<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<itemContainer xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="http://archive.oes.edu/items/browse?collection=1&amp;output=omeka-xml&amp;page=6" accessDate="2026-07-06T06:25:03+00:00">
  <miscellaneousContainer>
    <pagination>
      <pageNumber>6</pageNumber>
      <perPage>10</perPage>
      <totalResults>96</totalResults>
    </pagination>
  </miscellaneousContainer>
  <item itemId="46" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="47">
        <src>http://archive.oes.edu/files/original/2642f19e1213ec8429f64bfec1eaf717.pdf</src>
        <authentication>f51d76ada05849f0896f0de452dbdf74</authentication>
        <elementSetContainer>
          <elementSet elementSetId="4">
            <name>PDF Text</name>
            <description/>
            <elementContainer>
              <element elementId="92">
                <name>Text</name>
                <description/>
                <elementTextContainer>
                  <elementText elementTextId="1052">
                    <text>" i:r, ; ■ '
%

'

■&gt;

;,V;'

€

#

■

�!
v

•

i

�r

I

!

m

jmm v
BT» HEIEN'S M2

«M&gt; mw± m

f

For Reference
Not to be taken from this room

�»

OReqonepiscopALschoolsi97M972leqenC)-6elpliic

J

•!

2

�'

OReqonepiscopaLschooLsi97M972leQen6-C)elphicc

3

��•

•

5

�• j • • v..\ . ..

W- ;

:

�B-

—

7

�.

• A

..

�...

�■&gt;:

.

�Activities
ORQAniZAtlOnS
spopts

classes
faculty &amp; AdministRAtion
APveRtisinq

�*:,* • f •
$
■

L. '

3"

'

! •

��j

:
:

CivUS A
'■

tine. LUoods Game.
(orCalch Tine. Smokers)
G*bas ickfS ystems-ga rng.

I* Object
Move figure "A, into
sucn ca position final
ine identity of those
l\s\ f *
M
tigum * 5V' coo s&lt;2p~
erarely be dctermimd.
2o jerrnl nolccjy
jSZ
H_gare"A*shall be call® l &lt;/
the"afhority figured
Fipuf&amp;'g"shall becall&amp;l/j
/
the" smokers l
t

C&lt;4?
figure S

t

I

«Voio^

to Forces

figure"A shall be mot­
ivated by state iau).
fmre $&gt;' shall be mat(vaw by the need to
s moke*
At&gt; Complications
Fmre"pbchmp if shrubs^
u se fh t&gt; smokes as concealmen to
figure C i a tree.; not
obvious for aiUor/p fjurz to investigate, but net
4 s effect [ye as ccvm intent
5° Windfalls Fig w r&lt;2 "£ *: a dog ; own&gt;ed f,
by Fgurz "At If has ah u\n- ,
canny Imck of- fareffiha !&gt;&gt;,
hut smokers. ( J A'
Coo on to next set &gt;
o(r instructions

I

A A &lt;•

12

l

FftLDt

1

f&lt;fyurZsD

�.!■• 1-

Making f\ (jc\n)^lo0arc)
a) Use cardboard

6u)/x?)d

b) place, escape, routes jf
thougbifuljg.
|

j

f

■

T

2

rib) hi C

Remember III
Use you r fmagina-i /on J/
II L^JU

//&amp;£ fbg.

ba/gs clnanyeflaem;tf
you ujani more, roses
make theml
Be creative l

e

c°

r

" * ( dJ

-

I •

Re member iro kake

darkness mb cons\c)'
traitor; and koto about
ivinhr vs. spnm ?
Wave, cegood bmiii

" -/—n

" “

;i

’ "-WvS?6/«
£vovvr

0|?£j/r

J2*r»»n ror^^
VC -)&gt;
' liKfijyar^S for

13

�i

..
■

’t’’

rv '• ■.

.

I

activitiesactivitiesactivitiesACtivitiesactivitiesac
)

14

�activities

:

15

��&amp;

Tfc g&gt;Y&amp;* j* gApy.
ittr&amp;M. 9^t scU&amp;l -

„

���l\
i

���.

.
■

•

-

23

��i/*
V

;

v"

;-5/ • - &gt;

:

•&gt;k;

. -&amp;
• v. • •
‘

■ ;
;
r

• '{:«■* -\

*

■

'

y

: V~ v.„ ■

i

-

V

r-5:.c : '-

-

M.

^c=rj-

.... #v

/

&gt;V

v^.

f

.. »\V
"■? ?

■

■

- '

-'
;&gt;v

‘

;*

.

h
■

-..

SfeSs£I^^S:5

tS

25

���I :

-.1

.
•i

-

■
■

. :

'

'
■

■■

::x

- • A***■
•■V -V.;.

.

-x.,'

'•*.%:• ■■

...
yfSt
A-tvi

*V&gt;

'5
I

�*$*.■

'•

A

^
SB
:»wc&gt;
:&gt;4
v“-

*M?'

-'-•5

I

29

�4-5 color sound color sound color sound color color sound
sound sound color sound sound color color color color color
sound sound A PATTERN sound sound color color WEAVES
ITSELF color sound color sound INTO sound color sound color
THE GREAT HALL color color sound sound sound color
6-7 Oh no, not another first period with Mr. Ross! Get out
the No-Doze. Why doesn't he ever sit down at the desk? He
must have learned to lean on desks at college, who knows ? For
those who didn't know him, Ross could have been unexciting,
the guy who can look through all the excuses; talking in that
quiet tone of his; bringing up rare facts every now and then.
Good old Janies G. Blaine, how could he ever lose? We can't
help it if the bells don't work Mr. Ross, this he understands...
calmly. But for some of those who knew him a little bit more;
Mr. Ross was the attentive listener, the calm support during
those hectic admission days. Hey Mr. Ross! Do you have a
minute? "Sure," another one of his lines, "Oh no, you don't
want to go to THAT college; you wouldn't like it." So, Mr.
Ross the rock... through thick and thin he stands and will go on
standing.. .or leaning; calmly suggesting new methods to keep
from flunking in his class on those wonderful S.A.T.'S.
Thank you Mr. Ross.
8-abc Happiness can't be hidden! It is uncanny how each gradu­
ating class - and the year in which that class winds up its under­
graduate career - possesses a character all its own. This is so
much so that we can accurately describe it. So the Class of 1972
could be called a remarkably "sociable" class, a "happy" class.
Several 3'earsago a very talented senior surveyed the ways of our
schools as they were then, and said "We have no time to talk
with each other." So we mended our ways and the Great Hall
became the social center of our universe. SOME study was
done as well as a lot of soul-searching. The result has been a
good experience in coeducation, in friendship, and enough all­
round happiness for the rest of us to note it. College will mean
much to you. Those four years CAN be the happiest so far. I
hope they will be as happy and as full of good growth as the last
four years which ended here have been.
David Leech
Headmaster

*

I

10-11 The ominous cloud observing, drifting in the background.
The shadowy figure, watching, charting. Distantly they smile
and exchange comments, news, and pleasantries and then offer
support to the structure - the structure that without them would
fail. The board of Trustees

l

18-19 "But Rumania supported Galicia to Sevastopol, remem­
ber? Sevastopol stayed and Bulgaria attacked Rumania. Attack,
support, stay, bounce! It's all just one big bounce! "If only I
hadn't gotten bounced out of Burgungy." "Let's show moves. I
don't trust you." "That crazy Austria-Hungary, they're so
gullible you can teU them anything." "The secret to the game
is to find an aUy by the second move, then back-stab him on the
sixth. If you survive that long you can't lose."

30

�!
20-21 "Hey, you going to the dance on Saturday?" "Oh may­
be... I guess I'll go. " "I'll see ya there!" Saturday night,
you beg a ride out of your parents or talk your friends into
driving out to the school. When you arrive the band has al­
ready started. The Common Hall throbs with the music and
the floor vibrates. Boys and girls alike, are standing around
trying to look nonchalant; nobody is dancing and yet all want to.
Finally a boy saunters over and asks one of the girls to dance.
Then the others decide, what the hell, I might as well dance too.
Soon the dance floor is so crowded you can hardly move and the
temperature starts rising. The band calls an intermission.
Everyone disperses for the drinking fountains and the cookies.
So it goes until you think you will drop. Then the last chord
is played, the last drum beat struck and silence reigns. "How
did ya like the dance?" "Oh, it was a bummer." "Really? I
thought it was out-of-sight?"
22-25 "Will someone get the phone?" ’Where's the vacuum?
Oh well, I'll just say I did it." "Another housemother?" "The
mail here yet?" "This is actually dinner?" "Remember to
sign out!" 'What movie shall we say we are going to tonight?"
You can always tell a boarder. They are the ones with the neat
clothes who are always so wide awake and cheerful. Maybe the
food is getting to them ?
26-29 where the hell is Barber; he's on now! You want us to
learn all this in two weeks.. .You are joking aren't you ?...
You're not! It's snowing!.. .We don't have school but we do
have rehearsal.. .Is our director coming today? The party at
Seaborn's is the only reason I went out for the play. Long hours
of hard work pay off. A fantastic production is the results.
34-35 Arguments. Suggestions. Raised eyebrows. Counter
arguments. Conservativism. Liberalism. Disgusted sights.
Interest. Over - interested. Mother's apathy or Understanding
and Condemning. A Mixture. A Conglomeration. Student
Council.
36-37 Look at all that white space; think of all the pictures
you could put in that space. Who is handing out the paper?
Mrs. Froman needs 200 copies for alum. Birkmeyer get a
dictionary! Mark, I NEED some pictures, quick! This year
the HALLMARK wiped out the rally squad! Can you top that
next year Noack? He wants me to show all the layout sheets
to tlie whole student body for approval and then send it to the
printer... I'm going to go nuts ! School publications.. .a way
that students can express their ideas and feelings.

31

��'

zAtionsoRqanizAtionsoRQAnizAtionsoRQAnizAtior
UBRAR'i
ST. HaEN'S HATE
BISHOP DAGWai HALT

33

���■

36

• w.

�,*

•i

■

'

5

.

•r’;v'V' &gt;r*

V,
:«)■'

,•

•

Vi'i --!-r

.
'

L',;

v&gt;
z

■
a

•

!5

SI
^fsi
s#§i

fx

^•v

37

�-r^'' -- .;•!

���:

•
■

•

•

•

•

i

■'

•r.

-

m..

--

^^

jfc-m&gt;*

** . 0

"

✓

,

*-

^

-^v
k.

••»

&gt; ,/

•

,V* *

W'
'
-

r&lt;:

/

'-t

�•.

■

■

:■

i?V

;-

.

3 :V '
■'

!-S

II

42

.

; -

•ip ^

�I

.

.

'

.
■

|

......

■

Vv';&lt;
■■:-x

.

■

.

:

:':;;Cp'OSrCSSpORtSSpORtSSpOUtSSP

43

��'VS'

'•
r-: V
....

k&gt;&gt;

V"
-

• - ■•‘•'X'

��'• '

-

':' 4-i w K

:■'

'

9

: ;•

■

\\

\

:.v,!

f -'H

0
V

I
gii
Z'-L*

s

.... / •

—iT'

T‘|'l

i ,'.v

m

*&gt;*

4 v?

- */&gt;

V

47

�!
f
i

•

-» V

V? ■

4

W?M
■

■r

vtv.i

wy
- ,;-...-4. .•.••AW .v?«»
y-v!
■

**

t

!

►

*

I
&amp;#

r;

:iSl» •': • I;
“ ■

'

u,

•••*_____ r'

�/.-'

» ¥, ■

..

■'

if

„

-.

••
ICJ-

.

.

�5

■

I;

4

I

y

t

)

A

H

50

�i

r
■

!

f

i1

!
'
?■
.
i

■

sis*
TV

t-i

-

i*-

■

,~-

51

�I

1
f

i

�'W-;

- -W-.

��y
■

■

::/cy;rV5’

■

A'

55

�t

t.

��■-

■

��I

I

I

S'.?:"":5
*

• : p

j

v
:-y$

i

n

p

i

Xh'y.'

Sr \

:

*
;

‘ 1M MM
*

&lt;

,■

v: IbS

•»««i • — A-*—. *-&gt;r

a:

i
!?

UWLN

M

jr;i . V

LP'WPw
in .Ot'V ■ rVj

’ ir':

:,/ ‘ii

0 x v,

&gt;

f H-\ : .-- is

:•

Uf

ligfesSB *- , .

SifIPi

i
r

I

|p§ii§ IP

'ir'

^-

811181
rMMmSl

mmi*.

i

®P8B

^ts«m
fe$P
\-

-■^v,

crrr

r

�■

%*: :V

'

��'
i

_**
;

r;
■

■.m
ft

63

�:

j

m mm* Mmm
r «»p»*

»

�;
i

!:

:!
:■

i

!

{

C

• }

-mmmm
wmsm,
mms%,
'fS'S-SilKii

)

•-.: V- =•;&lt;

m
■

:f: ’

-

- ^ •1

■ ':;;M : .V 1

;

^

V

-. &lt;1

65

�r
40-41 The Natural Outdoorsman. Oh no, this pack is immov­
able! Guess 1*11 have to leave my tape recorder, electric
toothbrush, and Oxford Dictionary here at the car. # ? ! * @&gt;
I forgot my boots, what AM I going to do ?! And all my eggs
broke, they're sogging up my extra clothes. Yuk! ... Now if I
can only fix the strap on this dumb pack, maybe I'll be ready.
Talk
At this rate even Nelson will beat me to the base camp
about being slow. Blessed, I wish this trip was over.

I

44-45 "Willie, what time does the bus leave?" "First one
there gets the 37." "Carrie never misses one going by."
"We didn't lose, tied 0-0!" "Hot water anyone?.. .But they
said they were going to give us lunch." The third year of field
hockey was the best one yet. We understood the game more and
became further aware of people's abilities. The fine points are
beginning to be understood and maybe next year we will beat
Catlin.
46-49 Skull Session #48B Coach Hicks speaking: "Okay men.
I have very little to say. We all realize the importance of this
game and I think you aU sense it as much as I do - there's a
feeling of intensity among each and every one of you. Now
here's what I'll be looking for. Starting with the Super Weeny*,
we'H move right through the line-up discussing what I want
from each of you individually. (15 minutes later) To sum it up
men, we only go out there for one reason. And if I can't have
120% from each of you don't even bother to walk out onto that
field; you'll just be letting each other down. Remember, I want
fearlessness, heart, perpetual motion, constant chatter and,
most importantly, GOALS! Lots of doggies*... Pve got a lot
of faith in you, this is one heU of a club and you've come too
far to let yourselves down now. So let's have a little Houffin
Hauffer and then get out there to do a job." *Super Weeny team name for Miles Miller, the goalie. *doggie - team slang
word for goal.
50-51 Pant, pant, pant, oh my God, another mile and a half.
Pant, pant, the BDI1 pushers, pant, pant, pant, on their way
to another... Well, pant, pant, why are they whistling at us?
Pant, pant, it was worth it, we got a free dinner, pant, pant...

!

52-53 Not much to say about it. We lost every game but at
least we got out of P. E. for it.

i

54-55 What are we doing up here? Hardworking, fearless BDH
ski team. Athletic recognition goes to them. The switch from
fledging team to cohesive body. What a change! Through fair
and foul, rain or shine, the team skis on. Considering all of
the pressure, they're doing a grand job. Mr. Hutchinson an­
nounces, "The ski team etc..." Well, Mr. Hutchinson, heheh,
keep up the announcements; the Ski team will keep up the work;
we'll keep up the good hope! What are you guys doing up there
anyway?

--

i
(

i

11.

66

�:
;
;
!

:
56-57 A few old memories for the basketball team, or those
bodacious fools, as the players might have heard before. To
those who were told to get it on with the steps, remember, it's
not if you win the game, but if you get out without any injuries.
The crippled class of r72. Great guys, great. Whatever hap­
pened to the rally squad?

I

58-59 "Hey! Whenever I go to my knees he bites me!" "Well,
bite ’em back. ” Somewhere along the day the coach would
mumble something about his contact lens. Gotta find it, gotta
find it. It’s ok, I found it! the pieces anyway. Here scrape
’em off my feet. At 4:30, the coach would pull together the
team, and get down to the brass tacks. "Ok you guys, we have
a match tomorrow night, and I wanna come home victorious.
Ken, remember the crossface. Brent, watch the takedown;
Bishop, let’s get a pin this time. Peter and Hall, can we count
on twelve points tomorrow? Curren, take it easy on your guy.
Jow, Pete, and Craig, Kill’em! Good luck, men, and remem­
ber, you are ALL ONE TEAM, so get it on!.........................
Where’s Takashi?

'

i

60-61 Tension mounting with each swift return, expectant
muscles straining, guessing, hoping that the opponent wiU
miss and that the relief felt at the end of a match wiH be vic­
torious. (But then again as the OES teams know, one shouldn’t
always expect victory. Sometimes it’s just enough for the
match to end).
62-63 The participants striving through practice toward the
point where the body no longer limits and the mind’s goals can
be fulfilled.

!

64-65 They tried to stamp it out, more out of lack of opponents,
money and Catlin Gable, but they couldn't keep it down. There
was too much of a uniqueness and individuality that Baseball
America couldn't offer. It was an unmatchable strength, and
lacrosse had it.
Good-bye baseball,
Until we meet again.

|
.

67

�V

■■

:

I

&gt;
'I

•

M
i

:r:

68

;

�.

-I
,

.r

f
t

i

.

. i

y

!

I

:
1

(

sclassesclassescLassescLassesclassesclassesclasse
:

I

69

�I V

n

I vI
'
i

i

11

I

i
f
I
!

.
!

■

seniops
semoRs
senioRs
semoRs
semoRs
senioRs
semoRs
senioRs
semoRs
senioRs
I
senioRs
semoRs
senioRs
senioRs
seniops
semoRs
,o seniops

Jim Barber

,rI came and I went,
I suffered
from ignorant men,
yet I grew
from a new exjterience
of life."

Warren Bean

"Killing is a part of living
But can a man kill his
Brother, and still live?"

�.• . . .
•&lt;

J-i

'

| *,
:

a
' ■

■ r

• V!l

;T

"If you don't got nothin' on your plate but potatoes, you eat po­
tatoes. "
Mary Kathleen Lewis

i

f

Mark Bocek
?

••
&lt;

Karen Brice

:
"They that wash on Monday
Have all the week to dry
They that wash on Tuesday
Are not so much awry
They that wash on Wednesday
Are not so much to blame
They that wash on Thursday
Wash for shame
They that wash on Friday
Wash in need
And they that wash on Saturday
Oh! they are sluts Indeed.

71

�1
i

i i

l
i

Christopher Birkmeyor

'Before I send in my reserves I want to see my chess board
more clearly. "
Napoleon Bonaparte

.
i

t

;
i

;

Kim Bishop

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

(

I

72

�•• .
.

mm

' :•

•

;
Art Bruce

.v
■

"He is useless on top of the ground; he ought to be under it, inspiring the cabbages. "
Mark Twain

I

Gay Burnie

:!
:
■

3

Knowing someone, far or near, with whom there
is communication despite the distance, makes of
this earth a garden.
Goethe

"There's nothing half so sweet in life
as love's young dream."
Thomas Moore

Claudia Carrasco

73

�I

.

I

Sallie Cheatham

"With each rising sun think of our life as just beginning,
show kindness and love today for tomorrow's chance may be
lost."

Mary Critchlow

;
"The Americans are a mighty people who never give up or get tired on
sleep or dream. If these people hate someone, they will kill him by neg­
ligence, or if they like or love a person, they will shower him with af­
fection. "
Kahlil Gibran

=

74

�■

. : ■: :V,V
■

Steve Cox

Life is a comedy to those that live
and a tragedy to those that think.
Shakespeare

Stephen OXO Cuffel

"Shy lock Maybe
Drydock Baby
Ha-zSn"
from "Cowboy Bob sings Odes to
a Bifurcated Turtle"

■

�I

Andy Dappen

"He liked words- big words, fine words, grand words, rumbling,
thundering, reverberating words; with sense attached if it could be got
in without marring the sound, but not otherwise. "
Mark Twain

It
Leanne Davis

"The permanent temptation of life is to let dreams become surrounded by
reality. The permanent defeat of life is when dreams are surrounded to
reality. - What would we do without Franklin's Market. "

i
3

1

76

�Frederick Ellis

"My life is like a run
along the beach;
as near the ocean's edge
as I can go. "

Juli ElLis
E

I
"No love or friendship
can ever cross the
path of others without
leaving some mark on
it forever."

ij

!
i
t
s

Katy Finlay

"Procrastination is the art of keeping
up with yesterday. "
■-

!

i

77

�II

I

iv •
i*

f

"The Cat- he walked by himself and all places
were alike to him. "
Rudyard Kipling

Thema Fuller

Hall Grimes

;

I

"If you smile at me I will understand, 'cause that is something every­
body everywhere does in the same language. "
S. Stills

!
!

78

�.
:

"Break these bonds that hold my soul and I’m on my way
I can't help feeling, there's no time left to lose
I done made my mind up yesterday and I just can't stay
So hand me down my highway shoes
It's gonna give me just a little bit of old time glory
I'm talking 'bout the coming of the sunshine story
Set this poor soul free
Let it be.. "
J. Taylor

‘

:
:

t:

Debi Glinden

&lt;

I;

l
s!
;

.
:
Greg Hetzler

!

"If it feels good, do it.
If you do it, do it well. "

79

�Aw.'.,

;

i•

:|

i

Gillian Hobbs

i •
’In wet daybreak my face melts into the mist and as clutching fog
engulfs and twists familiarity into a vague image, my frail shadow
becomes a bridge that I must cross, to be full grown. "

I ;

!

:
!

■

;
:!

Bruce Jackson

;
:
'
;
t

:

!

!l :
*

r
80

�v.&lt;

't v

.

'• v.-Vi?

1;

John Korona

'1 went away and began to love strangers.

1

b
i

!,
&gt;
1
;

i

\
■

Tami Lake

:

I

I

My heart is on the mountain still.
Where'er my steps may be.
W. P. Stafford

81

�!!:! *
i

•N

U

i':

Melanie Poss

•3

■

i :

:•

"Yesterday’s
hurt is today’s
Understanding
rewoven into
Tomorrow's love."
Walt Rinder

1

:•
j

;

j
j

•t

111

;

Tucker Livingstone

j !
! !
-■

"Isn't life beautiful.
Isn’t life gay.
Isn't life the perfect thing
to pass the time away. "
Mason Williams

I

I

!

i
1

82

�-•

Dave Marble

"A person must strive to do the best he can.
Even if he has't much to work with or hope for. "

John Richard Nicholas

"Youth is whoLly experimental."
Robert Louis Stevenson

!

I

Deborah Plummer

"The responsibility of tolerance lies with those
who have the wider vision. "

83

�Peter Purdy

■

"My brother kneels, so saith Kabir
to stone and brass in heather-wise
but in my brother’s voice I hear
my own unanswered agonies
His God is as His fates assign
His pr-ayer is all the worlds and mine. "
Kipling

:
!:
;

!►

[

Franzi Ridgway

!
; I
:

I

!

"Man always kills the thing he loves,
And so we pioneers have killed our wilderness."
Aldo Leopold

/

.

84

�Suzanne Roplequet

I
;

fc

"Nothing surpasses the mystery of stillness."
e. e. Cummings

1

i

r
.

i

F

Carrie Sammons

l

,
1

:

.

"Life is made up of small comings and goings.
And for everything we take with us, there is
something that we leave behind.. "
Herman Raucher SUMMER OF '42

85

�u ■ .111

I

mv

m

r.

f■ f
■■

Martha Scarbrough

:
i

I:

t

"Madness is the first step towards
uselfishness. Be mad and tell
us what is behind the viel of
"sanity". The purpose of life is
to bring us closer to those
secrets, and madness is the
only means. "
Kahlil Gibran

H

ir
\

i

1
i

I

a i

Mark Schlesinger

i
J

Would it embarrass you very much if I
were to tell you___ I love you?
P.R.S.

I
II
86

�■

■

.

:

•

■:

!
I

I
I

Charles Seaborn

i
1

1!

3
:
"Footfalls echo in the memory
Down the passage which we did not take..."

I
i
\

I;

V

!'

i.
Norval Sheppard

"You retain the knowledge of what
you accomplish and build upon that;
survival demands knowledge and to
survive is to live, knowledge is liv­
ing. "

{

.

87

�lv. • '

nV

Bernice Stevenson

"When I stand up
the sun beats me down.
When I sit down
the bugs eat me up. "

•;

1

I

Robin Storey

;

l
:

i

:
! ;
i

;
(

1

"Go placidly amid the noise and haste and remember
what peace there is in silence."
found in Old Saint Paul's Church,
Baltimore

I
I

88

�Sandy Stronko

"Try not to live in the past
don't regret what lias liappened
Live for what today will bring
and look to tomorrow's future."

S1-i

I

i

Sally Thomas

§

"A faitliful friend is a strong defense. And he
that hath found such a one hath found a treasure. "
Ecclesiastais VI

89

�:,

;
f :

"Alice returned to the table and tliis time found
a little bottle with the words "DRINK ME" printed
in beautiful letters. "
Lewis Carroll

Joni Ueland

Pam Wegert

"Cruelty has a human heart,
And jealousy a human face;
Terror the human form divine,
And secrecy the human dress. "

j

90

�m

■

,
'

|

:

■

'

'

f

TV
V

'l will always have this dream;
that someday, but not this year,
My dirty river will once again run clear."
Hudson River Song

■

Sarah Wintersteen

*

Doug Wysham

"In short, I am convinced, both by faith and experience,
that to maintain one's self on earth is not a hardship
but a pastime, if we will live simply and wisely. "
Thoreau

91

�Juniors

i!

juniors
juniors

•
••

■

I

d
m
W

-U •

JUNIORS *
JUNIORS V

i

i
92

JUNIORS
JUNIORS
JUNIORS
JUNIORS
JUNIORS
JUNIORS
JUNIORS
JUNIORS
JUNIORS
JUNIORS
JUNIORS
JUNIORS "',‘N
JUNIORS
JUNIORS
JUNIORS
JUNIORS
JUNIORS
JUNIORS
JUNIORS
JUNIORS
JUNIORS
JUNIORS
JUNIORS
JUNIORS
JUNIORS
JUNIORS
JUNIORS
JUNIORS
JUNIORS
JUNIORS
JUNIORS
JUNIORS
JUNIORS
JUNIORS
JUNIORS
JUNIORS
JUNIORS
JUNIORS

Sally James
Scott Rosenlund
Ken Davidson

�m
■

I

!
:

Frances Kading, Katherine Ku, Brian Sylvester,
Joe Schafer, Kitty Church, Anne Ellis,
Takaslii Ilashimoto, Yuichi Takase, Jon Glenn

I1

I

93

�I I

M
■

I

■

■-

!'
:
;

&lt;

I
I

'

Carol Tuttle, Jim Mosher, Lacy Love, Clarence Pruitt,
Leann Correa, Kannes Noack, Greg Amerson, Nancy Bogue

94

�Jeff Honeyman
Martha Bullwinkle
Ed Sammons
Janet Buck
Drew Erensel
John Sanford
Dan McMurtry
Laurie Caswell

95

�I

SUPHUMOREs
SOPHOMORES
SOPHOMORES
SOPHOMORES
SOPHOMORES
SOPHOMORES
SOPHOMORES
SOPHOMORES
SOPHOMORES
SOPHOMORESj | Ann Farmer

i i

M

A
•

i

S W PH U V:

SOPHOMORES
SOPHOMORES
SOPHOMORES
SOPHOMORES
SOPHOMORES
SOPHOMORES
SOPHOMORES
SOPHOMORES
SOPHOMORES
SOPHOMORES
SOPHOMORES
SOPHOMORES
SOPHOMORES ^
SOPHCMoPES
SOPHOMORES
SOPHOMORES

t

r

j

&lt;\ ■"

Karen Noack
Tami Self ridge
Tim Curren
Brent Brensel
Karen Hudson
Amy Leech
Jim Weber
Paul Gerhardt

i

i

=•

S
J
!

96

SOPHOMORES
SOPHOMORE
SOPHOMOR
SOPHOMORES
SOPHOMORES
SOPHOMORES
SOPHOMORES
SOPHOMORES
SOPHOMORES
SOPHOMORES
SOPHOMORES
SOPHOMORE
SOPHOMORES
SOPHOMORES

�1•

Lance Brown, Autumn Alexander
Scott Harlow, Nancy Angus
Peter Grimes

Hila Scott, Brooke Ramsden
Tom Jackson, Wendy Poss
Becky Meyer, Richard Thlbot
Holly Parker, Miles Miller
John Coffey

Laura Maeda, Barbara Babson
Kathy Bomareto, Lee LeBeck
Cathy Banks, Brenda Williams
Sarah Bobb, Steve Allen

i

�m
r\

:
1

;■

i|]
:

:

M
.
!

■

•[.

1.

\u:

;
H;
!!
:1fi

Becky Hoff, Julie Lucas
Liza Lilley, Lisa Gross
Mike Harris

?

ill
■

!!
!

1

ill

r

I
I
; i

!

I

Cliff Brunell, Mike Andruss
Robin Church, Phid Erlandson

98

�Joan Bokemeier, Chuck Knox
Osa Arnold, Tom Howell
Max Miller

i
R
a

�111 ■ 11

If

-

r

100

FRESHMEN
FRESHMEN
FRESHMEN
FRESHMEN
FRESHMEN
FRESHMEN
FRESHMEN
FRESHMEN
FRESHMEN
FRESHMEN
FRESHMEN
FRESHMEN
FRESHMEN
FRESHMEN
FRESHMEN
FRESHMEN
FRESHMEN
FRESHMEN
FRESHMEN
FRESHMEN
FRESHMEN
FRESHMEN
FRESHMEN
FRESHMEN
FRESHMEN
FRESHMEN
FRESHMEN
FRESHMEN
FRESHMEN
FRESHMEN
FRESHMEN
FRESHMEN
FRESHMEN
FRESHMEN
FRESHMEN
FRESHMEN
FRESHMEN
FRESHMEN
FRESHMEN
FRESHMEN
FRESHMEN
FRESHMEN
r nr ouniiCM

Jane Honeyman, Ellen Montague
Blair Rosenlund, Teddi Howell
Bill Krotzer

Jean Duffle, Morris Westlund
Chris del Valle, Ken Wilkinson
Bonnie Page, Sarah Livingstone

�fife

]
■ i

{

i'

.

Martha Stein, Tom Hadley
Lisa Johnson, Sue Brustad
Jenny Holden

101

�Sarah McArthur
Maria Latourette
Lynn Seton
Susan Townend
Nancy Woodworth
Chris McMurtry

��I I

■ I II IU L

8th GRADE
8th GRADE
8th GRADE
8th GRADE
8th GRADE
8th GRADE
8th GRADE
8th GRADE
8th GRADE
8th GRADE
8th GRADE
8th GRADE
8th GRADE
8th GRADE
8th GRADE
8th GRADE
8th GRADE
8th GRADE
8th GRADE
8th GRADE
8th GRADE
8th GRADE
8th GRADE
8th GRADE
8th GRADE
8th GRADE
8th GRADE
8th GRADE
8th GRADE
8th GRADE
8th GRADE
8th GRADE
8th GRADE
8th GRADE
8th GRADE
8th GRADE
8th GRADE
8th GRADE
8th GRADE
8th GRADE
8th GRADE
8th GRADE
Rth RRADF

Debi Amerson,
Greg Goodman,
Bill Wall,
David Pierovich,
Blaine Doming

��r

■

; V :. ■

f!

(

i
■

■

! ••

r

€

s

9

I!

: ;: W'

i i
{

Bob Page, Phil Janney
Janelle Johnson, Michele Meyer
Bill Moersch

i

;
(

;
106

! ;

�John Waldum, Richard Zurow
Bruce Butson, Karen Sheppard
Laurie Jue, Gina Disney
Nancy Morrisette

!

■

*

i

:

I

i
*.

John Weber, Amy Joseph
Leron Paterson, Van Miller

'

i

107

�!

V

;•{

f

I
6
*

I
*

i

108

) I n GRADE
7TH GRADE
7TH GRADE
7TH GRADE
7TH GRADE
7TH GRADE
7TH GRADE
7TH GRADE
7TH GRADE
7TH GRADE
7TH GRADE
7TH GRADE
7TH GRADE
7TH GRADE
7TH GRADE
7TH GRADE
7TH GRADE
7TH GRADE
7TH GRADE
7TH GRADE
7TH GRADE
7TH GRADE
7TH GRADE
7TH GRADE
7TH GRADE
7TH GRADE
7TH GRADE
7TH GRADE
7TH GRADE
7TH GRADE
7TH GRADE
7TH GRADE
7TH GRADE
7TH GRADE
7TH GRADE
ITH GRADE
7TH GRADE
7TH GRADE
7TH GRADE
7TH GRADE
7TH GRADE
7TH GRADE
7TH GRADE

John Poss
D'Lorah Tittle
Matt Crook
Mary Johnson
Eric Redd
Sally Mills
Scott Woodruff

�I

\

f■

:

■

i

:

Chattie Hayes
Steve Simon
Scott King
Lisa Park
Carrie Sue Reichwein
Karen Schmaling

I

.

.
:
!:
;

i

Tracy del Valle, Robert Gurganus
Stacy Ramsay, Mowry Blake
Lisa Akiyama

�m
m

8/1

\

!

!

n&lt;i

i

«? •

r

n
\

s

t

l

I

!

;
Jill Davis, Margret Stevens
Russell Kay, Ed Hall
Neena Fromm, Lisa Blechschmidt

110

�:

::

. •.
I

■

:r

|
1

j.

!

:
!
I
i

&lt;

I

.
i

t

!
Tracy Wong, Jack Stein
Jeff Bemcnt, Cindy Harris

111

�r
i

-

■

■

'

S-H;:;;

.

W

■

H•
&lt;: ■

iii■

Hi:

};.!j i .

:

1
il
!r
'

- f
■

*
\
*
€

5

!

n

faculty &amp;a6mini$tRAtionfacuLty&amp;a6niinistRation

��IP

w-

1J;

r

Barry Pelzner
English

%■ ,imm
%

'-tew.;

114

�. »

■

I

I

,

I $
f.

- ,/:-i
.

!'vy

1

j
:
:

‘

.*

!
;

' {
/

✓
/
/•
v&gt;

:

/
fj
!
V

i I
/•

I
■

V

•
■

*

y

;
J

/
4

'
/
✓
I

*

'
Barbara Morse
English

Marcy Nolan
English

5

/
:

'

s

i

iiV

l

/&gt;

5

r /-

:
4

4

5

;
5

Robert Ross
English
College Counselor

115

:

�Lip i- ■
V:;: V'
5

l

.HI

Robert Johnston
Spanish

r

r

/

L.&lt;

=8

er/

■

ri

&lt;•
.•

■

a
Judy Hutchinson
French

116

�.K-

Candi Goodrich
F rench

Penny Dalrymple
French

Vii

�Gary Craigmiles
Mathematics
Athletic Director

'
i

'

Elizabeth Brasfield
Mathematics

118

�' •:/

I- t
'

Cordell Tittle
Mathematics

v

:

James Weber
Mathematics

■i

/
/

�Janies Hutchinson
Science

Roger Nelson
Science

*
John Hicks
Science

�■

%

'
%

'

A/
/

Eleanor Fass
History

Betty Wilcox
History

David Hursty
History

&gt;

�.
•

!•’*

’

*
Elsa Erceg
Art

s

i

\
*

Li
.

John Strege
Music

122

�v

■1
A
y

/
*
/
/
*/
/
2V
/

i

&amp;
i2
/
/
//
$

/
/
/

/
/
y
/
/

i'

:
/

?
i

James Lawrence
Art

123

�ft
T/':

The Rev. Peter W'cnnor
Religion
Chaplain

The Rev. Robert Greenfield
Religion

K• I£ •
■

\‘

W&lt;

:■

f

Sharon Wilhelm
Physical Education
124

pfPTHE

m

r

�i8

1

m)/

■1

*

Helga Daret
Physical Education
Middle School
Coordinator

v

/

4
/

8/
*
/
5
f

r/i

/

A/

/

4

/
/
/

/
/

/
/
/
//
/
//

125

�Fred Wood
Principal
History

�!
.
*
;

'4

■

v

/

Carolyn Harrington
Girls' Director
of Residence
College Counselor

5✓

/
✓
/
/
//
/

*
/

The Rev. David Leech
Headmaster

t

Jean Jackson
Public Relations

:
:
■

•

;!

�1
1

adveRtisinqadveRtisinqadveRtismqa&amp;veRtisinq
\

&lt;

�:
i • /:

• I
ij

V

i

\/
/
/
y7
/
■

K
7

/

/
/
/

V

/

✓
/
//

t

/
/
/
/
//
/
/

I

r 3adveRtismQa5vss:u5;nq&amp;d\

�:

■

:

SPONSORS

[

MR. WARREN BEAN
MR. and MRS. GERALD STOREY

MR.

AND

MRS. WILLIAM T. STEVENS

r

MRS. MARK P. MILLER
MAX M. BOCEK M.D.

MR.

►

and

MRS. NOACK

WILLIAM F. MEYER

=•
z:

130

�■J
■

•' , Tz

DURHAM Sc DOWNEY, Inc.

i?

Telephone 228-9453
711 S.W. 14th Avenue

•

£
£

Portland. Oregon 97205

*
/

r
r
s

/*r

'

/

■

!

/

/■

THINK OF YOURSELF AS THE SAFEST DRIVER IN THE WORLD
AND EVERYONE ELSE AS RECKLESS.

A

r
r

\

/■

/•

/■

f

/•

(

f

x

Insurance Service Company

i

M. H.ROSENCRANTZ
HARVEY ROSENCRANTZ
W. M. BRYAN

COMPLIMENTS OF

ARCO ELECTRIC SERVICE
3152

e. BURNSIDE
PORTLAND, OREGON

COMPLIMENTS
OF

}eier
1'anh

131

�=•

m.

0X0(0

gH
f

\

(9(9(9
0X0(0

r

:
»

COURTESY

i

OF

SECURITY SIGNS, IMC.
BOB FULTON

■

i

Bollons &amp; Poss, Inc. Realtors
I NDUSTRIAL
COMMERCIAL

903 YEON BUILDING

522 s. w. 5th AVENUE
PORTLAND,

Oregon 97204

227-2534

�I

I

I

/

V

*
*

■ /

Broughton
Lumber Co.

✓

/
/
✓
//
/
/

UNDERWOOD, WASHINGTON

98651

LUMBER FLUME FROM
WILLARD, WASHINGTON,
DROPS

1000 FEET IN

9 MILES
S INCE

TO UNDERWOOD.

1923.

H

fa

PRESENTS COL. SANDERS. ..

f&lt;/SI

a wise scholar on the subject of

V

K«ntu«kn fried #kirk«H

.&amp;

o

; . HE SAYS "IT'S FINGER LICKIN'GOOD
BY THE BOX, BUCKET OR BARREL."

pramin^bvj

■’

2L)est Coast picture Corp.
o;

2SZ-T295

-------

.
&lt;

l

.0

o

i

--- ----------.-- ®

/
K*ntuoku
Fried

ft

'o

(Congratulations

For further
source material

o'
0

\ ^*&gt;4

■

'ft

from
^lc§ Penney-09

Q
y.

eatPng°The Speck

o

suggests you consult^------ ^ I

o

H.Salt Esquire Fish and Chips
&amp;

m a

Kentucky Beef Sandwiches

y.

m

II owned and operated by

ih(

R E STAURANTS

See Yel low Pages

�.*

Miller s Sanitary Service

;

6812 S. W. 36th Ave.

:•

Portland, Oregon 97219
244-4253

I

638-5851
COMPLETE REFUSE SERVICE
Multnomah - Garden Home

- Metzger - Progress

i

;

IRC l BATTERY CO.

f
I

V

712 S. E. 7th at Alder
PORTLAND, OREGON 97214

Phone: 233-4616

Mail-WellV
ENVELOPE CO.

Has envelopes for your every
business need
Plus these helpful services

effective
direct
moil

money
saving
systems
envelopes

up-to-dote
postage
information

envelopes
for

,nriovotion
of new

packaging

Envelopes

cost
cutting
envelope
surveys

134

Mail-Well envelope co. / Pak-Well

paper products co./ Oregon divisions of

creofive
art
service

�=

I

THE WILL TO SUCCEED:
X.

%

r

■r

£

Ours is, by far, the greatest and most powerful nation the world has ever witnessed.
It is characterized by wealth, involved in struggle and strained by its own growth. But most of
all it lays bare the brightest of vistas for personal as well as collective achievement. And for the
most part, this wealth of opportunity is directly related to our unique and dynamic system of
free enterprise. For it is this system which enables each of us to work for and to reach the goals
of our maximum potential.

r

f

£

y
7

y

As the future leaders of our nation the following quotation offers an enlightening picture
of what awaits you.

S?y

‘Success . . . does not depend upon genius. Any young man of ordinary
intelligence who is normally sound and not afraid to work should succeed in spite
of obstacles and handicaps if he plays the game fairly and keeps everlastingly
at it.’
—J. C. Penney

27

And so it is. As America's youth, you stand at the crossroads of achievement and success.
Our system permits it. Only your determination will reach it. *»
Frank E. McCaslin

/
/

y
y

/

27

/

£Y

2y

/

y
y

President
Oregon Portland
Cement Company

/
/

//

OREGON PORTLAND CEMENT COMPANY
111 S.E. Madison Street

'y

v
'/

Portland, Oregon 97214

*/
/

'y
y
v

/

v

/
//

i
ii.

CONGRATULATIONS AND BEST WISHES
FROM
COMPLIMENTS OF

/
/
/

I/
/
s/

MERRILL LYNCH, PIERCE,
FENNER and SMITH, INC.

/

6
/

i/
N. Killingsworth • Gateway

/
i
/

Phone (503) 285-0505

t/

/
*
/

JOSEPH J. DU LONG

i
VICE

PRESIDENT AND RESIDENT MANAGER

/*

MR. AND MRS. ELLSWORTH D. PURDY

✓
*/

5

/
ns

�I

BK:
a

COMPLIMENTS OF

City Center Parking
OREGONS LEADING PARKING OPERATION
59 CONVENIENT LOCATIONS TO SERVE YOU

i

f

INSURANCE SPECIALISTS
JN

222 S.W. FOURTH AVE.

PORTLAND, OREGON

97204

\

DIAMOND

SETTING

Best wishes
for continued

fiatfUVui fJewele/vL

success
DIAMONDS

AND

WATCHES OUR SPECIALTY

COME IN AND SEE MIKE

PONY VILLAGE
NORTH BEND,OREGON

PHONE

136

756-4272

a friend.

�CERTAINLY----- YOU’LL HAVE TO LEARN TO
MANAGE MONEY SOME DAY.

WHAT BETTER TIME

THAN DURING YOUR LEARNING YEARS.

A U.S .

BANK SPECIAL CHECKING ACCOUNT IS IDEAL FOR
YOUR HIGH SCHOOL AND COLLEGE YEARS.

YOUR

NAME AND ADDRESS PRINTED FREE ON EACH CHECK.

CHECK WITH US!

UNITED STATES NATIONAL BANK OP OREGON
RALEIGH HILLS BR.

P.O. BOX 25290

MEMBER FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION

RIDE RADIO CAB

CApitol 7-1212
WITH

SINCERE

BEST

WISHES

from All of

RADIO CAB

�I

!
f

!•

(2&amp;pit* &amp; 'Duplicating
TfCacAinc
Specialists

K
\\ \
!

Linar

t^h\» fl 11

H&amp;MBUSINESS PRODUCTS, IftC.
:&gt;h
■I!

PORTLAND

SEATTLE

TACOMA

707 NX. Couch Street
BEImont M4tl

2301 Second Avenue
MAin 2-8888

1422 Tecome Ave. South
FUlton 3-2640

;

111
l!

COMPLIMENTS OF

Beaverton Auto Parts, Inc.

r

.y

jj

1

«flSl

Board of
Trade Building
Portland. Ore. 97204
Telephone: 22G-2392

/nsuronce
selection
that gives you
more for less.

V

DENNIS
distinctive
uniforms
imaginative new styles ... a wide

Insurance selection
that
gives you
more for less.

selection of fabrics. Let Dennis design
a uniform especially for you.

Dennis Uniform Manufacturing Co.
135 S.E. Hawthorne Blvd
Portland, Oregon 97214 503/234-5203

d

�7
z7
/

COMPLIMENTS

*
/

7

27

/
7
77

OF

I

Smith Brothers Office Outfitters
135

n.w.

/
/
'/

PARK A VE .

*
/
/
/
/

PORTLAND,OREGON

r

'

f

American Linen Supply

It pays to keep dean"

\\

139

�If

\U;

:
'

.

MM

:::

;■

■

BEST

5

WISHES
.
■

BEST

COURTESY

.1 v

OF

WISHES
•!■=

fij;

FROM

li!

