig, Katie Taylor, Toby Sawyer, Bottom Row- Coach Kris
Hatcher, Coach Karla Heckrodt, Tori Brock, Sara Stephenson. Daphne Wysham.
Not Pictured-

40

�When there is a team that is held together by a mutual
interest, a special bond that says, "We are one. We can
and will do it together," you have a team that is
•nseparable. This is the O.E.S. girls varsity soccer team. It
is difficult to put into words how hard each of the girls
worked. Everyone concentrated on their own skills.
Through all of the individual hard work put in, the end
result was a team who ail wanted and strived for the best.
They never backed away from their opposition, they were
willing to take anyone on, they met every challenge with
full force.
Behind every team there is said to be a good, caring,
hardworking and friendly coach. We had two such
individuals. With their help and guidance, the team was
always improving. Without their help, our unique and
special team wouldn't have been possible, thank you Kris
Hatcher and Karla Heckrodt.
Helen Yeaton.

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TOP Adrienne walks her ball.
MIDDLE LEFT Yeaton demonstrates the disco beat.
MIDDLE RIGHT Hillary gives ball the kiss of death.
BOTTOM. Karla attends to team players.

41

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�Opposite page
T°P
Goalie Steve Eckhardt stakes out his territory
Lower Left: An injured player is helped off the field.
Lower Right: Akiyoshi Miyabayashi shows his contempt for the photographer.
• his page
Bottom The J V. Soccer team: Coach Chuck Reynolds, Hossein Tabatabaien, Bob Gray, Pat
McCally, Konstantin Petropoulus, Rich Gessford, Dave Trieckel. Fernando Sanchez, Brad Davies,
A!' Tabatabai, Steve Eckhardt. Alan Reaume, Mahmood Sabahi, Marty Sanger, Khody Sirossi,
Spencer Wall. Steve Dibbins, Ted Davis and Akiyoshi Miyabayashi.

43

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LOWER LEFT: Susan executes good form.
LOWER RIGHT jenny Horniman battles
opponent for spike.

�VOLLEYBALL
,

The Volleyball team was a perfect example of
determination and drive. They practiced hard every
day after school and on weekends occasionally. They
helped one another out. They never had anything
negative to say to each other, this team really had it
together as far as being a TEAM. If someone was
having a bad day, everyone else on the team would
do their best to help them out. Just watching this
team perform, it was obvious they were Working
hard, putting into action all the things that had been
taught them. They had a good year, they were a
strong team and that is half the battle.
This team was led by the strong and determined Jane
Snyder. She put in many days and long hours into
this team, and every minute showed.

TOP Mary Lee mutilates the volleyball.
MIDDLE RIGHT: 'The agony of defeat?"
BOTTOM RIGHT: Kelly returns service as teammates
watch on

�UPPER LEFT. Mahmood K. Butch during
warmups,
UPPER RIGHT: Dorian prepares for jump
shot;
LOWER LEFT. Dorian skies for a lay-up;
LOWER RIGHT: Team takes short respite to
talk over strategy

BOYS’ VARSITY
BASKETBALL

l

OPPOSITE PAGE UPPER LEFT Pat shoots a
free throw;
UPPER RIGHT. Jeff prepares to rifle a pass,
LOR LEFT Butch shows good form on a free
throw,
LOWER RIGHT: Russell leaps for jump ball.

I

�f I one Six returning lettermen and
The 1978-79 OES Varsity basketball team
* J'J ^“success of the team. The staring team
a good crop of JV players from the previous year le&lt;i
Shahrum Bahmanyar, guards Dave Duff
boasted forwards Pat Ferguson and
^r'io“T.hmood Sabah, and Rob He- den, juniors
and scramblin' Kevin Fromm. The bene
Kohnstamm. Unfortunately, sup
Todd Husband, Russell Janney, Barry Daigle and Je ^
ng of the season and were out or a
Duff and Rob Holden sustained knee injuries
33 and 20 points respectively
month. With the scoring punch of Dorian *"^fw7nsthis season,
season romp over Jewell, the team posted many wins

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�GIRLS’ VARSITY
BASKETBALL
The 1978-79 girls' varsity basketball team was strong in both skill and depth.
The team won the first trophy ever won by an O.E.S. girls' basketball team by
taking second place in the 1978 O.E.S. Christmas Tournament This year's team
was made up of seniors Helen Yeaton, Cathy Leitch and Vassar Byrd, juniors Liz
Draper, Mary Lee Goldsmith and Ashley Kirkman, sophomores Michelle Fromm
and Sarah Stephenson, and freshmen Tori Brock and Angel Ellison Carla
Heckrodt coached the team to one of its most successful years, not necessarily
in terms of wins, but in terms of spirit and improvement. Our bench always had
something to add to the game and our faithful manager Jami Jacobson always
had witty and encouraging comments to make All in all, the effort that made
our team ultimately work came down to total determination and dedication by
all concerned

Center Left- And we're off.
Center Right. Manager Jami Jacobson,
Michelle Fromm, Vassar Byrd. Cathy Leitch,
Mascot Trophy, Helen Yeaton, Sarah
Stephenson, Angel Ellison, Tori Brock, Liz
Draper, Coach Carla Heckrodt. Ashley Kirkman
and Mary Lee Goldsmith.

48

�Top Left: Cathy Leitch and foe jump for
the ball.
Top Right. Interceptors stand by for an
unidentified flying object.

Center Left. The team listens to Coach Carla's
pre-game talk.
Center Right: Angel Ellison cheers Liz Draper and
her fast break on.
Lower Left: The team apprehensively returns to
the floor.

49

�JUNIOR
VARSITY
BASKETBALL

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The Junior Varsity basketball season was a very competitive
one. In every game the other team had to look out for Steve
Ritchie's aggressive moves to the basket, and Mike Fry
driving to the hoop with Barry Daigle ready to pick up the
rebounds. The Junior Varsity squad had Barry Daigle at
center, Steve Ritchie at center and forward, Mahmood
"Butch" Sabahi, Pat McCally and Steve Eckhardt were the
other forwards. Ali Omoomy, Mike Fry, Thad Selby, Ali
Tabatabai and Paul Lyshaug were the guards. With these
young players the team had a good season and hopes for an
even better one next year.

Opposite page Top Right: Steve Eckhardt
playing heads up defense.
Middle Left The bench looks on.
Lower Left: Coach Crossman
Lower Right Steve Eckhardt shoots his
patented free throw.
This page Top Left Thad Selby brings the
ball up the court.
Middle Left- The Fantastic Steve Ritchie
and Barry Daigle get ready to jump for the
rebound.
Lower Right: Barry Daigle and friends.