1!:

Southwest

i.
m
■

:
i

Office

r

Supply

Oregon

%
*

Transfer

I

TIGARD

Company

►
s

\

Bill England Construction, Inc.
I i
|

COMMERCIAL AND RESIDENTIAL

FREE ESTIMATES
LICENSED, BONDED AND INSURED

i

140

�I

Lisa Akiyama
Autumn Alexander
Steve Allen
Deborah Amerson
Greg Amerson
Michael Andruss
Nancy Angus
Osa Arnold
Tom Autzen
Barbara Babson
Kathy Banks
Jim Barber
Warren Bean
Jeff Bement
Craig Bethell
Karen Bice
Chris Birkmeyer
Brent Bishop
Kim Bishop
Mowry Blake
Lisa Blechschmidt
Sarah Bobb
Mark Bocek
Nancy Bogue
Joan Bokemeier
Kathy Bo mare to
Lance Brown
Art Bruce
Cliff Brunell
Susan Brustad
Janet Buck
Martha Bullwinklc
Gay Burnie
Bruce Butson
Claudia Carrasco
Laurie Caswell
Sallie Cheatham
Kitty Church
Robin Church
John Coffey
PerriAnn Combs
Leann Correa
Steve Cox
Mary Critchlow
Mat Crook
Steve Cuffel
Tim Curren
Andy Dappen
Ken Davidson
Leanne Davis
Mary Louise Davis
Cristina del Valle
Tracy del Valle
Blaine Deming
Gina Disney
Donald Domini
Jean Puffin
Anne Ellis
Elizabeth Ellis
Frederick Ellis
Julia Ellis
Brent Erensel
Drew Erensel
Charles Ericsson
Gordon Erlandson
Ann Farmer
Kathleen Finlay
Karen Fish
Neena Fromm

Names &amp; Addresses
1705 Evergreen Ave.
Yaldma Chief Ranch
P. O. Box 126
2606 N.E. 9th Ave.
2606 N. E. 9th Ave.
905 S.E. 94th Ave.
1900 N.E. Cleaviand
8303 S.W. TerwilUger
2132 S.W. 17th
3643 S. W. 52nd PI.
2028 S. VV. Clifton
255 Ashdale Ave.
6808 Englewood Ter.
2545 N.W. Westover Rd.
2188 S. W. Main St.
5108 West Lincoln
4708 34th N.E.
10590 S.W. Cook
654 S. W. Burlingame Ter.
14626 S. W. Uplands Dr.
11338 S.W. Aventine Clr.
4436 S. W. Alfred Apt. 40
1012 Hilltop Dr.
11519 S.W. Breyman Ave.
6243 S. W. 36th Ave.
110 Hillview Lane #2
8330 No. Chautaqua
7780 S. W. Mayo
1450 Hillside Ter.
1066 North Shore
217 So. Modoc
4437 S. W. Twombly Ave.
827 S. W. Moss
1008 S.E. 98th Ave.
5322 S. W. Hewett
2212 Glenmorrie Lane
12526 S.W. Edgecliff Rd.
10943 S.W. Colina Ave.
10943 S.W. Collina Ave.
7245 S. W. Ridge mo nt
647 S. E. Andover PI.
Route 3, Box 243
Gen. Delivery
9308 Merrick Drive
10404 S.W. Ridgeview Ln.
4927 S.W. Elm Ln.
78 Willis St.
4710 W. Glenhaven Dr.
Quarters 2335
7750 S.W. Montclair Dr.
2611 No. Halleek St.
4317 S.W. Bernard Dr.
4317 S.W. Bernard Dr.
2682 N. W. Cornell Rd.
3910 S. W. Beaverton Ave.
4819 N.E. 34th Ave.
2989 S. W. Montgomery Dr.
406 Briar Road
406 Briar Road
406 Briar Road
P. O. Box 764
P. O. Box 32
P. O. Box 32
830 S.W. 84th Ct.
2026 Lawrence St.
1015 Vaquero Rd.
1802 W. Yakima Ave.
1515 N.W. 28th Ave.
6175 S.W. Chestnut Avo.

It

■ y

/

Juneau, Alaska 99801
Mabton, Washington 98935
Ciatskanie, Oregon 97016
Portland, Oregon 97212
Portland, Oregon 97212
Vancouver, Washington 98664
Gresham, Oregon 97030
Portland, Oregon 97219
Portland, Oregon 97201
Portland, Oregon 97221
Portland, Oregon 97201
Los Angeles, Calif. 90049
Yakima, Washington 98902
Portland, Oregon 97201
Portland, Oregon 97205
Yakima, Washington 98902
Seattle, Washington 98105
Tigard, Oregon 97223
Portland, Oregon 97201
Lake Oswego, Oregon 97034
Portland, Oregon 97219
Portland, Oregon 97219
Yakima, Washington 98902
Portland, Oregon 97219
Portland, Oregon 97221
Eugene, Oregon 97401
Portland, Oregon 97217
Portland, Oregon 97223
Coos Bay, Oregon 97420
Lake Oswego, Oregon 97034
Medford, Oregon 97501
Portland, Oregon 97201
Portland, Oregon 97219
Vancouver, Washington 98664
Portland, Oregon 97221
Lake Oswego, Oregon 97034
Portland, Oregon 97219
Portland, Oregon 97219
Portland, Oregon 97219
Portland, Oregon 97225
Portland, Oregon 97202
Shelton, Washington 98584
Baguio City, Phillippines B-202
Pasco, Washington 99301
Portland, Oregon 97219
Portland, Oregon 97221
Richland, Washington 99352
Everett, Washington 98201
Fort Lewis, Washington 98433
Portland Oregon 97225
Portland, Oregon 97217
Portland, Oregon 97201
Portland, Oregon 97201
Portland, Oregon 97210
Portland, Oregon 97201
Portland, Oregon 97211
Portland, Oregon 97201
Bellingham, Wash. 98225
Bellingham, Wash. 98225
Bellingham, Wash. 98225
Blue Jay, Calif. 92317
Inchelium, Wash. 9913S
Inchelium, Wash. 99138
Portland, Oregon 97225
Klamath Falls, Ore. 97601
Pebble Beach, Calif. 93953
Yakima, Wash. 98902
Portland, Ore. 97210
Beaverton, Ore. 97005

X
X

*
/

X
X

V
X

X

X
X
X

X
X
X
X

X
X
X
X
X

X
X
X
X

X
X

X

X
X
X

X
X
X
X
X
X

X
X
X
X
X

X
X
X
X
X
X

X
X

*
X
X
X
X
2X
X
X
X

X

2
A

X
X

AX
£r

r
r
r

X

/-

141

�III. "
l?»

Tbema Fuller
Lynea George
Paul Gerhardt
Jonathan Glenn
Debi Glinden
Greg Goodman
Hail Grimes
Peter Grimes
Lise Gross
Robi Gurganus
Thomas Hadley
Edward Hall
Scott Harlow
Cynthia Harris
Michael Harris
Takashi Hashimoto
Chatten Hayes
Gregory Hetzler
Gillian Hobbs
Rebecca Hoff
Jenny Holden
Jane Honeyman
Jeffrey Honeyman
Teddi Howell
Tom Howell
Karen Hudson
Bruce Jackson
Thomas Jackson
Sally James
Philip Janney
Elizabeth Johnson
Janelle Johnson
Mary Johnson
Amy Joseph
Laurie Jue
Frances Ann Kading
Russell Kay
Scott King
Charles Knox
John Korona
William Krotzer
Katherine Ku
Tami Lake
Maria Latourette
Clarke LeBeck
Amy Leech
Elizabeth Lilley
Sarah Livingstone
Tucker Livingstone
Lacy Love
Julie Lucas
Laura Mae da
Sarah McArthur
Christopher McMurtry
Dan McMurtry
David Marble
Michele Meyer
Carol Meyer
Rebecca Meyer
Max Miller
Miles Miller
Van Miller
Sally Mills
William Moersch
Ellen Montague
Nancy Morrisette
James Mosher
Karen Noack
Karines Noack
Barbara Page

142

Route l, Box 1058
10315 S.W. 82nd Ave.
4240 S.W. Altadena Ave.
Cranguyma Farms
6441 Mokelumne Ave.
10735 S. W. Moapa
4129 S.W. Greenleaf Ct.
4129 S. W. Greenleaf Ct.
92 N.W. Macleay
2123 N. W. Hoyt St.
16191 S.W. Lake Forest Blvd.
3435 S.W. Heather Lane
326 4th St. Appt. 905
2242 W. Eugene St.
2242 W. Eugene St.
4-7-15 Azufawa Itabashi-ku
2794 S. W. Rutland Ter.
5409 S.W. Scholls Ferry Rd.
737 N. W. Powhatan Ter.
Horshoe Bend

1330 S.W. Orinda Way
5730 S. W. 70th Ave.
5730 S. W. 70th Ave.
1225 Lake Garden Ct.
1225 Lake Garden Ct.
1475 No. 10th Ct.
P. O. Box 55
P. O. Box 55
1726 N.W. 138th Ave.
7920 S. E. Reed College PI.
2801 S. W. Patton Lane
7145 S. E. Patton Lane
4623 N. W. Sob la r Ter.
7110 S.E. 29th Ave.
13850 S.W. Bonnie Brae
10106 N.E. Alton St.
6919 S.W. 10th Ave.
5005 S.W. Humphrey Park Rd.
5223 S. W. 19th Dr.
16775 Graef Circle
Route 2, Box 158
4159 E. Dakota Ave.
2130 S.W. 21st Ave.
1732 S.W. Elm
Haverhill Farm, Route 1, Box 16a
7235 S. W. Hunt Club Lane
1736 S.W. Prospect Dr.
2577 N. W. Westover Rd.
2577 N.W. Westover Rd.
P. O. Box 302
P. O. Box 6206
1536 S.E. 21st Ave.
4154 S.W. Tualatin Ave.
8018 S.E. Reed College Pi.
8018 S.E. Reed College Pi.
8 South 79th Ave.
4545 Sand Point Way, Apt. 301
8036 S.W. Valley View Ct.
8036 S.W. Valley View Ct.
P. O. Box 234
1G10S.W. Clifton
8125 S.W. 89th Ave.
1708 S.W. Hawthorne Ter.
9660 S.W. Eagle Ct.
3960 S. W. Wapato Ave.
3861 American River Dr.
12534 S.W. Iron Mountain
2740 Laurel Dr.
2740 Laurel Dr.
Route 1, Box 822

Beaverton, Ore. 97005
Portland, Ore. 9726G
Portland, Ore. 97201
Long Beach, Wash. 98631
Oakland, Calif. 94605
Portland, Ore. 97219
Portland, Ore. 97221
Portland, Ore. 97221
Portland, Ore. 97210
Portland, Ore. 97210
Lake Grove, Ore. 97034
Portland, Ore. 97201
Juneau, Alaska 99801
Hood River, Ore. 97031
Hood River, Ore. 97031
Tokyo, Japan
Portland, Ore. 97201
Portland, Ore. 97225
Portland, Oregon 97210
Idaho, 83629
Portland, Oregon 97225
Portland, Oregon 97225
Portland, Oregon 97225
Lake Oswego, Oregon 97034
Lake Oswego, Oregon 97034
Coos Bay, Oregon 97420
Mica Creek, B. C., Canada
Mica Creek, B. C., Canada
Portland, Oregon 97229
Portland, Oregon 97202
Portland, Oregon 97201
Portland, Oregon 97201
Portland, Oregon 97210
Portland, Oregon 97202
Beaverton, Oregon 97005
Portland, Oregon 97220
Portland, Oregon 97219
Portland, Oregon 97225
Portland, Oregon 97201
Lake Oswego, Oregon 97034
Ridgefield, Wash. 98642
Fresno, Calif. 93726
Portland, Oregon 97201
Portland, Oregon 97201
West Linn, Oregon 97068
Portland, Oregon 97223
Portland, Oregon 97201
Portland, Oregon 97210
Portland, Oregon 97210
Rancho de Taos, N. Mex. 87557
Torrance, Calif. 90504
Portland, Oregon 97201
Portland, Oregon 97202
Portland, Oregon 97202
Yakima, Wash. 98902
Seattle, Wash. 98105
Portland, Oregon 97225
Portland, Oregon 97225
Forest Grove, Oregon 97116
Portland, Oregon 97201
Portland, Oregon 97223
Portland, Oregon 97201
Beaverton, Oregon 97005
Portland, Oregon 97201
Sacramento, Calif. 95825
Portland, Oregon 97219
Sacramento, Calif. 95825
Sacramento, Calif. 95825
Beaverton, Oregon 97005

�j

;

•m

■

i

■

!!
!!
=1
I

1

Robert Page
Lisa Park
Holly Parker
Leron Paterson
David Pierovich
Deborah Plummer
John Poss
Melanie Poss
Wendy Poss
Clarence Pruitt
Peter Purdy
Anita Rae
Stacy Ramsay
Brooke Ramsden
Eric Redd
Carrie Sue Reichwein
Franzi Ridgway
Joan Ritchie
Elizabeth Robbins
Suzanne Ropiequet
Blair Rosenlund
Scott Roselund
Thomas Ross
Carrie Sammons
Edward Sammons
John Sanford
Martha Scarbrough
Joseph Schafer
Mark Schlesinger
Karen Schmaling
Hila Scott
Charles Seaborn
Chris Seaborn
Tamra Selfridgc
Lynn Seton
Karen Sheppard
Norval Sheppard
Sandra Sheppard
Stephen Kent Simon
Jack Stein
Martha Stein
Edmund Stevens
Margaret Stevens
Bernice Stevenson
Robin Storey
Sandra Stronko
Brian Sylvester
Yuichi Takase
Richard Talbot
Sally Thomas
D'Lorah Tittle
Susan Townend
Caroline Tuttle
Joni Ueland
Jon Waldum
Kip Walker
William Wall
James Weber
John Weber
Pamela Wegert
Morris Westlund
Kenneth Wilkinson
Brenda Williams
Sarah Wintersteen
Tracy Wong
Scott Woodruff
Nancy Woodworth
Douglas Wysham
Alexandra Zimmer
Richard Zurow

Route 1, Box 822
12000 S. W. Boones Ferry Rd.
882 North Shore Rd.
11960 S.W. 121st Ave.
7690 S. W. Stewart St.
3710 Clark
2835 S. E. Tolman
2835 S. E. Tolman
2835 S. E. Tolman
3568 S.E. Kelly
5909 Buena Vista Dr.
2825 N.E. 23rd Ave.
10352 S.W. Lancaster
6708 S. W. Bancroft Way
2900 S.E. Martins
1856 Glenmorrie Ter.
2022 S. W. Myrtle St.
3064 Fairmount
1728 S. W. Prospect Dr.
7025 S. W. Canyon Rd.
1475 N.W. Vista
1475 N.W. Vista
1775 N.W. 113th Ave.
01609 S.W. Radcliffe Ct.
01609 S.W. Radcliffe Ct.
2222 S.W. Spring Garden
9912 Tunney Ave.
13540 S. W. Hart Rd.
01425 S. W. Mary Failing Dr.
10400 S. W. 80th Ave.
2707 S. W. Boyd St.
2715 S.E. 39th
2715 S.E. 39th
2739 S.E. 79th Ave.
0936 S.W. Palatine Hill Rd.
Mountain Village
Mountain Village
Mountain Village
6205 S.E. Reed College Pi.
5037 S. W. Hilltop Lane
5037 S.W. Hilltop Lane
3416 S. W. Brentwood Dr.
3416 S.W. Brentwood Dr.
705 S. W. Oak (Box 544)
P. O. Box 633
3125 S.W. Florida
Route 5, Box 5712
9 Melantic St. San Lorenzo Village
5536 S.W. Hamilton St.
Underwood
16775 Graef Circle Dr.
3024 S.E. Woodstock Blvd.
1050 10th St.
6228 S. E. Belmont
P. O. Box 337
2921 E. Locust
7695 S. W. Cedar St.
2665 S. W. Scenic Dr.
2665 S.W. Scenic Dr.
8232 N.E. Schuyler
16842 Alder Circle
8885 S.W. Hillview Ter.
Route 1, Box 134
3104 N.E. Academy Ave.
355 N. E. 80th Ave.
Route 2, Box 200
2662 S. W. Gremvolde Pi.
2080 S. W. Warwick Ave.
2804 N. W. Cumberland Rd.
2531 S.W. St. Helens Ct.

Beaverton, Oregon 97005
Portland, Oregon 97219
Lake Oswego, Oregon 97034
Tigard, Oregon 97223
Portland, Oregon 97223
Vancouver, Wash. 98661
Portland, Oregon 97202
Portland, Oregon 97202
Portland, Oregon 97202
Portland, Oregon 97202
Vancouver, Wash. 98661
Portland, Oregon 97212
Portland, Oregon 97219
Portland, Oregon 97225
Portland, Oregon 97202
Lake Oswego, Oregon 97034
Portland, Oregon 97201
Portland, Oregon 97201
Portland, Oregon 97201
Portland, Oregon 97225
Portland, Oregon 97201
Portland, Oregon 97201
Portland, Oregon 97229
Portland, Oregon 97219
Portland, Oregon 97219
Portland, Oregon 97219
Northridge, Calif. 91324
Beaverton, Oregon 97005
Portland, Oregon 97219
Portland, Oregon 97223
Milwaukie, Oregon 97202
Portland, Oregon 97202
Portland, Oregon 97202
Portland, Oregon 97206
Portland, Oregon 97219
Alaska 99632
Alaska 99632
Alaska 99632
Portland, Oregon 97202
Portland, Oregon 97221
Portland, Oregon 97221
Portland, Oregon 97201
Portland, Oregon 97201
White Salmon, Wash. 98672
Lewiston, Idaho 83501
Portland, Oregon 97219
Juneau, Alaska 99801
Makati, Rizal, Philippines
Portland Oregon 97221
Washington 98651
Lake Oswego, Oregon 97034
Portland, Oregon 97202
Colusa, Calif. 95932
Portland, Oregon 97215
Lake Oswego, Oregon 97034
Albany, Oregon 97321
Portland, Oregon 97225
Portland, Oregon 97225
Portland, Oregon 97225
Portland, Oregon 97220
Lake Oswego, Oregon 97034
Portland, Oregon 97225
West linn, Oregon 97068
Portland, Oregon 97220
Portland, Oregon 97216
Newberg, Oregon 97132
Portland, Oregon 97201
Portland, Oregon 97225
Portland, Oregon 97210
Portland, Oregon 97201

%

J
%

%

Va
%

II
i
t

II
2

%

I

I2

2

1I
1
II
I

i

%

V,
&amp;

I

II

£

2
£
£
■ .
H
k

'/z

£
£
£
143

�I?
:•
|j
;
i!.
!
■

'
* •

*

1
■

I

This is a different yearbook. When I say different, I mean different from past pub­
lications. We have tried to break away from as many of the formalities that have
besieged past yearbooks as possible.
Underclass and faculty photographs were informal because we felt that an informal
shot was more natural and showed more of what each personality was really like.
The book is mostly made up of photographs; the articles have personal feelings
written into them and we hope you are able to relate to them.
I would like to thank all of the members of the staff and Betty Wilcox, our advisor,
who have donated their time, effort and ideas to make the publication of this book
possible. I especially want to thank Elsa Erceg. for without her encouragement
and ideas I never would have made it.
Mark Schlesinger
Editor

142

144

�I

�r\

p
*1 :

n:
i-

. !

#; i' •
K;i
&lt;

;

!

• !
I

.
*

Pv

*

t

I
rki
i

P
.
%

�ST. HELEN'S HALE
BISHOP DAGWELL HAL'E

For Reference
Not to be taken from this room
—z

��</text>
                  </elementText>
                </elementTextContainer>
              </element>
            </elementContainer>
          </elementSet>
        </elementSetContainer>
      </file>
    </fileContainer>
    <collection collectionId="1">
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="1">
          <name>Dublin Core</name>
          <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="1">
                  <text>Oregon Episcopal School Yearbooks</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="41">
              <name>Description</name>
              <description>An account of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="2">
                  <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>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="39">
              <name>Creator</name>
              <description>An entity primarily responsible for making the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="3">
                  <text>Oregon Episcopal School</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="45">
              <name>Publisher</name>
              <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="4">
                  <text>Oregon Episcopal School</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="40">
              <name>Date</name>
              <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="5">
                  <text>1921-1923; 1931-1995</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="47">
              <name>Rights</name>
              <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="6">
                  <text>All rights are reserved by Oregon Episcopal School.</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="44">
              <name>Language</name>
              <description>A language of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="7">
                  <text>English</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="51">
              <name>Type</name>
              <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="8">
                  <text>Yearbooks</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="65">
              <name>Conforms To</name>
              <description>An established standard to which the described resource conforms.</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="9">
                  <text>Describing Archives: A Content Standard (DACS)</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="78">
              <name>Extent</name>
              <description>The size or duration of the resource.</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="10">
                  <text>85</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="79">
              <name>Medium</name>
              <description>The material or physical carrier of the resource.</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="11">
                  <text>bound volumes</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="49">
              <name>Subject</name>
              <description>The topic of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="1298">
                  <text>Students</text>
                </elementText>
                <elementText elementTextId="1299">
                  <text>Junior colleges</text>
                </elementText>
                <elementText elementTextId="1300">
                  <text>Junior college students</text>
                </elementText>
                <elementText elementTextId="1301">
                  <text>High school student activities</text>
                </elementText>
                <elementText elementTextId="1302">
                  <text>Student activities</text>
                </elementText>
                <elementText elementTextId="1303">
                  <text>Student publications</text>
                </elementText>
                <elementText elementTextId="1304">
                  <text>Teachers</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </collection>
    <itemType itemTypeId="1">
      <name>Text</name>
      <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    </itemType>
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="78">
            <name>Extent</name>
            <description>The size or duration of the resource.</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="659">
                <text>1</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="79">
            <name>Medium</name>
            <description>The material or physical carrier of the resource.</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="660">
                <text>bound volume</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="661">
                <text>The Legend-Delphic 1972</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="49">
            <name>Subject</name>
            <description>The topic of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="662">
                <text>School yearbooks</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="663">
                <text> Students</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="664">
                <text> High school student activities</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="665">
                <text> Student publications</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="666">
                <text> Teachers</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="667">
                <text>This is an OES yearbook from 1972. 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>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="39">
            <name>Creator</name>
            <description>An entity primarily responsible for making the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="668">
                <text>Oregon Episcopal School</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="40">
            <name>Date</name>
            <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="669">
                <text>1972</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="47">
            <name>Rights</name>
            <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="670">
                <text>All rights are reserved by Oregon Episcopal School.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="44">
            <name>Language</name>
            <description>A language of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="671">
                <text>English</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="43">
            <name>Identifier</name>
            <description>An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="672">
                <text>oes_delphic1972-compressed.pdf</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
    <tagContainer>
      <tag tagId="1">
        <name>School yearbooks; Students; High school student activities; Student publications; Teachers</name>
      </tag>
    </tagContainer>
  </item>
  <item itemId="45" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="46">
        <src>http://archive.oes.edu/files/original/975c4ab510c5fa1a9f6cabce6a921527.pdf</src>
        <authentication>9c68b986818c77ceee25985ee32a4162</authentication>
        <elementSetContainer>
          <elementSet elementSetId="4">
            <name>PDF Text</name>
            <description/>
            <elementContainer>
              <element elementId="92">
                <name>Text</name>
                <description/>
                <elementTextContainer>
                  <elementText elementTextId="1051">
                    <text>m
I

��'

Oregon Episcopal Schools
Legend-Delphic
1970-1971
3

�I

4

�I

�INTRODUCTION
FACULTY &amp; ADMINISTRATION
CLASSES
SPORTS
ACTIVITIES
ORGANIZATIONS
ADVERTISING

��I hear of a time when it was more rarely said that something is "new." That was when "around the world in
eighty days" was still NEWS. If I remind you now that you of the Class of 1971 did something new it may not seem
very newsworthy because it is a fact of several months duration. I mean YOU ARE THE FIRST COEDUCATIONAL
CLASS IN ONE HUNDRED AND ONE JUNES. "Firsts" are fun and I hope you have found a joy in the trail-blazing
nature of your class.
The Class of 1971 has been a class of surprises and I would not care to guess why you did what you did nor try
to figure out the sociological or psychological significance - if any! - of the decisions you made. In the year of
ferment of the Woman's Liberation Movement you elected a girl to edit the school newspaper and another to edit
the yearbook. Then, in a complete about-face, an electorate over half female elected four boys to the student
body offices. Then, to compound the mystery, the four student council members-at-large chosen were, again,
boys. Someday you will tell me why boys swept the election, and, someday, we will know if together, boys and
girls, you set the pattern.
The 1970-71 student body has seemed a more reasonable student body than what we had before: girls on one
side of the fence, boys on the other. Our school has seemed like life, not an artificial arrangement of the facts.
We hoped you would learn to understand each other better by being in classes together "like^the rest of the world."
Time will tell. You and your classmates have made one community of St. Helen's Hall and Bishop Dagwell Hall,
showing your elders what it shoud have been from the beginning. Those you leave behind are left with the task of
making the Oregon Episcopal Schools community a better community and, in the very broadest sense, a better
religious community: that is, one that knows where it came from, that knows what it is doing now, that knows
where it is going. To the extent that members of the Class of 1971 can answer those questions about themselves
they are fortunate, and happy, and have learned something here - from all of us you will leave behind with, we
hope, affectionate memories.
David Leech
Headmaster

�BOARD OF TRUSTEES

" ~v •;vjr;v&gt;.

Miss Eleanor Fass
Girls* Director of Residence
History

Top: Mr. Mitchell Drake, the Rev. Robert H. Gr
The Rev. PittS. Willand, Mr. Willett R. Lake, J
Bottom: Mr. Merle K. Buck, Mrs. David B. Ch
Schlesinger, Mrs. William F. Thomas.
Seated: Mr. Philip Bogue, Mr. David Lee

's
i

( .*&gt;

Miss Candice Goodrich
F rench

11

�.
V.'

Mrs. Elizabeth Brasfield
Mathematics

■

V

Mr. Gary Craigmiles
Athletic Director
Mathematics

I
I hear of a time when it was more rarely said that something is "n
eighty days" was still NEWS. If I remind you now that you of the Cla
very newsworthy because it is a fact of several months duration. I n
CLASS IN ONE HUNDRED AND ONE JUNES. "Firsts" are fun and I
nature of your class.
The Class of 1971 has been a class of surprises and I would not cai
to figure out the sociological or psychological significance - if any! ferment of the Woman's Liberation Movement you elected a girl to edi
the yearbook. Then, in a complete about-face, an electorate over hal
body offices. Then, to compound the mystery, the four student counci
boys. Someday you will tell me why boys swept the election, and, sonK
girls, you set the pattern.
\
Die 1970-71 student body has seemed a more reasonable student body tnW
side of the fence, boys on the other. Our school has seemed like life, not aiK
We hoped you would learn to understand each other better by being in classes
Time will tell. You and your classmates have made one community of St. HeleiX^
showing your elders what it shoud have been from the beginning. Those you leave^
making the Oregon Episcopal Schools community a better community and, in the ver
religious community: that is, one that knows where it came from, that knows what
where it is going. To the extent that members of the Class of 1971 can answer thos
they are fortunate, and happy, and have learned something here - from all of us you
hope, affectionate memories.
David Leech
Headmaster

8

�Mrs. Elsa Erceg
Art

Miss Eleanor Fass
Girls' Director of Residence
History

Miss Candice Goodrich
French

11

�n

, l

’

The Rev. Dr. Robert H. Greenfield
Religion

Mr. Howard B. Haymes
Librarian

Mrs. Jawne Griswold
F rench

�1
Mr. John V. Hicks
Science

Mr. David Hunt
Spanish

Mr. David Hursty
History

IE

�Mrs. Judy Hutchinson
French

I

I

w
i

'

!
I;
Mr. James Hutchinson
Science

?

j
1

i
»

14

Mr. Gerald Merry man
English

�.

Mrs. Barbara Morse
English

Mr. Roger Nelson
Science

■

Mrs. Diana Rorer
Latin

15

�Miss Ruth Rose Richardson, Jr.
English

I

!

.

Mr. Robert Ross
English

r

:
Mr. Cordell Tittle
Mathematics

1

16

�Mr. James Weber
Director of Residence, Boys
Mathematics

The Rev. Peter W. Wenner
Religion

_—

,

HU
. r

Mrs. Betty Wilcox
Yearbook Advisor
History'

17

�Mrs. Sharon Wilhelm
Physical Education

I

Mrs. Carolyn Jlarring-ton
Director of Admissions
Dean of Girls

1

18

�The Rev. David Leech
Headmaster

Mr. Frederick Wood
Principal
History

19

�Mrs. May Froman
Secretary to the Headmaster

v
..-j

t

A •«» * • • •
‘

rj

C^iv'C • f • v. •
A”.

•.

:

.1

L
■t

: V

k
“j*

\

Mrs. Anne Willand
Registrar

Mrs. Jean Jackson
Public Relations

�Mrs. Lilia Gille
Business Office

Mrs. Donna Smith
Business Office

2

�Mr. Robert E. Williams
Business Manager

?

Mr. Earl D. Brunt
Maintenance Supervisor

i

22

�Mrs. Margaret Wind, R.N.
Nurse

Mrs. Eunice T. Muhm
Housemother

23

�Mrs. Rozella Rosa
Housemother
U!f
h'aw

i B:!?•
iwo|2S|

..

i

!

Mrs. Beulah Taylor
Housemother

1

24

�25

�Top: Jack Weber
Center: William Wall,
John Waldam.
Bottom: Alexandra Zimmer

a
nr

a
d
e
Top: Carol Meyer, Amy Joseph.
Bottom: Mike Kirkpatrick, Janelle Johnson, Laurie Jue

26

�Top: Bill Moorsch
Center: Nancy Morrisette, Michelle Meyer
Bottom: Robert Page, Van Miller

Top: Gina Disney, Perri Ann Combs, Bottom: Philip
Janney, Blaine Deming, Donald Domini.

Top: Loron Paterson, Tom Ross, David Pierovich.
Bottom: Edmund Stevens, Karl Smith

�e
Dan Foster
Lynn Seton

9
h
t
h

Chris DelValle
Barbara Page
Blair Rosenlund

Bill Sessions
George Horst
Sarah Livingstone
Teddi Howell
Jane Honey man

:

9

■I

Ij

Z. v-:-

*

d
e
28

Terry Johnson
Lynea George
Carleen Schiewe
Rick Rushing
Naren Hingerani
Steve Williams

�Gerald Russell, John Crawley, Morris Westlund,
Ken Wilkinson, Martha Stein.

Joan Ritchie, Elizabeth Johnson, Bob Smith, Ellen Montague, Liz Ellis.

Top: Sandra Sheppard, Joan Dougherty. Bottom:
Susan Brustad, Jenny Holden, Chris Seaborn.

29

�f

r
Scott Harlow, Takashi Hashimoto, Lise Gross, John Coffey.

Pn
Miles Miller, Karen Noack, Marie Motschman, Max
Miller.

30

�Tom Howell, Rebecca Hoff, Jewel Smith, Pam Heltmeyer,
Charles Knox, Amy Leech.

Top: Nancy Thompson, Tami Self ridge, Richard Talbot,
Bottom: Karen Fish, Joan Bokemeier.

31

�Rebecca Meyer, Laura Maeda,
Paul Gerhardt.

izabeth Lilley, Tim Magenis,

Terry Anderson, Jim Weber, Osa Arnold, Lance Brown, Steve Allen.

�'

Cliff Brunell, Brent Erensel, Tim Curren, Paige
Smith, Jacqui Green.

Cheri Palmer, Hiln Scott, Holly Parker, Brooke Ramsden. Front: Robin
Ramsey.

33

�TV '

h
Nell Dunlap, Ann Ellis, Tracy Gillet, Evelyne
Griswold, Leann Correa, Catherine Church.

Ed Sammons, Harxy Sherman, Kannes
Noack, Kay Krueger, Jon Glenn.

34

�Janet Buck, Laurie Caswell, Martha Bulhvinkle, Greg
Amerson, Nancy Bogue.

Lacy Love, Robert McCaslin, Dan McMurtry,
James Mosher.

35

�Mike Runstein, John Sanford,
Joe Schafer, Scott Rosenlund

H

'!

Jeff Honeyman, Sally James

36

�J
V
’

&gt;- -

i
I

Leanne Davis, Claudia Carrasco, Pam Wegert, Doug
Wysham.

Julie Ellis, Peter Purdy, Thema Fuller, Carrie
Sammons.

.

3‘

�Jir•' ' -

•'/.•wX

Steve Cox, Sand}' Stronko,
Maiy Crltchlow,
Gay Burnie, Sally Cheatham.

* *
Chris Birkmeyer, Stephen Cuffel,
Mark Bocek, Fred Ellis.

38

r

' y . •; ^ri -"

*

�Harold Larsen, Andy Dappen, Jarrett Dorsey, Art Bruce.

Tanil Lake, Tucker Livingstone, Gillian Hobbs, Kim
Bishop.

39

�.
,

Becky Ugrin, Robin Storey, Sarah WIntersteen, Joni Ueland, Warren Bean.

i

i

j/k

.

)

!

T3
Top: Franzl Ridgway, Katy Finlay, Sally Thomas. Bottom:
Cheri Spies, Mark Schlesinger, Bruce Jackson.

40

�Karen Bice, Norval Sheppard, Debi Glinden, Marilynn
Rose.

; I
■

i

Mammi**l i-1

l

,itg

i

*#\ •

/2
h

*

•i

&gt;

- Si

-v- -

&gt;v'

\
i•

*4mr. KM&amp;git

*»■

.r*

■ itfl

V-'

• : A
_ 2.

.1

sP
-v

I,

:V

5. *--&lt;•■.;
- -V p

.• .

•;
•

Melanie Poss, David Marble,
Martha Scarbrough.

■-

41

�s

e

i

n
i

o

P
S

BRAD ALLEN
"The person who has an open mind is a bet­
ter human being because he strives to find
the whole truth."

rr
!;

V

f

DEB ALLEN
"The mind is its own place, and in itself can make
a Heaven of Hell, a Hell of Heaven."
-Milton

I

42

�MARJORIE ANDERSON
"We may give without loving.
But we cannot love without giving."

CYNTHIA BAKER
"We shall live again,
We shall live again."
-Ghost Dance Song

43

�i

s
e

n
i

o

BRAD ALLEN
"The person who has an open mind is a bet­
ter human being because he strives to find
the whole truth."

P

S

DEB ALLEN
"The mind is its own place, and in itself can make
a Heaven of Hell, a Hell of Heaven."
-Milton

42

�MARJORIE ANDERSON
"We may give without loving.
But we cannot love without giving."

CYNTHIA BAKER
"We shall live again,
We shall live again. M
-Ghost Dance Song

43

�RACHEL BARNES
"Think as I think," said a man,
"or you are abominably wicked,
you are a toad."
And after I had thought of it,
I said "I will, then be a toad."
-Stephen Crane

I
■

RANDY BRUSS
"Lassies have more fun."

44

�BEN CRITCHLOW
"So many men are deprived of grace.
How can one live without grace?
One has to try it and do what Christianity
never did: Be concerned with the
damned."
-Albert Camus

C. R. DUFFIE
"... Everybody’s beautiful in their
own way..."
-Ray Stevens

45

�SHANNON FEARS
"The darkest hour is always just before the
dawn."
-David Crosby

ANN FOLAND
I believe in sun even when it is not shining
I believe in loveeven when I am alone
I believe in GOD even when IIE is silent.
found on the walls
of a wine cellar,
Cologne, Germany
W.W.I

�CAROLYN GAZELEY
"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

ED HAESSLER
"Live for today but remem­
ber yesterday and think of to­
morrow. "

47

�MARION HALBENZ
"I never refuse food.1’

SU HILLESLAND
"My tee fine: honary L.T.C.:
ahuh: Pop? Treats? bally ball:
rah, rah, rail: ski:
Learn, Change, Grow.
Remember... forget... .

�CHARLES HOLDEN
"If you have ears to hear, then hear.
Take note of what you hear; the measure
you give is the measure you will receive,
with something more besides. For the man
who has will be given more, and the man
who has not will forfeit even what he has."
-Mark 4:23,24,25

JOHN HOTTMAN
To Love;
Live and let live
Yet do I dare to eat a peach
and leave the world unchanged.

49

�ANITA JACKSON
•» We are making reservations,
That will be just for whites...
We are going to be the tourists,
We'll come to see you dance.”
Peter La Farge

PRANEE JANTARACH
Rule for Happiness
Something to do
Something to love
Something to hope for

50

�MARY JEAN JOHNSON
I have no Yesterdays,
Time took them away.
Tomorrow may not be,
But I have Today.
Catton

PATTI JOHNSON
"I meant to do my work today.
But a brown bird sang in the appletree,
And a butterfly flitted across the field
And the leaves were calling me."
-Fichte

51

�OSAMA KABBANI
"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."
-l-Ienry David Thoreau

I

~

~

CHRIS KARAFOTIAS
"Those who are faithless know the
pleasures of love; it is the faithful
who know love's tragedies. "
-Oscar Wilde

:

■7

:
1

x-4
'v*j

/

■ T
: *
■

V

52

i

&gt;:

w:i

n

1

M
1,

!
i

�:

.
’

MARTIN LANDEEN
"Happiness and beauty are by-products."
-G.B. Shaw

:

!

DEBBIE LEBECK
"Good tilings come in small packages."

53

�s
■

ti

JOHN MARCY
"All animals are equal, but some
animals are more equal than others."
-George Orwell

JANET McGREW
"Forsan et haec olim
meminisse Juvabit"
-Vergil

�;

;

TRENTON MORROW
"Where there is a weasel there is a way."
-Hotlips
"For solitude is not separation but
meditation."
-Ionesco

,

KAREN RANDALL
"He who does not enjoy solitude will
not love freedom"
A. Schopenhauer

\[

55

�KATHY REYNOLDS
"Look to this clay! .. .
for yesterday is already a dream
and tomorrow is only a vision:... "
from the Sanskrit
• • a sort of funny feeling began to
creep all over him.... It was just as
if somebody inside him were saying,
"Now then, Pooh, time for a little
something."
-A.A. Milne

FRED RUSSELL
"I'd rather wake-up in the middle
of nowhere than in any city on
earth. "
Steve McQueen

�LIZ SESSIONS
"Our lives are not shaped by those
who love us-by those who refuse to
love us."
-John Powell

rjaaiaii
rr^i

MARSHALL SPENCER
"To be what we are, and to become
what we are capable of becoming,
is the only end of life. "
-Robert Louis Stevenson

57

�JIM STIPE
"Love is but a memory."

CHRIS TREWHELLA
"To be nobody - but yourself in a world which is
doing its best, night and day,
to make you everybody else means to fight the hardest battle
which any human being can fight,
and never stop fighting."
-e. e. cummings

58

�ip
•w
V'J
«/ A ,
'■■

■

-.

SUMALEE VATANAVORALUK
"Oh Garroast! !"(in other words gross)

BETH WALTER
"People always expect more of you when you have naturally curly hair."
-Charles Schultz

59

�JIM STIPE
"Love is but a memory."

CHRIS TREWHELLA
"To be nobody - but yourself in a world which is
doing its best, night and day,
to make you everybody else means to fight the hardest battle
which any human being can fight,
and never stop fighting."
-e. e. cummings

�v-’r v*-

mtv
•

.'•IV'.

SUMALEE VATANAVORALUK
"Oh Garroast! !"(in other words gross)

BETH WALTER
"People always expect more of you when you have naturally curly hair."
-Charles Schultz

'&gt;

•

�BRYANT WOOTEN
Those who hope that the Negro needed to blow off
steam and will now be content, will have a rude awak­
ening if the nation returns to business as usual."
-Martin Luther King Jr.

�61

�foreign students

Takashi Hashimoto is the Halls' only student from Japan. He
lives in Tokyo with his 13 year old sister and his parents. His
father is a real estate agent and also owns an apartment house,
his mother is a housewife.
Takashi is a freshman this year and plans to graduate from Ore­
gon Episcopal Schools. His hobbies include fishing and taking care
of pets. After high school, Takashi would like to study in the field
of animal biology.

Sumalee Vatanavoraluk, 18, from Bangkok, Thailand, has attended
St. Helen's Hall for two years. She came to the United States through
the Thai Embassy to learn the language and customs of the Americans.
Sumalee plans to stay in the United States for college and would like to
study in Massachusetts to be a diplomat.
Her father is a factory owner and her mother is a housewife, She
has three brothers and five sisters of all ages, two of which are study­
ing in Hong Kong.
Sumalee likes drawing, swimming, and traveling as pastimes.
She feels Americans are friendly and also that the youths have a bet­
ter education and more freedom than in her country.

�Claudia Carrasco came to the United States in August of 1970 to
attend Oregon Episcopal Schools as a junior. After graduation,
she hopes to do a lot of traveling, perhaps as an airline steward­
ess, and later to study French in Switzerland or France.
Claudia has four brothers and sisters, two older and two young­
er. She has family in Portland, her uncle and her grandmother,
with whom she spends vacations.
While young, Claudia visited the United States, but felt that when
older she could experience the life in the United States much bet­
ter. She came with the purpose of learning more about the Ameri­
can high school and the students themselves, what they do, and
what they like.
Claudia enjoys traveling, language study, and waterskiing. She
is also interested in ceramics.

Osama Kabbani of Riyadh, Saudi Arabia came to Oregon Episco­
pal Schools in 1969 as a junior. Prior to coming to O.E.S. Osama
and his four brothers went to school in Washington, D.C. When
the family returned home it was decided that Osama would complete
his high school education in the U.S. Osama is an outstanding soc­
cer player and has played varsity soccer for B.D.H. for two years.
His other interests are architecture and the Arts.

63

�American Fielder* °ri^ina^y from Steinhagen, Germany, came to the United States on an
Underwood, Washington Pr0gram* She Presently is living with the Don Thomas family in
25 vearc
iS.a Polisher
has two other children besides Marion. Her oldest son, Till,
Marion.;^
a Polisher *nd Petra, 22 years old, is a journalist,
foreitrn l
S ° 1GS 0tb ***
^nitec* States and Germany are traveling, reading, and studying
M
an&amp;ua&amp;es. She plans to finish high school in her hometown and go on to college at
Marburg, Germany, studying as a law student.
Marion finds her stay in the United States a new experience and says Americans are friendly
and very polite.

Pranee Jantarach, from Bangkok, Thailand, has
been in the United States two years now. She came
as a junior, and after graduation, plans to attend
college in the Boston area, where she will study
business.
She has four brothers; three older and one young­
er, and one younger sister.
When asked what she thought of the United States
she replied, "Wonderful, wonderful."
She enjoys the weather and the traffic. Pranee
came with the intention to learn how to speak
English and to see what American life was like.
Pranee has cousins in California, with whom
she spent Christmas vacation, but her short vaca­
tions are spent with friends from school.
Her hobbies include shopping, movies, rock
concerts, and, most of all, traveling.
64

��SOCCER

3rd Place - CatlLn Gabel Six-a-side
3rd Place - Mt. Angel Oktoberfest
BDH
0
Catlin Gabel
BDH
1
Lincoln
BDH
1
Sunset
BDH
0
La Salle
BDH
0
Portland Christian
BDH
1
Mt. Angel
BDH
0
Western Mennonite
BDH
4
Wilson
BDH
9
Hillsboro
BDH
1
La Salle
4th Place - P. N. A.L S. Tournament
BDH
0
Charles Wright
BDH
2
Lakeside

1
0
0
0
1
0
2
0
0
3
4
4

1970 did not go by without some optimism. It was not the magical and miraculous year of 1969, and it
did not have many spectacular moments. But it was a year of rebuilding, a year which will hopefully be
the springboard for future championship teams. The year also saw a fantastic defense and superb goal­
tending, plus a new goal scoring record in one game.
The team managed to bring home as many trophies in '70 as in '69. Again, the first two weeks were
lucrative, but in third place winnings this time, rather than 1969's second places. The Falcons lost their
first round match at the Catlin Gabel Sixes, but then dramatically won three in a row to take third place.
MarshaU Spencer, Jarrett Dorsey, and Brad Allen got the winning goals. On the next weekend, the
Falcons lost to Catlin Gabel 1-0, but nabbed another third place trophy because of the small margin of loss.