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�SKI TEAM
1979

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Top Right: Beth Laun prepares for battle
Middle "I'm off to another victory"
Bottom Right Pierre Kent cruises towards another
victory
Bottom Left: It's Social time at the top of the HILL,
with Pierre Kent and Eric Hart

�F
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Where the temperatures never change, there is
always yellow light, (that is sometimes thought of as
artificial sun, or commonly known as floodlights), and
a perpetual breeze, caused by moving bodies, you can
find in this place called a GYM, the fencing class and
sometimes the team of reknowned fencers.
Not too often but it is known to happen, a student
could be found fighting off an attacking Saber . . .
tooth. Actually the Sabers are what the tools used in
fencing are called. For two terms this year there was
a class in Saber along with Beginning and
Intermediate Foil fencing being taught at the same
time in the winter term.
Thanks to the helpful coaching and assistance from
Mr. Alex Begunet, a fencing master from Toulouse,
France and Colleen Olney, the classes were a definite
learning experience for all those students involved.
Along with the class, a team was formed. Through
and through, fencing at OES was a big success this
year

Top: Payman Mehrassa, Hossein
Tabatabaeian, Ali Tabatabai,
Kevin Fromm, Amir Najafi,
Barry Daigle, Charles
Fosterling, Mike Fry, Jim
Moore, All Omoomy.
Center: Kevin Fromm receives
advice concerning his stance
Bottom: "Ready. Lunge!"

��55

�O.E.S.
FALCONS
SPORTS
SCORES
OES

OPP
W.S.D.
Columbia Christian
Mt.
Catlin
N.C.C.S
Lutheran
Gaston
W.M.S.
Sacred Heart
Columbia Christian
Catlin
N.C.C.S.
St. Paul
Gaston
W.M.S.
Sacred Heart
St. Paul

49
41
38
53
34
61
49
47
67
55
51
41
78
64
53
47
60

56

Catlin
Jewell
Perrydale
N.C.C S.
Columbia Christian
Western Mennonite
Catlin
North Clackamus Christians
Jewell
Columbia Christians

GIRLS VARSITY BASKETBALL
OPP.

Jewell
W.S.D.
Columbia Christians
MacLoven
St. Paul
Perrydale
Jewell
Catlin
N C.C.S.
Lutheran
Gaston
Western Mennonite
Sacred Heart
Columbia Christians
Catlin
N.C.C.S.
St. Paul
Gaston
W M.S.
S.H.A
St. Paul
Portland Timbers

38
70
49
74
57
45
57
61
55
50
70
52
62
48
64
66
52
52
45
56
84
40

OES
35

35
33
35
22
21
36
18
28
16
35
37
21
31
24
21
37
24

Jewell
W.S.D.
Jewell
Catlin Gable
Gaston
Western Menninite
N C.C.S.
Sacred Heart
Lutheran
Catlin Gable
N.C.C.S.
St. Paul
Gaston
Western Mennonite
Sacred Heart
St. Paul
Cascade Locks
Arlington

OPP
0
0
0
4
2
4
4
2
0
2
2

1
4
4

OES
1 Madison
2 Jackson
0 Columbia
0 So. Eugene
2 The Dalles
0 Aloha
0 Catlin
0 Lake Oswego
0 Parkrose
0 St. Mary's
0 David Dougias
0 Beaverton
0 Sunset
0 Hillsboro

OPP
20

25
30
50
113
38
50
40
55
40
33
52
94
46
40
52
38
38

FENCING

GIRLS VARSITY SOCCER

BOYS VARSITY SOCCER
OES
1 Madison
3 Jackson
0 Western Mennonite
1 Rex Putman
4 So Eugene
1 Hillsboro
0 Aloha
3 Catlin
1 Jesuit
1 Parkrose
0 Cent. Catholic
1 David Douglas
0 Beaverton
1 Sunset

66
25
33
48
50
62
54
40
51
27
40
34
42
40
44
40
45
46
31
49
41
49

OPP
win
win
win
win
win
win
lose
win
win
win
lose
win

St. Paul
Gaston

BOYS VARSITY BASKETBALL

Junior Varsity Boys Basketball
OES
26
14
29
48
32
40
34
23
28
22
32
31
38
34
34
21
36

VOLLEYBALL
OES
lose
lose
lose
lose
lose
lose
win
lose
lose
lose
win
lose

OPP
4

1
3
5

OES
3
5
Jesuit
6
Sunset
5
Jesuit

OPP
5
4
2
3

1
4
3
3
2
3
0

1
3
2

THE YEAR
OF
1978 - 1979

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GOD JUL . . .
FELIZ NAVIDAD . . .
JOYEUX NOEL . . .
BUON NAT ALE . . .
FROEHLICHE
WEIHNACHTEN . . .
BARA DIN MUBARAKH
HO . . .
S RODJE STVUM
CHRISTOVIM . . .
SING DAN FI LOG . . .
MERRY CHRISTMAS.

57

��I

SAINT NICHOLAS
CAROLING
TREE DECORATING

UPPER LEFT. Everybody shows their Christmas spirit by
making ornaments for the mammoth tree in the cafeteria;
MIDDLE LEFT, Students hang their creations on the big green
thing in the corner;

!

MIDDLE RIGHT: "Yes Father Paul'' there really is a Santa
Claus!;
LOWER LEFT: Toby, Norma, Pierre, Susan, and Rhett sing
some Christmas tunes while they create,
LOWER RIGHT. Guest Shaun Cassidy sings a few of his
favorites to the thunderous applause of his = fan club OES.

i

OPPOSITE PAGE UPPER LEFT- Heidi prays as Pat prepares to
cut off his fingers,
UPPER RIGHT Billie seems to have made a slight
miscalculation;
LOWER LEFT: A is before B, and C is after the both of them
while B is nestled snugly in between A and C Simple isn't it!;
LOWER RIGHT Pam and Christopher gratefully accept St
Nick's gift of candy.

■

59

�CANNED FOOD
DRIVE

UPPER LEFT: Is that all you can
carry? Boy what a little Sprout,
UPPER RIGHT: Peekaboo, EYE
see you;
MIDDLE LEFT: Holden takes a
lunch break;
MIDDLE RIGHT Wouldn't it be
funny if someone came running
through that door right now,
BOTTOM NO COMMENT!'

60

�PEOPLE:
SMILES,
FROWNS,
AND . . .
ALL OF OUR UNIQUE
EXPRESSIONS.

�TOP (left to right) Marty Sanger,
Adrienne Mikeworth, Pat McCally,
Susan Denman, Chuck Warren,
Tori Brock.
MIDDLE LEFT Steve Eckhardt,
Shelly Kerron, Richard Gessford,
Janet Gillman, Kim Parke, Glen
Patrizio

MIDDLE RIGHT. Sarah Geary,
Connie Knutzen, Markus Wandel,
Spencer Wall, Allison Katz, Angel
Ellison M
BOTTOM: Audrey Smith, Carolee
Larsen, Steve Dibbins, Kevin
Cavanagh, Melody Keaton.

62

�FROSH
R
E
1978
S
H 1979
M
A
N

TOP: Janice Smith, Tom
Geddes, Tom Gibson,
Dawn Drew, David
Jackson, Thad Selby, Alan
Reaume, John Garrett.
Middle: Ellen Bronson,
Regan Leon, Ann Highet,
Heidi Hoch.

*

63

�SOPHO­
MORES

Top Left: Sharon Moore, Toby Sawyer,
Kathleen Douglas, Benji Sawyer, Heidi
Lulich
Center Anna-Lisa Fear, Chris Cutler, Ted
Davis, Amir Najafi, Ruthanne Williams.
Lower Left: Jack Kent, Eric Hart, Micheal
Wienecke, Karen Ehmann.