66

�1

From there, the Falcon offense produced nightmares. They could only score once each against expan­
sion Lincoln and Sunset. Jarrett Dorsey scored against Lincoln and Osama Kabbani scored against Sunset.
lOCO’s physical rivalry between BDII and La Salle was discontinued for a day as the two produced a score­
less tie. La Salle occasionally allowed three or four Falcons the freedom of gathering around the net, but
still the ball acted allergic to the nets. La Salle declined the overtime which might probably have given the
Falcons a victory.
It was about to get worse. A humiliating 1-0 loss to weak Portland Christian at home was hard to be­
lieve. With the PCHS goal, better than 250 scoreless minutes, racked up by Warren Cox and the Falcon
Defense, was ended. And the Falcons had scored only twice in five contests.
At Mt. Angel, Kabbani broke the drought and gave the Falcons a 1-0 victory, and a ray of hope in the
playoff chase. Kabbani let loose a beauty of a blast from near midfield and it went in an upper corner.
Western Mennonite evened an old score with a 2-0 victory at BDH. For a while, the Pioneers couldn't
come close, but the Falcons could. Even so, it worked the other way. With a freak goal, Mennonite got
enough momentum to finish off the Falcons with one more goal. The first-place dream went down the drain
for the Falcons.
Then, switching Brad Allen to the forward line, the Falcons scored 13 straight goals without an answer.
Allen, rookie Tim Curren, Dorsey, and Marty Landeen belted Wilson for a 4-0 victory, but a week later
it was 9-0 over Hillsboro. Greg Amerson twice, Marshall Spencer twice, Brad Allen twice, Bryant
Wooten, Osama Kabbani, and Marty Landeen scored in the landslide of picture goals. The nine goals set
a school record for most goals scored in one game, breaking the old record by three goals.
La Salle, end mg in a second place tie with BDII, played off the Falcons at Reed College. The game,
fairly even most of the way, ended the Falcons’ 1970 dream to the tune of a 3-1 loss. For the first time all

'
:■

ft
season, the defense had a major lapse, and La Salle besieged Cox and Miles Miller with a triplet before
Spencer rammed home a penalty shot. The loss eliminated the Falcons from any playoff competition.
The team finished out the season with a 4-0 loss to Charles Wright and a 4-2 loss to Lakeside in the
P. N. A. I. S. tournament at Seattle.
For the second season under Coach John Hicks, the Falcons were: Warren Cox, Chris Karafotias,
Charles Seaborn, Tucker Livingstone, Don Pennington, Harold Larsen, Andy Dappen, Osama Kabbani,
Brad Allen, Greg Amerson, Bryant Wooten, Jarrett Dorsey, Marshall Spencer, and Martin Landeen.

67

��CROSS COUNTRY

BDII
29
Portland Christian 26
BDH
29
26
Concordia
BDII
22
34
Catlin Gabel
9th Place - Western Mennonite Invitational
BDH
29
26
Catlin Gabel
BDH
35
Western Mennonite 23
BDH
16
Columbia Christian 45
BDH
28
Catlin Gabel
29
3rd Place - District Meet

A new look highlighted the 1970 Falcon cross-country squad. With a new coach, Mr. James Weber, and
four new runners out of the seven-man team, the Falcons failed to equal 1969's conquest of the division
one crown. With the relocation of Western Mennonite into district one, the Falcons were no better than
dark horses all season.
The team held a 6-3 record over the course of the season. They defeated Catlin Gabel three times, the
last by one point in a meet decided by the Falcons' Trenton Morrow. The Falcons obliterated Columbia
Christian and took two "gift" wins in the form of Mt. Angel and St. Paul forfeits. Western Mennonite,
Portland Christian, and Concordia all took victories over BDH, but none were terribly substantial. How­
ever, they were just enough to assure the Falcons of missing the first place boat.
District turned out to be a pretty good performance for the Falcons, who dark-horsed their way to
third place with the surprise performance of John Marcy. Rather sluggish all season, the senior speed­
ster cut two and one-half minutes off of his time and finished sixteenth, which is good at district. Terry
Anderson took fifteenth, while Ed Haessler nabbed seventh. Haessler and Anderson dueled much of the
season for the honor of finishing first. Terry finished as the top Falcon five times, Ed four times.
Under Coach Weber's guidance, the Falcons consisted of Trenton Morrow, John Marcy, Ed Haessler,
Terry Anderson, Bruce Jackson, Brent Erensel, and Peter Purdy.

6S

�H

&gt;4

m

3. .
fetofl
—

f

f

l£=1
11

3
.r

nsimmtti
*”'/V

.

...

v'

v1
&gt;
&lt; Vvi

70

r.

'-&gt;r.

•o- - -v

�BASKETBALL

BDH
62
Columbia Christian
4th Place - MacLaren Tournament
BDH
47
Portland Christian
BDH
MacLaren
61
BDH
72
Chemawa
BDH
36
Jewell
Catlin Gabel
BDH
45
BDH
41
Knappa
BDH
27
Portland Christian
BDH
49
Corbett
BDH
MacLaren
49
BDH
Knappa
35
BDH
Gaston
65
4th Place - P. N. A. I. S. Tournament
BDH
Lakeside
51
Catlin Gabel
BDH
66
Gaston
BDH
63
BDH
Catlin Gabel
48
BDH
Portland Christian
52
BDH
Corbett
41
BDH
MacLaren
BDH
Columbia Christian
6 Wins

70

61
55

59
66

59
103
37
60

39
130
43
72

71
37
63
53

74

14 Losses

The 1970-71 Falcon basketball team was a paradox of results that could be fantastic one night and dis­
appointing the next. They compiled a 6-14 record, losing closely to Columbia Christian twice, Portland
Christian once, and Catlin Gabel once. They lost to state A champion Knappa twice by miserable scores,
but carted home the team's first trophy, for a fourth place finish in December's MacLaren Tournament.
The Falcons were victim to a lot of awesome basketball power. They played only one game with Jewell
and lost at the coast city, 66-36. After the first quarter, the Falcons were never in the contest. Steve
Olstedt blasted the Falcons with some fine shooting.
They faced a powerful, depth-filled Lakeside team in the P. N. A. I. S. tournament at Catlin Gabel and
lost, 72-51. Lakeside went on to take the tournament crown.
At the MacLaren tournament, the Falcons may have put on their best performance of the season in de­
feating AA Chemawa 72-59 for fourth place.
The team put on some real displays with teams from their own district, 1-A.
Columbia Christian took a close pair from the Falcons, 70-62 up north and - at BDH. The first game
saw Ed Haessler play with a crippling injury, and the Falcons failed to protect a lead. A late rally fell
short at BDH in the season's final game, and the Falcons garnered their 14th loss at the hands of the
Knights.
The team played three contests with Portland Christian. The first, at MacLaren's tournament, saw
the Falcons blow a lead in the fourth quarter. The second, at BDH, had the Falcons with only 9 points
after three quarters. They lost, 37-27. The third saw the Falcons fall to 9 fourth quarter PCHS freethrows and lose, 53-52, in a fine effort.
State Champion Knappa bounced the Falcons twice, 103-41 at BDH and 130-35 at the northern Oregon
town. The second game was so ridiculous that it caused a mild uproar in the Knappa following.
The Falcons dropped the cellar-dwellers, MacLaren, three times. Right above them, Gaston got
clobbered twice by BDH. MacLaren lost to the Falcons in their own tournament, 61-55, then by 49-39
at BDH, and finally - at home. The Falcons managed to massacre Gaston 65-43 at home and 63-37 at
Gaston in the game which marked Ben Critchlow's return to a Falcon uniform.
Corbett kept their winning streak over the hapless Falcons with a 60-49 blast of the Falcons at BDH,
and then a 74-41 humiliation at Corbett. The Cards boasted board strength in both games.
For the first time, Catlin Gabel did not lose to BDH in basketball for an entire season. They almost
did, 71-66 at the P. N. A. I. S. tournament, but pulled out safe 59-45 and 63-48 victories in the other two
matches.
Playing in part or all of the season for the Falcons, who were coached for the sixth year by Mr. Gary
Craigmiles, were: Warren Cox, Tracy Gillet, Greg Amerson, Miles Miller, Cliff Brunei 1, Ed Haessler,
Marshall Spencer, Dave Marble, Don Pennington, Jim Stipe, Terry Anderson, and Ben Critchlow. The
manager was John Marcy, and the assistant coach was Mr. Cordell Tittle.

i

j

i
j

t
:

71

�—i
.

* J-? _9m
21

-

i

L

4i-

SEfc
V-

&gt;
••
-i

f
f
72

L

**mmk

•*- # *

j*,

�I

l

73

�RALLY SQUAD

i

74

�LACROSSE

, hflflF 'iWSH
-

•■-&lt;*

-• •

V
.

;-

’*

' ■- iKF
.
• •;

•:

. - v'~ V: 7.

»*■ i.**

:-

-—
"7 -’risr^fz *
'?V ’&gt;F, : /.*?.-*■&gt;

'T-.;--. v;

..«'*!•' •

'•'• ' . FW--;- .
t-

■

*.

**•&gt;

I

Sxi-

r-r';•••::: h‘;
O.

-

••

i

.

• • • .v

: ..
—■ --t

'*■

■

r*J

:'v.

V

•

••

i

■ r.

•

l-V-

/

?3

«F
ffl

.,■■•■

:I

r-'
'■*

0
1

V
r

•' -• .........

-••'••
•• v

* •;

.

r~

v'i:

•F.

« --

^imm
75

��TENNIS
i
li.

It;

.

.
!

'nIVwSAW--

$

:

I:

.

.
'
*
;

77

��TRACK &amp; FIELD

Shotput
R. Bruss

Hurdles
C. Seaborn
B. Allen

Relays
D. Marble
B. Wooten
P. Purdy
C. Knox
E. Haessler
G. Amerson

79

�Pole Vaulting
F. Ellis
J. Stipe

High Jump
E. Heassler
W. Bean
Javelin
W. Bean
S. Cuffel
R. Bruss
C. Seaborn

Discus
R. Bruss
Long Distance Relays
T. Anderson
J. Dorsey
T. Livingstone
J. Marcy

�t

!

OUTDOORSMAN CLUB
i

u

!: *

r

4

i
It

■

II

■

81

|

r

�SKI TEAM

The ski team this year made a good showing, considering the number of racers and their
experience. This year, the ski team was composed of nine people; five boys and four girls,
three of whom had never raced before. The team raced against some thirty-five member
teams, and the competition was tough.
The ski team consisted of Ed Sammons, Tucker Livingstone, Kannes Noack, Paul Gerhardt,
Tim Magenis, Brooke Ramsden, Karen Noack, Tami Lake, and Sarah Livingstone.
A lot of people don't realize how much is involved in a ski race. It is much more than just
skiing down the course; it involves a state of mind, as well as a physical condition and the de­
termination to make a commitment to a lot of hard work. This year our ski team made quite
an accomplishment in doing these things.

�!
!
,
'
■

;

I

i

;

|l:

I

���ASSEMBLIES 1970-1971

r
rr

3
Frank Ivancie

Bob Benedict

Gerry Rubenow

Maggie Barclay

Doug Leedy

Gil Staender

Jose' Vasquez
Robin Rubenstein

�87

��ARTS FESTIVAL
WEEK
MARCH 6-14

�I
1

��DANCES

i

��r

//

v

'1

y

/

&gt;y. /

-

X

dorms

a
l

hJ
1

n

ri
■

!. ..

7

! ilia
i i! iii

'V:

'

pry*

k

m

C?Hf

Wmf

V.

i

■

'

•

/

ti

; y

}

s

-

’'

-

■

����STUDENT COUNCIL
In the face of the difficulties presented by the initiation of co-education, this year's student government has per­
formed with admirable efficiency. This success can be interpreted as services provided for the Student Body.
We have focused attention to the need for more student activities and to the responsibility of the Halls to the com­
munity. Thusly, the school has enjoyed more dances, dorm-parties, and movies than ever before. And through
scrupulous management, the bookstore has been kept replete with articles of interest. Additionally in 1970-71,
the Student Council has financially sponsored the Hall's first Debate team. Another valuable and worthwhile ac­
tivity has been the involvement of O. E.S. in the Youth Tutoring Youth Program. Through this, our students tu­
tored younger, grammar school aged children each afternoon in Albina. This was a rewarding experience for
both.
Much of our achievement is ascribable to the leadership of Charles Holden, our Student Body President, and
the sagacious advice of Mr. David Hursty, this year's Student Council Advisor. Indeed each of the eight coun­
cil members played their particular roles well. Together we have been a productive and effective team.

Charles Holden, Student Body President

98

�?

}

;

iI

;

I:

i •

!

i

i!

i

!

w

99

�\

�I

1

disciplinar y committee
Witness above those burdened with the onerous responsibility of administering discipline to our
community. Certainly not a popular job in a school of today.
This is the fourth year of operation for the Student-Faculty Disciplinary Committee, The concept for such a committee originated with Mr. Leech during his year as Headmaster of Bishop
Dagwell Hall. A similar committee was instituted a year later in St. Helen's Hall; and with the
advent of coeducation during our current academic session, a single group, with Mr. Wood as
chairman, serves all students, grades seven through twelve.
The Committee has reached maturity in its fourth year. It functions effectively as an advisor
to the facult}' on matters of discipline and serves as the communications link between faculty and
students. Neither function was envisioned by the instigators and both have developed as a result
of the constructive and determined approach of student and faculty members.
The Committee continues to deal out punishment where necessary and to evaluate and rethink
procedures to strengthen its operation.

I

111
iI

if

II
)

Hi
Not Pictured - Mr. Wood, Ben Critchlow

1

101

f
:

�THM-Uim

.

In its third year of publication, the Hallmark entered a period of change. In the first two
years the newspaper grew from nothing to a six-page extravaganza. This year the budget
brought us back down to four pages, but they were four pages packed with articles.
I think that the Hallmark became more refined and professional looking this year with the
help of the assistant editors Chris Birkmeyer and Carrie Sammons. With greater balance
between boys and girls, the staff did a good job of representing the opinions of the school.
From the responses in the form of letters to the editor and verbal communication with me,
I know that the Hallmark was read and looked for with anticipation; and if a newspaper stirs
up comment, as often the Hallmark did, well, that’s all right, that's what a newspaper is for.
Kathy Reynolds
Editor, The Hallmark

102

�I
I

YEARBOOK STAFF
■

t

!

|

1971 Legend-Delphic Staff
Editor: Beth Walter
Business Manager: C. R. Duffie
Advertising Manager: Rachel Barnes
Advertising Staff: Mark Schlesinger
Art: Tami Lake
Lay-Out Staff: Gay Burnie, Robin Storey, Sallie Thomas,
Melanie Poss, Kim Bishop, Kannes Noack,
Shannon Fears, Carolyn Gazeley, Chris
Trewhella, Leann Correa, Nell Dunlap, and
Anne Ellis.
Photography Staff: C. R. Duffie and Mark Schlesinger
Staff Writers: Anne Ellis and Ed Sammons
Advisor: Mrs. Wilcox

II
h
IM

.

103

:

�DRAMA TICS

This year under the supervision of a new teacher, Mr. Gerald Merryman, the Dramatics
Department produced two plays. These were MURDER IN THE CATHEDRAL, in December and
BLACK COMEDY in the spring. While these plays were completely different in nature, they
were equally demanding of the cast and the director.
MURDER IN THE CATHEDRAL is about the death of Thomas-a-Becket and of his becoming a
martyr. This play was full of terror and suspense. The chorus acted as the common people of
the town, while the main characters were portrayed individually. The spring play, BLACK
COMEDY took place mostly in the dark. This play was very amusing because of the fact that the
power had gone off in London when many important visitors were coming to see Brinsley, the main
character of the play.
Mr. Merryman gained the love of his students as a teacher and director, by his gentle manner
and genuine enthusiasm. We owe the success of our productions this year to Mr. Merryman,
and we would like to sincerely thank him.

104

�Murder in the Cathedral

Cast of Characters
Archbishop Thomas a Becket
Tempters

Knights Reginald Fitz Urse
William de Traci
Hugh de Morville
Richard Brito
Priests

Attendants

Chorus

Charles Holden
Jon Glenn
Steve Allen
Dave Marble
Mark Bocek
Charles Seaborn
Norval Sheppard
Trenton Morrow
Shannon Fears
Jarrett Dorsey
Art Bruce
Bruce Jackson
Steve Cuffel
Marshall Spencer
Sandra Stronko
Rebecca Meyer
Marion Halbenz
Janet Buck
Rebecca Hoff
Janet McGrew
Marie Motschman
Rachel Barnes
Beth Walter

!

i

ill'

iff

105

�i-f.v

RHP
Si

BLACK COMEDYmr&amp;
*

by Peter Shaffer

A Comedy in One Act

-■v*

mm-:

Directed by Gerald G. Merryman
Student Director, Charles Seaborn

Place: The London apartment of Brindsley Miller
a young sculptor.
Time: About 9:30 in the evening, the present.

m

■'tm

Cast (in order of their appearance)
Brindsley Miller, a young struggling sculptor
Carol Melkett, his debutante fiancee
Miss Furnival, a neighbor spinster lady
Colonel Melkett, CaroPs father
Harold Gorringe, Brindsley's neighbor
Clea, Brindsley's former mistress
Schuppanzigh, electrician, a German refugee
Georg Bamberger, millionaire art collector

Art Bruce
Gay Burnie
Irolyn Gazeley

ferval Sheppard
Steve Cuffel
Karen Randall
Steve Cox
John Marcy

�107

�SEPl: '•■-■I ’'

�I

P
H
O

T
O
C

L
U
B

The members of the photo club have been going on field trips this year. We have ventured to
the Forecourt Fountain late last year. With the pictures taken there the club had its first exhibit.
Mr. Nelson, the club's advisor, has been helping the members with new techniques in developing
and printing. The club has plans for another excursion to Burnside and another exhibit before the
year is over. This year the club has been a great success, and we hope that it will continue for
years to come.

Advisor
Mr. Nelson

&gt;
109

�(
it?1

BOARDERS’ COUNCIL

The Boarders' Council was formed to plan weekend activities for the resident student, and
to make suggestions to the administration as to improvements which could be made in board­
ing life. The council, in its first coeducational year, has performed with admirable success,
in arousing interest in attending movies, sports events such as hockey and basketball games,
and rock concerts, along with trips downtown. Many changes have been made in the rules
pertaining to boarders, to the relief of many of the students.
The council consists of the Directors of Residence, Mr. Weber and Miss Fass, the presi­
dent, Carolyn Gazeley, whose efforts and hard work have made the council what it is pres­
ently, and four representatives from the boarders. There are two girls and two boys, a boy
and a girl from the seventh, eighth and ninth grades, and two from the tenth, eleventh and
twelfth grades, who are elected each term. The council had done its job with all the mem­
bers working as a fairly effective group. Hopefully, the Boarders' Council will continue to
function as a means to convey to the administration the wishes of the students in regard to
the boarding department.

^

!

110

�I

MONITORS
■

i ■ -M $

Brad Allen, John Marcy, Trenton Morrow

Deb Allen
Patti Johnson
Marilynn Rose

111

�FENCING

The fencing group this year has been quite active. There are many beginners, more than
usual. Earlier this year there was a class of about twelve taught by Mr. Manley. Chuck
Knox has continued to fence after beginning in this class. In March, a new group started.
This Freshman group, under the direction of Mrs. Klink, an alumna of the St. Helen's Hall
Junior College, numbers twenty-four. Gillian Hobbs, Gay Burnie, and Janet McGrew assist
with this class, in addition to their fencing lessons.
Gillian and Janet have been fencing in competitions regularly since the start of the year
with a Y.W.C.A. tournament. Competitions have continued to be held with both girls usu­
ally placing well. One example is the Oregon Division Under-19 Womens' Foil. Janet
placed second, and Gillian third, thus both are eligible to go to the Pacific Coast Sectionals
being held in Los Angeles this May. Fencing has had a lot of enthusiasm this year at the
Halls.

112

�I

.

ART-LIT MAGAZINE
;

The Art and Literature Magazine is produced every year under the guidance of Miss Richardson.
The club consists of Andy Dappen, Anne Ellis, Christopher Birkmeyer, Marty Landeen and Doug
Wysham. This magazine is comprised of creative writings such as poems, short stories, art
work, and photographs. All of these works are submitted by the students of O. E. S. and the
magazine is organized by the members of the club. This magazine provides an enjoyable pas­
time for all the students, and we hope that it will continue for years to come.

(

!!
[r
113

�GIRLS’ ATHLETIC ASSOCIATION
B8S!

. *Lnctf X'lfOn .f
I/ilqvvi''*'
[S-JM.uk
*" 5»J

^ !

r!&lt;■

-.7

sWjte

:

u-v.ir-. /
-&amp;-

A7
;■••• ••

- i itii.

1

&gt;A&lt;

i*

Samidbij A\.uj NV *1

v
/%&gt;
c
kto- •t''1

A,

AA
:
■} M

I

: tV
u*« S

'U...
!

I

t

i

m~Y 2iv\i
&lt;AJl

j

Each year The Athletic Association is formed to provide some extracurricular activities
dealing with sports for the girls of the Oregon Episcopal Schools. Every girl is a member
of the association, but requirements, such as a certain amount of points, are needed to make
the girls voting members. These points are gained by the girls attending extracurricular acti­
vities, being in the activity, or attending some activities. Activities that have been set up are:
volleyball, basketball, grass hockey, and the exhilarating game, floor hockey. The purpose
of such sports is to promote a feeling of true school spirit and fair play, coupled with good
sportsmanship.
The Girls' Athletic Association is self supporting. For the last two years, it has set up the
concessions stand in the gym, selling candy and pop at the basketball games and wrestling
matches.
With the money the Association earns, it helps to buy athletic equipment for the gym that
would ordinarily not be bought, thus helping many other athletic groups. Last year the Assoc­
iation saved $150.00 that will be applied to some new equipment for next year. Also uni­
forms for the girls on school teams will be bought.
All in all, the Association has had an exciting existence, planning games and running the
concessions stand, helping to bring out the hidden spirit that runs deep in each of us.

L'

114

�r
:
i

I

'
I
I
i

ERRATA n

This year’s staff has decided to keep up the tradition of "Errata.” If any of the pic­
tures in this annual seem to be out of proportion, crooked, out of focus or overdevelop­
ed, you need glasses. Oh! You already wear glasses; well maybe they are dirty.
Please excuse any misplaced pages; this was caused by a mix-up between your viva­
cious staff and the publisher. And last but not least, we do regret that we did not have
enough pages to include girls’ athletics, this we hope will be remedied by next year’s
staff. Amidst all these errors we did have a few good points. This year we had a staff
that was willing to work and we did try harder.

The Staff

115

�rr~

meditation

• • ' :
.

w

r

V h
X

--

'S

**«
■/:

,

4
*

i
I

116

/

\

;.v
jS£S?‘

4-

V:

��STUDENTS

*

■

I

~"3i
r-----

r
w.

*

7

�\

-I

'
■

'
f
5

:
i

:

i-

im

igflp*:

t §p»r

WS&amp;
pigg

M
I?*
-v«-

—.’•' t r V ^

j
^ «■ ■
■

*

&lt;

- -'
.-

y

--

*.2

«* ■ i

*■&gt;

■''”

-,,i".^’

&gt;

• ■”•

».-.r

-.■Ar

"**•

' ^-4

-■**•*•

�:v

■-F?
- . ft;i -s

�I

FACULTY

r

K.

r;-

!!

-

v V.
‘

m

'•

si

f;

121

�I
.

I

!
|

w
:
'

$

122

�I

Sponsors

D. F. Allen
W. Bean Jr.
Guy E. Marcy
Mrs. Mark P. Miller
Sue T. Noack
Mrs. Guy Storey

�*

THE DIRECTION
OF YOUR DREAMS

;

-r

Youth is a time for building. A time for planning, setting
and challenging new directions. It is a time for solidifying
dreams and a time for striving to reach predetermined
goals. In youth energy abounds, setting itself squarely
into the pathway of life.
?
As the famous Henry Thoreau said.
“If one advances confidently in the direction of his
dreams and endeavors to live the life which he has
imagined, he will meet with a success unexpected
in common hours."
And so, as you linger in the youth of your life... advance
confidently in the direction of your dreams and meet
success unexpected.

Frank E. McCaslin
President

OREGON PORTLAND
CEMENT COMPANY

Our Compliments
to the Class
of 1971
Oregon Transfer
Company
124

�Board of
Trade Building
Portland, Ore. 97204
Telephone: 226-2392

oiio

no

y

Insurance
selection
that gives you
more for less.

Insurance selection
that
gives you
more for less.
CERTAINLY---- YOU 1LL HAVE TO LEARN TO
MANAGE MONEY SOME DAY.

WHAT BETTER TIME
A U.S.

THAN DURING YOUR LEARNING YEARS.
BANK SPECIAL CHECKING ACCOUNT IS

IDEAL FOR

YOUR HIGH SCHOOL AND COLLEGE YEARS.

YOUR

NAME AND ADDRESS PRINTED FREE ON EACH CHECK.

CHECK WITH US!

UNITED STATES NATIONAL BANK OF OREGON
RALEIGH HILLS BR.

P.O. BOX

25290

MEMBER FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION

ms LEADERS
IN THE

distinctive
uniforms
imaginative new styles ... a wide
/

selection of fabrics. Let Dennis design

KENTUCKY FRIED CHICKEN
KENTUCKY BEEF SANDWICHES
H. SALT ESQ. FISH &amp; CHIPS
zj£?

a uniform especially for you.

Perfect for parties, picnics and peppy gatherings
ALL OWNED AND MANAGED BY

H
31 LOCATIONS TO SERVE YOU
See Yellow Pages

Dennis Uniform Manufacturing Co.
135 S.E. Hawthorne Blvd.
Portland, Oregon 97214 503/234-5203
5

it
125

�Mail-Wei I
ENVELOPE CO.

Has envelopes for your every
business need
Plus these helpful services

effective

money

up-to-date

envelopes

direct

saving

for

mail

systems
envelopes

postage
information

packaging

innovation
of new
envelopes

cost

creative
art

cutting
envelope

service

surveys

Mail-Well envelope co. / Pak-Well paper products co. / Oregon divisions of

"FASTEST HOMESELLERS"
44 years of service

v

NORTHEAST SALES OFFICE

ADMINISTRATIVE OFFICES

3500 N. E. 82ND AVENUE

6410 S. E. MILWAUKIE AVENUE
PORTLAND. OREGON 97202
PHONE 234-9341

PORTLAND. OREGON 97220

Homes

PHONE 254-6511

OAK GROVE SALES OFFICE

BEAVERTON SALES OFFICE
526 N. W. CANYON ROAD
BEAVERTON, OREGON 97005

14690 S. E. MclOUGHLIN BLVD.

Acreage

(IN FRED MEYER SHOPPING CENTER)
MILWAUKIE. OREGON 97222

PHONE 646-9646

COMMERCIAL SALES OFFICE
8219 N. E. FREEMONT STREET

PHONE 659-1551

Commercial

PORTLAND, OREGON 97220
PHONE 255-4450

MILWAUKIE SALES OFFICE

SOUTHEAST SALES OFFICE
6410 S. E. MILWAUKIE AVENUE
PORTLAND, OREGON 97202

Income

PHONE 234-9341

TIGARD SALES OFFICE

2036 MONROE STREET

11577 S. W. PACIFIC HIGHWAY

MILWAUKIE, OREGON 97222

(IN FRED MEYER SHOPPING CENTER)

PHONE 654-5494

TIGARD, OREGON 97242
PHONE 639-7636

i

“SERVICE SINCE 1926”
126

�KNOW'S
American Linen Supply

xx/t pays to keep clean".
Congratulations For 1970
Best Wishes For 1971
"a Friend"

Congratulations and Best Wishes From

'VtflAL

N. Killingsworth • Gateway
Phone (503) 285-0505

Mr. and Mrs. Ellsworth D. Purdv

127

�Broughton
Lumber Co.
UNDERWOOD, WASHINGTON

98651

LUMBER FLUME FROM
WILLARD, WASHINGTON,
DROPS

1000 FEET IN

9 MILES
S INCE

TO UNDERWOOD,

1923.

Bollons &amp; PosS/ Inc. Realtors
INDUSTRIAL
COMMERCIAL

w'

903

Y EON BUILDING

522 S .

W, 5TH AVENUE

Portland, Oregon

97204

227-2534

Miller’s Sanitary Service
6812 S. W. 36th Ave.
Portland. Oregon 97219
244-4253

638-5851
COMPLETE REFUSE SERVICE
Multnomah - Garden Home - Metzger - Progress

128

�r.

1

Upper and Lower Bowls
Open - Three Chairlifts Tues. thru Sat. ’til 10 P.M.

129

�RIDE RADIO CAB
:

CApitol 7-1212
I
i

!

WITH

SINCERE

BEST

WISHES

from All of Us at
1
i

RADIO CAB
Best Wishes
Class of 1971

1

Sam
Johnson

130

�•5

Compliments of
Canteen Company
:
:

of
Oregon

KEEP ON

TRUCKIN'!

JONI, SARAH, SALLIE AND GAV

�SENIOR ACTIVITIES
Brad Allen - Varsity Track, Varsity Soccer, Monitor.
Debbie Allen - National Honor Society, Volleyball, Ski Club, Fencing, Field Hockey, Debate Team,
Vestry, Yearbook Staff, Teacher's Aid: Chemistry, Glee Club, and Senior Proctor.
Margie Anderson - Boarders council, Student Council Representative, Dramatics, Volleyball,
Fencing and Ski Club.

:
:

Cynthia Baker - Sophomore Class Secretary, Red Cross, Yearbook Staff, Girls' Athletic Commis­
sion Treasurer, Tutoring, Volleyball, Fencing (State'Award), Rally Squad.
Rachel Barnes - Freshman Class Secretary, Red Cross, Rally Squad, Ski Club, Fencing, Modern
Dance, Yearbook Staff, Dramatics.
Randy Bruss - Spanish Award, Vestry, Drama, Varsity Track (State B Champion), Lettermen's
Club.
C. R. Duffie - Freshman Class Secretary, Vestry, Lettermen’s Club, Dramatics, Yearbook Staff
(Business Manager), J. V. Soccer, Wrestling, Varsity Lacrosse Manager, Outdoorsmen Club, Newspaper Photographer, Photography Club.
Shannon Fears - Vestry, Junior Class Secretary, Yearbook Staff, Hallmark Staff, J. V. Soccer,
Lacrosse, Dramatics.
Ann Foland - Sportmanship Award, Biology Award, Girls' Athletic Association, Yearbook Staff,
Art and Literature Club, Red Cross, Volleyball, Field Hockey.
Carolyn Gazeley - National Honor Society, French Award, Boarders Council President, Hallmark
Staff, Yearbook Staff, Girls' Athletic Association, Volleyball, Ski Club, Teacher's
Aid in Math.
Ed Haessler - Vestry, Lettermen's Club, Varsity Track, Varsity Basketball, Varsity Cross
Country, J. V. Soccer.

W

Marion Halbenz - American Field Service Student, Hallmark Staff, Dramatics.

■

Su Hillesland - Freshman Class President, Rally Squad.

;
;

Charles Holden - Student Body President, Dramatics, Hallmark Staff, Soccer (Manager), Varsity
Track (Manager), J. V. Crosscountry, J. V. Wrestling.

!

John Hottman - J. V. Soccer, J. V. Basketball.

!
Anita Jackson - Junior Class Secretary, Tutor, Yearbook Staff, Girls' Athletic Association, Volley­
ball, Fencing.
Pranee Jantarach - Red Cross

132

�;•
:

Mary Jean Johnson - Pep Club, Girls' Athletic Association, Student Council, Drama Club, Foreign
Language Club, Ski Club, Tutor, Volleyball.
Patti Johnson - Ski Club Secretary, Disciplinary Committee, Senior Proctor, Fencing Club, Junior
Class President, Ski Team, Volleyball, Girls'Athletic Association, Teacher's Aid in
Chemistry.
Osama Kabbani - Varsity Soccer.
Cris Karafotias - Sophomore Class Treasurer, Hallmark Staff, Varsity Soccer, Varsity Lacrosse.

:
Martin Landeen - Varsity Wrestling (Captain), Lettermen's Club, Outdoorsmans Club President,
Varsity Soccer, Lacrosse, Basketball.

i

Debbie LeBeck - Girls' Athletic Association, Gymnastics.
John Marcy - Citizenship Award, Varsity Track (Captain), Varsity Basketball (Manager), Varsity
Cross Country, Drama, Lettermen's Club, Monitor, Debate Club.
Janet McGrew - National Honor Society, Art and Literature Club, Girls' Athletic Association, Red
Cross, Volleyball, Fencing, Field Hockey.
Trenton Morrow - Science Award, Disciplinary Committee, Junior Class President, Student Council
Representative, Hallmark Staff (Assistant Editor), Drama, Monitor, J. V. Basketball,
J. V. Soccer, Cross Country, Lacrosse, Track.
Karen Randall - Drama, Tutoring, Red Cross, Yearbook Staff.
Kathy Reynolds - Denton Pin Award, History Award, Latin Award, Vice President of Student Coun­
cil, Assistant Editor of Hallmark, Editor of the Hallmark, Volleyball, Fencing, Ski
Club.
Fred Russell - J. V. Soccer, J. V. Basketball.
Liz Sessions - Volleyball.
Marshall Spencer - French Award, Advisory Board, Student Council, Dramatics, Varsity Soccer,
Varsity Lacrosse.
Jim Stipe - Varsity Track, Varsity Basketball.
Chris Trewhella - Girls' Athletic Association, Fencing, Volleyball, Field Hockey.
Sumalee Vatanavoraluk - Art Award, Student Council, Hospital Worker, Volleyball.
Beth Walter - Boarders Council Vice President, S. H. H. Advisory Board, Girl of the Month,
Boarders Council, Dramatics, Volleyball, Hospital Worker, Editor of the Yearbook.
Bryant Wooten - Latin Award, Monitor, Lettermen's Club, Tutor, Varsity Track, Varsity Soccer,
Wrestling.

133

�OREGON EPISCOPAL SCHOOLS STUDENT BODY
Allen, Bradley................
Allen, Deborah............
Allen, Steve.....................
Amerson, Greg..............
Anderson, Margie____
Anderson, Terry..........
Arnold, Osa.....................
Baker, Cynthia..............
Barnes, Rachel..............
Bean, Warren.................
Berl, Joan.......................
Bice, Karen.....................
Birkmeyer, Chris___
Bishop, Kim................ .
Bocek, Mark................ .
Bogue, Nancy...............
BokemeLer, Joan.........
Brown, Lance................
Bruce, Art.......................
Brunell, Cliff..-...........
Brass, Randy................
Brustad, Susan..............
Buck, Janet...................
Bullwinkle, Martha ...
Burnie, Cay.................. .
Carrasco, Claudia
Caswell, Laurie...........
Cheatham, Sallie......... .
Church, Catherine
Coffey, John....................
Combs, JPerri Ann
Correa, Leann................
Cox, Steve.......................
Crawley, John................
Critchlow, Ben..............
Critchlow^, Mary Helen
Cuffel, Stephen..............
Curren, Timothy............
Dappen, Andy..................
Davis, Loanne................
del Valle,. Christina...
Deming, Blaine..............
Disney, Gina..................
Domini, Donald..............
Dorsey, J arrett..............
Dougherty-, Joan............
Duffie, Cornelius..........
Dunlap, N'ell.....................
Ellis, Fred.......................
Ellis, Anne.......................
Ellis, Liz ..........................
Ellis, Juli a........................
Erensel, Brent..............
Fears, Shannon..............
Finlay, Ka.thleen............
Fish, Karen......................
Foland, Aran.....................
Foster, Dan.....................
Fuller, Thema................
Gazeley, C arolyn..........
George, Lynea................
Gerhardt, }Paul..............
Gillet, Tracy......... ...... ..
Glenn, Jon............................
Glinden, Debi....................
Green, Jacqueline............
Griswold, Evelyne ....
Gross, Lise.......................

134

............1704 West Henry........................
............P. O. Box 126.............................
............P. O. Box 126.............................
............2606 N.E. 9th Ave....................
............5229 Louise Ave........................
............109 Abbott Dr...............................
............ 3543 S. W. Troy St. , Apt. 16
............3015 S. Cherokee St..................
............ 1078 Hammock St..................... .
............ 6808 Englewood Ter................
............P. O. Box 66..................................
............5108 W. Lincoln.........................
............ 4708 34th N.E..............................
............ 654 S. W. Burlingame Ter. . ,
........... 1012 Hilltop Dr..............................
........... 11519 S.W. Breyman Ave... .
............ 6243 S. W. 36th............................
........... 8330 N. Chautauqua..................
........... 7780 S.W. Mayo..........................
............ 1450 Hillside Ter.......................
............ 9995 S.W. Cypress St..............
........... 1066 North Shore.......................
......... 217 So. Modoc..............................
......... 4437 S. W. Twombly Ave ....
............827 S. W. Moss St......................
............Cia. Prodac..................................
............2212 S. Glenmorrie Lane... .
............12526 S. W. Edgecliff Rd____
............10943 S.W. Collina Ave...........
............7245 S.W. Ridgemont St____
............647 S. E. Andover PI..................
............Route 3, Box 243 .........................
............Brent School.................................
............4914 S.W. 39th Dr......................
............1017 W. Kennewick Ave...........
........... 1017 W. Kennewick Ave...........
........... 4927 S.W. Elm Lane.................
........... 78 Willis St.....................................
........... 4710 W. Glenhaven Dr.............
........... 7750 S.W. Montclair Dr...........
............4317 S.W. Bernard Dr..............
............2682 N. W. Cornell Rd.............
............3910 S. W. Beaverton Ave .. ..
........... 4819 N.E. 34th Ave...................
........... 3610 No. Houghton......................
........... 3609 S. W. Santa Monica Ct. ..
........... 2989 S. W. Montgomery Dr . . .
........... 1519 21st...........................................
............406 Briar Rd..................................
............406 Briar Rd..................................
..........406 Briar Rd..................................
......... P. O. Box 764..................................
......... Box 495.............................................
..........2300 S.W. Seymour Dr.............
..........1313 Brown Ave. #134.................
......... Route 2, Box 163-A.. ...... .
..........451 N. W. Skyline Blvd................
..........4123 N.E. 31st Ave.....................
..........Route 1, Box 1058........................
..........390 Tower St...................................

....... 10315 S.E. 82nd Ave..............
........4240 S.W. Altadena Ave........
....... Route 1, Box 398......................
......... Cranguyma Farms.......................
..........6441 Mokelumne Ave..................
..........185 Wilkes Dr..................................
..........6300 S.W. Nicol Rd.....................
..........1555 Franklin Ave.........................

.Pasco, Washington 99301
.Clatskanie, Oregon 97016
.Clatskanie, Oregon 97016
.Portland, Oregon 97212
.Encino, California 91316
.Mountain Home, Idaho 83647
.Portland, Oregon 97219
.Englewood, Colorado 80110
.Eugene, Oregon 97401
.Yakima, Washington 98902
.McKenzie Bridge, Oregon 97401
.Yakima, Washington 98902
.Seattle, Washington 91805
.Portland, Oregon 97201
.Yakima, Washington 98902
.Portland, Oregon 97219
. Portland, Oregon 97221
.Portland, Oregon 97217
.Portland, Oregon 97223
.Coos Bay, Oregon 97420
.Beaverton, Oregon 97005
, Lake Oswego, Oregon 97034
.Medford, Oregon 97501
.Portland, Oregon 97201
Portland, Oregon 97219
Antofagasta, Chile
, Lake Oswego, Oregon 97034
Portland, Oregon 97219
Portland, Oregon 97219
Portland, Oregon 97225
Portland, Oregon 97202
Shelton, Washington 98584
Baguio City, Philipinnes b-202
Portland, Oregon 97221
Kennewick, Washington 99336
Kennewick, Washington 99336
Portland, Oregon 97221
Richland, Washington 99352
Everett, Washington 98201
Portland, Oregon 97225
Portland, Oregon 97201
Portland, Oregon 97210
Portland, Oregon 97201
Portland, Oregon 97211
Portland, Oregon 97217
Portland, Oregon 97221
Portland, Oregon 97201
Longview, Washington 9S632
Bellingham, Washington 98225
Bellingham, Washington 98225
Bellingham, Washington 98225
Blue Jay, California 92317
Noxon, Montana 59853
Portland, Oregon 97201
.Yakima, Washington 98902
Hillsboro, Oregon 98123
Portland, Oregon 97229
Portland, Oregon 97211
Beaverton, Oregon 97005
North Bend, Oregon 97450
Portland, Oregon 97226
Portland, Oregon 97201
Lake Stevens, Washington 98258
Long Beach, Washington 98631
Oakland, California 94605
Eugene, Oregon 97402
Portland, Oregon 97223
Astoria, Oregon 97103

�Haessler, Ed..................
Halbenz, Marion............
Harlow, Scott................
Hashimoto, Takashi__
Heitmeyer, Pam..........
Hillesland, Susan........
Hingorani, Naren........
Hobbs, Gillian..............
Hoff, Rebbeca..............
Holden, Charles............
Holden, Jenny..............
Honneyman, Jeff..........
Honeyman, Jane..........
Horst, George................
Hottman, John................
Howell, Tom..................
Howell, Teddi................
Jackson, Anita..............
Jackson, Bruce............
James, Sally,................
Janney, Philip..............
Jantarach, Prance........
Johnson, Elizabeth ....
Johnson, Janelle............
Johnson, Terry..............
Johnson, Mary Jean....
Johnson, Patricia,........
Joseph, Amy..................
Jue, Laurie....................
Kabbani, Osama............ .
Karafotias, Chris........ .
Kirkpatrick, Michael ...
Knox, Charles ) I I I
Krueger, Kay.
Lake, Tami...
Landeen, Martin ...
Larsen, Harold........
LeBeck, Deborah ...
Leech, Amy..............
Lilley, Elizabeth ...
Livingstone, Tucker
Livingstone, Sarah .
Love, Lacy..............
Lucas, Julie............ .
Maeda, Laura........ .
Magenis, Tim..........
Marble, David..........
Marcy, John..............
McCaslin, Robert...
McGrew, Janet........
McMurtry, Dan___
Meyer, Michele___
Meyer, Carol............
Meyer, Rebecca ....
Miller, Van..............
Miller, Max............
Miller, Miles..........
Moersch, Bill.......... .
Montague, Ellen____
Morrisette, Nancy...
Morrow, Trenton....
Mosher, James........
Motschman, Marie..
Moulton, Pamelle...
Noack, Kannes........
Noack, Karen............
Page, Barbara..........
Page, Robert............
Palmer, Cheri..........
Parker, Holly..........

........ Diamond Head........................
........ Patthorst 309 .........................
.......... 326 4th St. , Apt. 905...........
.......... 4-7-15 Azufawa Itabashi-ku
.......... 7137 S. W. Vermont Ct .. ..
.......... 6312 No. Oberlin..................
.......... 4307 N. E. Flanders St.........
.......... 737 N. W. Powhatan Ter....
.......... Horseshoe Bend......................
.......... 1330 S. W. Orinda Way.........
.......... 1330 S. W. Orinda Way.........
.......... 5730 S. W. 70th. . ...................
.......... 5730 S. W. 70th........................
........ Star Route, Box 340 ..............
........ Box 375......................................
........ 1225 Lake Garden Ct............
..... .1225 Lake Garden Ct.............
.......... P. O. Box 488.........................
.......... P. O. Box 55...........................
.......... 1726 N. W. 138th...................
.......... 7920 S. E. Reed College PI .
.......... 990-992 New Rd.....................
.......... 2801 S. W. Patton Lane ....
........ 7145 S.E. Reed College PI .
........ 494 N. W. Skyline Crest. . . .
........ 2043 Center Ave....................
........ P. O. Box 356..........................
.......... 7110 S. E. 29th Ave...............
. _____6915 S.W. 15th Ave..............
.......... Ministry of Defense.............
.......... 5385 S. W. Humphrey........... .
..........3360 S.W. Ridgewood Ave .,
........ 5223 S.W. 19th Dr...............
........ 1311 Warm Springs Ave.. ..
........ 2130 S.W. 21st Ave...............
........ 1019 Woodlawn Ave................
........ 3963 Noela Place...................
........ .Route 1, Box 16A..................
........ 7235 S. W. Hunt Club Lane .
........ 1736 S.W. Prospect Dr........
........ 2577 N.W. Westover Rd___
........ 2577 N.W. Westover Rd----........ P.O. Box 302...........................
........ P.O. Box 6206........................
........ 1536 S. E. 21st Ave................
........ 3251 N. E. Alameda Ter . . . ,
........ 8 So. 79th Ave..........................
........ 2112 St. Helens........................
........ 217 S. Modoc............................
........ Long Creek................................
........ 801S S.E. Reed College PI.
........ 3338 43rd N. E.........................
........ 8036 S. W. Valley View Ct ..
........ 8036 S. W. Valley View Ct ..
........ 8125 S.W. 89th.........................
........ P.O. Box 234............................
........ 1610 Clifton St..........................
........ 9660 S.W. Eagle Ct...............
........ 3960 S. W. Wapato Ave...........
........ 3861 American River Dr ... .
........ Star Route.................................
.... 12534 S. W. Iron Mountain.. .
.... 328 East 4th Ave.....................
-----12310 N.W. Maple Hill Ln ..
.... 2740 Laurel Drive..................
■.... 2740 Laurel Drive..................
---- - Route 1, Box 822.....................
.... Route 1, Box 822.....................
.... 2000 Ash Canyon Rd...............
.... 882 No. Shore Rd....................