�Top Left: Joseph Ng, Konstantin Petropoulos,
Karen Tinning, Brad Whitcomb, Drue Fergison.
Top Right: Charles FosterlingCenter; Jenny Horniman, Marleine Hofman,
Michelle Fromm, Sarah Stephenson, Payman
Mehrassa.
Bottom Right: Ruth Hageman, Bonnie Potts,
Jami Jacobson, Tammy Wang, Rhett Fulwider.
Not pictured: Nicole Delman, Craig Johnson,
John Saunders, Lynn Willis

i

�Upper Left- Whitney Crookham, Liz Cohn, Russell
Janney

Center. Ali Tabatabai, Barry
Daigle, Gerald Sun, Brenda
Graves, Julie Kehoe, Tara
Wiskowski
Bottom Left: Hal Pfingsten. Jeff
Hearn, Ramin Khalkhali, Jennifer
Kennedy, Toni Gudish, Mary Lee
Goldsmith.

66

�Upper Left: Ashley Kirkman, Lisa
Brown, Steve Ritchie, Melanie
Ellison, Laura MacGregor, Jim
Moore. Jeff Kohnstamm.
Upper Right: Lindsay Hormman,
Mike Shepherd, Cathy Owen,
Annette Koenig, Fernando
Sanchez
Center, Liz Draper, Katie Taylor,
Akiyoshi Miyabayashi.

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Lower Right. Billie Bootsma.
Not pictured: Pat Ferguson, Todd Husband, Margo Lalich, Carrie Loar, Paul
Lyshaug, Verena Morel, Khody Sirossi, Dave Trieckel, Petra Wandel.

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�SENIORS

Shahram Bahmanyar

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68

�1

i

It takes so much to be a full human being that there are very few who have the
enlightenment or the courage to pay the price . . . One has to abandon
altogether the search for security and reach out to the risk of living with both
hands. One has to embrace the world like a lover. One has to accept pain as a
condition of existence One has to court doubt and darkness as the cost of
knowing. One needs a will stubborn in conflict, but apt always to total
acceptance of every consequence of living and dying.
Morris L West
"The Shoes of a Fisherman"

Know the true value of time; snatch,
seize and enjoy every moment of it.
Chesterfield, Letters to his Son

Lisa Bateman

God bless the child who's got his own.
Blood, Sweat and Tears

There's a world you're living in
No one has your part
Neil Young

The sky was yellow and the sun
was blue. Strangers stopping
strangers just to shake their
hands.
jerry Garcia

Have you ever been to Paris?
No.
Have you ever been to New Delhi?
No.
Just like I said. You see what you
want to see and you hear what you
want to hear.
The Kockmen in The Point

Jennifer Brock

)
He's lucky, you're lucky, I'm lucky, we're all lucky.
Magentz

.

69

�To hell with the truth . . . The lie of a pipe dream is what gives life to the whole
misbegotten mad lot of us drunk or sober.
Unknown

Vassar Byrd

The only guide to a man is his conscience;
the only shield to his memory is the
rectitude and sincerity of his actions. It is
very imprudent to walk through life
without this shield, because we are so
often mocked by the failure of our hopes;
but with this shield, however the Fates
may play, we march always in the ranks of
honour.
Winston Churchill

Tim Dibbins

�.........:T.
"If you didn't chew with your mouth open, the food wouldn't fall out."
Donna M Drummond
"If it wasn't so serious, it wouldn't bother me."
J.O.D.
12/7/78

Jane Drummond

"You are only young once, but you can be
immature forever."
Unknown

If I leave here tomorrow,
would you still remember me,
for I must be travelin' on now
and this Bird you cannot change
Lynyrd Skynyrd Band

Lord I was born a ramblin'
man,
try in' to make a livin' and
doin' the best I can,
When it's time for leavin' I
hope you'll understand,
lord I was born a ramblin'
man
Alleman Brothers Band

Dave Duff
May not like the way I look
May not like my songs,
May not like the way I live,
or the way I'm goin',
But I'm a Free born man,
And Home is on my back.
Outlaws

Now's my time OES. Later on and good luck.

71

�A Bird can soar because
he takes himself lightly . . .
Unknown

You grow up the day you have your first
real laugh, at yourself.
Unknown

Norma Dulin

SMILE, People will
wonder what you've been
up to.
Unknown

All people smile in the
same language
Unknown

An object in possession seldom
retains the same charm that it
had in pursuit.
The time is at. an end,
I've made the journey
and now it's over

Susan Eckhardt

I must go on without you,
And you without me.
I will never forget
All those I've come to love,
Though we shall be parted
Our memories will bind us forever
SM.E

72

Vielen Dank foer alles, und
viel schpass.
SME

�I

Winning is not a sometime
thing. It is an all time thing.
You don't win once in a while,
you don't do things right once
in a while, you do them right all
the time, there is no room for
second place There's only one
place, and that's first place

Kevin Fromm

Unknown

Take it any way you want
it: be your own superstar:
let the world know the
only way you want to be is
the way you are.
Outlaws Band

Mike Fry

73

�To live your life in your own way . . .
to reach for the goals
you have set for yourself . . .
to be the you that you want to be—
that is success.
Unknown

"Success is getting what
you want.
Happiness is wanting what
you get."
Gerald Heard

Sherman Gossett

"Que pasa, gabacha7"

74

�!

Turn off your mind, relax and float downstream
It is not dying
Lay down all thoughts, surrender to the void
It is shining
That you may see the meaning of within
It is being
Tibetan Book of the Dead

James Greve

I do
The
But
I do

not love thee, Doctor Fell:
reason why I cannot tell;
this I know, and know full well:
not love thee, Doctor Fell.
Thomas Brown

Gie me ae spark o' Nature's Are,
That's a' the learning I desire.
Robert Burns

If you lift a guinea-pig up by the
tail, his eyes will drop out!
Frederick Locker-Lampson

Maggie Groening

75

�Success is a journey,
Not a destination!
Anonymous
There is so much good in the worst of us
and so much bad in the best of us
that it hardly behooves any of us
to talk about the rest of us.
Robert Burns

The back table:
where the elite meet to
eat
(fatty, skinny, ugly,
smelly, lippy, buns)
RSH

Rob Holden

If you're not off that
playground in thirty
seconds, you're going to
find a size 7 loafer
between your buns.
SAD

If there ain't no beauty, you've got to make
some beauty.
Maurice White
Earth, Wind &amp; Fire

Dreams were made for those
who really try.
Andy Gibb

OES is like a little city
Anonymous
Hilary Holman

Strive to be honest, to be happy and not
afraid of loving.
Hilary Holman

76

�!

Humpty Dumpty was pushed.
Anonymous

I cried because I had no shoes until I met a man who
had no feet.
Anonymous

Kelley Howells
As you are, I will be,
As I am, you once were.
Anonymous
Don't forget to open the door
for the orange cat
Kelley Howells

The longer the wait,
the harder to forget
If you're not ahead,
you're behind.
Dorian Kappler

Dorian Kappler

77

�The thing that, keeps me doing
the things I do
And makes me think they may
work. .
Is that I've never in my travels
met a person who didn't want
to love and be loved by other
people .
That's the force I try to work
with. It's there.

Peter Kent

Joan Baez

Death to Disco
Anonymous
Bice.

That's alright, I still have my guitar.
Jim Hendrix from Red House

!