Lake Oswego, Oregon 97034
4803 Steinhagen, W. Germany
.Juneau, Alaska 99801
. .Tokyo, Japan
.Portland, Oregon 97223
. Portland, Oregon 97203
. Portland, Oregon 97213
.Portland, Oregon 97210
.Idaho 83629
. Portland, Oregon 97225
.Portland, Oregon 97225
.Portland, Oregon 97225
. Portland, Oregon 97225
.Moses Lake, Washington 98837
. Naches, Washington 98937
. Lake Oswego, Oregon 97034
.Lake Oswego, Oregon 97034
, Warm Springs, Oregon 97761
, Mica Creek, B.C., Canada
Portland, Oregon 97229
Portland, Oregon 97202
Bangkok, Thailand
Portland, Oregon 97201
Portland, Oregon 97202
Portland, Oregon 97229
Payette, Idaho 93661
Redmond, Oregon 97756
Portland, Oregon 97202
. Portland, Oregon 97219
Riyadh, Saudi Arabia
Portland, Oregon 97225
Portland, Oregon 97225
Portland, Oregon 97201
Boise, Idaho 83702
Portland, Oregon 97201
Oregon City, Oregon 97045
Honolulu, Hawaii 96S15
West Linn, Oregon 97068
Portland, Oregon 97223
.Portland, Oregon 97201
.Portland, Oregon 97210
Portland, Oregon 97210
Rancho de Taso, N. Mex. S7557
Torrance, California 90504
Portland, Oregon 97214
Portland, Oregon 97212
Yakima, Washington 98902
Yakima, Washington 98902
Medford, Oregon 97501
Oregon 97856
Portland, Oregon 97202
Seattle, Washington 98105
Portland, Oregon 97225
.Portland, Oregon 97225
Portland, Oregon 97223
Forest Grove, Oregon 97116
Portland, Oregon 97201
Beaverton, Oregon 97005
Portland, Oregon 97201
Sacramento, California 95825
Carson, Washington 9S610
Portland, Oregon 97219
Anchorage, Alaska 99501
Portland, Oregon 97229
Sacramento, California 95825
Sacramento, California 95825
Beaverton, Oregon 97005
Beaverton, Oregon 97005
Carson City, Nevada 89701
Lake Oswego, Oregon 97034

;
!

135

�Paterson, Leron............
Pennington, Don............
Pierovich, David............
Poss, Melanie.................
Purdy, Peter...................
Rams den, Brooke..........
Ramsey, Robin..............
Randall, Karyn..............
Reynolds, Kathryn___
Ridgeway, Franzi..........
Ritchi e, Joan...................
Rose, Marilyn.................
Rosenlund, Scott............
Rosenlund, Blair.........
Runstein, Michael..........
Rushing, Richard..........
Russell, Fred................
Russell, Gerald..............
Sammons, Carrie..........
Sammons, Ed...................
Sanford, John..................
Schafer, Joseph..............
Scarbrough, Martha___
Schiewe, Carleen...........
Schlesinger, Mark
Scott, Hila..........................
Seaborn, Charles............
Seaborn, Chris................
Selfridge, Tami..............
Sessions, Elizabeth....
Sessions, Bill...................
Seton, Lynn.......................
Sheppard, Norval............
Sheppard, Sandra............
Smith, Jewel.....................
Smith, Karl.......................
Smith, Paige.....................
Spencer, Marshall..........
Spies, Cheri.....................
Stein, Martha...................
Stevens, Edmund............
Stipe, James...................
Storey, Robin...................
Stronko, Sandra..............
Sylverter, Brian..............
Talbot, Richard.............. .
Thomas, Sally...................
Thompson, Nancy............
Trewhella, Christine ...
Ueland , Joni.......................
Ugrin, Becky.....................
Vatanavoraluk, Sumalee
Waldum, Jon.....................
Wall, William...................
Walter, Beth.....................
Weber, James...................
Weber, John.....................
Wegert, Pam.....................
Westlund, Morris............
Wilkinson, Kenneth ....
Williams , Steve
..........
Winters teen, Sarah ....
Wooten, Bryant.................
Wysham , Douglas.............
Zimmer, Alex.....................
Ross, Thomas.....................
Ropiequet, Suzanne..........
Williams, Brenda...............

1'

136

.11960 S.W. 121st Ave............
• 4th and Highland.........................
.7690 S.W. Stewart St................
.2835 S.E. Tolman................ .. .
. 5909 Buena Vista Dr................
.6708 S. W. Bancroft Way.........
.11375 S.W. Walker Rd............
.6735 S.W. 12th Ave..................
.2025 S.W. Mt. Hood Lane .. .
.2022 S.W. Myrtle St................
.3064 S.W. Fairmoutn..............
.2034 N. E. Hancock...................
.4215 S.W. 47th Dr.....................
.4215 S.W. 47th Dr......................
.3868 N. E. Alameda Dr............
.14370 S.W. Uplands Dr............
. 6622 S. W. Mayo St.....................
.6622 S.W. Mayo St.....................
.01609 S.W. Radcliffe Ct.........
.01609 S.W. Radcliffe Ct..........
.730 Fair Oaks Drive...............
.13540 S.W. Hart Rd..................
.9912 Tunney Ave..........................
. 1248 S. W. Hessler Dr..............
. 01425 S. W. Mary Failing Dr .
.2707 S.E. Boyd St.....................
2715 S.E. 39th..............................
2715 S.E. 39th..............................
2739 S.E. 79th..............................
11880 S.W. Douglas..................
.11880 S.W. Douglas..................
0936 S.W. Palatine Hill Rd. . .
Mountain Village..........................
Mountain Village..........................
Box 5489.........................................
Box 5489.........................................
2023 Crystal Way.......................
5409 S. W. Scholls Ferry Rd .
211 Amauulu Rd..........................
Ill S.W. Harrison, Apt. 23B
3416 S.W. Brentwood Dr..........
. 1300 Prineville Lake Route. ..
. P.O. Box 633................................
.3125 S.W. Florida.....................
.Route 2, Box 1215.......................
.5536 S.W. Hamilton St..............
. Underwood......................................
,936 S.W. Moss............................
.2#550 S.W. Upper Drive...........
, 6228 S. E. Belmont.................. .
, Route 1, Box 173....................... .
.135/24 Suriwongse Rd.............. .
. P.O. Box 337.................................
,7695 S.W. Cedar St...................
,3354 Crest Drive..........................
,2665 S.W. Scenic Drive............
2656 S.W. Scenic Drive............
8232 N. E. Schuyler...................
16842 Alder Circle.....................
8885 S.W. Hi 11view Ter............
Route 1, Box 575..........................
3104 N.E. Academy Ave..........
5621 N.E. 28th.............................
2080 S.W. Warwick Ave............
2804 N. W. Cumberland Rd ...
1775 N. W. 113th Ave..................
7025 S. W. Canyon Road............
Route 1, Box 134..........................

Tigard, Oregon 97223
Coos Bay, Oregon 97420
Portland, Oregon 97223
Portland, Oregon 97202
Vancouver, Washington 98661
Portland, Oregon 97225
Beaverton, Oregon 97005
Portland, Oregon 97219
Portland, Oregon 97201
Portland, Oregon 97201
Portland, Oregon 97201
Portland, Oregon 97212
Portland, Oregon 97221
Portland, Oregon 97221
Portland, Oregon 97212
Lake Oswego, Oregon 97034
Portland, Oregon 97223
.Portland, Oregon 97223
Portland, Oregon 97219
Portland, Oregon 97219
Eugene, Oregon 97401
Beaverton, Oregon 97005
Northridge, California 91324
Portland, Oregon 97201
Portland, Oregon 97219
Milwaukie, Oregon 97202
Portland, Oregon 97202
Portland, Oregon 97202
Portland, Oregon 97206
Portland, Oregon 97225
Portland, Oregon 97225
Portland, Oregon 97219
Alaska 99632
Alaska 99632
College, Alaska 99701
College, Alaska 99701
Boise, Idaho 83706
Portland, Oregon 97223
Hilo, Hawaii 96720
Portland, Oregon 97201
Portland, Oregon 97201
Prineville, Oregon 97754
Lewiston, Idaho 83501
Portland, Oregon 97219
Juneau, Alaska 99801
Portland, Oregon 97221
Washington 98651
Portland, Oregon 97219
Lake Oswego, Oregon 97034
Portland, Oregon 97215
Clackamus, Oregon 97015
Bangkok, Thailand
Lake Oswego, Oregon 97034
Portland, Oregon 97225
Corvallis, Oregon 97330
Portland, Oregon 97225
Portland, Oregon 97225
Portland, Oregon 97220
Lake Oswego, Oregon 97034
Portland, Oregon 97225
Troutdale, Oregon 97060
Portland, Oregon 97220
Portland, Oregon 97211
Portland, Oregon 97225
Portland, Oregon 97210
Portland, Oregon 97229
Portland, Oregon 97225
West Linn, Oregon 97068

�i

I

!

�■

,
'

H

}

�;

.

�‘

■U
:• I

'!

i

: :
.

i!

I
;
'
;

i
i
i

,

i

■

:
'

�■

-•

i

��</text>
                  </elementText>
                </elementTextContainer>
              </element>
            </elementContainer>
          </elementSet>
        </elementSetContainer>
      </file>
    </fileContainer>
    <collection collectionId="1">
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="1">
          <name>Dublin Core</name>
          <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="1">
                  <text>Oregon Episcopal School Yearbooks</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="41">
              <name>Description</name>
              <description>An account of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="2">
                  <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>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="39">
              <name>Creator</name>
              <description>An entity primarily responsible for making the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="3">
                  <text>Oregon Episcopal School</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="45">
              <name>Publisher</name>
              <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="4">
                  <text>Oregon Episcopal School</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="40">
              <name>Date</name>
              <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="5">
                  <text>1921-1923; 1931-1995</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="47">
              <name>Rights</name>
              <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="6">
                  <text>All rights are reserved by Oregon Episcopal School.</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="44">
              <name>Language</name>
              <description>A language of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="7">
                  <text>English</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="51">
              <name>Type</name>
              <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="8">
                  <text>Yearbooks</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="65">
              <name>Conforms To</name>
              <description>An established standard to which the described resource conforms.</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="9">
                  <text>Describing Archives: A Content Standard (DACS)</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="78">
              <name>Extent</name>
              <description>The size or duration of the resource.</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="10">
                  <text>85</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="79">
              <name>Medium</name>
              <description>The material or physical carrier of the resource.</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="11">
                  <text>bound volumes</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="49">
              <name>Subject</name>
              <description>The topic of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="1298">
                  <text>Students</text>
                </elementText>
                <elementText elementTextId="1299">
                  <text>Junior colleges</text>
                </elementText>
                <elementText elementTextId="1300">
                  <text>Junior college students</text>
                </elementText>
                <elementText elementTextId="1301">
                  <text>High school student activities</text>
                </elementText>
                <elementText elementTextId="1302">
                  <text>Student activities</text>
                </elementText>
                <elementText elementTextId="1303">
                  <text>Student publications</text>
                </elementText>
                <elementText elementTextId="1304">
                  <text>Teachers</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </collection>
    <itemType itemTypeId="1">
      <name>Text</name>
      <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    </itemType>
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="78">
            <name>Extent</name>
            <description>The size or duration of the resource.</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="645">
                <text>1</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="79">
            <name>Medium</name>
            <description>The material or physical carrier of the resource.</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="646">
                <text>bound volume</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="647">
                <text>The Legend-Delphic 1971</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="49">
            <name>Subject</name>
            <description>The topic of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="648">
                <text>School yearbooks</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="649">
                <text> Students</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="650">
                <text> High school student activities</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="651">
                <text> Student publications</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="652">
                <text> Teachers</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="653">
                <text>This is an OES yearbook from 1971. 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>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="39">
            <name>Creator</name>
            <description>An entity primarily responsible for making the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="654">
                <text>Oregon Episcopal School</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="40">
            <name>Date</name>
            <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="655">
                <text>1971</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="47">
            <name>Rights</name>
            <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="656">
                <text>All rights are reserved by Oregon Episcopal School.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="44">
            <name>Language</name>
            <description>A language of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="657">
                <text>English</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="43">
            <name>Identifier</name>
            <description>An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="658">
                <text>oes_delphic1971-compressed.pdf</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
    <tagContainer>
      <tag tagId="1">
        <name>School yearbooks; Students; High school student activities; Student publications; Teachers</name>
      </tag>
    </tagContainer>
  </item>
  <item itemId="44" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="45">
        <src>http://archive.oes.edu/files/original/4b23b346ed2a978d898d94717f11c061.pdf</src>
        <authentication>f614f298793ac44dc30d531aa6b32b9a</authentication>
        <elementSetContainer>
          <elementSet elementSetId="4">
            <name>PDF Text</name>
            <description/>
            <elementContainer>
              <element elementId="92">
                <name>Text</name>
                <description/>
                <elementTextContainer>
                  <elementText elementTextId="1050">
                    <text>:.-;

T

triiiij

::

•i;

;i

n:

-r::

; •;

-

_i,

i

;r

1

U;r

mi

:

*'■**&amp;$%
•i'

mM
Jlj'v.l;
’•::

Pill!

n

.

X

n

$

!

I

• i.

I

MMNI

!■

i;is.

in

f

al
•i:

:::*i

;

i

is-

SB!
:

jam

*&lt;*•&gt;!

i.

i;

Silt

tit

.ji;

•v

W-.\
j^aKil

m

11

iiiiSfl Iiteilllif
USIB

.’St

■i
■

mm

UjHgr

■;i;

y:

.

■i-'

•;
if.:*iRi®..,-.
■■tv.:

?S=3~S
:-i“.

Iffi

- jgp nr-rrV-r.^::.-:-ir-

r=s

'• :•

S. - : &gt; . •••:

2isf=isi

KSS35

‘.'rsii

lliliil
iSpffifa
r

ai
1
fe:!i

B

i;!

i

i!S

3
8Kipi

Mi

fj §1 \

m

................. .

■

1

i fm wm

uM

m

I:

l

m

m

■;gsa

■

:

_ :V

i

ftti

'

'j'j
•I

'ij

.w

!:

p|

WM
:irv;.

■

2!

ISSl

HUH

§■
H
in

i!

11-&gt;®iiiliiillliliilS'
1 til

i-'

��'

&lt;V

l

,

v**9
&lt;2^f&gt;»o-—

^,-X Jus^^—

&lt;s

clr'lC5Jv5C

i^AA/V,

CM-y=V

V&lt;CL -^(&gt;A^\A^C^ , 5-VCoca c^
\®&gt;~. o-^ OregonEpiMMipalSchools

7s
&lt;S&gt;

Legend*-Delphic
1969-1970
) -70

�=Tf:
fas
u

^=!

k

' *^ • 2i

ri------%

if

*

/J

. -7

-&lt;

I
7^
■&lt;■

&lt;■

•

;

4

�—

■

i

Q-

^

—

tO

_Q

.O

00
"O
C
a

o
^

a
°
13
~o
aj
o

o

a

o
o

ZD

o
CD

oo

a
o

C
CD

“a

N

CD

CD
"O

X

o

LT&gt;

CD

O

___

to

~a

&lt;D
to

13
O

to

$

a

°
c

o

&gt;-

=

a
c

CD
to

o
O
CD
3
ID

c
CD
uo
CD

uo

a
Q.
O

o

o

£
O

O
O

to

IE .5»
-5.
1UJ
=
CD
$

-Q
CD

03

a

Q

o

c
O
03
CD

O

�r

�V

jP'

■M\

|:;W; P ?
bi/H
■i

A

_M
__ EBHa

3*®-

\ Ji P-B

\

•&gt;.

I

■;

lx

£■

f

W-\ mt !¥ri!

^SPSis
n

i&lt;:, ^ilSpSj
&amp;&amp;$*£

K

■/

!
v

—-

7

��^ u&gt;o^
LV)

ry*

iO\5 KfX^V

5X

e uukiA

£

*} ^
Ok

a
:j

C-*rY*'^t C\jHak&lt;fc

Vcmujuv/e*;i
Ov'kJL Ui

A

9

*n

�c
,3

R

' V.

O

jsgsg
-

' Y&gt;.

s

,.v

m

S

;&lt;s

-■:.

„ ,

c

'

-

■■■/

O

,p|

u
N
T

R
Y

; 5E •

• -&lt; . ~v.

p%-';

•■-

.

&amp;
2r

■•.

MPPKfc*--

v*~

%

JK___
3

The 1969 BDH cross-country squad
showed perhaps the most improve­
ment of any BDH team. They collected
the divisional championship by going
undefeated. The squad downed Catlin
Gabel, Portland Christian, Concordia,
and Jewell for the perfect slate.
■*-

Under coach Clifton Young, the
team bowed out at the regional meet.
They placed second at district and
fourth at regionals.
The cross-country team held pow­
erful talent in Ed Haessler, Fred Ellis,
Jarrett Dorsey, Harold Larsen, Petei.
,£urdy. John Marcy, Stephen Cuffel
and Chris Birkmeyer.

1

A
L

I
I
10
j

�&gt;

i

ilSr- &gt;/

SM5HB*y5
:• -

■&lt;

W n?.X

• .

11

�SOCCER

!

2nd Place — 6-A-Side Tournament
2nd Place — Oktoberfest Tournament
BDH 1, Western Mennonite 3
BDH 3, Mt. Angel 0

i

BDH 2, LaSalle 1

* :

BDH 3, Portland Christian 0

:&gt;

BDH 1, LaSalle 1
BDH 2, Mt. Angel 1

;

BDH 2, Western Mennonite O
BDH 1, Catlin Gabel 2
BDH 0, Catlin Gabel 1
4th Place — P.N.A.I.S. Tournament

f
*

i

The 1969 soccer season was one filled with both the good and the bad. In the end, the Falcons carted off
second place in the Oregon High School League.
The Falcons were perennially second behind the Catlin Gabel Eagles. The Eagles took two pre-season
tournaments from the Falcons and the state championship game itself.
The team swept through Mt. Angel 3-0 and 2-1; LaSalle 2-1; and Western Mennonite 2-0 on their way to a
4-1-1 league record and the division championship. The lone tie came at LaSalle 1-1, with a 3-1 loss at home to
Western Mennonite. The team finished the season 6-6-1.
A playoff berth paid off as the Falcons dumped Portland Christian 3-0 and moved into the title game. The
Falcons lost 1-0 in overtime at Catlin Gabel before nearly 100 Hall students.
Assurance of the South Division championship came with a brilliant 2-0 win over Western Mennonite at the
valley school on October 10. Marshall Spencer’s skyrocketing blast slipped into the cords and that winning goal
tied up the championship of the South. Kris Hatcher’s late goal helped ice the victory.
Hatcher scored twice and right wing Osama Kabbani tallied once as the Falcons slapped Mt. Angel 3-0 on
September 26.
An intense rivalry built up between BDH and A-1 school LaSalle in a vicious home-and-home series. Mike
Russell and Hatcher led the way to a 2-1 home victory September 30. but a late LaSalle goal on October 3 gained
them a 1-1 tie in Milwaukie. Bill Lake, Warren Cox, and Mike Russell were temporarily sidelined with injuries.
Russell took over in goal for Lake October 7 at Mt. Angel and left the goal late in the game to rifle on goal
the winning assist. Kris Hatcher picked up Russell’s rebound and the Falcons won 2-1.
The Falcons breezed through the playoffs with a 3-0 win over Portland Christian on October 24 Kris Hatcher
drove home a 1-0 lead, but the turning point came when Bill Lake turned aside a PCHS penalty shot. Bryant Wooten
and Martin Landeen helped swamp the Royals and the Falcons were in the state title game.
However, Catlin’s 1-0 overtime win kept an unbelievable hex alive.
The team included Kris Hatcher, Osama Kabbani, Bryant Wooten, Greg Amerson, and Harold Larsen at for­
ward positions; Marshall Spencer, Martin Landeen, George Rector. Alan Dappen, and Don Pennington at midfield;
Charles Seaborn, Mike Russell, and Brad Allen on defense; and Bill Lake in goal. The Falcons were aptly guided
by coach John Hicks.

*

yf-

&gt;*

i ,

__.I 1

*
■

i

■

S
.“

&amp;

___
12

�ky.m

r

m&amp;m
.

■

■

i

J

s

r-2'
:i:r :•

•'--V

13

�RALLY SQUAD

i

I

CANDIDATES

5

THE JUDGES

II

I

14

�DORM PARTY and
HALLOWEEN PARTY

15

��s

�r

�w,
■5®

�WRESTLING
BDH 28. Knappa 35
BDH 25, Dayton 40
BDH 28, Corbett 20
BDH 32, MacLaren 15
BDH 26, Sherwood 23
BDH 17, Banks 13
BRH 11, Culver 15
BDH 23, Knappa 33
BDH 21, Sherwood 32
BDH 13, Banks 26
1st Place — Corbett Tournament

The 1969-70 wrestling team, under coach John Hicks, sent Art Bruce and Steve Premo to state and brought
them back both second place winners. The team finished 4-6 with a 1st place finish at the Corbett Tournament.
Premo lost to one-time state champion Bill Cox of Colton while Bruce dropped his title match to David
Tuckness of Harrisburg.

*

Martin Landeen went into the sub-district meet with a 10-0-2 record, but dropped his first match there.
However, it had been a successful if not outstanding season for Landeen. Norman Frink finished 3-3, with all three
of his wins coming on pins. The rest of the team included Steve Cox, David Foland, Tim Curren, Harold Larsen,
Greg Church, Jarrett Dorsey, Andy Dappen, Joe Augsburger, and Robert McCaslin.
The Falcons dropped a pair to Knappa 35-28 and 33-23, but split with Sherwood, 26-23 BDH and 32-21
Sherwood. They also split with Banks. The Falcons took the first 17-13 but dropped the finale 26-13. Dayton took
the Falcons 40-25, as did Culver 15-11. The Falcons downed Corbett 28-20 and MacLaren 32-15.
All in all, the wrestling team enjoyed a fine season with even better to come, as the team largely consist of
probable returnees.

��BASKETBALI

I

BDH 51, Gaston 34
BDH 57, MacLaren 52
BDH 54, Tillamook Catholic 55
BDH 49, Gaston 30
BDH 45, Corbett 51
BDH 57, Ml. Angel 28
BDH 55, Catlin Gabel 48
BDH 50, Jewell 65
BDH 76, Columbia Christian 63
BDH 39, Portland Christian 47
BDH 61, Catlin Gabel 43
BDH 59, Concordia 71
BDH 53, Jewell 57
BDH 56, Corbett 93
BDH 48, Mt. Angel 46
BDH 80, Columbia Christian 64
BDH 54, Portland Christian 51
BDH 76, MacLaren 49
BDH 44, Concordia 42
BDH 61, Tillamook Catholic 60
3rd Place — P.N.A.I.S. Tournament

The 1969-70 Falcon basketball team closed the season by scoring six straight victories to make the season
their best ever under the leadership of coach Gary Craigmiles.
Final victories over Columbia Christian, Mt. Angel, Portland Christian, MacLaren. Concordia, and Tillamook
Catholic rounded out a 14-8 season for the Falcons, their best mark in five years of existence.
The Falcons swept two from Gaston, 51-34 and 49-30. Neither game was much of a contest as the Grey­
hounds were the poorest team in the league. They could not match the offensively ferocious Falcons.
The Falcons also completed a sweep of MacLaren. The first game was 57-52 in overtime, but a Falcon rout
came in the second game by more than 20 points.
The pair with Tillamook Catholic came out a split. The Vikings took a 54-53 victory on the coast, dealing
the team the first of their eight losses. But the Falcons got the last of their 14 victories at home, 61-60. Bill Lake’s
free throw with 10 seconds to play broke a 60-60 deadlock.
The Falcons took third at the PNAIS tournament in Seattle. Charles Wright dumped the Falcons 59-57 in an
overtime battle as Bill Lake hit for 32 points. The next day saw a 61-38 victory over Catlin Gabel to take third.
The Falcons took the Eagles 55-48 and 61-43 in other contests.
Jewell took a pair from BDH, 60-45 and 57-53. The latter saw a Falcon rally buckle in the closing seconds.
In conference play, the Falcons turned in their best effort ever with a 4-4 record. Corbett took both ends of
a home-and-home, 51-45 and 93-56, but none others could so fully master the Falcons. Half of the final six wins
were conference wins.
Concordia won a double figure decision in a game that was close until the final quarter But BDH took a
most impressive 44-42 victory just when the Bluejays were about to nab first place.
The Falcons had never beaten Portland or Columbia Christian before the 1969-70 season, but they finally
took a pair from the Knights and one from the Royals.
76-B3 and 80-64 victories helped drop CCHS to their doom as BDH found the bucket more often than against
any other opponent.
A low-scoring 47-39 loss at Portland Christian was countered late in February. The Falcons needed a victory
to stay alive for state competition, and got it, 54-51. It was the end of a seven-game frustration for BDH, However,
the Falcons missed the playoffs by one game.
The team included Greg Amerson, George Rector, Alan Dappen, Marshall Spencer, Brad Allen, Jim Stipe,
Kris Hatcher, Mike Russell, Warren Cox, Ed Haessler, Scott Bogue, and Bill Lake.

■

���FACULTY vs.
the JUNIORS
HOCKEY GAME
LZ_____
;-'K'

.
■

: •

::■ Z ZZZZl_

1

,

YU ilpf*

'■ ■ 11»,

�CHRISTMAS DINNER

FATHER-DAUGHTER
DINNER

CHRISTMAS
FORMAL

�CHRISTMAS
FORMAL

27

�VALENTINE'S
DAY
DANCE

I

28

�THE LOTTERY

THE MARRIAGE PROPOSAL
By Anton Chelcov

Adopted from a Story by Shirley Jackson
Tommy

Mike Runstein

Dickie

Brent Erensel

Stepan Stepanovitch Tschubukov
. Guerry Bethell
A country farmer

Martin
Delacroix

Randy Bruss
Christopher Birkmeyer

Natalia Stepanovna
His duaghter

Hutchinson
Mrs. Dunbar

Paul Schlesinger
Diana Premo

Ivan Vassiliyitch Lomov
Tschubukov's neighbor.............. Mark Bocek

Mrs Watson

Edee Hibbard

Miss Bessom

Alexandra Dussin

Jack Wilkins

Eddie Sammons

Old Man Warner

Fred Ellis

Belva Summers

Betsy Evans

Joe Summers

Cornelius Duffie

Tessie Hutchinson
Little Girl
Davy

Jennifer Larsen

Villagers

Judy Slate
Heidi Snellman

Produced by arrangement with
Samuel French Publishing Company
For both plays
Director

Mrs. Robert Cox

Stage Crew

Alan Dappen
Shannon Fears
Tami Lake
Charles Holden
Marshall Spencer

Makeup

Jennifer Larsen
Joni Ueland

Carrie Sammons
Michael Fitzgerald

Liz Ellis
Bryant Wooten
Carrie Sammons

Nadine Christenson

�ARTS
MARCH 5-MARCH 10

FESTIVAL

: ;

i

)

30

�nEmnim ■

mmtjsi

XT

(c*. muse
ty JP0£T

r v:

ALSO

,

W-UtTU,Mark,

P

BryaNT1

5AWi
FAIR
gloz-s bltxver
few dry- rvikct'
'potter

unique pa inter i.f roco

SUM./MarS
FOLK’’315
r- W * -1 -

3PM
[fi;
"33SM

■

AW. ■ Mar9_____

\t tjes.mar'O
PLAYS BY

.

■

ENGLISH
dept.

Thur5 afternoon

„

GYMNASTICS
AAOD. DANCE

g

31

����GYMNASTICS

MODERN

��—9 ^ uy
T—

Q.

�LA
'&amp;•

!/•

They're saving it.

-

4J

-3

Li U 'Sit'; VA

j

Av

s; W&gt; i- .•
L LA

F
O
O

D
?

&gt;.

�:

i

mm
'

X

/

s

�8th
G
R
A
D
E

-

'V

3©
.rtf.

B
O
Y

1

s

KILa
v„Jc h s*

r

-

v'

mmST Jspf WM

■5HI 2 3E»*^i ;-n

@/st s tvn

i:V

___ _

vJ^rvi ^L

i.

8th
G
R
A
D
E

ip'
■

a;

G
I
R
L

s

;•

:
:*• 5 *

- I

f ■■
••';;

�:‘:&gt;v;ra

7th
G

t

N

, , rA
*.

*

6ft r*c9

R
A
D
E

5 i
';■

, 4\J
/
N

./ * /*

B
O

Y
S
/• b

Ht*r£±

&lt;£*cs &lt;L

/=o*ti^c.

&amp;£jS/OnJ

»&gt;. c

/CAo^'&lt;lJ

C+Jjtsj&amp;tf*

7th
G

R
A
D
E

V

•

w&gt; &gt;.

fit '

1 Hft
¥■

•,*
r-M?

&gt;•

T*

G

I
R
L

s

an
%,T^inr^ Jfe-«iTlrr
i' ;i W ■' \
Hm 1 t J r ; JCA a I i

t

•- W: T Y:'
!

;•

;

■%

--Ai.ivYAir

a

v/*n‘

1

• A.

«.•

'■•:■

v* ?M-'

l

: :\a:Pr~

■:.■

-;■

................................... ■*•■&gt;

\

"■T.7.V

■/r

i

■•

,•■"■•;■•:

'

!

Mvi
■

' \ -A"

■'

k .r
'

:

:• V

jv.

.
y;:

'-*
•*■**
,

:r- -I
:

■&gt;\'&lt;

41

�!
Laura Batch

Nancy Bogue

FRESHMAN
GIRLS

Anne Ellis

Martha Bullwinkle

Catherine Church

Evelyn Griswold

Sally James

42

�Janice Kline

Lacy Love

Edwina Steussy

FRESHMAN
BOYS

Greg Amerson

Jeff Honeyman
43

�Robert McCaslin

Kannes Noack

Don Pennington

i

I

:

i

)

Scott Rosenlund

Mike Runstein
44

Eddie Sammons

�s
o
p
H
Kim Bishop

Gay Burnie

O

E
Nancy Baird

Leanne Davis

i
R
L
Gillian Hobbs

Tami Lake

45

s
Susan Leonard

�f
•AsLStftf

Paige Lilley

Andrea McAlister

Diana Premo

Melanie Poss

Debbie Plummer
46

Carrie Sammons

�,

I

Judy Slate

Pam Wegert

Heidi Snellman

Adele Wilson

Sandy Stronko

Sarah Wintersteen

Joni Ueland
47

�s
o
p
H
Chris Birkmeyer

o

Mark Bocek

M

o
w

R
E
Art Bruce

Stephen Cuffel

Steve Cox

B

o
Y

s
Andy Dappen

Jarrett Dorsey
48

Fred Ellis

�Peter Goldsmith

Peter Purdy

Harold Larsen

11
, t. ■ fgjl

'I
•-

-

............................................■■

jja.

Mark Schlesinger
■5

Norval Sheppard

Decent!

Doug Wysham
49

Charles Seaborn

�Studying?
r

50

�Debbie Allen

Margie Anderson

JUNIOR
GIRLS

Cindy Baker

Ann Foland

Carolyn Gazeley
51

Susan Church

Su Hillesland

�Anita Jackson

r

.v v .if ■

Janet McGrew

Sheri Propes
52

�J

Sim si "■
Karyn Randall

Katie Riddell

Elizabeth Sessions

Sumalee Vatanavaraluk

irl
;
Beth Walter

Marcy Weed
53

�Brad Allen

JUNIOR
BOYS

Kirk Downing

Shannon Fears

Ed Haessler
54

John Hottman

�Martin Landeen

John Marcy

-Trenton Morrow
55

Steve Premo

�■

Marshall Spencer

Fred Russell

r

a

Jim Stipe

i(

ii
:

\
.
56
:j

Bryant Wooten

�t

„-"i &gt;!

&gt;

-

Iji

�I

POOR ST. BERNARD

v- ^V*v.

Hamsters always win
58

�gg§g||l
IF.Iyou can
v j Most Tickds

yoU^WIN

nJ
^rJ

r&gt;J

?nn PEST w dll

u6u(kc

I POLLUTION

awareness

59

?

a

�SENIOR GIRLS

Christina Augsburger “Chris
Red Cross, Foreign Affiliations, National
Honor Society, Vestry, Art-Lit Club, Choir,
Treasurer of Senior Class, Senior Proctor,
Girl of the Month

Roxanne Cady “Rocket"
Red Cross, A.F.L.A , Altar Guild,
Foreign Affiliations, Modern Dance

mm

Susan Bruce “Sue

11

Rally Girl, Foreign Affiliations,
Girl of the Month

60

�Elizabeth Dorosh “Liz
;

i»

President of Red Cross,
Disciplinary Committee

■

►

Nadine Christensen
Art-Lit Club, Red Cross, Hallmark,
Sophomore Vice President, Drama,
May Fete Court

Anne Dunstan “Annie”
Art-Lit Club, Red Cross, Tutoring
at Buchman School, part-time
Student Council Treasurer

61

�i

Alexandra Dussin “Alex"
Freshman Class Treasurer, Red Cross, Choir,
National Honor Society, Student Body
Treasurer, Student Body President, Drama

i

Ann Ginder
ss, Altar Guild, Foreign Affiliations,
Fencing, Yearbook Staff

Elizabeth Evans “Betsy"
Boarders Council, Girl of the Month,
Drama

62

�Edith Hibbard “Edee”
Student Council Representative, Sophomore
Class President, Assistant Editor to Yearbook
(Junior Year), Advisory Board, Nordstrom
Best High Board, Girl of the Month

Anne Englehart
Charles F. Berg High Board, Red Cross,
National Honor Society, Junior Class Secretary,
Modern Dance, Volleyball, Girl of the Month,
May Fete Court

Patricia Howard “Pat

i I

Red Cross, Foreign Affiliations, Choir
Vestry, National Honor Society

63

�Judith Lamkin “Judy”
Red Cross, Vice President and President of
Junior Class, Senior Class President,
Chorus, Meier &amp; Frank High Board, Drama

Susan Paisley "Sue”
Boarders Council

Jennifer Larsen “Jeff
Art-Lit Club, Secretary of Senior Class,
Assistant Editor to Yearbook, May Fete
Court, National Honor Society, Drama

/ tl

64

.'Y

�Sandra Storey “Sandy”
Red Cross, Ski Club, Fencing, Lower School
and Pre-School Teachers Assistant.
Yearbook Staff, May Fete Court

Nancy Purdy
Tutoring at Buchman School, May Fete
Court, Red Cross, Fencing

Joanne Yocum “Jo ' '
Foreign Affiliations, Fencing, Modern Dance,
Art-Lit Club, Advisory Board, National Honor
Society. Boarders Council President

65

�Susan Humphrey “Sue”
Red Cross, Tutor at Buchman School,
Girl of the Month

I

&gt;

i

��SENIOR BOYS
Guerrant Bethell
Swimming
Drama

Scott Bogue
Sophomore Class Vice President
Varsity Lacrosse
Varsity Basketball
JV Basbetball
Disciplinary Committee
Hallmark Staff

-

MacGregor Church, Jr.
Varsity Lacrosse
Varsity Wrestling
Varsity Soccer
Advisory Board

68

�Alan Dappen
Varsity Soccer
Varsity Basketball
Varsity Wrestling
Varsity Tennis
Student Body Vice-President
Disciplinary Committee
Hallmark
Stage Crew
Ski Club

David Foland
Varsity Wrestling
Outdoorsmen's Club
Lettermen’s Club
Lacrosse

Todd Follett
Disciplinary Committee
Advisory Board
Assistant Editor—Yearbook
Hallmark
Track
Wrestling
Drama
Sophomore Class President

69

�t

Norman Frink, Jr.
L. B c.
Editor — Hallmark
Senior Class President
Varsity Wrestling
Lacrosse
Student Body Treasurer
Student Council Representative
Disciplinary Committee
Yearbook Staff
Sophomore Class — Secretary-Treasurer

msKmsmm
smM
•&lt;

y.

Kris Hatcher
Varsity Soccer
Varsity Basketball
Varsity Lacrosse
Varsity Tennis
Lettermen's Club
Vestry

Willett Lake, III
Varsity Soccer
Varsity Basketball
Varsity Lacrosse
Varsity Track
Lettermen’s Club — President
Lettermen’s Club — Secretary-Treasurer
Drama
Hallmark
Stage Crew

70

J

‘

�Marcus Mitchum
Junior Class — President
Varsity Track
Varsity Wrestling
Varsity Soccer
Student Council Representative
Lettermen’s Club

Randall Ray
Student Body — President
Student Body — Secretary-Treasurer
Yearbook Photographer
Hallmark Photographer
Varsity Wrestling
Varsity Lacrosse
Lettermen's Club
Vestry

James Russell
Varsity Soccer
Varsity Basketball
Varsity Lacrosse
Varsity Track
Lettermen’s Club
Disciplinary Committee

l

71

�Ken Sakai
L.B.C.
Yearbook — Editor
Yearbook — Assistant Editor
Varsity Wrestling
Varsity Tennis
Vestry
Lettermen’s Club
Ski Club

Paul Schlesinger
L.B.C.
Drama
Ski Club
Ski Team
Soccer
Varsity Lacrosse
Hallmark
Stage Crew

Christopher Smith
lb c.
Freshman Class — President
Student Council — Representative
Varsity Tennis
Varsity Lacrosse
Varsity Wrestling
Lettermen’s Club
Drama
Senior Class — Secretary-Treasurer

72

�X '•

::jzz£
. -jssae

•. i

• r&lt;V i

Edwin Thomas, III
L B.C.
Varsity Tennis
Student Body — Representative
Student Body — Secretary-Treasurer
Hallmark
Drama
Vestry

�LMSS

NV'

'1

^1

&amp;

mm /ih

£
, •-'
kV

*

ill :

-3.
bt •

2*.

if

•1'

■i.

«

/*. 'n

t

H

•~vV

v

h

;*f ■,

-v

Of* W

".^‘Vv^V

:
74

�!

�L.B.C.
A £ u
U.
%

)

v

'•■n-i, 1-0-, .■ j «

V, . W w

-&gt;

!

In these days of radical ventures it is seldom that an organization as
tradition bound and as dedicated to principle as the LBC will be found.
When others faltered the LBC stood strong. When others stumbled the LBC
marched on. When others hesitated the LBC spoke forth. It was not an easy
task, but then what are tasks when principle is involved.
A law higher than events called them: Ken Sakai, Ted Thomas, Chris
Smith, Paul Schlesinger, Norman Frink. Even now the names ring out with
a special tone. And let us not forget their advisor, Fred Wood. No words
are satisfactory.
No other club had that inner rapport, spirit if you will, that the LBC
had. No other could boast the talent and potential that this club could. But
then no other club was this club.
As Churchill said, "Never have so many, owed so few, so much.”

Norman Frink
Rotating President
L.B.C.

76

�1'}

rat
f&gt;

LETTERMENS
ATHLETIC COMpT§:

�Hallmark
The year has been one of great change at this school. I think the
Hallmark, as a student newspaper, has both encouraged this change and
reflected it. At the same time, I would like to believe, we have established
the type of tradition of quality and responsibility which is important in any
organization.
Students made the Hallmark; without them it couldn’t have succeeded.
Kathy Reynolds was invaluable as assistant editor. Trenton Morrow worked
continuously and diligently. Todd Follett traced symbols through the world
of films. Ted Thomas told us what his anwser was. Shannon Fears viewed
the foul play of athletics. Randy Ray became permanently attached to his
camera. And Nadine Christenson, forever, became connected with the Girl
of the Month tradition. There were also such feature writers as Scott Bogue,
Mark Bocek, Christopher Birkmeyer, Paul Schlesinger and Alan Rayspen.
Finally, there was the advisor, Mr. Wood, who succeeded in a difficult
position.
It was a group which did something well and that made their activity
important.
Norman Frink
Editor

SQ;

nrr.-'-'

-urr t

��v&gt;
.

.

'■

yV

/

:

- -w

����k-. - ,
ULr-

t'v

fy
V*

^
-

•

-

■
■

m

vf-f:

r

&gt;•.

v-

��...

Would you believe.. Mary had a little lamb?

�cEsy .1

**

ibh

■m r

?

�;

88

��^•;.V, V5-V

H Q£ '
vffc

!. *

y rt

\
■

V&gt;
ti

The joyful appreciation of the stylish new uniforms

d

M
I

P

/
/
/
/■

Dorms Candids
U

-v.

fed

■■

/i t

�»

f

91

���94

����FACULTY 6c ADMINISTRATION
The Reverend David Leech........................
Mr. Fred D. Wood........................................
Mrs. John Harrington...................................
Miss Eleanor Fass........................................
Mrs. Raymond Brasfield.............................
Mrs. Robert Cox......................................
Mr. Gary Craigmiles...................................
Mrs. Herbert Daret......................................
Mr. Thomas J. Davidson........................
Mrs. John H. Doran................................. ..
Mrs. Joseph Erceg......................................
Miss Eleanor Fass......................................
Mrs. Roger Fitzgerald.................................
Mr. Roger Fitzgerald...............................
Mrs. Janine A. Griswold...........................
Mr. Howard B. Haymes........................ ..
Mr. John V. Hicks.....................................
Mr. David Hursty......................................
Mrs. James W. Hutchinson......................
Mr. James W. Hutchinson ......................
Mr. Ronald Matthews........................
Mr. Roger L. Nelson.................................
Mr. Bertin Plourde.....................................
Miss Ruth Rose Richardson....................
Mrs. Diana B- Rorer...................................
Mr. Robert G. Ross ...............................
Miss Cobie Smith.....................................

Mr. James G. Weber................................
Mr. Stephen J. White.................................
Mrs. Betty L. Wilcox.................................
Mrs. Robert Wilhelm ... ....................
Mr. Blake Wilson......................................
Mr. Clifton A. Young...............................
Mrs. Eunice T. Muhm...........................
Mrs. Rozella Rosa......................................
Mrs. Beulah Taylor...............................
Mrs. Beryl Martha Eaton, L.P.N...............
Mrs. Margaret V Wind, R.N........... .. • • •
Mrs. Barbara J. Andrews..................
Mrs. W. C. Froman, Jr...............................
Mrs. Lilia P. Gille......................................
Mrs. Rol^ert N. Gourley..........................
Mrs. Pitt S- Willand...................................
TJie Reverend Dr. Robert H. Greenfield
Mrs. John S. Jackson.................................
Mr. Harold Moore....................................
Mr. Earl Brunt............................................

98

.......................................Headmaster
............................................. Principal
................................... Dean of Girls
..................Girls Resident Director
.......................................Mathematics
............................................... English
Mathematics, Director of Athletics
.........P.E., Middle School Advisor
.............................Spanish, German
............................................. Religion

Art
. . .................English
. .French, Spanish
.....................English
.....................French
.................. Librarian
...........Biology, P.E.
.....................History
. . .English, French
Chemistry, Physics
........... Mathematics
. . .General Science
. . . . ...............French
. .English, Religion
......................... Latin
......................English
.....................History
........... Mathematics
. .Religion, English
.............
History
P.E.
. ... ..........Mathematics
Mathematics, Chemistry
...................Housemother
............. .. . Housemother
...................Housemother
................................Nurse
................................Nurse
....................Central Staff
. . . ............Central Staff
....................Central Staff
.................... Central Staff
Upper School Secretary
. . ........................Chaplain
............. Public Relations
.........Business Manager
Maintenance Supervisor

f,

I

\

f

�Sponsors
Philip Boque
Julian Cheatham Fund
Sylvia Nemer Davidson
Dr. Norman Frmk
Goldsmith Company
Mr. Jack Larsen
Dr. Guy Marcy
Barbara Pennington
Mr. William Sakai
Mrs. Guy Storey

99

�I

SKI

by

fU
Upper and Lower Bowls
Open - Three Chairlifts Tues. thru Sat. ’til 10 P.M.

100

�\

K

»

e

^fvU4ten4b"s

\
\

ELECTRIC, INC.

N.E. Sumner

•

Portland, Oregon 9721 1

(

i
!

t

101

1

�WITH

SINCERE

BEST

WISHES

from All of Us at

RADIO CAB

RIDE RADIO CAB

CApitol 7-1212
102

��Vi

�OIL HEAT
Phone 644-3155 - ANY TIME

m

Use Your Chevron or Standard Credit Card
Complete Heating Service

&gt;

Insurance
selection
that gives you
more for less.

Board of
Trade Building
Portland, Ore. 97204
Telephone: 226-2392

Insurance selection
that
gives you
more for less.

'
;
?

:
.

\

DENNIS
Framing bg

2S2-7295

\

Congratulations

7-

9k

ma

imaginative new styles..

7.

classes of 1970
from
&lt;Bre§ Tenney' 09

I

istmctwe
uniforms

$

2l&gt;est&lt;roort picture Corp. i
l

|

. a wide

selection of fabrics. Let Dennis design
a uniform especially for you.

8

m a

,rm Manufacturing Co.
[Tennis Uniform
135 S.E. Hawthorne Blvd.
Portland, Oregon 97214 503/234^20^^

))

105

■
•1

�Miller’s Sanitary Service
B812 S. W. 36th Ave.
Portland, Oregon 97219
638-5851

244-4253
COMPLETE REFUSE SERVICE
Multnomah - Garden Home - Metzger • Progress

Compliments of

The Capitol Dairy Queen
6660 S.W. Capitol Highway
Portland, Oregon

Congratulations and Best Wishes From

R tC '

N. Killingsworth • Gateway
Phone (503) 285-0505

Mr. and Mrs. Ellsworth D. Purdv

Certainly - -You’ll Have to learn -bo
manage money some day Whab better time
than during your learning years A
US. Bank Special Checking Account is ideal
for your High School and College years.
No minimum balance. No monthly service
charge. Your name and address printed
free on each check. CHECK WITH US l

UNITED STATES NATIONAL BANK OF OREGON

Member Federal Deposit Insuranco Corporation

106

�\

m:

*e for
■X

■ 7'

Vi,

If
jSSSa:

^.v.;v

p-af-

m

COIF,

CLARK &amp;
CUNMIHGHi

industry

i
222 S.W. 4th, PORTLAN1

[GON 97204, TELEPHONE 224-9700

\
7

t

TER
ES
l

:;*Vv*V&gt;v

i
■■

*‘“f.

■

VV:

McGREW - long creek, ore.
107

r:

m

�Congratulations and best wishes
to the Class of 1970

Pope &amp; Talbot Inc.

01
O
\

m

p

i;&gt;i

S§9

f

Compliments

;js#St

of

■-m

heavy &amp;
specialized hauling

15

&lt;7

call Wilhelm

u/&gt;.

&lt;y*

H (S

i

5 Pl f

S

?
5
C
Y

108

'

^
£ r 6
Cl
7 2 n
&lt;

Automotive
Equipment v
Company 2

We have over 200 hauling units from 1 to 300-ton capacities.
All handled by men who know their business
Wilhelm Trucking Company, 3250 St. Helens Road
Portland, Oregon • (503) 227-0561 • Call Collect

3

A

;

4

�m^2^

Mail-Well
ENVELOPE CO.

Has envelopes for your every
Plus these helpful services
business need
i

effective
direct
moil

up-to-date

money
saving
systems
envelopes

postage
information

envelopes

innovation

cost

for
packaging

of new

cutting
envelope

envelopes

^

creative
art
service

surveys

Mail-Well envelope co. I Pak-Well paper products co. / Oregon divisions of

THE WILL TO SUCCEED:
Ours is bv far the qreatest and most powerful nation
it is characterized by wealth, involved in struggle ^

the world has ever witnessed.
growth. But most of
achievement. And for the

all It lays bare the brightest of vistas for ^rectw re!atedto our unique and dynamic system of
m08tePn?erpn-se. f"'U is thifsys'em’"which enables each of us to work for and to reach the goals
free
of our maximum potential.
enlightening picture
the following quotation offers an
As the future leaders of our nation
of what awaits you.
,nte„,geSncCeC:Sho is normal,y
of obstacles and handicaps if he plays the game fairly

l

—J. C. Penney

at it.’

roads of achievement and success.
And so it is. As America's youth, you stand at the cross
Our system permits it. Only your determination will reac
.

Frank E. McCaslin
President
Oregon Portland
Cement Company

;

OREGON PORTLAND
111 S.E. Madison Street

CEMENT COMPANY

Portland, Oregon 97214

109

■

�\

Our Compliments
to the Class

f
*

of 1970
y

Oregon Transfer

&gt;

Company
The B.D.H. Senior Class wishes
to remember those who didn't,
or wouldn’t, make it.
Doug Anderson
Stuart Bengeult
Sky Bissell
Gary Brown
Curt Cuffel
Joel Ecob
David Flov/eree
Jay Fowler
Mike Grew
Scott Harris
Ken Humke
Peter Kuhlmann

Bob Matson
FL L. McFarland
Craig Morrison
Ben Riekkola
Walt Sherman
"Dick" Skeie
Brad Smith
Kim Smith
Peter Tobey
Kirk Wolverton
Alan Wurzweiler

110

i

�B

YEARBOOK STAFF
.

. . . Editor
Assistant Editor
Business Manager

Ken Sakai . .
Jennifer Larsen .
Todd Follett . .
Layout

Photography

Advertising

Ann Ginder
Sandy Storey
Trenton Morrow
Jennifer Larsen
Randy Ray
Stephen Cuffel
Todd Follett
Ken Sakai

Randy Ray
Mrs. Jean Jackson
Jennifer Larsen

Todd Follett
Beth Walter
Chris Birkmeyer
Cornelius Duffie
Mark Schlesinger
Carrie Sammons

Sports Writer
Shannon Fears

(XfP

1

^ERRATA
Pg^onal to Susan Humphrey: Please excuse the placement of your picture, but
there was a minor mix up with the photographer which had to be corrected at
the last minute . . . There are no Student Council pictures due to general incom­
petence, however we do acknowledge the existence of such an organization . . .
Because of the light-fingered inhabitants of the dormitories we must apologize for
having no Centennial section . - Other Student pictures may seem to be out of
place alphabetically, but that is merely a figment of your imagination ... We
hope the faculty will understand the lack of suitable pictures and funds has
caused their section to be highly condensed . . . There may be other various
and sundry mistakes not specifically included (as pictures cut and/or placed
crookedly) that we hope you will excuse on the grounds of the excellent
coordination of our staff . . .
In our attempt to put forth a vague idea of a yearbook using the resources at
hand we may have failed in many ways, but we hope that you will appreciate
the effort and thought that was put into this marvelous creation . . .
May we also make a suggestion to Student Councils of the future to pick those
who are willing to work to head the yearbook, not necessarily those who are
experienced. Thank you for your patience.
The Staff

111

��filTcA,'

U.

4&gt;ls Imxu daz
kncuw
Dl)^ 607

teu
kd/£

■i&gt;

xrosTef owr aynznsdtid^ nf^ferfed
cmL^^mAJus sumrw i

%jS V l^,
A ^ a,jjl!^ A y7^

faieri'Sttj

3 4toc&amp; ^oi/p^UO

^o

uu -,e
u°&lt;

j~c

j

C&lt;

'V

M°’ ~*Q^

Frtetcy H:cjhl -\f/

J\M ffSVD'ib

a.
•G,

4£

'of
&lt;

A

v/

A

&lt;2^

&gt;«v

,&gt;9 S~
J?-e
/

U

oi

A

w

yA
/0

t"

^

^.A
* ^

^

&lt;/

I

i ^A

f

,?^&gt;/

*

v,&gt;

**/

M)

&gt;1"

ia&lt;H
\VLA

V
• 0^9
f

�ii:

m

;:

ii

.ii

i

;

I

i;

foil

•: p
;&gt;!

... iH

mm
B'

■I:

:

•r

■

r

'I

f.

iKiiiii

&gt;: :i.

m
r

Ui?j
S5!
;i:

*i!i*
II P|fjlMll|l||||!|

gj'Si
I

:
fSS-

mm

i

gil

Blip
diasiii

•v

::

ml

lilt;!

I:

m

i
...jiipiiip
lltlii:!:BB

n;

;v

!;

fi

i;

'lip

i

•i

i

■|! |i|l|l|B|i:

m

\

f.

■aMwiiMr

T':

u

!!!»!

is; :

mmmm* .iBi
:

l

it

.

'i

rnv:f.:v*

ISIlIii
mss

.

|gg

.

ii:

■i'.

(HcSi

Ii

:r-;

L': v:

;

’•

MM—1
:

■WMMMltlMWBBIMI UttH

�</text>
                  </elementText>
                </elementTextContainer>
              </element>
            </elementContainer>
          </elementSet>
        </elementSetContainer>
      </file>
    </fileContainer>
    <collection collectionId="1">
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="1">
          <name>Dublin Core</name>
          <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="1">
                  <text>Oregon Episcopal School Yearbooks</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="41">
              <name>Description</name>
              <description>An account of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="2">
                  <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>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="39">
              <name>Creator</name>
              <description>An entity primarily responsible for making the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="3">
                  <text>Oregon Episcopal School</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="45">
              <name>Publisher</name>
              <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="4">
                  <text>Oregon Episcopal School</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="40">
              <name>Date</name>
              <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="5">
                  <text>1921-1923; 1931-1995</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="47">
              <name>Rights</name>
              <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="6">
                  <text>All rights are reserved by Oregon Episcopal School.</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="44">
              <name>Language</name>
              <description>A language of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="7">
                  <text>English</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="51">
              <name>Type</name>
              <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="8">
                  <text>Yearbooks</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="65">
              <name>Conforms To</name>
              <description>An established standard to which the described resource conforms.</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="9">
                  <text>Describing Archives: A Content Standard (DACS)</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="78">
              <name>Extent</name>
              <description>The size or duration of the resource.</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="10">
                  <text>85</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="79">
              <name>Medium</name>
              <description>The material or physical carrier of the resource.</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="11">
                  <text>bound volumes</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="49">
              <name>Subject</name>
              <description>The topic of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="1298">
                  <text>Students</text>
                </elementText>
                <elementText elementTextId="1299">
                  <text>Junior colleges</text>
                </elementText>
                <elementText elementTextId="1300">
                  <text>Junior college students</text>
                </elementText>
                <elementText elementTextId="1301">
                  <text>High school student activities</text>
                </elementText>
                <elementText elementTextId="1302">
                  <text>Student activities</text>
                </elementText>
                <elementText elementTextId="1303">
                  <text>Student publications</text>
                </elementText>
                <elementText elementTextId="1304">
                  <text>Teachers</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </collection>
    <itemType itemTypeId="1">
      <name>Text</name>
      <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    </itemType>
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="78">
            <name>Extent</name>
            <description>The size or duration of the resource.</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="631">
                <text>1</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="79">
            <name>Medium</name>
            <description>The material or physical carrier of the resource.</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="632">
                <text>bound volume</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="633">
                <text>The Legend-Delphic 1970</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="49">
            <name>Subject</name>
            <description>The topic of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="634">
                <text>School yearbooks</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="635">
                <text> Students</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="636">
                <text> High school student activities</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="637">
                <text> Student publications</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="638">
                <text> Teachers</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="639">
                <text>This is an OES yearbook from 1970. 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>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="39">
            <name>Creator</name>
            <description>An entity primarily responsible for making the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="640">
                <text>Oregon Episcopal School</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="40">
            <name>Date</name>
            <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="641">
                <text>1970</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="47">
            <name>Rights</name>
            <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="642">
                <text>All rights are reserved by Oregon Episcopal School.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="44">
            <name>Language</name>
            <description>A language of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="643">
                <text>English</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="43">
            <name>Identifier</name>
            <description>An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="644">
                <text>oes_delphic1970-compressed.pdf</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
    <tagContainer>
      <tag tagId="1">
        <name>School yearbooks; Students; High school student activities; Student publications; Teachers</name>
      </tag>
    </tagContainer>
  </item>
  <item itemId="43" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="268">
        <src>http://archive.oes.edu/files/original/9a17a2c9e499cb2c3ee78881c00261a9.pdf</src>
        <authentication>818e781eac6c8a126d49e2aa09bc4c5b</authentication>
        <elementSetContainer>
          <elementSet elementSetId="4">
            <name>PDF Text</name>
            <description/>
            <elementContainer>
              <element elementId="92">
                <name>Text</name>
                <description/>
                <elementTextContainer>
                  <elementText elementTextId="3116">
                    <text>����������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������</text>
                  </elementText>
                </elementTextContainer>
              </element>
            </elementContainer>
          </elementSet>
        </elementSetContainer>
      </file>
    </fileContainer>
    <collection collectionId="1">
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="1">
          <name>Dublin Core</name>
          <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="1">
                  <text>Oregon Episcopal School Yearbooks</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="41">
              <name>Description</name>
              <description>An account of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="2">
                  <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>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="39">
              <name>Creator</name>
              <description>An entity primarily responsible for making the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="3">
                  <text>Oregon Episcopal School</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="45">
              <name>Publisher</name>
              <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="4">
                  <text>Oregon Episcopal School</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="40">
              <name>Date</name>
              <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="5">
                  <text>1921-1923; 1931-1995</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="47">
              <name>Rights</name>
              <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="6">
                  <text>All rights are reserved by Oregon Episcopal School.</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="44">
              <name>Language</name>
              <description>A language of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="7">
                  <text>English</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="51">
              <name>Type</name>
              <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="8">
                  <text>Yearbooks</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="65">
              <name>Conforms To</name>
              <description>An established standard to which the described resource conforms.</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="9">
                  <text>Describing Archives: A Content Standard (DACS)</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="78">
              <name>Extent</name>
              <description>The size or duration of the resource.</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="10">
                  <text>85</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="79">
              <name>Medium</name>
              <description>The material or physical carrier of the resource.</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="11">
                  <text>bound volumes</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="49">
              <name>Subject</name>
              <description>The topic of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="1298">
                  <text>Students</text>
                </elementText>
                <elementText elementTextId="1299">
                  <text>Junior colleges</text>
                </elementText>
                <elementText elementTextId="1300">
                  <text>Junior college students</text>
                </elementText>
                <elementText elementTextId="1301">
                  <text>High school student activities</text>
                </elementText>
                <elementText elementTextId="1302">
                  <text>Student activities</text>
                </elementText>
                <elementText elementTextId="1303">
                  <text>Student publications</text>
                </elementText>
                <elementText elementTextId="1304">
                  <text>Teachers</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </collection>
    <itemType itemTypeId="1">
      <name>Text</name>
      <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    </itemType>
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="78">
            <name>Extent</name>
            <description>The size or duration of the resource.</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="617">
                <text>1</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="79">
            <name>Medium</name>
            <description>The material or physical carrier of the resource.</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="618">
                <text>bound volume</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="619">
                <text>The Legend-Delphic 1969</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="49">
            <name>Subject</name>
            <description>The topic of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="620">
                <text>School yearbooks</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="621">
                <text> Students</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="622">
                <text> High school student activities</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="623">
                <text> Student publications</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="624">
                <text> Teachers</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="625">
                <text>This is an OES yearbook from 1969. 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>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="39">
            <name>Creator</name>
            <description>An entity primarily responsible for making the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="626">
                <text>Oregon Episcopal School</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="40">
            <name>Date</name>
            <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="627">
                <text>1969</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="47">
            <name>Rights</name>
            <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="628">
                <text>All rights are reserved by Oregon Episcopal School.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="44">
            <name>Language</name>
            <description>A language of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="629">
                <text>English</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="43">
            <name>Identifier</name>
            <description>An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="630">
                <text>oes_delphic1969-compressed.pdf</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
    <tagContainer>
      <tag tagId="1">
        <name>School yearbooks; Students; High school student activities; Student publications; Teachers</name>
      </tag>
    </tagContainer>
  </item>
  <item itemId="42" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="44">
        <src>http://archive.oes.edu/files/original/fcb61326915a500201b6d5d0289e5950.pdf</src>
        <authentication>6c327f7d1eaf0ef28d50fd970ee97ba1</authentication>
        <elementSetContainer>
          <elementSet elementSetId="4">
            <name>PDF Text</name>
            <description/>
            <elementContainer>
              <element elementId="92">
                <name>Text</name>
                <description/>
                <elementTextContainer>
                  <elementText elementTextId="1049">
                    <text>mi

■M

:

ntM

Hppi

iiiuiniiniiniiiuimH^«ir |bmb
itluiiimiiiiuuiiuiiHmiMWUunn
ih i i iiinnm i if11111 numi11 nnn■■i
TimHimiWilUBMUlIMWMMIII
■HiimiiimmminrinMiMinnii
iuuiinniiiiiimiiiniHniimiflni

�"

For Reference
I

XI

X. ~

&lt;c

�4ft.:'

v

�,

�UBRAM
ST. HEL9PS HME
"-M

I

For Reference
Not to be taken from this room

�.

;

i

-V*

1

*

�THE LEGEND
1968

Bishop Dagwell Hall
Portland, Oregon

EDITORS
DAN DRISCOLL
ROBERT BRECKBERG

ADVISOR
DON CLARKSON

BUSINESS MANAGER
CRAIG HONEYMAN

a

ACTIVITIES

SPORTS

MARK SCHLESINGER
RICK STORRE

ERIC SPARKMAN
GREG TEENY

ART COMMITTEE

ART ADVISOR

WALTER DAGGATT

MRS. ELSA SILVER

PHOTOGRAPHY

ADVERTISING

ROBERT MARCY
KEN McKEE

NORMAN FRINK
KEN SAKAI

TYPIST
JIM O'DONNELL

�?'«:

m
:

. £• -

"

■

v
I !

•y
•

.V

' ;£•

�DEDICATION

The second yearbook of Bishop Dagwell Hall is dedicated to a man who will
determine the future of our new school, our new Headmaster, the Rev. David
Leech.

i
i

i
■i

1

=

d

Mr. Leech is a native of Ardmore, Pennsylvania, where he received his second­
ary school education. Pie received his B.A. from the University of Pennsylvania in
1944. In Post Graduate work he went on to receive a B.S. from Drexel Institute
of Technology and an M.A. from the University of Pennsylvania in 1946. In
conclusion of his fonnal education he attained a Th.B. from The Philadelphia
Divinity School in 1952. He comes to BDH from Huntsville, Alabama, where he
was Headmaster of the Randolph School since 1959.
In addition to being Headmaster of Bishop Dagwell Hall, Mr. Leech is an
active clergyman in the Diocise of Oregon. He is active in musical, literary, and
community welfare activities. His main interests are anthropology, his field of
graduate study, and library development, an early professional activity. He is
married and has two children, a daughter and a son.
In his first year at Bishop Dagwell, Mr. Leech has greatly improved relations
between the faculty and students. With actions such as the formation of the
Disciplinary Committee, he has given the students a strong voice in the affairs
of the school. He has worked hard to harmonize relationships between, as he
calls them, the “99 year old girl,” SHH, and the “3 year old boy,” BDH. This has
helped create a greater feeling of unity and cooperation between the two schools.
In the future, as Headmaster of both schools, Mr. Leech will certainly do much
to make BDH and SHH fine schools, dedicated to developing young men and
women who will be able to succeed in the demanding world of the present.
We, the Senior Class, are honored to dedicate this yearbook to a man who
will be mainly responsible for building BDH into an excellent college preparatory
school, the Rev. David Leech.

You call THAT a lunch?

�t
i:
V '

T)ke JJeadmaAter’* c4ddrete
i!

-*;!

We may have discovered that it really doesn't take “forever” to establish traditions. This
yearbook and the Class of 196S to which it is a tribute are only the second in their respective
categories to make their impression on us. And the school is so new that almost any other school
we know could call us infants! Yet, look around you. The genius of the architect created new
and astonishingly modern buildings that looked settled and nestled-in the very year they were
built. The boys who promptly homed in on these buildings acted pretty much like school boys
anywhere. Their triumphs and anguishes were absolutely traditional: what struck them as funny
has tickled the funny bones of generations of students; their teachers both triumphed and de­
spaired for age-old reasons; even when the boys didn't cut their hair they managed to look like
their great great grandfathers. So in the midst of authentic newness we accidentally (as far as
we were concerned) managed a settled appearance.
The Class of 1968 may be remembered for wringing a number of concessions from the
powers-that-be, concessions which could well become traditional for generations of students not
yet enrolled. We wear a uniform of sorts: but not the seniors on their day, Friday. The lower
classmen go everywhere emblazoned with the school seal on their blazers; but not the seniors,
far they go around “unbranded” and thus may gentlemanly fade into the crowd, men among
men rather titan as go schoolboys among their elders. The rest of the upper school sit at lunch
humbly mixed and presided over by gimlet-eyed masters. Not the seniors: they sit in lordly
isolation at lunch — settlors alone, mark you — enjoying their own jokes and only rarely lapsing
into the raucousness of lesser kinds. Of course seniors study out of day study hall and accept
all the risks of maturity which, no doubt, will strike low a few of them in the first year of college.
But such are the risks of early old age. And one thing more: seniors take attendance in chapel,
boldly risking the displeasure of the under-classmen whom, of course, they do not fear.
So these are the concessions and the earned responsibilities. Will the authorities ever tain
them back? It is to be wondered but doubted. How could we? The memory of these valiant
few —these ten—will linger on. We will remember it was these, who — sending their most
verbal, most glib, to the den of the headmaster — asked, not demanded, but asked, unflinch­
ingly—these concessions. And in one day, less than a week, a new idea became a tradition,
a sacred right, an emblem of liberty never never to be yielded.
So do we grow old.
And so do I, the capitulator who sought to understand and rightly recalled his own senior
days, congratulate you on your survival and your conquest of all that stood between the day
after Labor Day in the fall of 1956 and Freedom Day in June of 1968. You have done well
to meet all that has been asked of you in these only seemingly endless intervening years. You
will be missed more than you will understand until you, too, get to the place where you will
help others shape their minds and lives.
Our best wishes follow you through the years ahead. Our interest in you is sincere so we
trust you will remember its as we will you.
David Leech
Headmaster

f

-

5

�6

�1 ■
■&lt;

n

BOARD OF DIRECTORS

i-

:?
p:

'i

R. Lcedy, D. Kingsley, P. Bogue, J. Cheatham, Rev. Leech, B. Lake, H Moore.

THE

BOARD OF

DIRECTORS IS THE OFFICIAL

GOVERNING BODY OF BISHOP DAGWELL HALL.
AS SUCH IT IS RESPONSIBLE FOR SETTING OVER­
ALL

SCHOOL

POLICY,

ACTING AS AN
THE

RAISING

FUNDS.

AND

INTERMEDIATE BODY BETWEEN

SCHOOL AND THE PUBLIC.

THE BOARD

MEMBERS GIVE GENEROUSLY OF THEIR TIME AND
EFFORT

7

OF

INSURE THE SUCCESS OF B. D.H.

�DEANS

MR. EDWARD A. MORIN
Dean of Admissions

MR. W. BARTLETT CHASE
Dean of Students

MR. JAMES T. CALDWELL
Director of Athletics

8

�Quth
f&gt;
DOES YOUR SON

HAVE ANY CONTINUING

CONDITION

to

0* his iflcid

is
withd

entai

ra* M
acc°unt

WEEKEND ACTIVITY STPf

»££b

JO

FoR 6 t/s

��i
MR. BERNARD AXE
English

MRS. ELIZABETH BRASFIELD
Math

!

{

MR. JAMES CALDWELL
History
Coach

MR. W. B. CHASE, Jr.
Physics
Science
Coach

I
I

MR. DONALD CLARKSON
English
Dorm Master

f

MR. GARY CRAIGMILES
Math
Basketball Coach

MR. DONALD COLBERG
History
Dorm Master
Seventh and Eighth Grade Coach

Dorm Master

MR. THOMAS DAVIDSON
Spanish
German

MRS. VIRGINIA DOWSE
Drama
Speech

�DR. R. H. GREENFIELD
Religion

MRS. JANINE GRISWOLD
French

MR. DAVID LEECH
Religion
Headmaster

MRS. ELIZABETH JOHNSON
Chemistry

MRS. WINIFRED LUSTED
English

MR. EDWARD MORIN
Science
Psychology

MRS. GAIL PEDE
Music

MRS. DIANA RORER
Latin

MR. ROBERT ROSS
Track Coach
English

�l
MR. RICHARD SANO
Biology
Algebra

MRS.
Art

V

MR. FREDERICK WOOD
History
Dorm Master
Coach

[»
i

Now, about this morality business —

13

You k ids arc a pain in the nock.

Ben and Mark

Now, I remembor tho time . . .

. .?

�I

WANTED:

For Principal of BDH

This is the way it's done, Mr. Craigmiles.

Mr. Burns, it's about the food!

No, I like mine better Ben

14

�An attentive class.

I

Do you have any Metrccal?

And now wc move to South Amc

�I
SECRETARIES

MRS. MAY FROMAN

MRS. JANE TAYLOR

FOOD SERVICE

MAINTENANCE

MR. BEAL BURNS

MR. EARL BRUNT

16

�PUBLIC RELATIONS

Mr. Hulley has just completed his first year as
Director of Development and Public Relations for
Bishop Dagwell Hall and St. Helen’s Hall. He has
done an excellent job in providing information for
interested persons and publicizing the schools so
they will become better known in the Northwest.
He comes to us from Lewis and Clark College, where
he was Administrative Assistant in DevelopmentAlumni Relations and Special Events.
Although a great deal of work is “behind the
scenes,” his service will provide the school with many
interested parents to lead to the school’s success.

MR. WILSON HULLEY

BUSINESS

Mr. Harold Moore joined the administrative staff
in 1967 as Business Manager of both St. Helen’s Hall
and Bishop Dagwell Hall. He comes to us from recent
employment with White Stag Mfg. Company and has
twenty years' experience in management positions.
As Business Manager of the school, Mr. Moore is
Director of all school operations and is in charge of
the financial affairs and expenditures. Although his
job does not deal directly with the students, it is cer­
tainly necessary, and results in the success of the
institution.

MR. HAROLD MOORE

17

�STAFF

Time for the 7 minute break?

c___ r _

J

IN* .k *1

*

18

��SEVENTH AND EIGHTH GRADES

ROGER D. ANTHONY
Portland, Oregon

WILLIAM J. AUGSBURGER
Portland, Oregon

WILLIAM P. BARNARD
Vancouver, Washington

JOSEPH W. BARNES
Eugene, Oregon

FORREST F. BISHOP
Portland, Oregon

GUY L. BOYDEN
Portland, Oregon

THERON CONOVER
Portland, Oregon

20

�SEVENTH AND EIGHTH GRADES

KEVIN M. DAVIDSON
Beaverton, Oregon

BRUCE F. FISHER
Seattle, Washington

BRUCE K. FRANKLIN
Portland, Oregon

JAMES A. GILCHRIST
Gilchrist, Oregon

PETER A. GOLDSMITH
Portland, Oregon

!

STEVEN R. HAESSLER
Lake Oswego, Oregon

21

BRADFORD A. GREEN
Portland, Oregon

�SEVENTH AND EIGHTH GRADES
:

MARK E. HARRIS
Portland, Oregon
)

JOHN W. HOLLAND
Portland, Oregon

JEFFREY C. "JEFF" HONEYMAN
Portland, Oregon

ROBERT FARRELL KINGERY
Portland, Oregon

RICHARD H. LEONARD
Portland, Oregon

JACKSON LUM
Beaverton, Oregon

THOMAS K. MAGENIS
Portland, Oregon

22

�•:
:
1

SEVENTH AND EIGHTH GRADES

'
;
!

W. A. P. "Pat" McGURK
Los Angeles, California

!
\

\

SCOTT D. ROSENLUND
Beaverton, Oregon

CHARLES R. SEABORN
Portland, Oregon

NORVAL D. SHEPPARD
Mountain Village, Alaska

i»

JOHN H. SMITH IV
Beaverton, Oregon

DAVID R. WIDING
Portland, Oregon

23

WILLIAM H. STEVENS
Portland, Oregon

�FRESHMEN

WILLIAM ARNOLD
Portland, Oregon

TREVOR A. BROOKE
Lake Oswego, Oregon

i

&gt;

l

RANDALL BRUSS
Portland, Oregon

ROBERT T. CATL1N
Portland, Oregon

!

!
1

i

!

I
i

Who hasn't done his homework?
Typical attitude toward faculty.

24

�FRESHMEN

s

SHANNON M. FEARS
Portland, Oregon

!
!

EDWARD B. HAESSLER
Lake Oswego, Oregon

JOHN D. HICKS
Bellevue, Washington

FRANK R. GILCHRIST
Gilchrist, Oregon

CORNELIUS R. DUFFIE
Portland, Oregon
Secretary-Treasurer

t

CHRIS K. KARAFOTIAS
Portland, Oregon
.

HUGH S. LUSTED
Portland, Oregon

-

CRAIG V. HOLMAN
Portland, Oregon

25

JOHN J. MARCY
Yakima, Washington

�I

:

FRESHMEN

KENNETH A. McKEE
Goldendale, Washington
President

MARSHALL T. SPENCER
Portland, Oregon

BRIAN W. WORKMAN
Portland, Oregon

MARK R. SCHLESINGER
Portland, Oregon

TRENTON T. MORROW
Carson, Washington
JOHN A. MARTIN
Seattle, Washington
MARK R. TEENY
Portland, Oregon

RICHARD J. WILLIS
Portland, Oregon

RICHARD C. STORRE
Eureka, California

26

�!.l
SOPHOMORES

SCOTT W. BOGUE
Portland, Oregon
Vice-President

GARY P. BROWN
Spokane, Washington

McGREGOR L. "Greg" CHURCH
Portland, Oregon

CURTIS M. CUFFEL
Portland, Oregon

SCHUYLER C. BISSELL
Everett, Washington

GUERRANT G. BETHELL
Portland, Oregon

JAMES S. CAMPBELL
Portland, Oregon

I

27

�5

SOPHOMORES

NORMAN W. FRINK
Portland, Oregon
Secretary-Treasurer

DAVID A. FOLAND
Portland, Oregon

TODD R. FOLLETT
Portland, Oregon
President

MICHAEL D. GREW
Tacoma, Washington

KRIS D. HATCHER
Portland, Oregon

WILLETT R. "Bill" LAKE
Portland, Oregon

PETER N. KUHLMANN
Portland, Oregon

28

�I
!

SOPHOMORES

I
;
MARCUS S. "Mark" MITCHUM
Brightwood, Oregon

CRAIG MORRISON
Lake Oswego, Oregon

RANDALL E. "Randy" RAY
Pasco, Washington

JAMES M. RUSSELL
Portland, Oregon

KEN W. SAKAI
Portland, Oregon

i

CHRISTOPHER S. "Chris" SMITH
Beaverton, Oregon

PAUL R. SCHLESINGER
Portland, Oregon

ALAN S. WUR-ZWEILER
Portland, Oregon

EDWIN S. 'Ted" THOMAS III
Portland, Oregon

29

�JUNIORS

JACK H. 'Tom" BOON, Jr.
Portland, Oregon

ROBERT L. BRECKBERG
Kodiak, Alaska
Vice-President

IULIAN N. "North" CHEATHAM
Portland, Oregon

ELIOT E. COBB
Portland, Oregon

WILLARD 0. "Bill" COURTER
Bend, Oregon

WALTER J. DAGGATT
Seaside, Oregon

GREGORY W. DAUGHERTY
Eugene, Oregon

DOUGLAS W. GONYEA
Eugene, Oregon

ROBERT S. LOVE
Taos, New Mexico

�.
:

JUNIORS
:
1

!

I
’

I

SSI

ROGER T. MONTGOMERY
Boise, Idaho

HARRY J. “Jim'' O'DONM
Seattle, Washington
Secretary-T reasurer

PAUL J. PROUDFOOT
lone, Oregon

JAMES R. RANDALL
Portland, Oregon

ROBERT E. MARCY
Yakima, Washington

LEE B. LUSTED
Portland, Oregon

MARK S. PALMER
Camas, Washintgon

31

�JUNIORS

CHARLES C. REYNOLDS
Portland, Oregon

CRAIG B. ROSENLUND
Beaverton, Oregon

ERIC T. SPARKMAN
Portland, Oregon

BENJAMIN D. STEWART
Vientaine, Laos

GREGORY U. TEENY
Portland, Oregon

MARK H. WORKMAN
Portland, Oregon

RICHARD N. WESTLUND
Lake Oswego, Oregon
President

32

�T-

Student's

�34

�.

Slave

1

.

I

A familiar scene at 8:35 A. M.

!

I

Now here we have a book . . .

35

�THE SENIOR CLASS OF 1968

What was the Class of 1968? To some extent we had lost some of the energy
and enthusiasm that we had displayed as Juniors. You could usually find us
in the great hall relaxing or in our rooms taking it easy. The Senior study lounge
usually held more than a few slumbering upper classmen. Everywhere there
were signs of that dreaded disease “SENIORITIS”.
But as we lost some things when we became Seniors we also gained a few.
To replace youthful enthusiasm we developed a greater degree of maturity and
responsibility. When it came to supporting the school, the Seniors led all of the
classes. The soccer team that smashed Catlin Gable in the final game of the
season was made up mostly of Seniors. The wrestling squad had one state cham­
pion — Nick Peachy. The basketball team owed many of its victories to the solid
playing of Green, Honeyman, and Driscoll. We also gave similar support to
Lacrosse and track. And the Senior contribution didn’t stop with athletics. All
of the student organizations were headed by Seniors. Nearly every important
project that was undertaken usually had a Senior behind it. The giving of a school
gift in June was the culmination of a year of extremely positive extracurricular
service.
But as much as we gave, we received a lot more. When it came time for
Graduation in June I think it could be honestly said that all ten Seniors were
ready for college. No, we weren’t perfect, but we had learned a lot more about
life and also ourselves.
And so, as lofty graduates, we can give a little advice to the Class of 1969.
As Seniors next year, have a large amount of fun and develop a lot of lasting
friendships, but don’t forget your responsibility to achieve as much as you can
for the school and for yourselves.
Bob Ruben,
Senior Class President

36

�. 1

Daniel Thomas Driscoll
DAYVILLE, OREGON

Oregon State University
Drisco . . . “Big Deals” . . . “Pud” . . . “One of
the four most respected Seniors on campus”
. . . Envolved . . . Girls . . . Panda . . . Dan.
VARSITY SOCCER—'67, '68
VARSITY BASKETBALL—'66, '67, 68
LACROSSE—'68
METRO &amp; WASH. YOUTH COUNCILS—'66, '67, '68
SOPH. CLASS PRESIDENT—'66
STUDENT COUNCIL REP.—'67
NEWSPAPER STAFF—'67
SKI CLUB PRESIDENT—'67, '68
ANNUAL EDITOR—'68
MONITOR—'67, '68

w
John Hewes Flowerree
LAKE OSWEGO, OREGON

University of Oregon
Flow ... “A constant hassle” . . . “Yeah, what
the H—” . . . One of the gunners . . . “Exactly”
. . . “You're perceptive” . . . Road racer . . .
Porsche 9-115 . . . Last of the great capitalists

. . . John.
VA RSITY SOCCER—'68
LACROSSE—'68
WRESTLING—'66, '67
STUDENT COUNCIL REP.—'66, '67, '68

37

�SENIORS

I

��44

�STUDENT COUNCIL
r

r*

This year the B.D.H. student council undertook a
year of building. It was a year during which we con­
structed a foundation for future councils to add to, in hope
that each successive year the school will have a more
efficient, responsible and respected government.
With great help from the new headmaster, a studentfaculty disciplinary system was set in motion, a big step
toward student government. Although in its first year, the system worked unex­
pectedly well and is certain to continue next year.
A major accomplishment of the B.D.H. Student Council was the establish­
ing of a “Student Supply Store”. Working closely with the S.H.H. council and
relying heavily upon the inspiration of Mr. Colberg, a truly complete store was
created out of an unused office. “The Store,” as it is referred to by its patrons,
carries a multitude of school supplies, not to mention records, posters, paperback
books, and sundries.
Of course the student council has accomplished much more this year. Dances,
movies, and a recreation room have all been provided for student entertainment.
Fun, however, is not the main objective of the Student Council. It is one of
arranging student activities, organizing and projecting student thought, while
working with the administration to provide for the students’ best interests.
Ben Westlund
Student Body President

45

�I

!
;

f

■

V-'

:

i

PRESIDENT
BEN WESTLUND

TREASURER
PAUL PROUDFOOT

SECRETARY
BILL COURTER

MR. DON COLBERG
ADVISOR

46

�THE
1968

u.
n
:

LEGEND
In deciding upon the name of this annual, the “Legend” was chosen in preference to previous
titles because of its implication of a lasting history or course of events. It is a written record of the
most important activities of this year.
The ’6S Legend represents a year of development, fun, as the candids show, and work, both academic
and physical. In looking at the most signficant developments of this year, we find it has been one of
building. Mr. Leech “built” a Disciplinary Committee to handle student offences and created a better
attitude among the student body. The Student Council “built” a Student Book Store and greatly increased
student responsibility in the operation of the school.With this building came the establishment of customs
which became an accepted part of the school, and possibly, if they last, traditions.
These traditions are the substance of our theme. Objects like the Victory Bell and the Senior Park,
and activities such as the Mardi Gras, Sophomore Carnival and chapel services are all seemingly perma­
nent parts of our school. They are traditions, which is rather ironical in a 3-year-old school. Some will
last, while others of course will fail; it will be interesting to see what changes and additions take place
in these traditions in the future.
The staffs goal was not one of creating a completely original or novel annual. Instead, it was one of
involving a large number of people so that it became a community project. Getting people interested
and involved was a major accomplishment of this year. This annual was produced not by two or three
boys but by approximately one-third the student body, making it one of the largest organizations this
year. The Legend contains articles from as many different students as possible, adding a personal touch
to the book. It is the hope of the staff that these writings represent the views and opinions of the
students of our school.
The support shown towards the yearbook was not limited to the school. It was with great apprecia­
tion that the staff received the advertisements from the many parents, friends, and corporations which
supported this publication. With this backing, we were able to not only publish the book and pay back
last year s debt, but also buy some desperately needed equipment for the annual department.
An important part of this school year for the entire staff was the knowledge gained in many fields,
such as finance, business, art, and human relations, in putting out this annual. The education derived
from the publishing of a book such as this in many ways equalled the value of a major course of study
for us. The importance of the yearbook in the schoolcurriculum is greater than might be thought. The
responsibility placed on individuals, the cooperation needed for its success, and the organization involved
in publishing all develop practical skills and understandings which the basic studies often miss. The
publishing of this yearbook has been a great experience for all of us, and we hope the annual gives its
readers as much enjoyment as we received in producing it.

in

47

k

I

!

i

�.

EDITORS
As editors of the second Bishop
Dagwell Hall annual, we wish to thank
Mr. Clarkson, our advisor, for the time
and patience he spent with us, and for
the invaluable help he gave us in putting
out this annual. We also wish to thank
Mrs. Silver for the time she spent in
helping us design the artwork within
this volume. Finally, we extend our
thanks to the entire staff; typists, pho­
tographers, and advertising. Without the
help of every member, the publishing
of this yearbook would not have been
possible. We hope the efforts of this
staff have been successful in producing
a yearbook of which our school can be
proud.
Dan Driscoll
Robert Breckberg

ADVISOR
DON CLARKSON

ART ADVISOR
MRS. ELSA SILVER

WORKING STAFF

�fy|71
THE
Vol.

QUEST

QUEST

1
No. 2
January 1, 1968

Editors

Nick Peachy
Chuck Reynolds
Doug Gonyea
Staff
Pete Green
Bob Ruben
Advisor
Mr. Ross
Cover design by Gonyea
Photography by Reynolds

The Quest is a new student publication at BDH, replacing last year’s student
newspaper, the Falconer. The Quest has brought new and broader opportu­
nities to BDH students. It has given every student a chance to express himself
creatively on whatever subject seems to him most pressing. Drawings, Essays,
Interviews, Photography, Poetry, Short Stories, and Student Polls, have all been
a part of The Quest. It has given, for many students, their only opportunity
to express their thoughts to the whole school. In doing so, it has brought BDH
closer together, making it more of a community.
The Quest was run by three editors; Nick Peachy, Editor in Chief; Chuck
Reynolds, Managing Editor; and Norman Frink, Graphics Editor. It was financed
by advertising and the BDII student body, and was published every six weeks.
Nick Peachy
Editor

49

�DISCIPLINARY COMMITTEE

rrr-

This is the first year Bishop Dagvvell Hall has had a Disciplinary Committee.
The year has been one marked with success. The committee has rightfully gained
the respect of the student body and the support of the faculty.
The Disciplinary Committee, by maintaining certain rules and regulations
made on a basis of precedent, hopes to encourage student responsibility and
self-discipline.
Nine members sit on the committee, four students and four masters, with
a chairman presiding over the meeting. Each Upper School class has one rep­
resentative who is elected by his class for a one year term. The student repre­
sentatives were Nick Peachy, Senior; Walter Daggatt, Junior; Norman Frink,
Sophomore, and Craig Holman, Freshman. The masters of the committee included
Mr. Craigmiles, Mr. Colberg, Mr. Clarkson, and Mr. Ross. The chairman was
Mr. Chase. To deal with marks appeals a sub-committee was created. The
student representative was Norman Frink and the master was Mr. Craigmiles.
It is hoped that in the years ahead the Disciplinary Committee will continue
to operate as fairly and effectively as it has done this year and that it will
continue to generate a feeling of cooperation between the faculty, the students
and the administration.
Norman Frink

50

�-

I

SKI CLUB
=

:
■

Although the school took over the ski club’s major purpose, that of providing
ski trips for the increased number of skiers in the student body, the club pro­
vided an important service to the school — the ski-day. The Ski Club planned
an exciting day at Mt. Hood, followed by an excellent dinner and dance at school.
This completed the activity and made it a total success. This day had more sig­
nificance than just a recreational activity; it was an important step in providing
B.D.H. with extracurricular functions.
Without the Ski Club, this important event of the school year would not
have been planned and carried out. Hopefully the Ski Clubs of the future will
continue with the ski day and possibly provide weekend trips to other ski areas
as further activities.
Dan Driscoll, President

-

51

�L

RIFLE CLUB

i

PHOTO CLUB

52

�STUDENT SUPPLY
STORE

I'm sorry, Mrs. Craigmiles, this is a student store.

In its first year of existence the student store has been an undeniable
success. Under the capable management of Mr. Colberg, the store satisfies most
of the student body’s sundry needs.
Not only does the store deal in the utensils and basic necessities of school,
the discriminating customer can find great bargains on the latest records and
posters. And to satisfy any other needs that our distinguished clientele may
have, a variety shelf containing everything from nose drops to nylons is present.
The purpose of our store has been to raise money for activities of both
St. Helens and Bishop DagweJl Halls.
The knowledgeable leadership of Mr. Colberg, together with the excellent
job done by the student staff, has made the student store one of the major
highlights of this year.
Carl Nash

53

�JUNIOR
SENIOR
STORE
WHY
BUY FOR
MORE?

book store, in the study hall. This
enables the Junior-Senior Store to
open after lunch and take the day
students “for a ride.”

But, but, I don’t owe that 37c!
This and other denials are continu­
ally heard, but, alas, the hard core
Juniors and Seniors are just after
their Store’s money. This money
will sponsor BDH’s Junior-Senior
Prom and pay for the Senior Class
gift to the school. This year the
location of the store has been
changed to the location of the old

As much as all the students com­
plain about the prices, they never
stop pestering a Junior or Senior
to open the store after study hall.
Pete Green

■ If
&amp;

SST;
v-l-v*

i

-K-- .1*1

54

�■

■■

U'

STUDENT VESTRY
bv-

'

■

i

In its first year, the vestry has done a lot towards showing students the joy
of giving rather than receiving. The vestry members acted as a link between
the students and those who were in need. Every Friday during chapel services
the members passed the offering plate. From the Thanksgiving offering we
collected over $100.00 which went towards a very worthwhile cause.
Now that the vestry has been organized, we can look forward to helping our
less fortunate friends by raising money through dances and other student func­
tions. It is sincerely hoped by all the members of this organization that we may
next year derive sizable profits through activities and share this money with
those who are deserving.

i

.
.

’

I

( :

Jim O’Donnell

j
=
r

55

�ij

r

i

TRADITION

The traditional entrance

. .

as studenti often ice it.

»1
I

v■

I

f:;

/

if
f

V

/

I,

\
,

vV

ll

\

I-/

VI

, ■ fv&gt;: , K
Si*-®#-::'

*V

!\J

L:

V

:1S

.VJ

■m}

i'i&gt;:

1

rV

irv». :&gt;&lt;«!

iiV i'-Y

•

—ivudiasiawBi

ssaa a&gt; I1*' '
;■•••'/
. J' -

••s;

s-

56

�I

�iniii
Jiuik

�J.

DANCES
* rrl | j

; V:

\ i

■:

II MU U11
r?

59

�60

�CHRISTMAS ACTIVITIES

Christmas was a bit more merry around the campus this year than in the
past. This was due to the early snowfall which began Christmas vacation three
days early. The early closure of school unfortunately canceled a special B.D.H.
dinner, the Christmas play, and Christmas carol presentations.
On the 16th day of December the annual Christmas formal dance was held.
The X-25 provided the music and contributed greatly to the dance’s success.
To increase the spirit of Christmas for the resident students, each dormitory
was provided with a handsome Christmas tree that was decorated by the mem­
bers of the dorm.
In general this year’s Christmas brought out the true school spirit by involv­
ing the students in planning parties and helping to decorate for the very successful
Christmas formal.
Dave Sessions

*

■

1i

I I

£ ■ :'J 'Mtm
='
-4

&gt;'

|

61

.**

y

*

S-Scfl
■4

��DINING AND SOCIAL HOUR
i

'

63

�SENIOR SLAVE
SALE

I®

P"

■■na

■;j

■r

£

p

■■

t

!

■:-■

A\\ :

f

F figft

IVfePi'

jL few

N

. : i

fi
i

ffii

1

...
VJb ^
:
:

w
'• - 'K

’V

•

-• •
$

f

:

■

-a ‘

P

-

p

T..“

�FACULTY-FROSH HOCKEY GAME

Step lively, Colberg!

"I'm BEHIND you all the way, George."

_I

,

...
■'i *

Going in circles.

65

Help!

Another freshman down!