Anonymous

Supreme Executive power derives from a
mandate from the masses not from some
farcical aquatic ceremony.
Dennis 137

Kevin Kraft

Blind acceptance is a sign of stupid fools who
stand in line
Johnny Rotten from EMI

Music should never be
harmless
Unknown

�"The deeper that sorrow carves into your being
the more you can contain. / •
"The Prophet"

For although in a certain sense and for light-minded
persons non-existent things can be more easily and
irresponsibly represented in words than existing things, for
the serious and conscientious historian it is just the
reverse Nothing is harder, yet nothing is more necessary,
than to speak of certain things whose existence is neither
demonstrable nor probable. The very fact that serious and
conscioutious men treat them as existing things brings
them a step closer to existence and to the possibility of
being born."
Albertus Secundus

"The permanent temptation of
life is to confuse dreams with
reality. The permanent defeat
of life comes when dreams are
surrendered to reality."

Elizabeth Laun

"Everybody's got to know,
Love's the reason we're
here,
No matter which way you
go, Love's gonna meet you
there "

"Yes, there are two paths you
can go by, but in the long run,
there's still time to change the
road you're on."
Led Zepplin

Cat Stevens

Michener7

Different Drummer
Indian's Prayer
Let my deeds
Show in the eyes of my fellow man.
Let my extended hand
Have the strength of ten
When it serves to lift the souls of men
Let my voice
Be music to the ears
Of the lonely and frightened.
Let my eyes
See the needs of those who are too timid - or
Too proud to ask.
Let my ears
Hear the far-away cry for help - of
The weak.
Let my heart
Interpret languages
I have never heard before.
If 1 do these things
Then will I be at peace with the world And maybe
. the world will be at peace.
Baxter Gamble
Albany, Oregon

Why should we be in such
desperate haste to
succeed and in such
desperate enterprises?
If a man does not keep
pace with his companions,
perhaps it is because he
hears a different
drummer
Let him step to the music
which he hears, however
measured or far away.

:
;

Henry David Thoreau

Cathy Leitch

-

All men whilst they are awake
are in one common world;
but each of them, when he is asleep,
is in a world of his own.
Plutarch

79

�"What'll we do with ourselves
this afternoon?" cried Daisy,
"and the day after that, and
the next thirty years?"
F Scott Fitzgerald
But I, being poor, have only my
dreams;
l have spread my dreams under
your feet,
Tread softly, because you tread
on my dreams.
William Butler Yeats
Quand quelque chose nous
defaut,
On sait alors ce qu'elle vaut.
Unknown
Born with the gift of laughter
and a sense that the world is
mad.
Rafael Sabatmi

Phoebe McKinney

In the summertime Poo-Poo's mother used to like to
have dinner in the garden. Poo-Poo used to like that,
because in the garden somehow it was not quite such
bad manners to get up and walk about between
mouthfuls.
POO-POO AND THE DRAGONS, C.S. Forester
You might as well fall flat on your face as
lean over too far backwards.
"The Bear Who Let It Alone"
FABLES FOR OUR TIME
James Thurber
*

Carl Markley

i
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80

�1

You might sometimes lose,
and you sometimes win.
BUT LOSING IS ALWAYS A GOOD START
FOR WINNING.
Done Park
You never find what you want
if you try to create it.
It must happen without
expectations or demands
Unknown

Ali Omoomy

And in chasin' what I thought
were moonbeams
I have run into a couple of walls . . .
But in looking back at the faces
I've been
I would sure be the first one to say
When I look at myself today
Wouldn'ta done it any other way.
Jim Croce
Old days, good times I remember.
Gold days, days I'll always treasure.
Chicago
Dorie Park

"!Solo el mejor, hijo!"
D.U.J.P.

81

�. .

OK, OK, OK, NO PROBLEM

La vida, no es vida sin ser
uno mismo. Y para serlo
hay que vivir la vida.
Eduardo Reyes

The thoughts are long and deep
Maybe big even small
Yet I look back
And remember
The good times and bad
The smiles and laughs

There are three things that remain - faith, hope, and love,
- and the greatest of these is love.
I Corinthians 13:13

Tim is now and was

i

The friends still are
I ever-wander the future
And sure for one thing are hopes
So I build a castle
Slowly but surely
And once completed
The time for enjoyment is but
small
Pleasure must be here
Enjoyment compassion
And love
I set out once again to build a
castle
And look ahead
I consider
Another castle to be built
As I go along
Each becomes easier to build

I

Memories are with us
But memories can help us
I will never lose touch with my
friends
I look ahead
And consider
Another castle to be built . . .
R.E.C.

82

There is no higher religion than human service. To
work for the common good is the greatest creed.
Albert Einstein

We must not desire all to begin by perfection. It matters
little how we begin, provided we be resolved to go on well
and end well.
Unknown
Earth grants joys that are great; but transplants such joys
to heaven to enoble them through the enboeling love of
God and they grow to a magnitude beyond the
comprehension of earth mind.
Unknown

Ralph Edward Clenton Richardson

�i
You can never change the past days, but always remember
to make a good yesterday for tomorrow.

Unknown

t

Love is like rain less of it is useful but much of it is
harmful.

Mahmood Sabahi

As the June light
turns to moonlight
I'll be on my way.
To where the winds don't blow
and golden rivers flow,
this way I will go
Beatles

Dan Rogers

i

83

�The clouds may drop down titles and estates; Wealth
may seek us; but wisdom must be sought.
Edward Young
True friendship is a plant of slow growth, and must undergo and
withstand the shocks of adversity before it is entitled to appelation.
George Washington

Craig Werner
Storch

He who laughs the least, cries the
hardest.
C.W S.

Still I sent my prayer, wondering who
was there to hear, I said, "Send me
somebody who's strong and
somewhat sincere."With the millions
of the lost and lonely ones, I called
out to be released. Caught in my
struggle for higher achievement And
my search for love that don't seem to
cease.
Joni Mitchell

Time to grow, Time to go.
Adolesce, Adolesce.
Too young to take over, too old
to ignore.
Gee, I'm almost 20, what, what
for,
There's a lot I'm not certain of,
Good-bye 12, Good-bye 13,
Hello love
A CHORUS LINE

84

Good pilgrim you do wrong your hand too much,
Which mannerly devotion shows in this;
For saints have hands that pilgrims' hands do
touch
And palm to palm is holy palmers' kiss
ROMEO AND JULIET Act 1, Scene V

Katharine Louise
Sammons

Vive la Bice

�That is to say
Man is all-knowing,
that is to say,
We think man is all­
knowing,
that is to say,
We are pretty sure man is
all-knowing,
that is to say,
It is not certain that man
is all-knowing,
that is to say,
It is possible that man is
not all-knowing,
that is to say,
It is probable that man is
not all-knowing,
that is to say,
It is most likely that man
is not all-knowing,
that is to say,
Man knows nothing,
except ... urn ... ,
that is to say . . .
1974 Mike Sullivan
OES class of 1978

Andreas
Strotmann

Happy Revolution!