�o

�SOCCER

v
A
R
S
I
T
Y

►
RECORD

BDH
BDH
BDH
BDH
BDH
BDH
BDH
BDH
BDH
BDH
BDH
BDH
BDH
BDH
BDII
BDH
BDH

COACH
MR. JAMES CALDWELL
CAPTAIN

67

NICK PEACHY

2
0
1
0
1
0
1
2
0
0
0
0
4
6
1
0
1

Western Mennonite 1
Catlin Gable 5
Reed College 3
OSU 5
Lewis and Clark 0
OSU 2
Wilson High School 0
Charles Wright 3
Lewis and Clark 4
Portland Community College 4
OSU 2
Wilson High School 3
Jackson High School 0
Jackson High School 0
Charles Wright 0
Wilson High School 1
Catlin Cable 0
Won 7
Lost 10

�RECORD

BDH
BDH
BDH
BDH
BDH
BDH
BDH
BDH

To a Charles Wright victory

0
0
0
0
1
1
1
1

Catlin Gabel 3
Western Mennonite 3
Charles Wright 2
Western Mennonite 5
Mount Angel 1
Charles Wright 2
Catlin Gabel 3
Catlin Gabel 3
Won 0
Lost 7
Tied 1

68

�SOCCER
M
I
D
D
L
E
S
C
H
O
O

L

I

RECORD
BDII
BDH
BDII
BDH
BDH
BDH
BDH
BDH

69

3
0
0
2
1
0
1
1

Catlin Gabel 3
Riverdale 0
Riverdale 2
Riverdale 1
Charles Wright 2
Riverdale 3
Charles Wright 2
Catlin Gabel 2
Lost 5
Won 1

��&gt; '

%

The soccer season could be described briefly as a weak start
and a glorious finish.
The first soccer turn-out was an omen of what lay ahead.
Two lettermen and two JV players from the year before returned.
The rest of the turn-out was totally green — many players had
never jdayed soccer before.
After a close 2-1 win over Western Mennonite, who were
in their first soccer season, BDH lost in a onesided 5-0 game to
Catlin Gabel, 3-1 to Reed College, 5-0 to OSU, before snapping
the losing streak with a 1-0 win over Lewis and Clark. Hard
work was showing results, and after a close 2-0 loss to OSU,
BDH won again, over Wilson High, 1-0.
After an unfortunate loss to Charles Wright, when BDH blew
a 3-0 half time lead, the team came back to pulverize Western
Mennonite, 5-1.
Losses to Lewis and Clark, 0-3, Portland Community College,
0-3, and OSU, 0-2, followed, but were all commendable efforts.
Unexpectedly, BDH then lost to Wilson, 0-3, before lining
up three wins in a row, 4-0 and 6-0 against Jackson High, and
a redeeming win over Charles Wright, 1-0.
Another loss to Wilson High followed before the final game
of the season against Catlin Gabel.
Before the largest crowd to watch a soccer game, the team
X^layed what was unquestionably their finest game of the season,
and finished the year with a very gratifying 1-0 win over Catlin.

•.

�The JV squad, with very few experienced players, started
out slowly with a 4-0 loss to the Catlin Gabel JV, followed by
a 0-3 loss to Western Mennonite.
Although losing again to Charles Wright JV 0-2, the team
showed much improvement, and tied with Mount Angel 1-1,
the following week.
In an exciting return game against Charles Wright, BDH
almost managed a win, before going down 1-2.
Although much improved over the beginning of the season,
BDH found Catlin Gabel JV still too much, and went down in
the final game, 0-2.
Although the season’s record was nearly all losses, the team
showed much improvement, and, with the experience gained,
promises a more satisfactory record next year.

-r

The Middle School, with very small classes from which to
draw, played admirably during the season. They opened the
season with a 3-3 tie with Catlin Gabel, followed by a 0-0 tie
with Rivcrdale.
From this fairly promising start, however, things got worse,
and BDH suffered successive loses to Charles Wright, 2-1, Riverdale, 0-3, another close one to Charles Wright, 1-2, and a loss
to Catlin Gabel in the final game of the season, 0-3.
Despite the record, the team, considering the small number
of boys available, always showed spirit, hustle and the promise
of some fine players for coming JV and Varsity teams.

!•

•

.

Mr

�I

1

:
•;
! I

V
A
R
S
I
T
Y

►
&gt;
;
;

;

COACH
MR. GARY CRAIGMILES

73

RECORD
BDH 46
Tillamook 51
BDH 48
Tillamook 55
BDH 49
Catlin Gabel 35
BDH 41
Charles Wright 30
BDH 48. Gaston 62
BDH 51
Jewell 36
BDH 46
Catlin Gabel 39
BDH 47
Washington School 59
BDH 4S
Col. Christian 55
BDH 44
Washington School 49
BDH 69
Corbett 66
BDH 38
Portland Christian 52
BDH 38
Catlin Gabel 47
BDH 45
Corbett 69
BDH 53
Catlin Gabel 69
BDH 61
Jewell 71
BDH 47
Gaston 31
BDH 53
Col. Christian
BDH 32
Portland Christian 49
BDH 46
Mt. Angel 49
BDH 61
Lakeside 42

�BASKETBALL

j

v

COACH
MR. STEVE BARENDRICK
CAPTAIN

MIKE RUSSELL

74

�BASKETBALL

f

______ :___

~ •

V

M
I
D
D

I-

L

*'

®.p
i

!

!

4V-" '

E

s
c
H
0
0
L

mu

►

I

I

i

COACH
MR. DON COLBERG

■

CAPTAIN

j

75

BILL STEVENS

—

��I

I
I

luiai

t i i

iinn
ii manic t3 uni
I3MSOU

is ruin

is HU MU

v cumin *

mn
ii mum 23
23 01191

21 Btlflil
23 CO*
ji

tin

ntuaci
-

41 till
430HI
OJIfllll

31 Mil Off
33»»««

41 SMC II

is tciioai

i

The basketball team of 1967-68, with head coach Gary Craigmiles, had its
best season in the three year his ton' of Bishop Dagwell Hall and promises an
even better record in coming years.
The season started off with a relatively green taem, but as the season pro­
gressed, the team developed cooperation and skill under the coach’s guidance,
until they worked as a unit. This teamwork was the cause of not only an increase
in “games won” percentage over the past two years, but also an inspiration to
the students and the faculty of BDH and SHII to come and see a winning team.
As the highlight of the season, Mr. Craigmiles organized a very successful
tournament between BDH, Mt. Angel, Catlin Gable, and Lakeside, in which
three teams received trophies to keep for one year. Hopefully a tradition will
be started, and a tournament for the trophies will be held every year at Bishop
Dagwell Hall.
The Varsity squad extends a sincere “Thank You” to Mr. Craigmiles for his
work in setting up the tournament and for his dedication to the team throughout
the entire season. Without his enthusiasm and coaching skill, the team would
certainly have had a much poorer record. We express our gratitude for his
interest in us.
Playing games before the varsity team, the J.V’s, coached by Steve Barendrick, had a lot of individual potential which developed greatly as the season
progressed. It is the hope of the varsity team that these students will keep up
their basketball training, so that they may lead the school’s team to further
victories. These victories will result in a school spirit which can only be gained
by participation in events which are rewarding to see.
Bob Love
Captain

i

i

!

■

t

i

.

\

V-;:

; &amp;
. ■

s

�f
I

)
'
■

I

I
The middle school basketball team performed with remarkable zeal and
J enthusiasm in each game during the season. Their won-loss record was not
i exceptional, but having demonstrated talent, they will be an invaluable asset
to the Junior Varsity team next winter. Even though the record was not out­
standing, one must admire the attitudes and team spirit which flourished between
'both the individual members and their coach, Mr. Colberg.

;

!

■ 3

i 1

�WRESTLING

1
:

COACH
MR. JAMES CALDWELL
CAPTAIN

79

NICK PEECHY

�1

r- -' - - -

This year Bishop Dagwell Hall completed its most successful wrestling
season. Although only one of the team’s fifteen wrestlers was a returning letterman, the team showed steady improvement as the season progressed. By the end
of the season they had collected two wins, along with several defeats which
could very easily have gone the other way. This was a building year for wrest­
ling. Because the squad will lose only two of its members next year, BDH can
look forward to even greater success in the coming year.
There is little team work involved in a wrestling match. It is a sport where
physical and mental pressures are not shared collectively by a team, but rather
by each individual. It tests the individual in almost every way. Because of this,
wrestling is the most demanding of all high school sports.
This year’s squad was made up of a strong group of individuals. Leading
the team was Joe Augsburger (98), followed by Ken Saki (115), Mark Mitchum
(123), Craig Holman (130), Bob Ruben (136), Bill Courter (141), David
Poland (14S), Randall Ray (157), and the team captain, Nick Peachy (178).
The best individual record was compiled by Nick Peachy, who won three major
tournaments during the season: District Class B (191), State Class B (191), and
District Class A-2 and B (178).
All these wrestlers showed perseverance and determination while leading
B.D.II. to the most successful wrestling season in its history.
Nick Peachy,
Captain

( sT,

K-

&gt;Ti
r7‘&gt;-

■'TS'

wmmm
Mat men.

�Jrrrr;;..-

;
:

■

,

i

£% s
V..

i

••

** ••'

-'■■:■■■ ;:-V

v
•vJi

5P
g8w-

81

' ?

�LACROSSE

COACH
MR. FREDERICK WOOD

�TRACK

t

&gt;; :
COACH
MR. ROBERT ROSS

=,
1'.

■ft
J.',-

‘ff*

iM i

83

Ww
mSm

�CAMPUS
Vj

\

s,r-/..

{firT.?-Jv;-

*SME»a5B«H^•.

W&amp;
*s '&lt;
■

-

msj

' ?$

. •.

gj:
?A'5 * S

7'

UT'
I .i '

i®

j

■

3i5*gj

». *

m

t

•

\

.

■«
:

V

^•cil
■""'

fe-;

rr:

:

:■■■,.

■

■

-

-•■

UrTl
i•

■«^*1

;
3

V-

84

�DORM LIFE
HfgFi.

I"

; :■ .Y.;F‘:f
• '•

••O-V
.'v

I

\

&lt;'■■';■;if

vv-./ ,,;/.•■•
h 'f'

■■

--$2%
*,■

PlSSI V Vi-.

Up, up and away!

m&amp;mmv g;

CSQ

ML,

u '

r-*-

Up

■

,

XT

njfefciv.

mtrn-

.-:

vr;

a

: ■}v-i/.-C-.w'

J--

V*

i’* ' " •.. I*'"-

:

f?
?P

if. .- *

'

&amp;

!je
; i
i

r ,
r

Jr^J

�'

F3T,

-;

T
r'- '*. &gt; '

"':: '¥' v:i.

Underdog!

. and now, Mr. Clarkson, here we have . . .

86

��Juliet!

�Part of our cultural enrichment.

An enthusiastic dorm master.

�.

, I
1

I

iqoS
6L/&gt;—

0

'^Avdtmw*
tra/T-

rrrsoJVK,

O

\
C-V\v

J^tcc v-k &lt;zfcJiJL^c VZ

/s^
[jJ ajljir'- 0 or^j^yLT

Qj.rP, SfoiM

M^&gt;Sm*r
"

'7'ytsi l^tyn

^

O'cuA*#-—-

nope- von jvpfcfTO pS
b^ppy co pfcjsdo chfe €^te&gt;
£kS we&gt; Wfc&amp;fc

Apfe^

90

�! '

Mr. Frank R. Gilchrist

■

i
Dr. and Mrs. T. J. Boyden
Mr. and Mrs. A. E. Montgomery
Mr. B. J. Westlund
Dr. and Mrs. Norman W. Frink
Mr. William H. Bishop
Mr. and Mrs. Frank B. Green
Dr. and Mrs. Guy E. Marcy
Mr. and Mrs. Cornelius Duffie

SPONSORS

Mr. and Mrs. Frank D. Hatcher, Jr.
Dr. Lee Lusted
Mr. Frank Morrow
Mr. and Mrs. Harry O'Donnell
Mr. and Mrs. M. A. Foland

Mr. and Mrs. Peter Fisher
Dr. and Mrs. Frank Nash
Mr. and Mrs. Follett
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Mckee
Mr. and Mrs. B. D. Stewert, Jr.

91

��Taste that
beats the
others cold!

pepsi cola

PiPSI-COLA BOTTLING CO.
Portland, Oregon

Compliments of . .

I

MMfr
0

CONGER PRINTING COMPANY
WISHES TO EXPRESS THEIR GRATITUDE
FOR THE FINE COOPERATION WE
RECEIVED FROM THE “LEGEND"
STAFF IN THE PRODUCTION
OF YOUR YEARBOOK
GOOD LUCK TO YOU ALL!

93

rank

��1

I

Mail-Well

ENVELOPE CO.

Pak-Well
PAPER PRODUCTS COMPANY

PORTLAND DIVISIONS OF

Pak-Well
PAPER INDUSTRIES. INC.
where imagination creates the unusual

P
Compliments of

RADIO CAB COMPANY
1613 N. W. KEARNEY
PORTLAND, OREGON
227-1212

Board of
Trade Building
Portland, Ore. 97204
Telephone: 220-2392

95

Insurance
selection
that gives you
more for less.

Insurance selection
that
gives you
more for less.

�SKYLINE DRIVE-IN
1313 N. W. Skyline Blvd.
Portland, Oregon

HONEYMAN

HARDWARE
COMPANY

c/HV9

WHOLESALERS
3055 N.W. YEON AVENUE
PORTLAND. OREGON 97210

(A 'C 503)
PHONE 227-3593

Congratulations on a Successful Year!
POPE &amp; TALBOT, INC.
Congratulations on a Successful Year!
POPE &amp; TALBOT, INC.
Congratulations on a Successful Year!
POPE &amp; TALBOT, INC.
Congratulations on a Successful Year!
POPE &amp; TALBOT, INC.
Congratulations on a Successful Year!
POPE &amp; TALBOT, INC.

96

�Nudelmans is definitely with the

Fashion Revolution!
The
Brave New Breed
paints the
Fashion Scene
for J68 from
Wild to Mild!

■

When you rent Formal Wear at
Nudelmans your selection ranges
from the newest in Double-breasted
Dinner Jackets and Formal Turtle­
necks to the Traditional Dinner
Jackets and pleated Formal Shirt.

||l

NUDELMANS have over twenty

(20) fashion ideas in Formal Jackets
with a variety of complementary col­
ors in Formal Turtles . . . the greatest
showing in the Northwest!
Don’t delay! Come in now and make
your selection for your Prom. Some
items are in limited quantities. Re­
member . . . FASHION is changing
into FUN!
Open Monday
and Friday
evenings

NUDELMANS
Formal Wear
4th AT WASHINGTON. DOWNTOWN/228 6662
RALEIGH HILLS SHOPPING CENTER/292-3544

•4 Madrid 4*
97

�]

Congratulations
Class of '68

SWEDE’S BARBER SHOP
Fred Meyer Shopping Center
Raleigh Hills

Compliments
of

Saga Foods Inc.

Warm Regards
from
Mr. and Mrs. William Y. Sakai

98

�;
■

-

't

i'V-;
*0
'• r

\

n.i'

fh

4

i

1

s,, r _v nIV

3.'
v

v

&lt;vt

a

4,

&amp;

Cj/icul&amp; iQ &lt;§lumlseA/
AREA CODC 303 343-3343
DOWNTOWN AT TENTH a PEARL
EUGENE. OREGON 07401

fter ME

p
-C7

?

Certainly - -You'll have to learn -to
manage money some day What- better time
than during your learning years A
U-S Bard&lt;'Special Checking Account is ideal
■for your High School and College years.
No minirnum balance. No monthly service
charge Your name and address printed
free on each check CHECK WITH US l

UNITED STATES NATIONAL BANK OF OREGON

w

Member Fedaral Deposit Insurance Corporation

lALLYOURl

INSURANCE!

/?

n.

DUNNING/RAY

QQ

�DR. A. C. PHAELZER
"The All Around Doctor"

WISHES TO BID
THE DEPARTING SENIOR CLASS
A MOST FOND ADIEU
For those young men staying in the Portland
area, my offices are located in the
Skookum Building
REMEMBER: Cut Rates and Green Stamps

jll

aMvecjo

216 No State St. • Lake Oswego, Oregon
636-1028

�Coming..

• • •

everyone at

DAGWELL

ENJOYS . ..

It S finger lickin' good! Buy it by the box, bucket or barrel.

See the yellow pages for the location
101

i

nearest you.

J

�A FRIEND

A FRIEND

A FRIEND

A FRIEND

A FRIEND

A FRIEND

COMPLIMENTS OF A FRIEND

A FRIEND

A FRIEND

COMPLIMENTS OF A FRIEND

A FRIEND

A FRIEND

A FRIEND

A FRIEND

A FRIEND

A FRIEND

COMPLIMENTS OF A FRIEND

A FRIEND

A FRIEND

COMPLIMENTS OF A FRIEND

A FRIEND

A FRIEND

COMPLIMENTS OF A FRIEND

A FRIEND

A FRIEND

A FRIEND

A FRIEND

A FRIEND

A FRIEND

COMPLIMENTS OF A FRIEND

A FRIEND

A FRIEND

COMPLIMENTS OF A FRIEND

A FRIEND

A FRIEND

COMPLIMENTS OF A FRIEND

A FRIEND

A FRIEND

A FRIEND

A FRIEND

COMPLIMENTS OF A FRIEND

COMPLIMENTS OF A FRIEND

COMPLIMENTS OF A FRIEND

COMPLIMENTS OF A FRIEND

E. C. ERNST, Inc.
Electrical Contractors
WASHINGTON, D. C.

111

�-'&lt;• ••

• -

[i
■

Best Wishes
from

i

Eugene Investment Co.

COURTESY
O F

WEST COAST PICTURE CORP.
5805 N. E. SKIDMORE STREET
PORTLAND, OREGON 97218

103

�1

��I

1

1

-

BDH Students

ANTHONY, ROGER ...................
ARNOLD, BILL ...........................
AUGSBURGER, JOSEPH .........
BARNARD, WILLIAM

.................... 2833 S.W. Upper Drive —...... -------- ----------- _________ Portland, Oregon
_________ 2775 S.W. 107th------------------------------- ------- ........... .......Portland, Oregon
.............. ......4510 N.E. 112th ......... ............. ............ ......— ________ Portland, Oregon
...... .............Vancouver, Wash.
.................... 6303 Kansas St......... —..... ............................

BARNES, JOSEPH _...................
...................

BETHELL, GUERRY
BISHOP, FORREST

BOGUE, SCOTT.................
BOON, TOM
BOYDEN, GUY .............
BRECKBERG, ROBERT
BROOKE, TREVOR
BROWN, GARY

........ ................

1078 Hammock St.----- ----------------------------- _________ Eugene, Oregon
2188 S.W. Main St. ---------------------------- — _____ ___ Portland, Oregon
654 S.W. Burlingame Terrace------------------- _________ Portland, Oregon
.11519 S.W. Breyman Ave. .... —..... —-........ ._.................Portland, Oregon
.................. Portland, Oregon
18945 N.E. Hassalo St..............—.................

____ ______ 4167 S.W. Grcenleaf Ct....................~.......... ................... Portland, Oregon
.................... Box 993
.................................. -............. ........ __________Kodiak, Alaska
......... ............752 Lake Shore Road-------------------------------- ............... ...Lake Oswego, Oregon
...................... 4815 S. Perry
......................... ................... ____ ____ .Spokane, Wash.

BRUSS, RANDALL

__ _______ 911 Jackson Tower----------------------------------- _________ Portland, Oregon

CAMPBELL, JAMES _____ __ —

11955 S.W. Trcmont ........... -....................... _________ Portland, Oregon
.................... 4222 S.W. Warren's Way ------------------------ ................... Portland, Oregon

CATLIN, ROBERT _____ __ —

......

CHEATHAM, NORTH ...............

.................

12526 S.W. Edgecliff Road ____ ___ _____ .................. Portland, Oregon

CHURCH, GREG __

____ __ _

10943 S.W. Collina Ave._________ __ ___ ......... ..........Portland, Oregon

COBB, ELIOT

.................... 7640 S.W. Cedar St_____________________

CONOVER, THERON ..................

.....................4454 S.E. 12th Ave. .................... .................... __________ Portland, Oregon

COURTER, BILL ...........................

................

2207 Panama ............................................. ........ _________ Bend, Oregon
4927 S.W. Elm Lane __ __________ _____

CUFFEL, CURTIS .........................

_________ Portland, Oregon

_________ Portland, Oregon

DAGGATT, WALTER

................... 2505 Ocean Vista Drive -------------------------- __________Seaside, Oregon

DAUGHERTY, GREGORY

..............

2530 Woodland Dr....................................... — .........

.................... 2210 S.E. King Blvd................. -.......................

DAVIDSON, KEVIN

Prairie Springs Trout Farm.................... ....... _______

DRISCOLL, DANIEL__________
...........

DUFFIE, CORNELIUS

............

FEARS, SHANNOR

Eugene, Oregon
.....Beaverton, Oregon
Dayville, Oregon

2989 S.W. Montgomery Drive .............. .......... _________ Portland, Oregon
2300 S.W. Seymour Dr. .........................—..... ________

Portland, Oregon

3116 Cascadia Ave. S..................... .................. _________ Seattle, Wash.

FISHER, BRUCE .........

02425 S.W. Mintary Rd.............................. —. ....................Portland, Oregon

FLOWERREE, JOHN
.....................

.... ......... ..... 451 N.W. Skyline Blvd._________________ __ _______ Portland, Oregon

FOLLETT, TODD .........................

...... ...............6175 S.W. 90th ......................... ............ ........... __________Portland, Oregon

FRANKLIN, BRUCE

.................... 7395 S.W. Montclair Dr____________ ____ __________ Portland, Oregon

FOLAND, DAVID

....................

FRINK, NORMAN ___________

............. ...... 10740 S.W. Summerville ................................. .................... Portland, Oregon

GONYEA, DOUGLAS ...... ..........

................... Route 4, Box 77................ ............................... ..................Eugene, Oregon

GOLDSMITH, PETER

....................4140 Grcenleaf Ct............................................... __________Portland, Oregon

___ ____

.............

10835 S.W. Muirwood Dr. ............................. .................... Portland, Oregon

GREEN, BRAD .................... .........

..... ...........

1515 S.W. Elizabeth Ct...................................

HAESSLER, STEVE .......................

...........
Diamond Head ................. ............... .....
... ..... ......Diamond Head ..... ................................

GREEN, PETER

..........

HAESSLER, EDWARD

...........

Portland, Oregon
Lake Oswego, Oregon
....._....... —Lake Oswego, Oregon
Portland, Oregon

HARRIS, MARK ....................

................... 4116 S.W. Tualatin Ave.

HATCHER, KRIS ................. ..........

______ ___ Route 1, Box 147V* ------------------- -------------- __ _______Portland, Oregon

HICKS, JOHN

...............

............................

HOLLAND, JOHN

....................

HONEYMAN, CRAIG

2012 77th N.E....................................................

........ .......... 3000 S.W. Montgomery Dr. ....... ...............

HOLMAN, CRAIG ....................
HONEYMAN, JEFF............

—..........................

5120 S.W. Scholls Ferry Rd., Apt. 208
.................... 2008 S.W. 19th Ave.........................................
............

2008 S.W. 19th Ave.........................................

............. ......Seattle, Wash.
..............

Portland, Oregon

..............

Portland, Oregon
Portland, Oregon

................... Portland, Oregon

KARAFOTIAS, CHRIS

1339 S.W. 11th Ave......................................

Portland, Oregon

KINGERY, ROBERT

12606 S.W. Edgecliff Rd.

Portland, Oregon

KUHLMAN, PETER

3597 S.W. Council Crest Dr......................... „.

Portland, Oregon

LAKE, BILL

2130 S.W. 21st Ave.................................

Portland, Oregon

106

�;
LEONARD, CHIP

...... 2431 S.W. Sherwood Dr.....................

LOVE, ROBERT

2491 S.W. Sherwood Drive .........

..... ......-Portland, Oregon
.............. Portland, Oregon

LUSTED, LEE ........................ ..

________ 2491 S.W. Sherwood Drive

MAGEN1S, KEVIN

............... 3251 N.E. Alameda Terr........... ........

MARCY, JOHN ... ......................

2112 St. Helens

........

_______Portland, Oregon
Yakima, Wash.

MARCY, ROBERT ......................

________ 2112 St. Helens ...................

Yakima, Wash.

MARTIN, JOHN..... ...................

.................Box 8182, N. Gate Station

Seattle, Washington
Brightwood, Oregon

MITCHUM, MARK ...

Route 2, Box 1099

MONTGOMERY, ROGER

203 Jantoi Drive ................................

Boise, Idaho

MORRISON, CRAIG ...................

1428 Uplands Drive ...........................

______ Lake Oswego, Oregon

MORROW, TRENTON

Star Route

............. Carson, Washington

MeGURK, PATRICK

24733 Long Valley Road

..............

.............. 1885 N.W. Ramsey Drive ............—

NASH, CARL

........... 1030 37th Avc. East ...........................

O'DONNELL, JIM

805 N.E Fifth Ave.

PALMER, MARK
PEACHY, NICHOLAS
PROUDFOOT, PAUL .
RANDALL, JIM .....................

REYNOLDS, CHARLES

Portland, Oregon
Beaverton, Oregon

13780 S.W. Brightwood
.............. 13780 S.W. Brightwood

................

RUBEN, ROBERT

............... 4712 Charles Avc.................. —

RUSSELL, MICHAEL

................4003 S W. Hillsdale Avc. ..................

SCHLESINGER, PAUL ........ ...

lone, Oregon

Pasco, Washington

4121 W. Riverhaven
............... 2025 S.W. Mt. Hood Lane

......... ....Beaverton, Oregon
Calgary, Alberta
____ Portland, Oregon
Portland, Oregon

25 S.W. 85th

..........................

Camas, Washington

___ Portland, Oregon

...............6735 S.W. 12th Ave.

. 01425 S.W. Mary Failing Dr

SCHLESINGER, MARK

_______ Portland, Oregon
...... ........Seattle, Washington

Portland, Oregon

.............. Box 369 ..............................................

ROSENLUND, CRAIG
ROSENLUND, SCOTT

...............

.............3417 S.E. Carlton St

RAY, RANDY ...............

SAKAI, KEN

Calabasas, California

Goldcndalc, Washington

McKEE, KENNETH

________01425 S.W. Mary Failing Dr

Portland, Oregon
Portland, Oregon
______ Portland, Oregon

SEABORN, CHARLES

2139 W Burns.de

SESSIONS, DAVID

11380 S.W. Douglas

SHEPPARD, NORVAL

Mountain Village ................................

Alaska

SMITH, CHRIS . ....-.........
SMITH, JOHN .................

2649 S.W. Georgian PI.

Portland, Oregon

10930 S.W. Walker Rd..................

Portland, Oregon

.12255 S.W. Boones Ferry Rd

SPENCER, MARSHALL

.................3722 S.W. Grccnlcaf Dr.....................

STEVENS, BILL

Portland, Oregon
Portland, Oregon
Portland, Oregon

...... ... Eureka, California

125 Edgewood Rd.

........... Portland, Oregon

3663 S.E. Claybourne .

.......................

Portland, Oregon

San Francisco, Calif.

c/o USAID/BPR APO

STEWART, BENJAMIN
STORRE, RIC
TEENY, NICK

...............

............... 1595 S.W. Highland Pkwy

SPARKMAN, ERIC

TEENY, MARK..........................

.................3663 S.E. Claybourne

_______ Portland, Oregon

TENNY

____ ___ 5800 S.W. Tcrwilligcr Rd........ .........

............. Portland, Oregon

THOMAS, TED ...........................

................ 12525 S.W. Edgccliff Rd. ................

...........Portland, Oregon

WESTLUND, RICHARD
...... ..

WESTLUND, BEN
WIDING, DAVID

.....................

WILLIS, RICHARD
WORKMAN, MARK

107

........... Portland, Oregon

....... 15042 N.W. Oakmont Loop

LUSTED, HUGH

.

..... ........New Mexico

_________Box 302, Ranchos de Taos .

LUM, JACKSON...............

_______Portland, Oregon

Bay Rock No. 30, 668 MeVey

Lake Oswego, Oregon

Bay Rock No. 30, 668 MeVey

Lake Oswego, Oregon
..............Portland, Oregon

................. 11235 N.E. Liberty St.
................ 2200 S.W. Warwick

.

4381 S.W. Fairview Blvd................

WORKMAN, BRIAN

4381 S.W. Fairview Blvd....................

WURZWEILER, ALAN

2712 S.W. Patton Ct.

Portland, Oregon
Portland, Oregon
...............Portland, Oregon
Portland, Oregon

�SHH Students

.................. 5229 Louise Avenue

ANGERMAN, BARBARA .........„....

.......... .......4422 S. E. River Drive ----------------- ----

ANDRUS, LINDA .............................

........... .......4038 S. W. Garden Home Road-------

ATKINSON, JUDITH ........ .........

___ __ ___920 Crest Drive

AUGSBURGER, CHRIS_________

.......... ........4510 N. E. 112th Avenue _......... .........

_______

BAKER, CYNTHIA

_________ 1 South Pearl------------------------------------

________ Denver, Colorado

BARNES, RACHEL ....... .......-........

.................. 1078 Hammock Street .—.........—.........

........... .....Eugene, Oregon

BETHELL, MARJOLAINE ........ ..

..................2188 S.W. Main Street -------------------

................. Portland, Oregon

BISHOP, LIBBY

.................. 1032 Westward Ho Road ........-........ ..

................Lake Oswego, Oregon

BRIGHAM, PATTI ...........................

................. 1060 Date Avenue —...........................-

_______ Coos Bay, Oregon

BRILLING, NANCY .................... ....

.............

_______ Spokane, Wash

--------------- --------------

P. O. Box 337, Dishman Branch----------

Route 2, Box 165 ................................

BROWN, MOLLY ............................

BRUCE, LENORA
BRUCE, SUSAN

-----------------------

_________Encino, California

ANDERSON, MARJORIE ____ ___

_________Jennings Lodge, Ore.
...... ........... Portland, Oregon
_____ ___Eugene, Oregon
Portland, Oregon

............... Hillsboro, Oregon

_____ ___ 7780 S. W. Mayo ............ _......................

_____ ___Portland, Oregon

..............7780 S.W. Mayo --------- -------------------

________ Portland, Oregon

336 Fillmore Street

............... Port Townsend, Wash.

CADY, ROXANNE ..........................

2369 S. W. 84th Avenue _............... —

..... ........... Portland, Oregon

CHRISTENSON, NADINE

1955 N. W. Ramsey Drive ......

...............Portland, Oregon

BRYDGES, NORA

.............

_______ Portland, Oregon

............

..................10943 S.W. Collina Avenue —..............

COLLINS, SARAH ............... ............

245 Valley View Drive ............. ............

. ______Medford, Oregon

................ P. O. Box 631 ................... -........... .........

________ Ketchum, Idaho

CHURCH, SUSAN

CONLEY, CATHERINE

...... ..........

9050 S. W. Garden Home Road ...........

COULSON, JUDITH

................ Route 1, Box 165 —----- --------------------

CRENSHAW, SUSAN

...... ........ Scio, Oregon
............... Dallas, Oregon

CRIDER, PEGGY ................................

................. 202 Haytcr Street

CRISPELL, SARAH ..............

........ ........2200 Rockwood Drive .............................

________ Sacramento, Calif.

DAHL, ROXANNE ....... .............. _..

...........

Box 578 _________________________

________ Redmond, Oregon

Box 9, Navcommsta Kodiak .................

...... .......... FPO, Seattle, Wash.

4303 S. W. 68th Avenue —..................

________ Portland, Oregon

DARLING, CYNTHIA
DAVIS, NIKI

...............

................... _.....

DEGGE, LESLI

................

DcMOND, RANDALL .....................
DOROSH, ELIZABETH

................................

................. Portland, Oregon

Eugene, Oregon

614 Fair Oaks Drive.................
3240 N. E. 131st Avenue

................ Portland, Oregon
Tigard, Oregon

_____ 10795 S.W. Fairhaven Way ________
_____

Reno, Nevada

DRAIN, MARCY ...............................

1570 S. Marsh .........................................

DUSSIN, ALEXANDRA

8450 S. W. Woodside Drive

Portland, Oregon

EHRLICH, JANE

Washington Apts. 21, Mar Egco 48

Guadalajara, Jalisco,
Mexico
............ Portland, Oregon

ENGLEHART, ANN

.1201 S. W. 12th Avenue ..

EXLEY, MARILYN ...

2610 S. E. 8th Avenue

FOLAND, ANN

451 N. W. Skyline Blvd.......

Portland, Oregon

FRAME, TEANA

P. O. Box 338

Coos Bay, Oregon

GATTO, DEBORAH

1809 S.W. Myrtle Street

..........................

Portland, Oregon

Portland, Oregon

GILLIES, CAROL

1617 N. E. 132nd Avenue

Portland, Oregon

GINDER, GRETCHEN "ANN"

24 Arbutus Court....................

Walnut Creek, Calif.

HANSON, MARCIA

.. .13650 S.W. Linda Lane

Beaverton, Oregon

HARPER, KELLIE

2550 S. W. 83rd Avenue

Portland, Oregon

HARRIGAN, SARAH

9400 S.W. Malcolm Glen

Portland, Oregon

HARRISON, LESLIE

1118 St. Paul Street

Baltimore, Maryland

HASLETT, SUSAN

7123 S. E. 31st Avenue

Portland, Oregon

HAWKINS, KATHLEEN

1860 S. E. Spruce

Beaverton, Oregon

HELVERSEN, ANN

3111 S.W. Talbot Road

Portland, Oregon

HERVIN, MIA

2020 S.W 15th Avenue

Portland, Oregon

HIBBARD, EDITH

173 Harding Boulevard

Oregon City, Oregon

�!

r:
_____ ___6312 N. Oberlin________ ___

________

JOHNSON, ELIZABETH "BETSY"

_______ Route 1, Box 978 __________
_______ 2116 Roberts Road_________
_______ 7325 S. W. Brenne Lane____
_______ 7463 N. Dwight Avenue_____
_______ P. 0. Box 356 _____________

_________ Sherwood, Oregon

________

Redmond,Oregon

JOHNSON, JULIANNE _________

_____ __ 2801 S. W. Patton Lane______

________

Portland,Oregon

JONES, LISA __________________

........... .....7900 S.W. Brentwood, Apt. 18

_________ Portland, Oregon

KING, LAURA_________________

________ 2705 S.W. English Court____

_________ Portland, Oregon

KOZLOSKY, ROSEMARIE_______

_____ ___P. 0. Box 361

_________ Scappoose, Oregon

KREWSON, KATHY____________

_____ ___3026 West Gilbert Avenue___

_________ Roscburg, Oregon

LAMKIN, JUDITH _____________

________ 10960 S.W. Durham Road ___

... ...............Tigard, Oregon

LITTLE, SHARON_____________

________ 912 N. E. 44th Avenue

_________ Portland, Oregon

LUNDEEN, ELLEN_____________

________ 3500 Pearl Street ........................

_________ Eugene, Oregon

LUXFORD, JEAN______________

................Route 2, Box 200 ................ -.......

__ ______ Clatskanie, Oregon

McDonald,

________ 1770 Skyline Boulevard

________ Eugene, Oregon
________Long Creek, Oregon

HILLESLAND, SUSAN...............
HOWARD, PATRICIA __________
HOWARD, ROBYN ..... .............. ....
HUNTER, COLLEEN ___________
ENGLIS, HELEN_______________

deborah________

............ ...........

McGREW, JANET_____________

_________ Portland, Oregon
_________ Portland, Oregon

............ .... _ Portland, Oregon

MERWIN, MARY ELIZABETH
MOORE, BARBARA____________

L_____5343 S.W. Bancroft ............ ...........
_____ 2352 Van Ness Street

______ Portland, Oregon
_________ Eugene, Oregon

NIETE, LINDA________________

_____ P.O. Box 5 ......................... -.......... -

_________ Oregon City, Oregon

teresa___________

.... .............. Bly, Oregon

OBENCHAIN, MARGARET ______
PLUMMER, PAIGE_____________

________ 3710 Clark Street

_________ Vancouver, Wash.

POND, BARBARA______________

________ 5720 Kansas Street ...............................

................... Vancouver, Wash.

PROPES, SHERI________________

________ Route 1, Box 227 .....................

__________Sheridan, Oregon

PYLE, KATHLEEN______________

....... .........10775 S.W. Hawthorne Lane

----------

...... ............. Portland, Oregon

RANDALL, KARYN ____________

________6735 S.W. 12th Avenue ....................

........... ........ Portland, Oregon

RENNETT, BETTY___________ __

_______ 4627 S. W. Humphrey Court_______

__________ Portland, Oregon

REYNOLDS, KATHRYN ________

________2025 S.W. Mt. Hood Lane ...................

__________Portland, Oregon

RITCHIE, ELIZABETH _________

________ 1221 Birch Street ..................... .............

_________ Forest Grove, Oregon

ROACH, CATHIE

_____ ___880 N. W. 8th Street

_________ Gresham, Oregon

__ __________

________ P. 0. Box 1 ----------------------------------- -

_________ Mangla, W. Pakistan

RODGERS, PAULETTE__________

________ 2495 Sunnyvicw Road N. E. ................

_________ Salem, Oregon

ROSENLUND, DANA __ ________

_____ ___ 13780 S. W. Brightwood ................ ......

_________ Beaverton, Oregon

SESSIONS, ELIZABETH ................
SHELTON, LINDA_____________

................. 11880 S.W. Douglas Street
..P.O. Box 5041 ....... ................................

__________ Portland, Oregon
__________ Carmel, California

SIMPSON, LYNDALL ....................

________ 812 Riverdalc Avenue S.W. —......—

__________Calgary, Alberta, Can

SMITH, SALLY

________ 415 South 6th Street ----------------------

_________ Coos Bay, Oregon

RODGERS, DEBRA LEE ...................

__ __________

STEVENSON, SARAH

. 2783 S W. Roswell .............................

_________

STOREY, SANDRA ___ __________

__________Portland, Oregon

________ 123 Fifteenth Avenue ................... ......

__________Lewiston, Idaho
__________Eugene, Oregon

SWIFT, AMBER...................... ...........

.................450 Sterling Drive

THOMAS, LINDA .............................

________ 7145 S.W. Sharon Lane ...._...... ...

_________ Portland, Oregon

TRESSLER, DEBORAH __________

...... ..........Box 77 ............................... -........... ..

__________Neskowin, Oregon

TUSON, SUSANNE ...........................

................ 311 East Market

VITOUSEK, KELLY ..........................

................. 4005 Round Top Drive.................. -.....

WEBB, 'TONI" FREDERICKA
WILLIAMSON, JANIS ............... ............ ..

.........................

............. .............

______P.O. Box 1003 _________________
______3909 S.W. 52nd Place __________

WORTHINGTON, REBECCA ................... ... .......

2406 South Fir ------------ -----—.......—

YOCUM, JOANNE ..--------------- ------------- ______ 819 W. 18th

109

....... ........... Medford, Oregon

_____ 2747 S. W. Roswell Avenue

McKinney,

P

Portland,Oregon

.................... ...............

______ ___ Kellogg, Idaho
....................Honolulu, Hawaii
__________Grants Pass,Oregon
........ .......... Portland, Oregon
__________Olympia, Wash.
__________Albany, Oregon

�:

!
■

'

�I.

»

For Reference
Not to be taken from this room

LIBRARY
ST. HELEN'S HALL’
BISHOP DAGWELL HALI

��;■ 'iij

imm

msasmsssm
A

BPSSSE

igBHSsni
lIHIIIIIlHUIlIHnHIlUUnillHnilllH

iiiiiminiiniuuiiiiniiAuiiiHiiini
n

lUllllllllllWIIIIUIIIIIIIIillllStllUIII

MMBBMBMM

sassarass
niiBBUir iimiiiiumiiHiiiiB
c

Riniiiin»wr.iiiiuiniiii0iiiuiiiiii
BiiiHiiiiiwi^iiiniiwnuuniL

�</text>
                  </elementText>
                </elementTextContainer>
              </element>
            </elementContainer>
          </elementSet>
        </elementSetContainer>
      </file>
    </fileContainer>
    <collection collectionId="1">
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="1">
          <name>Dublin Core</name>
          <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="1">
                  <text>Oregon Episcopal School Yearbooks</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="41">
              <name>Description</name>
              <description>An account of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="2">
                  <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>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="39">
              <name>Creator</name>
              <description>An entity primarily responsible for making the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="3">
                  <text>Oregon Episcopal School</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="45">
              <name>Publisher</name>
              <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="4">
                  <text>Oregon Episcopal School</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="40">
              <name>Date</name>
              <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="5">
                  <text>1921-1923; 1931-1995</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="47">
              <name>Rights</name>
              <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="6">
                  <text>All rights are reserved by Oregon Episcopal School.</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="44">
              <name>Language</name>
              <description>A language of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="7">
                  <text>English</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="51">
              <name>Type</name>
              <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="8">
                  <text>Yearbooks</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="65">
              <name>Conforms To</name>
              <description>An established standard to which the described resource conforms.</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="9">
                  <text>Describing Archives: A Content Standard (DACS)</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="78">
              <name>Extent</name>
              <description>The size or duration of the resource.</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="10">
                  <text>85</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="79">
              <name>Medium</name>
              <description>The material or physical carrier of the resource.</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="11">
                  <text>bound volumes</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="49">
              <name>Subject</name>
              <description>The topic of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="1298">
                  <text>Students</text>
                </elementText>
                <elementText elementTextId="1299">
                  <text>Junior colleges</text>
                </elementText>
                <elementText elementTextId="1300">
                  <text>Junior college students</text>
                </elementText>
                <elementText elementTextId="1301">
                  <text>High school student activities</text>
                </elementText>
                <elementText elementTextId="1302">
                  <text>Student activities</text>
                </elementText>
                <elementText elementTextId="1303">
                  <text>Student publications</text>
                </elementText>
                <elementText elementTextId="1304">
                  <text>Teachers</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </collection>
    <itemType itemTypeId="1">
      <name>Text</name>
      <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    </itemType>
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="78">
            <name>Extent</name>
            <description>The size or duration of the resource.</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="603">
                <text>1</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="79">
            <name>Medium</name>
            <description>The material or physical carrier of the resource.</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="604">
                <text>bound volume</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="605">
                <text>The Legend-Delphic 1968</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="49">
            <name>Subject</name>
            <description>The topic of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="606">
                <text>School yearbooks</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="607">
                <text> Students</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="608">
                <text> High school student activities</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="609">
                <text> Student publications</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="610">
                <text> Teachers</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="611">
                <text>This is an OES yearbook from 1968. 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>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="39">
            <name>Creator</name>
            <description>An entity primarily responsible for making the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="612">
                <text>Oregon Episcopal School</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="40">
            <name>Date</name>
            <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="613">
                <text>1968</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="47">
            <name>Rights</name>
            <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="614">
                <text>All rights are reserved by Oregon Episcopal School.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="44">
            <name>Language</name>
            <description>A language of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="615">
                <text>English</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="43">
            <name>Identifier</name>
            <description>An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="616">
                <text>oes_delphic1968-compressed.pdf</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
    <tagContainer>
      <tag tagId="1">
        <name>School yearbooks; Students; High school student activities; Student publications; Teachers</name>
      </tag>
    </tagContainer>
  </item>
  <item itemId="41" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="43">
        <src>http://archive.oes.edu/files/original/39cb0c7922ca41757fe33adc2c89ad7a.pdf</src>
        <authentication>64e8ca075adab22c7786d9431c6a9628</authentication>
        <elementSetContainer>
          <elementSet elementSetId="4">
            <name>PDF Text</name>
            <description/>
            <elementContainer>
              <element elementId="92">
                <name>Text</name>
                <description/>
                <elementTextContainer>
                  <elementText elementTextId="1048">
                    <text>I

DELPHIC 1968

�!
I

i

For everything there is a season, and a
time for every matter under heaven:
a time to be born, and a time to die;
a time to plant, and a time to pluck
up what is planted;
a time to kill, and a time to heal;
a time to break down, and a time to

build up;
t

PI

a time to weep, and a time to laugh;
a time to mourn, and a time to dance;
a time to cast away stones, and a time
to gather stones together;
a time to embrace, and a time to refrain
from embracing;
a

time to seek, and a time to lose;

a

time to keep, and a time to cast

a
a

time to rend, and a time to sew;
time to keep silence, and a time to speak;

away;

a time to love, and a time to hate;
a time for war, a time for peace!
What gain has a worker from his toil?
Ecclesiastes

��:
!
I
i
■

!•
!•

I
I

i

\
:
I
I

[I

,\
&gt;

.

4

�A time to thank . .
Caroline Paige
The teacher who walks in the shadow of the temple,
among her followers, gives not of her wisdom but rather
of her faith and her lovingness.”
Kahlil Gibran

. -

*.
- ;

5

�i

I

* 4 ■ £

6

�k c i cn e
CO pLAN t

_ -

/

^.

y
/

^;x

m
-

-?' '

&gt; '£/ ^-' ./

ea*"v/-

I

/&lt;

S

;
SI
/ :
•A

v.