Hossein
Tabatabaeian

85

�Winter rain, now tell me why
Summers fade and roses die.
Golden hills now built on grey
Summer leaves are blown away.
What remains for wind and rain.
Jerry Garcia
Weather Report Suite

May your hands always be busy
your feet always be swift

Trudi Vetterlein

May you have a strong foundation
When the winds of changes shift
May your heart always be joyful
May your song always be sung
And may you stay forever young.
Bob Dylan
Forever Young

The great pleasure in life is doing what
people say you cannot do.
Walter Bagehot

1

i

All I knew was that you had to run, run, run,
without knowing why you were running
and the
winning post was no end to it . .
Allan Sillitoe

Daphne Wysham

86

�Perspective, I realize, is the essence
of life
Broken down it may be classified as
suchThose that see Life merely for its
gains,
Rewards handed out for quotas of
good deeds made
Seeing only that which will reap in a
profit
Smiling through clean smiles that
issue cuts
Wounding others to the quick
But the others-having felt the cuts,
cast them off
Their armour is the goodness that
fills the heart
Their wisdom is like the quiet that
comes in the End
Like dust settling out upon the
horizon at sunset
ABY

Helen Yeaton

Integrity is not measured by the amount
of goodness one has within
But rather by the way one uses that
goodnessABY

Happiness and trouble stand at everyone's gate yours
is the choice which you will invite in.
Chinese Proverb

The great use of life is to spend it for something that
will outlast it.
William James

LadanZeighami

�All things are possible to him who
believes; they are less difficult to him
who hopes; they are easy to him who
loves; and they are simple to any who
do all three.

Siamak Zeighami

Not all things hatch from an egg.

"May I help you?"
"Yes, I'll have a piece of life, hold the pain,
sorrow and tears "
"Will that be all7"
"No, and a glass of laughs on the rocks."

Gabriele Zimmer

�:

"Without faith a man can do nothing; with
it all things are possible.”
Sir William Osier

"You give but little when
you give of your
possessions. It is when you
give of yourself that you
truly give.”

Kelly Jarvis

Kahlil Gibran

IBITY, IBITY, IBITY . .
THAT’S ALL
FOLKS!

89

�F

s

O T

TOP LEFT: Shahram Bahmanyar, Ali Tabatabai, Amir, Najafi Ah Zeighami, Ladan Zeighami,
Niloufar Khalkhali, Mahmood Sabahi, Ramin Khalkhali, Hossein Tabatabaeian, Khody Sirossi.
Payman Mehrassa

R
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CENTER LEFT. Tammy Wang, Akiyoshi Miyabayashi, Joseph Ng, Gerald Sun

CENTER RIGHT Eduardo Reyes, Fernando Sanchez

LOWER LEFT: Petra Wandel, Andreas Strotmann

I
LOWER RIGHT:
Konstantin Petropoulos

90

�1

FACULTY

Math Department
Left to right: James Weber, Elizabeth Brasfield, Marcia Zimmerman,
Gary Crossman.

Tom Goman

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91

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History
Department

Top Right: Sam Dibbins
Bottom (left to right) Lome Johnson,
Chuck Reynolds, Eleanor Fass

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Bottom (left to right) Julie Stevens, Terry Hansen, Reed Clark, Lynne Sadler,

93

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Upper Right (left to right): Janci King, David Streight, Pam
Vohnson.
Middle: David Streight instructs future world diplomats in
the intricacies of the Spanish language
Bottom- Pam Vohnson corrects tests under the watchful
eye of Charles de Gaulle.

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Top: Lucille Mitchem.
Left Jane Snyder.

MUSIC
Right: Sandra Fairbrook

95

�Science
D ep artm ent

Top Right. Mike Houck practices the sly eye
movements of the kit fox
Bottom: John Kerslake, Mike Houck

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Left. Kate Loggan

COLLEGE
COUNSELOR
Right: Cynthia Doran .

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��ADMINISTRATION
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Opposite Page Top Left James G Weber Upper School
Principal
Top Right: Helga Daret. Middle School Principal.
Lower Left: Peter Sipple. Headmaster.
Lower Right: Betty Wright. Lower School Principal
This Page. Top Left Ann Bronson. Public Relations
Director.
Top Right: Betty Miller. Director of Development.
Lower Left May Morris. Middle and Upper School
Secretary
Lower Right Lois McAlister. Registrar and Secretary to
Headmaster,

�■

Grounds

100

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Top Right - Jon Von Baren, Keith Geiger, Joe Snyder, Dan
Butler, Dan Woodfield, Emo, Bob Reagan, Ruth Ferris, Mike
Hayakawa
Bottom Left - Joe Spooner
Opposite Page Above - Mac McRae, Jeanne Harmon, Jerri Johnson, Janice
Cowan, Fern Hartley, Barbara Erickson, Mike O'Hara, Efim
Moshkovich
Below - Jon Von Baren, Mike Hayakawa, Joe Snyder, Bob
Reagan

101

�Bill Wagner, Greg Simon, Jim Pelerson, Jim
Geissmger, Eddie Packer, Gina Ruscigno, Beth
Layton, Mark Gossett, Boo Riedel,. Rachael Green,
Kelli Dahn, Lenya Shore, Mecia Muter, Sarah
Chick

Back Row Brian Malley. Phillip Bronson, Patty
MacNaughton, Tim Wheeler, Bill Drinkward.
Robby Fletcher, Regan Moran John Dunham
Front Row. Mike Boyles, Chris Meier, Stacy
Barrows, Theresa Nicholson Laura Inkster, Ilene
Reed, Ty Storch, Pat Schmitt, Len McGough

■h

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�Back Row Ron Crawford,
Scott Chernoff, Peter
Fanning, Jack Altstadt, Jack
McCann, Pam Millaran. Front
Row Sue Horniman, Beth
Kempton, Karen Matson,
Scott Keller, Amir Zeighami,
Joy Spencer, Diana Smith,
Sharon Greve, Lynn Medoff.

Back Row Linda Brown,
Kristen Gustafson, Courtney
Graham, Gary Garyfallou,
Tom Hayes, Joe Brockert,
Brent Husband. Front Row:
Kellie Smith, Paige Parker,
Sharon Chandler, Liz Coletti,
Leanne Amos, Pardis
Mehrassa, Pace Vetaly,
Vaughn Langsdorff, Phil
White, Peter Donahower

103

�Left:
Back Row: Joseph Byrd.
Mitchell Buge. Bruce
Goodell, Kelly Dannen.
Middle Row Peter
Johnson, David
Warrington, Adrianne
Green, Denise Bravall,
Kirsten Nielsen Front
Row Terry Grover, Kamal
Yadan, Betsy Schulevitz,
Kim Earnst.

8TH GRADE
P

Right:
Back Row; Craig Hargraves,
Chris Monroe, Chris Young,
Analise Wamsley Middle
Row: Stephany Shirley, Betsy
Bowsen, Bryn Fletcher, Beth
Layton, Geoff Fanning Front
Row: Lisa Gegna, Ruth
Preston, Dana Berger, Pam
Connors, Lisa Wheeler

104

�MIDDLE SCHOOL

Top Left: Sandy Fairbrook Music
Middle Eleanor Pass - 7th
Geography, 8th Government
Bottom Right: Fr Paul
Barthelemy - Religion
Bottom Left. Evelyn Pratt Middle School Science
Top Right George Gray - Drama,
Social Studies, Religion

�r;
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Upper Left: Mrs. Hayes
Upper Right, Left to Right Regan Moran, Jim Peterson,
Rachel Green and Boo Riedel, cast members of the sixth grade
play, "Baba Yaga and the Frog Princess"
Middle Right: Mr. Snyder and Scott Keller at Camp Westwind
Lower Left: Mr Gray directing Sarah Chick, the angel to
'Noah's Animals"
Lower Right: The Seventh Grade Community Building Trip to
Camp Westwind