/
/: *.

/

KDCRINISrRXUON

�'
;• i*.

:

1

.'.

. ... -

:
--

■-

(

V.;,

;v

..i

■

■■

r ;■

-

-r-

.

-

r.'J'.'V

'••

■

... .

-

'-.v.

�V

V

Somebody has said that modern education is simply the process of
discovering our ignorance.
If you pick up this annual twenty-five years
from now and browse through it, and by some chance read this editorial
from your Bishop, you’ll probably accept the definition with more apprecia­
tion than you do now
Life is tull of absurdities of that sort. The more
learned the man, the more informed and perceptive he becomes, the more
he is likely to acknowledge his limitations. We have attempted to provide
at St. Helen’s Hall not only intellectual but moral and religious values for
her graduates, and in those fields also there are somewhat absurd contradic­
tions. The longer you live and attempt to obey the Commandments to love
Cod and to love your neighbor, the more you will be aware of your sinfulness.
It’s the man who is in jail who usually protests his innocence. The man in
the monastery acknowledges with St. Paul his sinfulness, but strangely
enough is happier because of his humility. Contradictions fill our lives. I
can well understand how sensitive young people today are angry at our
money-orientated, status culture,—so much so that 1 have come to think
that the teen-agers during the great depression had a far happier time of it.
Never have we been so rich in America as we are today, and never have we
been so aware of social unrest in our cities and in our hearts. May Cod bless
you as your lives unfold. My prayer is that you will increasingly appreciate
the everlasting truth that in all of these areas of darkness—educational,
moral, material—our Lord Jesus Christ is indeed THE LIGHT OF THE
WORLD.
Faithfully, your Bishop,
James W. F. Carman

7

�I

1

I
I

I

To the Craduates of the Class of 1968—in the
hope that they will always realize and fully under­
stand the enduring character of one kind of time—
A Time for Thought
Over thirty years ago, in a message to the
graduating class of St. Helen’s Hall Junior College,
the Sisters of St. John Baptist wrote these words for
their annual, the Scintilla:
. to be a real St
Helen’s Hall girl or a real St Helen’s Hall alumna
implies a singleness and simplicity of purpose or
ideal, born of looking sanely at all sides of our
complex nature and choosing the things which have
behind them rugged truth and honesty, fair dealing
and breadth of view.”
Now, thirty-three years after those words were
written, our natures seem to have become infinitely
more complex; decisions, more complex; morality,
more complex; the world, more complex
Yet, in
the midst of complexity, the only valid solutions still
stem from ‘‘a singleness and simplicity of purpose or
ideal, born of looking sanely at all sides of our com­
plex nature and choosing those things which have
behind them rugged truth and honesty ...”
:

Yes, there are all kinds of times in life—to be
born and to die ... to kill and to heal ... to
break down and to build up .
.to weep and to
laugh ... to mourn and to dance
to seek and
to lose ... to love and to hate. . . . And all of
us, just in the course of that awesome but thrilling
and vital experience of living, know each of these
times in all their fullness of grief and joy, frustration
and fulfillment—running every gamut of human
emotion. For we are human beings, with weaknesses
and strengths, blindness and insight, ignorance and

8

understanding, cynicism and idealism.
But, if we will only claim it, there is always time
for thought As we go through life, passing from one
extreme of physical and emotional depth and height
to another, we must, if we think at all, if we are hon­
est with ourselves in our thinking, come to realize
the full implication and truth of Shakespeare’s words,
‘‘There is nothing either good or bad, but thinking
makes it so.”
You are graduating from St Helen’s Hall and
from one phase of your lives.
I hope for you and
beg of you, out of the many hopes and pleas that I
might express, this above all else: Guard your think­
ing1
Keep it straight during times of complexity;
fill it with rugged truth during times of sophistry; and
most important of all, make it honest at all times.
Sympathizing with those who deserve no sym­
pathy . . . condemning on a basis of incomplete
knowledge .
. going along with the crowd because
‘‘every one is doing it
. these are the easiest
forms of self-deceit and dishonesty in the world
If
you are tempted to indulge in them — and who isn’t?
— hold them up to the mirror of "rugged truth and
honesty, fair dealing and breadth of view.”
As you leave me and I leave you, my hand goes
across my desk to each of you. The warmth of my
handclasp urges you, first, to be indeed true to your­
self, so that you may never find yourself false to an­
other; and last, to find a time always for sane and
honest thought.
My affectionate au revoir —
Gertrude Houk Fariss

�CAROLYN COLLETT
(right)
Administrative Assistant, Dean of
Students, College Counselor
ready f° lauf&gt;h • •
ready to sympathize
sincere . . . idealistic . . . identifies
with everyone, anyone . . . sees eye to eye,
despite her height
. loves young people,
her own included!

EVELYN STRAHAN
(below)
Resident Director
hates self-centeredness . . . does a tough
job to the best of her ability . . great sat­
isfaction in seeing girls blossom into good
citizens
loves flowers, arranges them
artistically
poetic in speech, loves Kip­
ling
often profound.

CAROLYN HARRINGTON
(above)
Admissions Director, Music Appreciation
dislike of humorless people . . . addicted to travel . . . often
found in a swimming pool . . love of music . . . shines from
within . .
realistic and balanced.
9

�THE REV. DAVID LEECH

!

(right)
Chaplain
tidbits of wisdom . . . intimate friendship with the Bible
. . . encouraging familiarity with chapel service.

THE REV. R. H. GREENFIELD
(below)
Religion
repelled at negative, ever-destructive thinking
. philos­
opher . . . collector of books and records . . aware, alert,
concerned . . twinkling eyes, ready laugh, good cheer

10

�ISABEL BROWN
(left)
French
abhorence of untidiness . . . im­
maculate . . . organized . . . crisp
lightness of speech . . . communi­
cates her fondness of language.

r- j

ELIZABETH BRASFIELD
(right)
Mathematics
outdoorsy . . . golf, the beach.
driving . .
anything to escape
housework
enviable talent
with numbers.

NANCY DEWEESE
VAUNDA CARTER
(left)
Modern Dance
expressing aesthetic values . . .
feline grace . . . elegantly yet
simply approaching life.

11

�CYNTHIA DORAN
(right)

i

I

Religion
!

Johnnie . . . admiration of the fine arts . . . Johnnie . . .
exuberant . . . Johnnie . . . refined . . . intelligent.

!
I

I

!
HELCA DARET
(below)
Physical Education
everybody’s pal . . comforts with a chuckle . . . eternally
searching for a C.A.A. name
good friend of Santa
Claus . . . embodiment of tolerance.

if.

7 ;
■.

■"'J r

#■

/ /A

4 '
V

' f;

/

&amp; iK

' Xs

/?

:• t r:

&amp;m

:

;

i

f

* i *

WILLIAM BARTLETT CHASE
(below)
■

Y

/ r.

7

Physics

«

ardent sports fan
Green Bay Packers
his specialty . . . spouting with phrases .
in knowledge.

ammM'i
i
i

' \

&lt;

(

&lt;■

.

&lt; :&lt;■ r

c&lt;

/ f

(

CY A
&lt; YU
Y

x

/ k

: .‘v___
Y - /&lt;

12

skiing
steeped

�:

I

VIRGINIA DOWSE
(right)
Drama, Voice and Diction
Mrs. Collett’s prodigy ... a successful alumna . . . back
to give of herself and her charm . . . generous with ad­
vice .
. a friend as well as teacher.

JOANNE GILLESPIE
(below)
indefatigable stenciler . . explorer of menthol wilds . . .
limitless energy
fun to talk to seriously .
dedicated.

1
ELIZABETH JOHNSON
(above)
Science
disgusted with laziness . . . lover of the all-outdoors
of hiking, hunting, gardening . . . fondness for
life in all its forms ... no matter how small, no mat­
ter how large . . . concerned with conserving nature.

?f rM
" laibis
i-

t:

'K

■

:■

..

-j

A

13

�I

i

MARION MITCHELL
(left)
Spanish
repelled by boastful vaunting . .
dislikes excessive
vanity . .
sewing
. . tennis . .
traveling
. .
always on the go
makes Spanish come alive.

I

$

ISABELLE MCKIRDIE
(below)
History
always cheerful, always thoughtful ... a spring bubbling
encouragement, extracting bits of knowledge .
. hard
to really know, but makes knowing worth all efforts.

14

LENORE KLINK
(below)
Fencing
agility mingled with skill . . , “touche”
plined with a keenness for fun

�CAROLINE PAICE
(right)
Mathematics
aversion to disloyalty . . .
donor of flowers . . . her heart
in the chapel . . . greatest
pride is in her students . . .
adept at numerous handicrafts
. . . giving, giving, always
giving . . . her time, her
energy, her guidance.

RUTH ROSE RICHARDSON
(below)
CARL REYNOLDS
(below)
Art History and Appreciation
cosmopolitan
. . vast accumulation of slides . . .
radiates a genuine appreciation . . . compassionate
concern for the Hall

English, Old Testament
R3” .
antipathy for thoughtlessness, particularly
when it hurts others . . . generous with time . . .
considerate .
. always a dozen puns on hand . . .
bird-watching . .
sagacious . . . piercing intellect
. . . curious.

15
I

�I

I

DIANA RORER
(below)

!

Latin
soars to great heights in a silver bird . . . aura of
mystery .
. frequent excursions to the faculty
lounge . . . vivacious and patient . . . awe-in­
spiring.

!
i

■

ELSA SILVERS
(above)
Art
pleasant . . . gentle mannered . . . perceptive . .
conveying her creative spirit to her students.
BETTY WILCOX
(left)
:

History and Guidance

contemplative yet lively . . . conservation enthusias
. . . brings the ancient world up to date . . . acut&lt;
understanding

U.

16

�MIDDLE SCHOOL FACULTY
JPlf1*

HELEN CAMPBELL
(left)
English, Social Sciences,
Literature
strict ... a sense of justice . . .
consciousness of social correct­
ness . . .

JUDY OREM
(right)
Math and Science
youthful . . “2 + 2 = 4” . . . presen­
tation integrated with scientific abil­
ity . .
serious but fun.

17

�■

I

I
I

I
I

I

—

MRS. GUNDRY
Registrar

MRS

HUNTER

Secretary

MRS. COBB
Receptionist

�i

•;
l
t
i

:

MRS. MOFFETT, MRS. TAYLOR, MISS LOFSTROM, MRS. DYER
Housemothers

MR. BURNS
Kitchen Manager

MRS OSVOLD, MRS. SELF
Librarians

19

�f
I

I

.

I
I

I
:
i

:
I

i

i

I

!
!

�1

:
;

x trtcne tro
gxrneR ^roxie^
togecbea

\
'

\&gt;

Jk;

M1

»

\

z
ll
t

J

)

ORCXtNJtZKriONS

��I :

21

�1

I
I

I
I

STUDENT COUNCIL

»
:

I
‘

STUDENT COUNCIL
President Roxann Dahl (right)
i

spirited debates . . . impetus behind
dances
money-raising projects . . .
detention slips
. always open to any
suggestions . .
link between administra­
tion and students

ROW ™0' Ubby Bish0DnSu«CneHmp'f T If*. A'kinson' S*rah Collins, Linda Andrus, Roxann Dahl. President.

* ™EEH"g!f;dv,^s, amscv

�DELPHIC

try ~\-£; if*'

W vv;
«V- •:
/* &gt;
&gt;

'V.

mz

BACK ROW- Mia Hervin, Sue Crenshaw, Ann Helverson, Nora Brydges,
editor; Paige Plummer. FRONT ROW: Leslie Harrison, Julie Johnson, Judy
Atkinson.

23

i

�I

ATHLETIC
COMMISSION

i

President:
Mamie Bethel

i

i
i

I
:
i

&amp;/■

J

A

IP
: "
r

.i .

JUNIOR
RED CROSS
President:
Linda Andrus

�1.

ALTAR GUILD
President: Marcia Hanson

�I

I

i

!

I

71
*

2

I

BOARDERS' COUNCIL
President: Jean Luxford

'

s~r

&gt;j

, K:J &lt;SS'

■

•. • •;•

- •

HELENAS
26

President: Randi DeMond

�NICOLODEON
Editor: )udy Atkinson

*

GLEE CLUB
President: Sue Crenshaw

�!
I
l

I

\
|
5

!
I
I
1

I

ART-LITERATURE CLUB
President: Marcy Drain

FOREIGN AFFILIATIONS

President: Kathy Pyle
Above is a picture of a Japanese dragon taken from the Mardi Cras decora­
tions. It is modeled after similar dragons used in our sister city, Sapporo,
Japan.

28

�r i on o
co L,\uan
k

��;

!'
I

“He is indeed wise, for he does not bid you
enter the house of his wisdom, but rather leads
you to the threshold of your own mind.”

I

Kahlil Gibran

V

Mary Rodney, for rwenty-seven years, Ger­
trude Fariss, for thirty-five years, dedicated their
service, their love, their tears, their laughter,
their lives to the activities of St. Helen’s Hall.

j

Miss Mary Rodney
First Principal, St. Helen’s Hall

“And there are those who give and know not
pain in giving, nor do they seek joy, nor give
with mindfulness of virtue; . .
They give as in yonder valley the myrtle
breathes its fragrance into rpace.”
Kahlil Gibran

Mrs. Gertrude Houk Fariss
Director, St. Helen’s Hall
29

�MIDDLE SCHOOL ACTIVITIES

l

I

i
j

i

;
l

I

:

mk
•*

*

:

..

m.

■

r

J*

:
;

IcJ

: jflm.
r

f &gt;

i
i

\.

f
v&gt;--'

Sb

r
J
i.

'rd.

w
30

�/

: .

31

��■

SENIOR DINNER

OLD GIRL-NEW GIRL TEA

33

�.
{

INITIATION

l

I
I

i

!
!

i

;

m
./

l

i

:

■.

y,Xi

;
.

7
■

i

I w&gt;&lt;

�!
!
;

'v

�11

I

! I
I

.

PORTLAND ZOO DANCE

I

I
I

j

1

:
1

1

■

0

■l

I

i

&gt; t
•r /

V'

. I

.

'•f

w■

t

- S\

/

•;/

?

• ?r hi
f

■

■

:
l

&gt;
*
**

i

1)

h

* _ T^/

;j

JUNIOR RED LETTER WEEK

?;[
■

■

;}

�SOPHOMORE DANCE

��I

;I

SWEETHEART DINNER
li

E?

r.w

\

"i V

■

V

s

.yU
,//■

*
7

If* 5.t.Jf

&gt;B.i£

■PM fe

1

»

V

ft--fl
1 ^

~iC

.. i
‘

;

y

-T ■

r*i

•■-

\

■il

t:

u

k

"&gt;^r &amp;£•

-

rI I- I
■

,i

lI

I

•■-

:

3&amp;

MARDI GRAS
DANCE

\

4

fl;?.:

mA

l)&gt;'Jr
w•

PI

isawg
K|

If.;4

m

7

\

y-Al

39

��p.

MAY COURT

Princess Janis

=

Princess Linda

Princess Susanne

41

���44

���S':

\
&gt;
t'

�.

,1 if

THE CROSS AND CROWN CIRCLE

'

Randi De Mend
Mary Rodney Award

I
i

i
i

:

i j

5
I

j

!
I

Nora Brydges

Carol Gillies

Jollins

Suzanne Tuson

»

I
\|

Roxanne Dahl
St. Helena Award

Judy Atkinson
Alumnae Award

!
The Dagwell Cup Award
Helen Inglis

|:

48

�HONORS

Science Award
Pat Howard

Sportsmanship Award

Libby Bishop

Chapel Award
Marcia Hanson

Drama Award
Roxanne Dahl

Music Award
Helen Inglis

i;

Religion Award
Nora Brydges

i

Nicolodeon Award
Judy Atkinson

Delphic Award
Nora Brydges

49

�)
!
i

!

I
?
I

i

1
Enthusiasm
Sarah Collins

I
i

Awareness

Love
Helen Inglis

Niki Davis

Cratitude
Carol Gillies

Renewal of Spirit
Susan Crenshaw

Discovery
Nora Brydges

Sentiment
Betty Rennet

GIRL OF THE
MONTH
Perseverence
Jean Luxford

50

Imagination
Leslie Harrison

�■
i

x z;tcn&amp;

co ecnenxce

■

I

b

€

«%

»

K

g

UN»&gt;eRCLXS»SCne M

�i

!;• n
r ?
&amp;

i

|:V:B ...

' ,
!

-h

■

~.
■•-

b-

.r-

•. 4

\:

'I

■

■■

�MIDDLE SCHOOL

fej
L . .
BACK ROW: Leslie McCracken, Susan Kem, Peggy
Hermann, Lori Schiewe, Evelyne Griswold, Gail Rob­
ertson, Ann Groshong, Leslie Clark, Mary Langham.

FRONT ROW: Sherri! Brown, Deanna Anson, Vanda
Kolodziejczak, Martha Bullwinkle, Julie Whipple.

BACK ROW: Gillian Hobbs, Jane Mann, Jynene Zeek
Debbie Plummer, Gay Burnie, Erin Pettygrove, Leanne
Davis, Lisa Church, Cindy Tomlinson, Pam Wegert,
FRONT ROW:
Margaret Souther, Melanie Poss.

Heidi Snellman, Sally Cheatham, Amy Drake. Page
Lilley, Sherry Wieden, Susan Leonard, Kim Collett,
Adele Wilson, Pam Woodruff, Laurie Carney, Kim

Bishop.

�I

l

FRESHMEN

.i

I
!

j

)
!
i

1

I
,j
i •

Marjorie Anderson

I
i

Cynthia Baker

.*
;
President,
Class Officers:
President, Susan Hillesland;
Kathryn Reynolds; Secretary, Kendra Grant; Treasurer, Sheri Propes
!
Rachel Barnes

)
.|

Susan Church

'

m ill

52

Marilyn Exley

Ann Foland

�----

Kendra Grant

Sarah Harrigan

Susan Hillesland

Stephanie Hunt

rxl

Colleen Hunter

Lisa Jones

Janet McGrew

Sheri Propes
sk

Karyn Randall

Kathryn Reynolds

Cathie Roach

Elizabeth Sessions

Sally Smith

Dana Rosen!und

53

�SOPHOMORES

Barbara Angerman

Chris Augsburger
-Tr

•* -

p- mr-rn
•r

•: •

'

Class Officers President, Laura King; Vice-President, Nadine Chris­
tenson, Secretary, Robyn Howard; Treasurer, Debbie Tressler.

i

V
Nancy Bril I ing

Susan Bruce
54

Roxanne Cady

Nadine Christenson

Sarah Crispell

�Jl

Elizabeth Dorosh

Alexandra Dussin

Jane Ehrlich

m

Ann Englehart

»

Deborah Catto

Gretchen Cinder

Pamela Graham

Susan Haslett

I

Edith Hibbard

Patricia Howard

Robyn Howard

55

�!

V

I

I
l

l

i

.

*&gt;
i

Tisa McKinney

Cathryn Phillips

Lyndall Simpson

Sandra Storey

rr

I,

;-:

:

■

Deborah Tressler

■

I''
I

j '

:i

i

:
Kelly Vitousek

56

Toni Webb

joAnne Yocum

�JUNIORS

Caroline Austin

Marni Bethell

Class Officers: President, Libby Bishop; VicePresident, Paige Plummer; Secretary, Molly
Brown, Treasurer, Cindy Darling.

Libby Bishop

Patti Brigham

,-N

/*• vh:

Molly Brown

Lenora Bruce

Peggy Crider

Cynthia Darling
57

�I •

i

!•
I

i

i

Teana Frame

Kellie Harper

Ann Helversen

Betsy Johnson

Sharon Little

Marybeth Merwin

I

mBmk £
Rosemarie Kozlosky

Kathy Krewson

F
1
i

!
Barbara Moore

Linda Niete

Margaret Obenchain

Paige Plummer

Paulette Rogers

Linda Shelton

Sarah Stevenson

:
.
'

i: i Its
.

!
4 .i '

-13
\

=

58

���M.'M
T'"-:

m

\

/
\.

r-

-

.

me

*
: •'

Class Officers: President, Sarah Collins; Vice-President, Susan Crenshaw; Secretary, Judy Atkinson; Treasurer,
Linda Thomas, reading from right to left.

Remember?
Calm down!
Red Licorice
Tim upon Tim upon Tim . . .
Senior Birdsmen
Chirping at Lunch
Boogaloo
Eternal Hamburgers
Baskin Robbins
Rally Queen
Pig Tails
Stevie Wonder
The Fountainhead
Chemistry?
I’m Loving it and I’m Not Kidding!

The Class of ’68

59

�graceful . . . poised . . meticulous . . . everdancing . . . natural . . . good looking . . .
willing to help others

i
!
I
I
I
i

I
t

LINDA MARIE ANDRUS
Portland, Oregon

I*

conscientious . . studious . . . organized and
creative . . . humane . . . brightening spirits
.. . keenly observant of life

=1

I

ft.

JUDITH ELLA ATKINSON
Eugene, Oregon

60

�I

gracious . . . cheerful . . . guitar-loving . . .
mechanical flair ... a way with cars . . . cap­
tured by art and philosophy . . . romantic . . .
searching for herself

NORA GAIL BRYDCES
Port Townsend, Washington

J
i

i

Sar-rah" . . energetic . . . overflowing with
enthusiasm . .
instantly humorous . . . gen­
erous
. idealistic

SARAH DELCENA COLLINS
Medford, Oregon
61

�. . very stable"my kingdom for a horse
minded . . . pleasantly chuckling .
lightheartedly viewing life
l
i

•!

;

I
!
’

:
JUDITH DIANE COULSON
Portland, Oregon

.

■

i

“Crench’* . . sunny in disposition
. unaf. questioning and reachfected . . . sincere
ing for Cod

i!

•!;; 1 f
i i
Pi
i:;i
= ::'
t

i m
■

!

ill
m

SUSAN AUDREY CRENSHAW
Scio, Oregon

62

�»«
melodiously scaling peaks of
Roxie
laughter . . . witty . . . efficient and depend­
able . . nulli secundus . . . independent and
daring . . . loving nature . . . the unusual

ROXANN LOU DAHL
Redmond, Oregon

“Niki” . . . happily scatterbrained . . . fan­
tastically devoted to shoes and more shoes
. . at ease with people . . . perceptive . . .
poetically profound

NICOLETTE LYNN DAVIS
Portland, Oregon

�"Randi” . . . slyly funloving .
. quietly ob­
servant . . . scholarly . . versatile fingers on
the keyboard .
sensitive
always asking:
why?

RANDALL HARRISON DEMOND
Portland, Oregon

ft •

Draino", "Marly” . . . always where the boys
are. . . radiant . . . artistic . . . straight forward
. . . never at a low ebb

i

•

i

J -i

I If

Ji i
=

MARCY JO DRAIN
Reno, Nevada
64

fell

�n
"Happy-go-lucky” . . . spontaneous . . . opti­
mistic . . . precisely correct . . . reserved

t

CAROL ANNE GILLIES
Portland, Oregon

Music her first love . . . good natured . . .
dedicated to service . . . strong willed . . .
conservative . . . imaginative

MARCIA LYNN HANSON
Portland, Oregon

�I

I:

“Harr” . . . unpredictable . . . insatiable appe­
tite for books . . . creative with pen, brush,
and voice . . intellectual acumen . . . genu­
inely and completely herself

i

!

j

!
;
I'
t

!
i:

i

:
t

LESLIE ANN HARRISON
Baltimore, Maryland

I

■■Kathy” . . . sensitive . . . subtly humorous
. reserved . . . quiet yet friendly

yi

j
I

i

I

:

in’i
* &lt;1
(;

KATHLEEN CORRINE HAWKINS
Beaverton, Oregon

�■

arty . . . fashion-conscious . . . “diet tomorrow” . . dramatic abilities . . . faithfully devoted to care of the chapel

MIA LINDA HERVIN
Portland, Oregon

t

considerate, always helpful . . . kind . . . mag­
nificent cook . . deliciously appreciated . . .
thoughtful, benign

HELEN INCLIS
Portland, Oregon

�\
Ii

Julie” . . . carefree . . . effervescent . .
warm-hearted with a smile for all . . . frivo­
lous yet intense

i
!;
'.

\'

I

1

:

\
I

:

JULIANNE ROBERTSON JOHNSON
Portland, Oregon

Ji- 1

Ij i

a flair with words . . . constant companion, a
piano . . persevering . . . quest for knowledge
3 \ li {

Sll!n
-

i

p

ill

ELLEN RUTH LUNDEEN
Eugene, Oregon

68

�“Lux” . . . horses ... a twinkling eye and a
sly grin . . . horses . . . avid reader . . . horses
. . diligence . . a disciplined and dedicated
equestrienne

JEAN LYONS LUXFORD
Clatskanie, Oregon

'Debbie'' . . buoyant . . uninhibited . . .
compassionate . . . vividly imaginative . . .
benevolently concerned for others

DEBORAH SUE McDONALD
Eugene, Oregon
69

�I

always chewing . .
wheeling
"Barbie”
. histrionic
about in a baby blue Mustang .
. . . ambitious, daring yet reliable

:

i
BARBARA LOUIS POND
Vancouver, Washington

; I

“Kathy” . . . alert gaiety . . . true sportsman­
ship .
optimistic .
bright and happy .
breezy

i;
; j

I
li
Hi

li
Hi

li

=

KATHLEEN ANN PYLE
Portland, Oregon

III

1!

70

�■

“Betty • * . . sparkling . . . sincere . . . serene
and gentle . . . well-organized . . . loyal

ELIZABETH FLORENCE RENNETT
Portland, Oregon

,/

stylish . .
chievous

vivacious . . . articulate
. . magnanimous

. . mis­

LINDA MITCHELL THOMAS
Portland, Oregon
71

�"Tusie” . . . congenial .
affable . . . indus­
trious .
inquiring mind . .
tenacity of
purpose
!
.

SUSANNE ELIZABETH TUSON
Kellogg, Idaho

IT
;

n
■

I

impulsive . . . spontaneous repartee . . . wry
wit . . . lives for today .
. flamboyant . . .
certain of her convictions

= 1 j| • '

,1

i mi
II!
■.

I;
m
if

; r i;.;:

I

JANIS LEE WILLIAMSON
Portland, Oregon

I'
72

�“And even as each one of you stands alone in Cod’s knowledge
so must each one of you be alone in his knowledge of Cod and in H»is
understanding of the earth.”

Gibran

����IF WE CAN MAKE IT
SO CAN YOU!
CLASS OF 1968

75

�¥

?■

Compliments

Congratulations

0/

from;

DENNIS UNIFORMS

HONEYMAN HARDWARE

:!

r
.

Congratulations

1

from

DAVIS
INDUSTRIAL PRODUCTS

■

Certainly - - You’ll have to learn -fco
manage money some day What better time
thar» during your learning years. A
US. Barxk'Special Checking Account is ideal
for your High School and College years.
No ml nimum balance. No mon+hfy service
charge. Your name and address printed
free on each check. CHECK WITH US l
UNITED STATES NATIONAL BANK
OF OREGON

Member federal Depont Insurance Corporation

I
;

76

338 N.W. 6th Avenue
Portland, Oregon
Tel. 226-1221
And

DAVIS
WELDING PRODUCTS
1415 N.W. 22nd Avenue
Portland, Oregon
Tel. 222-3611

�WITH

SINCERE BEST WISHES
from All of Us at

RADIO CAB
I

RIDE RADIO CAB

CApitol 7-1212

77

�i

COMPLIMENTS OF

SAGA FOOD CO.

!b

'
'
■

i

If

CONGRATULATIONS
CLASS OF 1968

i

: f
;

78

�"£

.

79

�iri
l U!

I

50% OF ALL AIR TRAVEL
IS IN PRIVATE AIRPLANES.
CAN YOU FLY?
See EAGLE for:
* Professional Flight Instruction
* Air Taxi Service
* Soaring in Gliders
(Oregon's Newest, Most Exciting Sport)
Call for More Information

I

AMERICAN
LINEN
SUPPLY

648-7151

It Pays to Keep Clean

EAGLE
FLIGHTWAYS, INC.
Portland-Hillsboro Airport
Hillsboro, Oregon 97123

COMPLIMENTS OF

LAKE OSWEGO
PHOTOGRAPHY

80

�I

. I n

I

DIAMOND FUEL CO.
BUBNER AND HEATING SERVICE

We Service All Makes

24 HOUR SERVICE

We Give GOLD BOND STAMPS

-

4145 S.E. Powell Blvd.

PR 5-8661
If No Answer

CA 3-6178

81

�' //
Keep your money matters
under one roof. “— 1|§§P,

^ ^7/
BILL MORRISON CO.
••• Typewriters
* Adding Machines
* Rentals

J'

IBM
Rebuilt
Sales and Service
Mobile Power Service

244-1103
5839 S.W. Hood Avenue

CLARENCE WALKER for FLOWERS
435 Killingsworth Street
Portland, Oregon 97217
(Across from The Little Chapel of the Chimes)
Phone: 285-0525
We Give S&amp;H GREEN STAMPS
Cash or 30 Day Open Accounts
U.S. Bank Americard Accepted

BUSINESS STBT1CC I
coiuciions. nc. I

UlNf
O'HIB

umas

*1*
Raleigh Hills Branch
7260 Beaverton-Hillside
Portland

FIRST
NATIONAL
BANK OF OREGON

Compliments of

R. A. CHAMBERS and ASSOCIATES
General Contractors
342-3365
1843 Garden Avenue
Eugene, Oregon

Compliments of
Congratulations from

PLAZA CLEANERS

SHERLOCK

1803 S.W. lOtn
Portland, Oregon

PHAGAN'S SCHOOL of
HAIR DESIGN
BEAUTY
IS OUR

Beginner
&amp; Advanced
HAIRSTYLING
All work
strictly supervised
Tinting . . . Coldwaves
Shaping . . . Facials
Manicures
82

BUSINESS

726 S.W. 4th Avenue
226-3891
Student Enrollment
Information
226-1621

AMORE
V1NC1T
OMNIA
Temple Buell,
Beware!

�EVERYONE AT ST. HELEN'S HALL ENJOYS . . .

COL. SANDER’S RECIPE
KENTUCKY FRIED
CHICKEN
"It's Finger Lickin'
Good"

from the Speck
Remember Col. Sander's Kentucky Fried Chicken for good eating. Perfect
for parties, picnics, groups or solitary snacking. It's finger lickin' good!
Buy it by the box, bucket or barrel. See the yellow pages
for the location nearest you.

83

�If
■

Compliments of
GARDEN HOME PHARMACY
1405 S.W. Garden Home Road
Portland, Oregon

Brown and Furple Forever
SARAH 'N' SUE

From la Bete to Rabbit
The Year of Animals
Blimps pestered by Harrs
and Vice Versa

Compliments of
CANYON GLASS

‘It is in exchanging the gifts of the earth
that you shall find abundance
and shall be satisfied . .

LOSLL INC.
5808 S.W. Hood Avenue
Portland, Oregon
CH 6-5446
Sheet Metal

Compliments of
ESTES

Kahlil Gibran

UPTOWN SHOPPING CENTER

Compliments of
TOWN RECORD SHOP
2334 W. Burnside
Portland, Oregon
"Gratitude is the
heart's remembrance.''

Compliments of
TONSETH'S FLOWERS
2103 W. Burnside
Portland, Oregon
227-0488

"The psychologists tell us that our nagging doubts
about your goodness burrow into the
subconscious mind and spit pcison.
Isn't this a bit unfair, O Lord?

David Head
84

Old French Proverb

Burkhardt's
1882
Since
JAMES BURKHARDT FLORIST
2405 W. Burnside
Phone 223-6151
PORTLAND FIREPLACE CENTER
"Everything Your Hearth Desires
292-1977
4525 SW. 77th Avenue
Portland, Oregon

�DOOLY
INDUSTRIAL
INSURANCE
SPECIALISTS

Insurance Agents
and
Brokers
T7
Z

Modern business requires
cost saving insurance that
gives exacting coverage for
specific needs.
For 30 years Cole, Clark and
Cunningham has given pro­

tection to meet the require
ments of industry. That is
why businessmen rely or
Cole, Clark and Cunning­
ham, experts with the tool
of industrial insurance.

Board of Trade Building

COLE,CLARK&amp; CUN N INGHAM INSURANCE
222 S.W. FOURTH AVENUE, PORTLAND 4, OREGON • CA 2-9341

CA 6-2392

85

�Mrs. Santa may not
have made it
to St. Helen's Hall
this year until
February 14; BUT
she MADE it!

COMPLIMENTS OF

A FRIEND

�"Time present and time past
Are both perhaps present in time future.
And time future contained in time past.
If all time is eternally present
All time is unredeemable.
What might have been is an abstraction
Remaining a perpetual possibility
Only in a world of speculation.
What might have been and what has been
Point to one end, which is always present.
Footfalls echo in the memory
Down the passage which we did not take
Towards the door we never opened
Into the rose-garden . . ."

T. S. Eliot

87

�DELPHIC ACKNOWLEDGEMENT
Editor-in-Chief .....
Associate Editor ...
Advertising Editors
Art Editor ...............
Business Manager ..
Copy Editor.............
Layout Editor ..........
Photography Editor
Assistant .......
Assistant .......
Assistant .......

Advisor ......
Publisher ...

88

.... Nora Brydges
Paige Plummer
Leslie Harrison
)ulie Johnson
Ann Helverson
.... Sue Crenshaw
Judy Atkinson
Mia Hervin
Judy Atkinson
Barbara Pond
Sara Stevenson
....... Carrie Austin
... Carolyn Collett
Yearbook House

�I

:

t

r

\

]

1

�*

�THE OREGON
BOOKBINDING CO.
3315 S.E. 17th Ave.
Portlnnd Ore. 97202

r

�</text>
                  </elementText>
                </elementTextContainer>
              </element>
            </elementContainer>
          </elementSet>
        </elementSetContainer>
      </file>
    </fileContainer>
    <collection collectionId="1">
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="1">
          <name>Dublin Core</name>
          <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="1">
                  <text>Oregon Episcopal School Yearbooks</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="41">
              <name>Description</name>
              <description>An account of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="2">
                  <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>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="39">
              <name>Creator</name>
              <description>An entity primarily responsible for making the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="3">
                  <text>Oregon Episcopal School</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="45">
              <name>Publisher</name>
              <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="4">
                  <text>Oregon Episcopal School</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="40">
              <name>Date</name>
              <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="5">
                  <text>1921-1923; 1931-1995</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="47">
              <name>Rights</name>
              <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="6">
                  <text>All rights are reserved by Oregon Episcopal School.</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="44">
              <name>Language</name>
              <description>A language of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="7">
                  <text>English</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="51">
              <name>Type</name>
              <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="8">
                  <text>Yearbooks</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="65">
              <name>Conforms To</name>
              <description>An established standard to which the described resource conforms.</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="9">
                  <text>Describing Archives: A Content Standard (DACS)</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="78">
              <name>Extent</name>
              <description>The size or duration of the resource.</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="10">
                  <text>85</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="79">
              <name>Medium</name>
              <description>The material or physical carrier of the resource.</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="11">
                  <text>bound volumes</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="49">
              <name>Subject</name>
              <description>The topic of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="1298">
                  <text>Students</text>
                </elementText>
                <elementText elementTextId="1299">
                  <text>Junior colleges</text>
                </elementText>
                <elementText elementTextId="1300">
                  <text>Junior college students</text>
                </elementText>
                <elementText elementTextId="1301">
                  <text>High school student activities</text>
                </elementText>
                <elementText elementTextId="1302">
                  <text>Student activities</text>
                </elementText>
                <elementText elementTextId="1303">
                  <text>Student publications</text>
                </elementText>
                <elementText elementTextId="1304">
                  <text>Teachers</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </collection>
    <itemType itemTypeId="1">
      <name>Text</name>
      <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    </itemType>
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="78">
            <name>Extent</name>
            <description>The size or duration of the resource.</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="589">
                <text>1</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="79">
            <name>Medium</name>
            <description>The material or physical carrier of the resource.</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="590">
                <text>bound volume</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="591">
                <text>The Delphic 1968</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="49">
            <name>Subject</name>
            <description>The topic of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="592">
                <text>School yearbooks</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="593">
                <text> Students</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="594">
                <text> High school student activities</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="595">
                <text> Student publications</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="596">
                <text> Teachers</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="597">
                <text>This is an OES yearbook from 1968. 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>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="39">
            <name>Creator</name>
            <description>An entity primarily responsible for making the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="598">
                <text>Oregon Episcopal School</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="40">
            <name>Date</name>
            <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="599">
                <text>1968</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="47">
            <name>Rights</name>
            <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="600">
                <text>All rights are reserved by Oregon Episcopal School.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="44">
            <name>Language</name>
            <description>A language of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="601">
                <text>English</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="43">
            <name>Identifier</name>
            <description>An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="602">
                <text>oes_delphic1968-compressed.pdf</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
    <tagContainer>
      <tag tagId="1">
        <name>School yearbooks; Students; High school student activities; Student publications; Teachers</name>
      </tag>
    </tagContainer>
  </item>
  <item itemId="40" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="42">
        <src>http://archive.oes.edu/files/original/404e830be9050c1d20d24b83ebeb9114.pdf</src>
        <authentication>8cfc321b68056035f3855b7f97086e3e</authentication>
        <elementSetContainer>
          <elementSet elementSetId="4">
            <name>PDF Text</name>
            <description/>
            <elementContainer>
              <element elementId="92">
                <name>Text</name>
                <description/>
                <elementTextContainer>
                  <elementText elementTextId="1047">
                    <text>DELPHIC 1967

�i

Like a lotus blooming mysteriously in some
water-washed grotto, St. Helen’s Hall holds
much in store for those who discover her . . .
A chapel of quiet, meditative beauty, an
orchard chuck-full of tangy apples, fields of
towering poplars, and a taste of infinite
knowledge ... all lie in the heart of the

2

flower. She whirls in dizzy eddies of activity,
yet in rare moments of timc-cauglit calm she
gathers her strength. Her beauty and fra­
grance inspire in us a reverence and joyous
sense of awe. May we, as we bend to touch
her, sense the wonder and become one with
her constantly unfolding petals.

�a generation of dis­
union and restless action.
i .c impetuosity beats against
the walls of tradition like
loamy breakers against a cliff.
Our minds and spirits, just
awakening from the sleep of
childhood, are groping, ques­
tioning, wondering. Yet there
is one here who, with keen un­
derstanding, reaches through
the wall separating youth and
adulthood. Her hand is warm
and gentle. She is a woman—
in the highest and truest sense
of the word — regal, staunch
in her own principles, and yet
inspiring faith, love and cour­
age. Hers is the genius of
human understanding — the
rare ability to do the unex­
pected act of compassion. It
is with deep love, esteem and
honor that we, the Class of '67
dedicate our Delphic to you,
Carolyn Collett.

:&lt;&gt;
V

I-::

�iiThe soul
unfolds itself,
like a lotus of
countless
petals
—Kahlil Gib ran

�i

5

�■

Gertrude Houk Fariss, Director
Dear Graduates of 1967 —
The process of “growing up” is a fascinating and mysterious experience, is it not?
At fourteen you look eagerly forward to it and can hardly wait for it to happen! At sixteen
you’re in the midst of it and have absolute certainty that it has happened and that you are com­
pletely “grown up”. At eighteen you begin to have a few doubts. From this time on, if your life
is a worthwhile one, you seek for further knowledge and understanding of much that in your
heart you intuitively know to he true.
Kahlil Gibran has written:
“Your hearts know in silence the secrets of the days and the nights.
But your ears thirst for the sound of your heart’s knowledge.
You would know in icords that which you have altvays known in thought.
You would touch with your fingers the naked body of your dreams.”
Does he not say that “growing up” is partly the experience of feeling what we often refer
to as “the divine discontent?” As a child you accept, you feel, you knoic in your own heart that
certain truths are. As you grow up, you question, you examine, you analyze, you search for new
horizons of understanding and a broader vision of all that is. Your mind is stirred by an awaken­
ing intellectual curiosity; your heart seeks for tangible evidence of the truths that it “knows in
silence.”
May you never live with petty discontent that brings only irritating dissatisfaction and miser­
able unhappiness. May you live always with divine discontent that stretches every fibre of your
mind and brings you closer to a genuine understanding of facts and the reasons for them; of
people, their problems, and their almost limitless potential; of life and the full living of it; of
love for human beings and for God.
As you leave St. Helen’s Hall, my dear Seniors, I send you on with these beautiful words
from John Gould Fletcher’s While Symphony, on my lips, and with this prayer for each of you
in my heart.
“Towards the impossible,
Towards the inaccessible,
Towards the eternal.
These blossoms go."
Always affectionately,
Gertrude Houk Fariss

�1
V “

N

The Rt. Rev. James W. F. Carman, D.D.
No matter when you read this, when it is first published, or
when you are—as I pray you will he someday—a grandmother, one
philosophy will, I believe, he always true. The girl you are at any
present moment is the fashioning of all your yesterdays, their
hopes, joys, fears, failures and prayers. One present moment is
also the anticipation of the future, immediate or distant. We
always live at one time only, between times, in the mysterious now.
But the past and the future always determine the quality of the
now. When a person says he is “bored stiff,” he means that there
is nothing very much in the past or the future that intrigues him.
May God always bless your “nows.”
James W. F. Carman
Bishop of Oregon

�CAROLYN COLLETT
(right)
Administrative Assistant, Dean of Students, Drama
Mrs. Collett was born in North Carolina and
attended St. Helen’s Hall Junior College. She went
on to the University of Washington, won a Phi Beta
Kappa key; received an M.A. degree from Columbia
University; studied acting under Madame Maria
Ouspenskya.

CAROLYN HARRINGTON
(below )
Admissions Director, Music Appreciation
Mrs. Harrington received a B.A. degree with
English as a major, and then at Westminster College
in New Jersey earned a Bachelor of Music Degree.
She adds dedication, vitality, and sense of humor to
her work at St. Helen’s Hall.

EVELYN STRAHAN
Resident Director
Mrs. Strahan was born in Sausalito, California
and received a B.A. degree at Oregon State Uni­
versity. As resident director, she has shown her deep
conviction to the ideals of the Hall. Quietly, but
determinedly, she works to instill in us her own sense
of gentility.

�The REV. EDWIN BISHOP
Chaplain, Religious Education
Father Bishop was horn in Seattle. He attended
the University of Washington and the General
Theological Seminary in New York. He served in
the navy and has had parish ministries in Nevada
and Oregon. The father of three children, he has
a keen understanding of young people.

The REV. R. II. GREENFIELD
Middle and Lower School Chaplain
Father Greenfield was horn and raised in
Portland. After earning a B.A. degree at Reed, he
attended Oxford University, where he received a
B.Litt. degree and a Ph.D. Before returning to the
States, he toured Europe on a bicycle. He has served
St. Helen’s Hall with unceasing zest, and at present
is vicar of St. Stephen’s Chapel.

9

�••
'
ELLEN BERNSTEIN
Mathematics

'^M‘

Mrs. Bernstein was horn in Brooklyn, New
York, and attended the University of Arts and
Science in Indiana. Impish and spirited, she radi­
ates enthusiasm and her love for math.

VAUNDA CARTER
Modern Dance
Mrs. Carter was a soloist in the Portland Ballet
Troupe at the remarkable age of 15. She was
graduated from Mills and has traveled all over the
world. Forceful, yet elegant, she stimulates aware­
ness in her students.

i

IIELGA DARET
Physical Education

10

Mrs. Daret, horn in Portland, received a degree
in Health and P.E. at Lewis and Clark. She worked
for a time at Emmanuel Hospital before becoming
an integral part of the Hall. A friend to all, she
is fun-loving and spontaneous.

�CYNTHIA DORAN
History, English
Mrs. Doran was graduated from Wellesley Col­
lege and received an M.A. degree from Brown Uni­
versity. She is as enthusiastic as the Juniors she
advises, and enjoys the theater and symphony.

Mrs. Gries studied at Reed College and through­
out Europe. She loves dancing, especially ballet
and folk dances. She is both firm of discipline
and keen of wit.

DOROTHY HARVEY
Spanish
Mrs. Harvey, a native of Oregon, attended
Oregon State University. She studied recently at the
University of Mexico. Her warm vitality was conta­
gious; people, ideas—anything out of the ordinary—
fascinated her. A whiz at tennis.
IN MEMORIAM
“The teacher who walks in the shadow of the temple,
among his followers, gives not of his wisdom hut
rather of his faith and his lovingness.”
—Kahlil Gilnan

�ISABELLE McKIRDIE
Miss McKirdie was born in Scotland. She at­
tended Washington University in St. Louis, and the
University of Edinburgh. After teaching in public
schools in the Chicago area, she came to St. Helen’s
Hall. Here she continually inspires her students
with her seeming omniscience and demand for the
best.