106

�Upper Left: Debbie Roemer
Upper Right. Mr. Crossman and David Sellers officiating
at the "Timbers" game
Middle Left, Left to Right: Debbie Roemer, Kellie Smith
and Karin Goodell clowning at Camp Westwmd
Lower Right. Phil White
Lower Left: Mrs Fanning, organizer of the Camp
Westwind trips, painting Mrs. Snyder's face

107

�6th GRADE
Top Left: Jennifer Layton, Gina Ruscigno and Laura Inkster
demonstrate what AGGRESSION means
Below Left: Gina Ruscigno and Joy Dunham go in for the kill
Below Center: Joy Dunham kicks the ball out of 0 E S.
territory.
Below Right. Ilene Reed, Kelly Bushell, Rachael Green and
Jennifer Layton kibbutzing as to what to do next

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6th GRADE
Top Right: Pat Schmitt takes a lay-up as Catlin's opponents stand in awe.
Center Left: Bill Wagner passes off to Greg Simon.
Center; Pat Schmitt and Phil Bronson intimidate a victim.
Center Right; Ty Storch's skill and speed are too much for some.
Bottom: Jim Geissmger makes a successful jump ball, as 0 E S players
Eddie Packer, Tim Wheeler, Jim Peterson (-34) and Len McGough await
possession

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Heard most often to say: "Well"
Most favorite food: strawberry shortcake
Biggest characteristic: quietness
Seen most often wearing: cords
Favorite pastime: table tennis, bike riding
Most favorite famous person: Paul Simon
Most famous for: his german candy bars

110

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Trudi Vetterlein
Favorite song: Way Out Willie and the Hand Jive
Heard most often to say: "No, it's not a permanent!
Most favorite food: Peppermint candy ice cream
Biggest characteristic: Massive quantities of
uncontrollable curls
Seen most often wearing: Bright red booties
Favorite pastime: Playing
Most favorite famous person: Rhett Butler
Most famous for: Her curly, kinky, blonde, cool, farout, groovy HAIR

Favorite song: Sultans of Swing; Sl^rwafc^-;Heaven'
Heard most often to say: Ola! Como estas - Spanish
expressions .
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Most favorite food: Toffeefay candies
Biggest characteristic: Being a music rowdy with
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Seen most often wearing: Hiking clothes
Favorite pastime: Guitar playing or tennis
Most favorite famous person: Jimmy Page, guitarist

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Most famous for: His guitar playing ambitions.

Daphne Wysham
Favorite song: Vincent; The Pretender
Heard most often to say: "Can I turn it in
tomorrow?"
Most favorite food: Chicken curry
Biggest characteristic: Procrastination
Seen most often wearing: Indian clothes
. Favorite pastime: Soccer
Most favorite famous person: Gilda Radner, Jackson
Browne
Most famous for: Her red hair

Mahmood Sabahi

Kelley Howells
Favorite song: Love in the Afternoon
Heard most often to say: "What's for lunch?"
Most favorite food: Mint chocolate-chip ice cream
Biggest characteristic:----Seen most often wearing: a nun's habit
Favorite pastime: —
Most favorite famous person. Jacqueline Kennedy
Onassis
Most famous for: Her long fingernails

Favorite song: Stairway to Heaven
Heard most often to say: Death to Shah
Most favorite food: Chelo Kabab
Biggest characteristic: Sense of humor
Seen most often wearing: Adidas
Favorite pastime: Sports
Most favorite famous person: Khomeini
Most famous for: —

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Favorite song: The Gambler
Heard most often to say: Nothing
Most favorite food: Bavernbrot and Erbsensuppe
Biggest Characteristic: Being logical and quiet
Seen most often wearing: pants
Favorite pastime: Playing basketball
Most favorite famous person: Mickey Mouse
Most famous for: Her profound pronouncements.

Beth Laun
Favorite song: Motor City Madhouse
Heard most often to say: "Smile, please!"
Most favorite food: Apple burritos
Biggest characteristic: Smiling, laughing
Seen most often wearing: Green ski jacket
Favorite pastime: talking
Most favorite famous person: Ted Nugent
Most famous for: —

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Favorite pastime: Listening to Muzak
Most favorite famous person: Mick Jagger
Most famous for: His guitar playing

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Heard most oftensay; Persian talk
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Most favorite food: Pizza
Biggest characteristic: Tall
Seen most often wearing: Clothes
Favorite pastime: Basketball (but not losing part)
Most favorite famous person: Martin Luther King
Most famous for: His English slurs

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Favorite song: Freebird
Heard most often to say: "Mosay"
Most favorite food: Pizza, extra cheese
Biggest characteristic: Skinny, keys in back pocket
Seen most often wearing: Bearbottom jeans - work
shirts
/ Favorite pastime: Diggin' on some Southern Rock
Most favorite famous person: Billy Jones, lead guitar,
Outlaws
Most famous for: His voice

David Streight
Favorite song: He Ain't Heavy, He's My Brother
Heard most often to say: Abran Los Libros A La
Pagina .. .
Most favorite food: Bouillabaisse
Biggest characteristic: Excellence in formal and

Favorite song: Two Tickets to Paradise
Heard most often to say: Can I bum a smoke
Most favorite food: Mexican food
Biggest characteristic: Beard
Seen most often wearing: Head band
Favorite pastime: Playing foosball
Most favorite famous person: Stanislaw Groff
Most famous for: His books in his green pack always

informal attire
Seen most often wearing: Excellent attire
Favorite pastime: Introspective T'ai Chi
Most favorite famous person: The unknown soldier?
Most famous for: His unique beard

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Favorite song: It's Alright, Ma (I'm only bleeding)
Heard most often to say: empty, meaningless
platitudes
Most favorite food: Pink frosted animal cookies
Biggest characteristic: tendency toward hysterical
laughter
Seen most often wearing: gold-satin disco jacket with
sequins and matching boots
Favorite pastime: pondering existentialism
Most favorite famous person: Bob Dylan
Most famous for: Her hysterics

Susan Eckhardt
Dorie Park
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Favorite song: MacArthur Park by Richard Harris
Heard most often to say: "I'm late!" and "I don't
understand math."
Most favorite food: Strawberries - fixed any feasible
way
Biggest characteristic: Tactful
Seen most often wearing: High heeled shoes
Favorite pastime: Seeing how much I can get away
with
Most favorite famous person:----Most famous for: Her smile

Favorite song: Will You Still Love Me Tomorrow7
Heard most often to say: Ach De Liebe Heilant
Most favorite food: Wienerschmtzel and Spezla mit
Sos
Biggest characteristic: Hugger
Seen most often wearing: Blue jeans
Favorite pastime. Skiing, loving people, dancing
Most favorite famous person Sylvester Stallone
Most famous for: Her skiing ability
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Heard most often to sayi-'I'm hunkey dorey and
peachy keen."
Most favorite food: Soy beans with chocolate sauce
Biggest characteristic: my prunes; oranges and

.Heard most often to say:----Most favorite food: potato pancakes
Biggest characteristic: blue eyes and a smile

. Seen most often wearing: jeans and a blouse
Favorite pastime: bicycling and goofing off at OMSI
Most favorite famous person: Jennie,, Lady Randolph
, . /Churchill
Most famous for: origami Christmas ornaments

Craig Storch

Rob Holden
Favorite song: Free Bird
Heard most often to say. "Basta. n w Butt Nugga."
Most favorite food. Baskin-Robbins ice cream
Biggest characteristic: smile
Seen most often wearing: vest
Favorite pastime: sports, especially soccer
Most favorite famous person: Geoff Petrie
Most famous for: his "subtle" comments

Favorite song: Nights in White Satin
Heard most often to say: "Don't be so snippy "
Most favorite food: fish
Biggest characteristic: rowdiness
Seen most often wearing: Adidas, T-shirts and funky
pants
Favorite pastime: working on my car, sports
Most favorite famous person: Clint Eastwood
Most famous for: his nickname - fish face

115

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Most favdrite famous person: Elliot Richardson
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Favorite song: National Front Anthem
Heard most often to say: "How are you?"
Most favorite food: kgormesakzi
Biggest characteristic: forever watching eyes
Seen most often wearing: jeans
Favorite pastime: sports
Most favorite famous person: Khomeini
Most famous for: effective smile

116

Favorite song: Mandy
Heard most often to say: "I wanna go home."
Most favorite food: Mu-shu pork
Biggest characteristic: giggling
Seen most often wearing: a large tumbleweed on top
of my head (alias hair)
Favorite pastime: trying not to get caught smoking in
the dorm
Most favorite famous person: The Big Fig Newton
Most famous for: Jasper (Camero)

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tb’sa^: Kiss me, you fool:
ello cu bes p/-.; -Biggest Characteristic:;Perfect poise In embarrassing
situations
Seen
most often wearing: Pink socks
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Favorite pastime: .Flinging OES Jello cubes
Most favorite famous person: Basil Rath bone
Most famous for: Her intelligent looks

Heard most often to say: "No way, Bbzzo'-, "I heardv
.somewhere,,...
Most favorite tfqod: Ice cream
biggest characteristic:.Athletic intuition
Seen most often wearing: Penny loafers
.
Favorite pastime: Playing sports/ especially socjcer&gt;
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Most favorite famous person:. Bifly Jean King
Most.famous for: Comments from the. Yearbook
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Tim Dibbins

Favorite song: Saturday Night Fever
Heard most often to say: Oops
Most favorite food: Chelo Kabab
Biggest characteristic: My necklace
Seen most often wearing: Jeans
Favorite pastime: skiing
Mdst favorite famous person: Khomeini
Most famous for: His determination

Favorite song: "The Song Remains the Same"/*vThe
Cowboy Song"
Heard most often-to say: "Shup up, Holden u
Most favorite food: Maine lobster
Biggest characteristic: Athletic ability
Seen most, often wearing: Soccer cleats
Favorite pastimevP^itting down Holden and Duff and
Fry and Kraft arid Markley
Most favorite famous person:
Most famous for: His dedication to his athletics

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Favorite song: You still a Young Man (Tower of
Power)
Heard most often to say: Ok, Ok, Ok, no problem!
Most favorite food: Good steak with good wine
Biggest characteristic: My personality
Seen most often wearing: Blue pants and white shirt
Favorite pastime: music and talking with wise persons
Most favorite famous person: Miguel Hidalgo
Most famous for: His smile

Phoebe McKinney
Favorite song: Appalachian Spring
Heard most often to say: "I can't cope"
Most favorite food: Strawberry pop-tarts
Biggest characteristic: Spasmodic paroxysms of
undulations and gestures
Seen most often wearing: Anything found on the
floor at 8:15 in the morning
Favorite pastime: Practicing paranoia in front of the
mirror.
Most favorite famous person: John Doe
Most famous for: Her hilarious insanity

117

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�Mir. (SMlrs. Dei mar F. Bice. Jr.
Mir. c?-Airs. James K. Cosen
Mir. &lt;s-Mlrs. William F. Dyrd. Jr.
-Air. &lt;sMrs. Johns. Cavanayh
Mrs. Elennor Clarke
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Sally S. Davis

John A. Douglas
Mr. s-Mlrs. Phillip E. Draper

Mr. ejerald K. Drummond
Mr. Coe 77 Dulin
Mir. &amp;Mys. Richard C. Fhmann
Mr. F. Cromwell ejeddes, Jr.
Mr. c?Mlrs. jfiomas b. (Jiliman
Dr. &amp;Mrs. Jrs W.e^ossett
Mr. c?Mrs. James FL.

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Mr. c? Mrs. A rthur (=?udish

Mr. cs-Mrs. Richard J. Hofemann
Mir. Richard A. Howells
Dr. &lt;s- Mrs. CynnS. Flusband
Mr. &amp;MIys. Frank E. Jackson
Mr. egordon R. Janney
Tooran jenah
Mr. H. Roy Johnson
Mr. Ralph liappU'r

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�Mrs. Sharon E. O’Keefe
Dr. &amp;Mrs. Fernando Leon
Mrs. Alary Allen Mac&lt;yreyor
M r. &amp; Mrs. Alaj R. Mills
Mr. &lt;5 Mrs. yoshiyok) Miyabayashi
Mr. &amp;Mrs. Delos Morel
Mr. John Patrizw
Dr. &lt;sMrs. Thomas Rutter
Air. E. C\ S annul ns
Mr. Den S. Sawyer
Aiarilyn Sawyer
Airs. Jane W. Sheperd

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Mr. &lt;s-Mrs. Ceiyb D. Stephenson
Mr. c-Mrs. W.~T.C. Stevens
Mr. csAtrs. W. Herman Taylor, Jr.
Mr. ^Mrs. WjllianiA.Wall
Mr.

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Mr.

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SPONSORS
125

�r

BEST WISHES SENIORS

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Building, Transportation, and Industrial

uniforms

Products and Services

Since 1930

Oregon

PARR LUMBER COMPANY
INC.
4605 S.W. Scholls Ferry RD
Portland, Oregon 97725
Phone. 292-4472
Lumber and Bldg. Materials

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imaginative new styles...a wide
selection of fabrics. Let Dennis design
a uniform especially for you

Dennis Uniform Manufacturing Co
135 S.E. Hawthorne Blvd ,
Portland, Oregon 97214

233-7123

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MASTER SERVICE
CENTERS
your tire and appliance headquarters

SALEM-ALBANY-BEND

126

�Advance savings
directly to U.S. Bank.
Member F.D.l.C.
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MILK—ICE CREAM
COTTAGE CHEESE

DR. GAYMONT'S YOGURT

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Collect interest.
United States National Bank of Oregon

Serving
Clubs—Hotels—Restourants
Hospitols—Schools—Stores

WILHELM
TRUCKING CO.
GROUER
SUctxic &lt;utd ‘PCcCHtfatU} Supply (?0.
21B WEST FOURTH STREET

Oregon, Washington, Idaho, California

Vancouver. Wash. 98660

FRYER TUCK
6722 SW Capital Hwy.
246-7737

TOMMY LUKE
FLOWERS
625 S.W. M orrison
228-3131

127

�M U LT

COMPLIMENTS
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Good Luck
| Carl and Mary
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JIC,yr
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Hal Ritchie
Tire Co.
211 N. E. Columbia Blvd.
Portland, Oregon
283-3504
Brakes - Shocks

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128

��TO KNOW, TO ESTEEM, TO LOVE,
AND THEN TO PART;
MAKES UP LIFE'S TALE
TO MANY A FEELING HEART.
Coleridge
OnTaking Leave Of

*

CONGRATULATIONS
TO THE CLASS OF '79

*

MdUk ScuiitciSuf, S&amp;uUce
7764 S W Capitol Highway

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Portland, Oregon 97219

KISS
(KEEP IT SIMPLE STUPID)!

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130

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WEST END
Ltd

128 N.W. 23rd Ave.,
Portland, Oregon
97210
Phone 224-2600

WOMENS APPAREL

EXTECH LTD.
5319 S.W. Westgate Drive
Portland, Oregon

Bollons S Poss, Inc.
REALTORS
Industrial &amp; Commercial
Real Estate £ Insurance

PERSKOIA

Yeon Building
522 S.W. 5th Ave.
Portland, Oregon 97204
227-2534
CARL W. POSS, JR.
JOHN H. BOLLONS

Special Gifts
for Special persons
at Special times

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WurmarJb
Jurists inc*since 1882

223-6151
use your
Bank Credit Card
by phone

2405 West Burnside
Plenty of free parking

132

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��</text>
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                  <text>This is a collection of yearbooks from the Oregon Episcopal School (OES). The bulk of the yearbooks are from St. Helen's Hall, with yearbooks also from the Junior College as well as Bishop Dagwell Hall. The title for the OES yearbook evolved from The Delphic to The Legend-Delphic. The title for the Junior College Yearbook was The Scintilla.</text>
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                  <text>1921-1923; 1931-1995</text>
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            <description>The material or physical carrier of the resource.</description>
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              <elementText elementTextId="688">
                <text>bound volume</text>
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          <element elementId="50">
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                <text>The Legend-Delphic 1974</text>
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                <text>School yearbooks</text>
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                <text> Students</text>
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                <text> High school student activities</text>
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                <text> Student publications</text>
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                <text>This is an OES yearbook from 1974. The yearbooks were published annually after 1925. Yearbooks from 1921-1968 were known as The Delphic and were created by St. Helen's Hall students attending in their high school years. St. Helen's Hall was an all-girls school that pre-dated Oregon Episcopal School. In 1969, the yearbook evolved into The Legend-Delphic with the addition of Bishop Dagwell Hall and male student attendees. After 1986 the yearbook branding begins to singularly list "OES" with a few volumes referencing "The Delphic" or "The Legend Delphic". Yearbooks helped to chronicle the school year's events and activities, in addition to listing each student and staff member.</text>
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                <text>All rights are reserved by Oregon Episcopal School.</text>
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of a sadistic tree.
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Not the moments
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Jane L. Bondhus

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"True Love can be whispered from Heart to Heart.M
Meredith Wilson

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"He who wants the last drop out of the
can gets the lid on his nose. M
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only when he sticks his neck out."

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’’This old world it needs a-paintin'
These old walls are gettin' thin
There's a lot that needs a-fixin'
You can help us all begin.
We'll remove the rust and tarnish
From the hearts of everyone
Hand in hand we'll stand together
Take a look at what we've done.
It's gotta be soon
So let it cool awhile
Slow down easy style
And you'll be doin’ all right
'cause you love."
Jim Seals

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moonshadow - leaping and hoping on a
moonshadow."
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"Come Saturday Morning
I'm going away with my friend
We'll Saturday spend till the end of the day
Just I and my Friend
We'll travel for miles on our Saturday smiles
And then we'll move on
But we will remember
Long after Saturday's gone."
Don't walk in front of me
I may not follow
Don't walk in back of me
I may not lead
But walk beside me
And be my friend.
A. Camus

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"Stand easy children
For God is good
And speaks softly
To all men."
Roth Tolies
"There is no road to peace,
peace is the road."
annon.
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Let me lie down and sing with the grasses."
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"Let us therefore stop turning critical eyes
on one another. If we must be critical, let
us be critical of our own conduct and see
that we do nothing to make a brother stumble
or fall."
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it to me in more sheltered climes."
H. Jeremy Packard
"There will be a bunch of thick-headed fools above
you, hindering you at every step. They'll give you
idiotic orders, you’ll have to carry them out, and
you’ll pay for them in soldiers lives."
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"When all the laughter dies in sorrow
and all the tears have risen to a flood.
When all the wars have found a cause
in human wisdom and in blood.
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Do you think the eye will blink
Do you think they'll curse the madness
Do you even think they'll think?
When all the great galactic systems
sigh to a frozen halt in space.
Do you think there will be some remnant
of beauty of the human race
Do you think there will be a vestage
of a sniffle or a cosmic tear
Do you think a greater thinking thing
will give a damn that man was here?"
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�Clarence Pruitt
"Come with me
and I shall reveal to you
the supreme beauty of my
utopia.
The essence of life
and the insurmountable
pleasure;
an oasis complete
with love, laughter, wine
and every day it’s party
time."
P.R.U.

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"Alone I walked on the strand,
A pearly shell was in my hand;
I stooped, and wrote upon the sand
My name, the year, the day.
As onward from the spot I passed.
One lingering look behind I cast,
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"If I am wise I do not try to take
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�"Mr. Wood is an individual who___ " Mr. Wood is an individual. It is as simple as that.
Or is it? Or is he? Whatever he may be, Mr. Wood has earned the respect of many stu­
dents. His constant quest for a generous smoking student lias challenged him during the
years he's been here. One of his great loves is a perenially refreshing raisin; another is
the life of Ulysses S. Grant. Looming authoritatively over whatever innocent mischief a
student may engage in is the figure of Mr. Wood. For us Class of '73, the School and Mr.
Wood exist as one. Our feeble imagination cannot conceive of either without the other. Let
us leave it, then, for future generations to separate The Wood from the Chaff. We warn you
of this, however, it will not be easy. His trace will be found—under the desk, behind the
kitchen, on the history bookcase, and somewhere beside a cold fire at Whatam Lake.

THE RAISIN FREAKS
OF '73 - O.E.S.

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CONGRATULATIONS AND BEST WISHES
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PHONE 221-1666
120 SW CLAY STREET
PORTLAND, OREGON 97201

MEMBER OF NATIONAL PARKING ASSN.

BEST WISHESTO
ALL THE STUDENTS
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EPISCOPAL SCHOOLS

GORDON HIGGINSON

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CONGRATULATIONS ON
ANOTHER FINE YEAR

WILHELM TRUCKING CO.
OREGON, WASHINGTON, CALIFORNIA, IDAHO
3250 NW ST. HELENS RD.
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"I'm WHAT
Sitting home on a hot summer night while trying to write an
editors note, the only thing that comes to mind are the words of
my math teacher Jim Weber, "K.I.S.S." (Keep it simple, stupid.)
I would like to extend my thanks to Ellen Montegue, Lisa
Johnson, Blaire Rosenlund and Leann Correa for coming through
some of the time and to Liz Robbins for coming through once. A
very special thanks to Barbie Babson for being my right-hand man
throughout this whole thing and to the bear at home whose nagging
and pessimism made me prove to myself and to her that the year­
book would get out.
Nancy Bogue
Editor
"The copyists worked fast. They finished a book with a great sense
of relief (as who does not?), and often closed with a personal note.
For instance: Explicit hoc totum;/ Pro Christo da mihi potum."
The Horizon Book of the Middle Ages - pg. 283.

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