ELIZABETH JOHNSON
Mrs. Johnson was horn in Michigan. She at­
tended the University of Washington, received an
M.S. degree from Mills College, and then came to
teach at St. Helen’s Hall. Mrs. Johnson's enthusiasm
for science spills over in her classrooms, and cap­
tures the minds of her students.

CAROLINE PAICE
Mathematics
Barn in North Dakota, Miss Paige moved west
in her teens and attended St. Helen's Hall. She then
earned a B.S. in mathematics at the University of
Washington. In her many years of service to the
Hall, she has demanded not only perseverance hut
Christian dedication from her students.

12

�ELSA SILVERS
Art
Mrs. Silvers was horn in Washington and
studied art at Reed College. Teaching gives her
freedom for self-expression and satisfaction in guid­
ing young artists. Fame and fortune still lie in the
future, but happiness disguised as a paint brush
colors the present.

CARL REYNOLDS
Art Appreciation
A native of Portland, Mr. Reynolds received
Ills IS.A. and M.A. degrees at Stanford. Through
endless slides and warm patience he instills in us
a generous portion of his own great love for art.

RUTH ROSE RICHARDSON
English and Old Testament
Miss Richardson came as a student to St.
Helen s Hall in her junior year and graduated
president of her class. She received degrees at
v
i "ivcr®i,y of Oregon and the University of
rVorth ( arolina, and did graduate work at Claremont
-ollege and Stanford. We cannot think of Miss
nicliardson without an inward smile and feeliii"
of respect. A rose with any other spirit would inspire

�BETTY WILCOX
(right)

IRENE WOLFSON
(below)

Guidance and History

French

Born in Oceanside, Cali­
fornia, Mrs. Wilcox graduated
from Reed College with a B.A.
in psychology. She is a great
lover of the outdoors. Though
quiet, she is a favorite with
her freshmen, and makes his­
tory come to life for them.
Mrs. Wilcox is skilled in guid­
ance, and is in charge of the
testing programs. She is un­
derstanding of personal prob­
lems.

Madame Wolfson was horn
in Poland. She received B.A.
and INI.A. degrees from the
King Frederick Wilhelm Uni­
versity in Poland. Since com­
ing to the United States, she
has taught in high schools
and colleges from Georgia to
Oregon. “Madame" immeas­
urably broadens our class­
room experience by giving
the European viewpoint and
by virtue of her broad know­
ledge and experience.

HELEN STOLL

(left)
Voice and Diction
Mrs. Stoll is a long-standing
Portland resident. She at­
tended Roosevelt High School,
St. Helen’s Hall Junior Col­
lege, the University of Wash­
ington, and did post-graduate
work at Reed College. She,
in her gracious speech and
manner, sets a high example
for her Voice and Diction
students at the Hall.

14

�;

mi
&lt;T?

IT

w

t

*

Q

V-

&gt;
Mrs. Scott
Receptionist

C-/ *

I

J

"V.

Mrs. Gunclry
Secretary

Mrs. Dunford
Registrar

/
r

STAFF
Mr. llahlors
Business Manager

to Right: Miss Larson, Mrs. Brouaugli, Mrs.
McLean
Librarians

Mr. Rurns
Kitchen Manager

Mrs. Oyer, Mrs. Taylor, Miss Lofstroni, Mrs. Moffett,
Mrs. Keefe
Housemothers

�r

!

I ■

i

i

St

t.

I

Secret agent,
Mrs. Orem?
■ i

i

&gt;:■

• ■

!

!1

18

Middle School Activities

�!
;
1
1
)
■

I

;

I

:

Running from the BDII boys, Zi Zi?

:
Mr.

Shislcr

and

the

New Rejoice

Mass

19

i

�?!

II

Senior Dinner
Meeting friends again, dining and—
dancing?

i

20

�S:
i

1'

Old Girl-New Girl Tea

School Picnic

i •

�II '
/

Initiation
|

:

■;

�Junior Red Letter Week
coffee ice cream, crunchy apples, donuts,
bright scarves, pencil holders—and, to crown
it all. a dance.

'

23

�Christmas Play
’{

v

:

3 '' F. '

*

Christmas Dinner

N
&gt;W :&gt;•/•

�Christmas Dance

�Sweetheart Dinner
Daughters serenade Papas with a song, and
amuse them with a play.

s
k
1

1

n

g

�Princess Penni

Princess Becky

Queen Susan II

Princess Mary

May Court
Photograph of Princess Mnrtha not available

Princess Ann

�if'
,'

ii
i;

■

:
!

-.. -"H- '■ t:' *

Room inspection!

I N
i

r

�����1

fs

-

V

* V

-v *

* *

Will I make the
May Court?
ye ye

;
■

i

�On the Riviera, we never worried about clothing—
much less uniforms!

|

But Miss Richardson, we’re studying comic relief!

i

r.v.trtr

�l

ORGANIZATIONS

Never one thing and seldom one person can make for a success. It takes
a number of them merging into one perfect whole. —Marie Dressier.

�I
Student Council
Keen-spirited, its members continually co­
operate with the administration and occa­
sionally (and a hit freuzicdly) with the hoys
of Bishop Dagwell Hall . . . planning Mardi
Gras, building a gazebo . . . enliving a mean­
ingful spirit, inspiring the best of the Hall.

Seated: Martha Smith, Caroline Dye, Betsy
Johnson, Becky Reynolds, Leslie Stevenson,
Jill Hanna, Phoebe Conklin, Mia Hervin,
Emily Zell.
Standing: Carolyn McKee, Val Poulette, Joan
Hoffman, Edith Hibbard, Sydney Sulliff.
Viki .Shilaos, Nora Brydgcs, Mary Russell.

Rebecca Reynolds, President

�M
m

•. V

Delphic staff
. •' ’Dedicated ? \es!
:&gt;: lovers .of-, the to»arre, •“- ■"•
^
iwhRJ,
i
'"' ctUde fraiftfc. deadUijfcs}??
•&gt;.- f:' 'tip-top, Cflme McKee,;editor ;•
. ' leftrJimh^Karoliiie Dye, asso-^^
• ciat.e^:^ditor; right iim$, ■
Phoebe toniklin, Leslie Steven- v ^
^ %&gt;,sOn, Joan Hoffman,
^ ^ Brydges;
sidndipji, /. ,Jane\
1 ?11 a «JP n C- oYgaII
■4 r-

-3-

�Athletic Commission
These are the spirited, energetic ones—the vital
force behind the best volleyball team in Portland.

!

Joan Hoffman, Phoebe Conklin, Becky Reynolds, Mrs.
Darel, Ann Norlands, Margaret Anderson, President; Libby
Bishop, Secretary; Penny Skates, Jill Hanna, Jane Adams,
Suzie Seeds.

ill

Junior Red Cross
This group fosters a sense of community
ponsibility
and compassion for the needy.
res
Marybeth Mervin, Treasurer; Mia Hervin, Secretary; Martha
Smith, President.

38

�Altar Guild
Have you ever wondered who pro­
vides the flowers for the altar,
polishes the brass, and keeps the
linen clean? These, guided by Miss
Paige, are the dedicated ones, appreci­
ating the beauty and purpose of the
chapel.
TOP ROW: Libby Bishop, Julie Johnson,
Niki Davis, Marti Smith, Susan Tuson,
Marni Bcthcll, Christie Voreas, Diane Col­
lins, Kathy Mitchell, Sarah Stevenson,
Sharon Little, Myra Clark.
SECOND ROW: Sue Roseborough, Kay
McKclvcy, Sue Thomas, Margret Anderson,
Jane Adams, Mary Russell, Ann Ncwlands,
Marilyn Dc Vault, Debbie Abelio, Chris
Bicbcr, Betty Rennett, Joan Hoffman.
OFFICERS: Mia Hcrvin, President; Betsy
Johnson, Secretary-Treasurer.

Foreign Affiliations
The wide wide wonderful world! This
is the main interest of Foreign Affilia­
tions, which collects a scrapbook for, and
corresponds with, our “sister” schools in
Arundel, in Southern Rhodesia, and
Koran, in Japan.
OFFICERS: Betsy Johnson,
Hoffman, President.

Secretary;

Joan

�I

Helenas
The goal of Helenas is
an intangible on
that of
keeping “alive and thrash­
ing” the Hall ideals of
integrity and service.
RACK ROW: Rebecca Reynolds,
Suzie Seeds, Leslie Stevenson.
Nora Brydgcs, Carrie McKee.
FRONT ROW: Phoebe Conklin,
Chris Bieber,
Vice-President;
Caroline Dye, President; Jill
Ilanna, Secretary; Emily Zell.

Ii

Art-Literature Club

i

“Create!—a thought, a poem, a play, a drawing, a painting. Do it
with pure joy, sorrow, tongue-in-cheek humor, or rebellion, hut do it
with spirit!”

!
!

Susan Wcigar, Kathy Mitchell, Ellen Lundeen, Barbara Moore, Pam Packham, Randy
DcMond, Secretary; Kathy Budd, Holly Thompson, Viki Shilaos, Kay Ashton, Tisa
McKinney, Chris Voreas, Mia Hcrvin, Jane Adams, President.
'■!

i

j

40

�Boarders’ Council
Boarders’ Council seeks to create
for the hoarders.
HACK ROW, Pbonb. Conklin, June “

a con genial,

home-like atmosphere

s; asasa as {arsjssr^wfc..

M*

�:

Nicolodeon
These zestful journalists and their hard­
working staff bring us current happenings
and gossip.
Jane Adams, Associate Editor; Emily Zell, Editor;
Mrs. Larson, Advisor.

■ j

E
I
.

a
i= \ii

Marianne
Smith, Kathy Thompson, Mrs. Harrington.

!
42

�Ijet me be the. great nail hoblittg a skyscraper through bine night into
white stars. — (lari Sandburg

�■ 1

Alumnae Circle

}

;
! '
• •
;:
;

■

!

;
,

■

Rebecca Reynolds
Mary Rodney Award

II!

Caroline Dye
Dagwell Cup

Phoebe Conklin

i
;
!

■

£
£

u

Sl

k

a

&amp;

&gt;

4\ .

V_—gy

■^3.
\

Emily Zell

Carolyn McKee

St. Helena Awards

:
-

Suzanne Seeds
Wiig
“Whose service is
perfect freedom.”

I

Phoebe Conklin

M
/-

z

!

�[■

.

-J:

■^31
jm
:.:;

Delphic Award
Carolyn McKee

Sportsmanship Award
Libby Bishop

Chapel Award
Mia Hervin

Nicolodeon Award
Emily Zell

Delphic Award
Caroline Dye

Science Award
Randi DeMond

Chapel Award
Marcia Hanson

Drama Award
Suzanne Seeds

Chapel Award
Betty Rcnnett

Boarders - Citizenship
Sydney Satliff

Chapel Award
Julie Johnson

45

�Friendliness
Suzy Seeds

Ingenuity
Marilyn Devault

Enthusiasm
Caroline Dye

Girl
of
Growth
Diane Collins

the

Integrity
Mary Russell

Month

r

Dedication
Emily ZeU

Graciousness
Margaret Anderson

Sense of Gratitude
Marylou Sanford

Generosity of Spirit
Christi Voreas

�These are the believers in life and the bounty of life, and their coffer
is never empty.
—Kahlil Gibran

�MIDDLE SCHOOL

7th Grade

:

8th Grade
48

�I

CLASS OFFICERS: Debbie Cntto, Vice-President; Viki Shilaos,
Lorcnzcn, Secretary. SEATED: Alexandra Dussin, Treasurer.

President;

Mary

Kay Ashton

Christina Augsburger

Barbara Rathrick

Molly Bccket

Janet Beilis

Ann Rridenbaugb

Susan Bruce

Roxanne Cady

�I

Barl&gt;ara Culp

Alexandra Dussin

Ann Faber

Jane Ehrlich

Ann Englhart

Deborah Gatto

Ann Cinder

'

!

Susan Hash u

Mary Lee Lorenzen

Edith Hibbard

Teresa McKinney

Patricia Howard

�i

t
\

Margaret McSwain

Sherry Mundhcnke

Sally Moore

Kathleen Mitchell

?

d

r
Dorothea Parsons

Cathy Rodman

Jody Rugg

Laurie Seton

Vickimarie Shilaos

Elizabeth Smith

Amber Swift

Kathleen Thompson

Ceorgena Webb

Susan Weigar

Joanne Yocum

�I

CLASS OFFICERS, STANDING: Kathy Robertson, Vice-President; Dana
Treasurer. SEATED: Val Poulcttc, President; Shari Little, Secretary.

Hopkins,

r
}2
I-

j

\

"i
Caroline Austin

Marni Bethell

Libby Bishop

Linda Brown

Molly Brown

Lenorn Bruce

Myra Clark

Mimi Crafton

i

B

=

�Teana Frame

Ann Hclvcrscn

Susan Johnson

Sharon Little

Dann Ilopkins

Kay MeKclvcy

Marybcth Merwin

Barbara Moore

Ann iScwlands

Margaret Obencnain

i

Elizabeth Johnson

Paige Plummer

�Valeric Poulctlc

Susan Roscborough

Marianne Sniclser

Helen Simpson

Sarah Stevenson

Dionne Walsh

!

Katherine Robertson

Carla Starrctt

�(.LASS OFFICERS: Leslie Harrison, Secretary; Randy Deniond, Vice-President; Nora
Rrydgcs, President; Sally Rice, Treasurer.

Carolyn Adams

Fran Agather

Linda Andrus

Judith Atkinson

Jeanne Bowers

Nora Rrydgcs

Katliic Rudd

Sarah Collins

�i

:

'

I

,
■

;

II

I

Judy Coulson

Susan Crenshaw

Roxann Dahl

Niki Davis

Laurie Guion

Jill Manila

j

i

Randall DcMond

Marcia Hanson

Kathleen Hawkins

Marcy Drain

Lesli Harrison

Min Hcrvin

�Susan Muni

Helen Inglis

Jennifer Jameson

Juliarine Johnson

Tracy Knapp

Candi Lewclling

Mary Little

Lllen Lumlecii

Jean Lux ford

Mary Maginnis

Deborah McDonald

Pamela I'nekham

Mary Cail Ilubbs

Debra IValiody

�rami lie Poneet:

Hnrbnra I'oni

Leslie Stevenson

Susnnrie Tuson

Jan is Willin tnson

Denise Wreden

Elizabeth Rennett

Holly Thompson

�“And let today embrace the past with remembrance and the
future with longing
—kahlil Gibran

�We’ll never forget —
Pebbles at our win­
dow
ape-masks
“Let’s be friends”
December’s playmate
ba ba ba boo
Contemporary
Photography
“lo buy or not to
buy”
return of the natives
back for more
baked potatoes
without boys
IP’s while bunny
car
sweet pea
listen lo Conklin—
and Dye
the Class of ’67

SENIOR CLASS OFFICERS: Mary Lou Sanford, Treasurer; Linda Fish, Vice-President;
Phoebe Conklin, President; Emily Zell, Secretary.

�Always saying: 1 dare her to give me demerits!
Best known for: dissatisfaction with status quo
Aversion: socialism
Where found: on the golf course
Ambition: to have a book published
Favorite song: “Rhapsody in Blue”

JANE MELANIE ADAMS

“Andy”
Always saying: Are you for real?
Best known for: willowy grace; mischievous spirit
Aversion: unkind people
Where found: where the boys are
Ambition: to fly United as a stewardess
Favorite song: “Moon River”

MARGARET EILEEN ANDERSON

�Always saying: Bieber, old girl, gel to work
Host known for: wit
Aversion: being pressured
Where found: on the dance floor
Ambition: to teach kindergarten children modern
dance
Favorite song: “Where Is Love?”

CHRISTINE LEE

BIEBER

Always saying: Thankee
__ i

Best known for: artistic spirit; slowness of a
summer day
Aversion:

spinach

Where found: absorbed in a romantic novel
Ambition r to he a nurse
Favorite song: “Bang Bang”

m

SIIAUON ANN COLGAN

�I

“Di”
Always saying: This is a sticky siliialion
Ucsl known for: love of horses, naive gaiety
Aversion: people who ask, “Are you a big «rjrl
of 12?”
Where found: riding Pawnbroker
Ambition: to teach first grade
Favorite song: “Theme from the Sandpiper”

I KK DIANE COLLINS

“Bird”
Always saying: I hale my hair!
Best known for: her sunflower spirit; loyally
Aversion: status seekers
Where found: Herd’s; or masleriiif; Chopin
Ambition: lo go into medicine
Favorite song: “Lara’s Song”

PHOEBE WINSLOW CONKLIN

�.
I

I■

I

Always saying: Obviously, evidently, apparently

• ;
;

Best known for: love of clothes, irrepressible enthus­
iasm
Aversion: teased hair

l

Where found: driving Herman
Ambition: to l)e a fashion-merchandiser
Favorite song: Mozart’s 39th symphony, second move­
ment

i

: &lt;

I

MARILYN BETH DeVAULT

►
i

I:
Always saying: I won91 be a housewife!
Best known for: fascination with new things learned;
poise, pranks, and sunniness
Aversion: one-story stucco houses in groups of one
hundred
-

Where found: dreaming of Utopia
Ambition: to live in Europe
Favorite song: “The Girl from Ipancma”

CAROLINE ELLEN DYE

�Always saying: Would you believe?
Best known for: quiet friendliness; integrity
Aversions: exams and spinach
Where found: driving an emerald-green Mustang
Ambition: to be a marine biologist
Favorite song: “Eroica”

LINDA SUSAN FISH

Always saying: I’m going lo forget my bead!
Best known for: doing tilings with style
Aversion: “phonics” and College Admissions Boards
Where found: driving in “Jose”
Ambition: to travel around Europe in her own
MGTD
Favorite song: “Mas-que-Nada”

LEE ANN FRANKLIN
65

�!
Always saying: you know—
Best known for: cat-like agility and curiosity,
but with a strong sense of loyalty
Aversion: open-mouthed giim-chewers
Where found: on ski slopes
Ambition: to serve in Peace Corps

(I
i

Favorite song: “Gigi”

!

r
.

;
JOAN IRWIN HOFFMAN

i

I

1

f

:

Always saying: Marvi—Pooh
si

:

Best known for: expression of irresistable devilish­
ness; sparkling wit
Aversion: rain at a drive-in
Where found: making tossed green salads

!

Ambition: to teach primary grades
=
=

Favorite song: “I Left My Heart in San Francisco”

MAR’LYNN HOLMAN
66

�“Carrie”
Always saying: Shhhhlihhh!
Best known for: imaginings of a kaleidoscope;
moody as autumn
Aversion: indifference
Where found: munching a juicy apple
Ambition: to rival Shakespeare
Favorite song: “Bridal Song”

CAROLYN JANET McKEE

Always saying: Nobody’s perfect
Best known for: shy quietness, calm search
for truth
Aversion: insincerity
Where found: curled up with a book, or in
the wind with a sail boat
Ambition: who knows?
Favorite song: “England Swings”

CATHY ANNE McLAUCHLAN
67

�“Becky”
Always saying: Why?
Best known for: knack for organizing
Aversion: naturally curly liair

I

Where found: strumming a guitar; curled up with
a good book
Ambition: to teach secondary grades
Favorite song: “Scheherazade”

,

i

REBECCA JANE REYNOLDS

|i
Always saying: I’m just so jazzed!
Best known for: exuberance of a red helium
balloon
Aversion: icy temperatures
Where found: never found, always going
Ambition: to teach elementary school
Favorite song: “Wonderful, Wonderful!”

MARY RUSSELL
68

�Always saying: That’s lovely
Best known for: pop art originals
Aversion: dirty liair
Where found: painting fantasy murals
Ambition: to learn, to travel, to make money
Favorite song: “The Shadow of your Smile”

MARY LOU SANFORD

“Suzie”
Always saying: Sick’em Fang!
Best known for: comical faces and gestures;
beneath—a hard-working, searching spirit
Aversion: allergies
Where found: rehearsing a scene
Ambition: to star in musical comedies
Favorite song: “Where Is Love?”

SUZANNE SEEDS
69

�1

I

: ;
:
;•

Always saying: Cool it!
!

;

i

Best known for: romantic reveries, Wake-Island,
leisure

•

l|;; 1

Aversion: toothpaste in her bed

I

Where found: making mosiacs

ill

Ambition: to go into technical electronics

! 1
!;

Favorite song: “Sounds of Silence”

1:1
j, ]

I

PENNI CORRINE SKATES

:!
s

“Marti”
Always saying: Are you kidding me?
■

Best known for: sentimental dreaming; lovely
piano compositions

i

|j

Aversion: shrieking people
Where found; listening to music

-

Ambition: to compose music
Favorite song: “Shadow of Your Smile”

I

MARTHA ANN SMITH
70

�Always saying: I’ll do il tomorrow
Best known for: a model’s figure; dramatic style
Aversion: going to bed early
Ambition: to keep out of trouble
Favorite song: “Cherish”

JULIE CAROLINE STRICKLAND

“Syd”
Always saying: Diet tomorrow!
Best known for: chronic giggles; naivete, and
fun-loving nature
Aversion: snakes
Where found: with people
Ambition: to tour Europe on a tandem with
the man of her dreams
Favorite song: “Softly, As I Leave You”

SYDNEY EILEEN SUTLIFF
71

�Always saying: That’s so rude.
Best known for: thoughtfulness and serenity
Aversion: knives turned the wrong way
l

Where found: with George
Ambition: not to he married before 21
Favorite song: “Somewhere My Love”

i

1

SUSAN JO THOMAS

“Christie”
Always saying: “Dum spiro, spero”
Best known for: lovely Greek dances; quick
imagination
Aversion: ignorance
■

Where found: at the heacli
Ambition: to go ’round the world (no matter
how long it takes)
Favorite song: “Rhapsody in Blue”

CHRYSANTHE HELEN VOREAS
72

�Always saying: No lie
Best known for: ever-present Sucaryl drops
Aversion: distance
Where found: on llie sands of Kauai
Ambition: to teach kindergarten
Favorite song: “I’ll Remember You”

ANN KATHLEEN WIANCKO

Always saying: Oh you doody.
Best known for: well-bred restraint combined
with impish spirit
Aversion: wailing for the school bus on a wet,
rainy day
Where found: making a crepe suzette
Ambition: to be a French teacher
Favorite song: “Almost There”

EMILY ZELL
73

�.1

'

!
i:
■

•;

■

i
■

!

. 1

Thus it was
;}

I am being driven forward
Into an unknown land.

•!

The pass grows steeper,

i

The air colder and sharper.

;

A wind from my unknown goal
Stirs the strings
Of expectation.

p

Still the question:
Shall I ever get there?
There where life resounds.
A clear pure note
In the silence.
from Markings
by Dag Hammarskjold

74

�You can tell the ideals of a nation by its advertisements.
—Norman Douglas

�i

i
i
|
1
t

I

h

MB
3i£ ::
;
;

t
P-

•!v:;

; !
|

i

S.D.S. LUMBER COMPANY

Bingen, Washington

Be alert to
Cancer's seven Danger Signals
1. Unusual bleeding or discharge
2. A lump or thickening in the breast
or elsewhere
3. A sore that does not heal
4. Change in bowel or bladder habits
5. Hoarseness or cough
6. Indigestion or difficulty in swallowing
7. Change in a wart or mole
See your doctor immediately if any of
Cancer's Seven Danger Signals lasts
more than two weeks.
See your doctor every year for a
health checkup.
AMERICAN CANCER SOCIETY

%

��,

I

■

( I

Compliments of

; !

CANYON GLASS

r
Congratulations

!i
1:

SAGA FOOD CO.
;

78

�I
FULTON
PROVISION
COMPANY

Hot Damn
Glad You Made It!
S.R.
H.S.
M.C.
D.W.

B.J.
6333 S.W.
MacAdam Avenue
Portland, Oregon

K.R.
K.Mc.
M.C.

DOOLY
&amp; CO.

Compliments of
TONSETH'S FLOWERS
2103 W. Burnside
Portland,

227-0488

Oregon

"Conform and Be Dull'
SARAH and SUE

Insurance Agents
and
Brokers

Board of Trade Building

CA 6-2392

79

�PORTLAND FIREPLACE CENTER
Everything Your Hearth Desires"
292-1977
4525 S.W. 77th Avenue
Portland, Oregon

Compliments of

LANGENDORF

UNITED BAKERIES

Compliments of

ATHENS WEST

Compliments of

KALBERER HOTEL
!

SUPPLY CO.

►

COMPLIMENTS OF

LAWSON

CONSTRUCTION
Compliments of
TOWN RECORD SHOP
2334 W. Burnside Street
Portland,
80
71

Oregon

�8130 S.W. BARBUR BLVO.

PHONE

"Joys too exquiste to last
Yet, more exquiste when past."
246-7522

Congratulations
MRS. ROBERT SMITH

CHOWDER
HOUSE

Here's to uptight out of sight.
Groovy Chimp Tim's
Signed,
THE BOBSY TWINS (DAVIS &lt;S JOHNSON)

Good Luck
CATHY, HELEN, DEBBIE, CAROL

ANN, LINDA,
PAIGE &amp; LIBBY,
MOLLY

81

�Compliments of
HATFIELD JEWELERS

DAWSON. TURNER
CY 2-4312

Raleigh Hills

&amp; JENKINS, INC.
Compliments of
Advertising
Pittock Block
921 S.W. Washington
! I

Portland,

ESTES
Oregon

UPTOWN SHOPPING CENTER

Compliments of

BURKHARDTS
1882

Since

James' Burkhardt Florists
2405 W. Burnside
Phone 223-6151

ALBERT MILLER

LOSLI INC.
Ah, the Age of
INNOCENCE!
BIEB &amp; HARR

5808 S. W. Hood Avenue
Portland, Oregon
CH 6-5446
SHEET METAL

ill
:

Compliments of
ST. HELEN'S HALL

ALUMNAE ASSOCIATION

Keep your money matters
under one roof...

:

Raleigh Hills Branch
7260 Beaverton-Hillside
Portland
82

FIRST
NATIONAL
B ANK OF OREGON

�INDUSTRIAL
INSURANCE
SPECIALISTS

a whole
new world
with

s
•t

CONTACT LENSES

3

There is no greater satisfaction to anyone who
wears glasses than the pleasure provided by prop­
erly fitted contact lenses. A whole new world of
unhampered vision and pride in appearance opens
to the wearer. May we offer you the benefit of our
years of experience in fitting and prescribing con­
tact lenses for men and women of all ages?
Dr. Milton Zell
Dr. Jack Patton
Optometrists

Zell(J)Bros
Optometrists

Modern business requires
cost saving insurance that
gives exacting coverage for
specific needs.
For 30 years Cole, Clark and
Cunningham has given pro­

tection to meet the require­
ments of industry. That is
why businessmen rely or.
Cole, Clark and Cunning­
ham, experts with the tool:
of industrial insurance.

COLE, CLARK&amp; CUNNING HAM INSURANCE
222 S.W. FOURTH AVENUE, PORTLAND 4, OREGON • CA 2-9341

and Opticians

ugnnUON AT NINTH AVCNUC - CA Q-OIO *

83

�I

I

HOFFMAN CONSTRUCTION COMPANY

-

710 8. W. COLUMBIA BT.

84

PORTLAND 1, OREGON

TEL CB03) E2B-4301

�n
■

With Sincere Best Wishes
from All of Us at

RADIO CAB

RIDE RADIO CAB
CApitol 7-1212

85

�DIAMOND FUEL CO.
Burner and Heating Service

We Service All Makes
24 HOUR SERVICE

WE GIVE GOLD BOND STAMPS

4145 S.E. Powell Blvd.

PR 5-8661

If No Answer
*

CA 3-6178

�1

"Any person who thinks he is going

to be happy and prosperous by letting the

government take care of him should take

a close look at the American Indian."

WILLIAM B. ADAMS

St. Helen's Hall — Bishop Dagwell Hall

Companion Schools . . .

The Dream of

BISHOP BENIAMIN D. DAGWELL

87

�PINE MOUNTAIN ESTATES
Exquisite Residences Steeped in the Beauty oi Northern California

Willits,
88

E. M. McKee, Jr.

California

�I
Listen . . . do you want to
know a secret? Do you promise
not to tell? Oh-Oh
(Closer)

Let me whisper in your ear,
say the words you want to hear:
"How now, brown cow" said
the turtle.
"Just fine, feline," said the
goat.
"But I must admit with blade,
with bloody blameful blade, he
bravely broached his boiling
bloody blameful blade."
(Tee-Hee)

MATILDA LUCILE HOIVEN
JUNE MAY UDAMS

"If a person does not make
new acguaintances as he advances through life, he will soon

I
6

find himself left alone. A person

:

should keep his friendship in
constant repair."

BOSWELL'S LIFE OF
SAMUEL JOHNSON

89

�MERCANTILE
COMPANY

128 N.W. Twenty-tli
Telephone 227-7882

Compliments of

HONEYMAN
HARDWARE

RALEIGH HILLSltexatt DRUGS
Phone CY 2-3539

730« S.W.BCAVCRTON HILLSDALE

I

PRESCRIPTIONS

PORTLAND 19.ORE

"Heaven is not reached at a single bound.'

MARTHA SMITH
NORDSTROM'S HI-BOARD

Uptown Shopping Center
Portland, Oregon

227-1414

�COMP LI M EN T S OF

A FRIEND
91

�■

.....

............

■'

y:

Ah! The trials of being Editors — and Associates! We really hove
been balancing precariously between cold splashes of despair and utter
ecstasies of triumph. And we never would have survived or succeeded (for
we really think we have) without the ardent help of so many wonderful
souls — Phoebe for Lay-out, Joanie and Marilyn for Advertising, Jane for
Business Manager, Sharon for Art, Rebecca for Chauffeur, Leslie for
Photography, and Mr. Breek for his remarkable patience and photography.
Our mightiest thanks to you all, and to the Seniors — your Delphic ’67.
92

Carrie and Caroline

���i;
■:

0*7^

.

.

t
i

.

�I

!'

J

;

.

.
'

1

I
j
*
'
1
:
I

.

li
:
i

i!

ii

;•
, i

;
i

&lt;

■

Mi
\

�</text>
                  </elementText>
                </elementTextContainer>
              </element>
            </elementContainer>
          </elementSet>
        </elementSetContainer>
      </file>
    </fileContainer>
    <collection collectionId="1">
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="1">
          <name>Dublin Core</name>
          <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="1">
                  <text>Oregon Episcopal School Yearbooks</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="41">
              <name>Description</name>
              <description>An account of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="2">
                  <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>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="39">
              <name>Creator</name>
              <description>An entity primarily responsible for making the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="3">
                  <text>Oregon Episcopal School</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="45">
              <name>Publisher</name>
              <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="4">
                  <text>Oregon Episcopal School</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="40">
              <name>Date</name>
              <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="5">
                  <text>1921-1923; 1931-1995</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="47">
              <name>Rights</name>
              <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="6">
                  <text>All rights are reserved by Oregon Episcopal School.</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="44">
              <name>Language</name>
              <description>A language of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="7">
                  <text>English</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="51">
              <name>Type</name>
              <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="8">
                  <text>Yearbooks</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="65">
              <name>Conforms To</name>
              <description>An established standard to which the described resource conforms.</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="9">
                  <text>Describing Archives: A Content Standard (DACS)</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="78">
              <name>Extent</name>
              <description>The size or duration of the resource.</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="10">
                  <text>85</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="79">
              <name>Medium</name>
              <description>The material or physical carrier of the resource.</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="11">
                  <text>bound volumes</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="49">
              <name>Subject</name>
              <description>The topic of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="1298">
                  <text>Students</text>
                </elementText>
                <elementText elementTextId="1299">
                  <text>Junior colleges</text>
                </elementText>
                <elementText elementTextId="1300">
                  <text>Junior college students</text>
                </elementText>
                <elementText elementTextId="1301">
                  <text>High school student activities</text>
                </elementText>
                <elementText elementTextId="1302">
                  <text>Student activities</text>
                </elementText>
                <elementText elementTextId="1303">
                  <text>Student publications</text>
                </elementText>
                <elementText elementTextId="1304">
                  <text>Teachers</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </collection>
    <itemType itemTypeId="1">
      <name>Text</name>
      <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    </itemType>
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="78">
            <name>Extent</name>
            <description>The size or duration of the resource.</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="575">
                <text>1</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="79">
            <name>Medium</name>
            <description>The material or physical carrier of the resource.</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="576">
                <text>bound volume</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="577">
                <text>The Delphic 1967</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="49">
            <name>Subject</name>
            <description>The topic of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="578">
                <text>School yearbooks</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="579">
                <text> Students</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="580">
                <text> High school student activities</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="581">
                <text> Student publications</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="582">
                <text> Teachers</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="583">
                <text>This is an OES yearbook from 1967. 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>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="39">
            <name>Creator</name>
            <description>An entity primarily responsible for making the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="584">
                <text>Oregon Episcopal School</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="40">
            <name>Date</name>
            <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="585">
                <text>1967</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="47">
            <name>Rights</name>
            <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="586">
                <text>All rights are reserved by Oregon Episcopal School.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="44">
            <name>Language</name>
            <description>A language of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="587">
                <text>English</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="43">
            <name>Identifier</name>
            <description>An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="588">
                <text>oes_delphic1967-compressed.pdf</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
    <tagContainer>
      <tag tagId="1">
        <name>School yearbooks; Students; High school student activities; Student publications; Teachers</name>
      </tag>
    </tagContainer>
  </item>
  <item itemId="39" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="41">
        <src>http://archive.oes.edu/files/original/c39c6bf72646e5cbfad1b3e6c4552736.pdf</src>
        <authentication>d38f16dcb6f37996f2c996429173ffdd</authentication>
        <elementSetContainer>
          <elementSet elementSetId="4">
            <name>PDF Text</name>
            <description/>
            <elementContainer>
              <element elementId="92">
                <name>Text</name>
                <description/>
                <elementTextContainer>
                  <elementText elementTextId="1046">
                    <text>f. • '

4

DELPHIC
1966

St. Helen’s Hall
Portland, Oregon

�1

I ;

II
) •
1 !

Youth:
Action,
Vitality,
Breathing.
Savoring every moment,
A source of idealism,
of expectation,
:

Reaching for the
essence of meaning
in all facets of life.
Bursting,
like ballons,
with
unquenchable
energy.
We:

Page 2

the dream of today,
the reality of tomorrow,
How we live,
and why.

��..

i

Youth is action: a time to learn and
to achieve—
It is vitality
idealism
an expectation
the indecision found
in laughter and in tears;
A time to dream and to discover;
A time too soon gone—
and often forgotten
as we are caught up in the
world of reality
in which we lose that indefinable feeling:
the spirit of youth.

i

But in some the spirit lives eternally—
Embodied within them is an understanding
and a concern for youth—
ever-giving
a laugh,
a word of encouragement,
of consolation,
Instilling within us, the young,
a hope for the future,
a desire to reach out
and grasp this gift that is offered.
It is with the joy of youth and with deepest gratitude that we, the
class of 1966, dedicate this DELPHIC to Isabelle McKirdie—our spirit
of Youth.

Page 4

�I

\
{

t
I

I
I

l
1

I

Page 5

�I

Gertrude Houk Farias, Principal

To You .. .
Youth, like love, is indeed “a many-splendored thing”. Like a beauti­
ful crystal pendant, constantly moving and shifting in the breeze, it is
saturated by the rain, clear and cold in the still atmosphere, and dancing
with myriad colors in the sunlight.
It is a time of temptestuous storm . . . breathless waiting . . . indes­
cribable joy. It is filled with unbelievably swift journeyings to depths and
heights. It knows utter inadequacy and unshakable confidence . . . despair
and delight . . . misery and ecstasy. It has its hours of intense hatred and
passionate love. It experiences only moments of calm and contemplation.
The truly vital part of youth, through all of this kaleidoscopic move­
ment, running every gamut of emotional response, is encompassed in its
first three letters. For youth is a time of supreme creation. You are
creating You. You are determining with whom you will live for a lifetime,
during every moment of each day and each night. You are etching deep
lines into a coin which*will carry the image of You—as a friend ... as a
daughter ... as a wife . . .as a mother.
Lack of concern, of self-respect, and of innate dignity will gradually
fill the lines with dust, and your image will be a pitifully dull one. A strong
concept of personal standards, social ethics, and moral and spiritual values
will leave the lines clean-cut, and the image will become more glowing and
beautiful with every passing day.
Into the image will be indelibly etched many of your experiences—
much of your learning—at St. Helen’s Hall. The lines will be deepened
during your college years. May they create an image which will fill you
and those who love you with pride and happiness and fulfillment.
Youth in action . . .
You in action!
May the action always be worthy of You.

Page 6

With affection,
from
Gerti'ude Houk Farris

i

�Administration
i

Jfc
3
!

4

■

A
r4

3

1

■

i

k

I

i

U

H

/&lt;

Y~&gt; —

a

X
\

\

.iSaj

The Rt. Rev. James W.F. Carmen, D.D.

Sometime in the future, perhaps many years
hence, perhaps at a reunion or just with one of the
graduates of 1966 that life decrees will always be a
nearby neighbor, you will be having fun looking at
this book. The topic will be DO YOU REMEMBER?
The people and events which will be recalled are not
likely to be those you felt to be important in 1966.
As I have talked with the alumnae during the past
ten years, and particularly during the last four
years when we have worked hard to relocate the
school, I have been impressed by their memories:
memories of teachers, most of them nuns, Sisters of
the Order of St. John the Baptist. The Hall gave
them, and it must continue to give to all of its grad­
uates, a stiff moral and spiritual standard, rooted
in the Christian Faith. Each member of the class

of 1966 will be making moral and spiritual choices
all during her life. The man she marries? What
she will teach her children? These choices will be a
thousand times more important to your happiness
and that of your children than all of the technical
choices you might make in a selected academic
major. So I hope when you have a good time look­
ing at this book years hence you will be able to say,
“Do you remember that improvised Chapel we
marched to every morning? Look at the beautiful
one they have now.”
May God bless you always,
James W. F. Carman
Bishop of Oregon

�■

CAROLYN COLLETT
Administrative Assistant, Speech, Drama
The ideal woman . . . looks for the best in
every situation, even a college application
or a late DELPHIC deadline ... an in­
spiring imagination.
Faith and truth.

EVELYN STRAHAN
Resident Director
The guiding hand . . . conviction and con­
cern ... a sense of gentility . . . appreciates
the lovely things in life.
First, last, and always, a lady.

Porrn R

�THE REV. R. H. GREENFIELD
Chaplain, Religious Education
A never-ending source of energy . .
creates an exciting classroom atmosphere
with a calm manner . . . slow to condemn
and quick to forgive.
Instills within us a search for the truth.

CAROLYN HARRINGTON
College Counselor, Music Appreciation
Practical and understanding, indispens­
able to the Senior Class . . . makes others
feel at ease . . . music, her first love.
Conscientious and considerate.

Page 9

�VAUNDA CARTER
Modern Dance
A way of movement ... an enlightened
conversationalist . . . original and dramatic
to her approach to life.
Elegance in simplicity.

WILLIAM BARTLETT CHASE
Physics
Mostly “their’s”, partly “our’s” ... a
cup of instant coffee, scientific notation, and
a smile . . . willing to explain those impossible
physics problems.
Always “in the right ball park”.

HELGA DARET
P.E.
An incentive to “get going” . . . spontan­
eous . . . sympathetic . . . more like a friend,
than a teacher . . . “You’ll always have a
shoulder to cry on !”
Happy and fun-loving.
Page 10

�CYNTHIA DORAN
English, U.S. History, Christian Ethics
Young and dedicated . . . everything ac­
complished in orderly fashion . . . gracious
in manner, but firm when necessary . . .
wonderful recordings.
Charm plus discipline.

DOROTHY HARVEY
Spanish
Definite flair for color and clothes . . .
makes music of the Spanish language . . .
has a way with tennis and with “the boys".
Spontaneous and strikng.

ELIZABETH JOHNSON
Science, Health
A moment for everything and everyone
. . . naturally concerned about those things
that really matter ... a wonderful under­
standing of the ways of science.
Idealistic and yet practical.
Page 11

�ISABELLE McKIRDIE
History
History is her life, but so is the future
. . . demands and gives the best . . . under­
stands and appreciates people . . . makes
learning exciting.
Young at heart.

CAROLINE PAIGE
Mathematics
The chapel ... a bowl of flowers on her
desk . . . “May I count the offering today,
Miss Page?” ... so much a part of the Hall
and its traditions.
Dignity and service.

CARL REYNOLDS
Art Appreciation
Always a smile . . . absorbed himself in
the art of all ages, he fills us with his own
great zeal and interest . . . Africa, Europe,
Asia, South America are his through their
artists . . . Michelangelo, de Vinci, Degas,
Piscasso, his spiritual intimates.
Slides and more slides.
Page 12

�RUTH ROSE RICHARDSON
English, Old Testament
Filled with “quips and cranks” ... in­
genius and inventive . . . quietly sips her
coffee while we remain perplexed . . . know­
ing looks ... a thought for the day.
“Golden impeccable English”.

DIANA RORER
Latin
An aura of mystery about her . . . reads
constantly . . . vital awareness of the modern
world . . . enlivens Latin with amusing anec­
dotes ... an interesting and unique person­
ality.
Responsive and reasonable.

CHERYL SHANKS
Art
Expensive . . . original . . . optimistic . . .
a real flair for art of all kinds . . . enjoys
life immeasurably.
Warmth and enthusiasm.

Page 13

�.

HELEN STOLL

)

Speech
Grace in motion, charm and voice and
personality . . . eager to give of herself and
to make something out of her students.
Sincerity and idealism.
-i

IRENE WOLFSON
French
Spanish, French, German, English all at
her command . . . ready to share her knowl­
edge, her life, in the classroom, at the lunch
table, in the hall, anywhere, anytime . . . her
talents run the gamut from cake decoration
to oil paintings.
So much in one so small.

me 14

�Staff
Efficiency . . . cheerfulness . . . an­
swering phones, balancing books and
locating lost lambs.

Mrs. Dunford

Mrs. Lichter, Mrs. Scott,
Mrs. Gundry

Guardians of the reserve
shelves . . . policemen of study
hall . . . trying-in-vain to sep­
arate the sexes . . . shh! . . .
“Would you please sit down"
determination and detention.

Miss Larson, Mrs. Bronaugh
Mrs. Lipp

HOUSEMOTHERS
STANDING: Mrs. Florence, Mrs. Davis.
SEATED: Miss Lofstrom, Mrs. Taylor.

Page 15

�.

MIDDLE SCHOOL FACULTY

HELEN CAMPBELL
Principal 8th Grade
Always well-dressed, always correct in
etiquette ... warmth and concern.

MARGO CHESNEY
7th Grade
A cheery “Good morning" ... a
rollicking Santa Claus . . . genuine
interest in her students.

�“Only by taste can we account for taste . .
Lope de Vega
Page 17

�Middle School
We welcome to the 1966 DELPHIC, St. Helen’s Hall
Middle School, its faculty, and activities. We are happy
to include you in our annual in hopes that you may be a
vital, involved part of our whole.

7th Grade

8th Grade
Page 18

�F reshmen

CLASS OFFICERS: Ann Newlands, Treasurer; Betsy Johnson, President;
Kathy Robertson, Vice-President; Paige Plummer, Secretary.
We are the Freshman small
Some day we’ll show you all . . .

Caroline Austin

Libby Bishop

f
j

Lenora Bruce

Karen Ek

Linda Brown

1
Karen Frost

Molly Brown

Dana Hopkins
Page 19

�.

Page 20

Elizabeth Johnson

Sharon Little

Kay McKelvey

Maiybeth Merwin

Ann Newlands

Pam Olds

Margaret Phillips

Paige Plummer

Valerie Poulette

Katherine Robertson

Danielle Salmonson

Janet Sharrock

Carla Starrett

Sai*ah Stevenson

Colleen Swanton

Allison Wymer

�Sophomores

CLASS OFFICERS: Denise Wreden, Treasurer; Jill Hanna, Secretary;
Leslie Stevenson, President; Sally Rice, Vice-President.
We are the Sophomores wise
Just beginning to realize . . .

^

Ann Bacharach

Nora Brydges

Roxann Dahl

Niki Davis

Terry Cass

Laura Greene

\

Judy Coulson

Jill Hanna
Page 21

�Marcia Hanson

Leslie Harrison

Mia Hervin

Julie Johnson

I

Helen Inglis

Tina Love

Jane Kennedy

V

!

9
'

Nancy Me Burney

Page 22

Deborah McDonald

: *

r

♦

.

V
Terri O’Connor

Barbara Pond

�Betty Rennett

Sally Rice

Leslie Stevenson

Denise Wreden

Wanda Wiley

Kristy Timm

Page 23

�Juniors

CLASS OFFICERS: Phoebe Conklin, Vice-President; Jane Adams, Treas­
urer; Susan Thomas, Secretary; Carrie McKee, President.
We are the Juniors bold
Seeking things yet untold . . .

TV*

£■&gt;

]

Page 24

/*
f
*4 Jr

w

Jane Adams

Deborah Anderson

Margaret Anderson

Christine Beiber

Sharon Colgan

Catherine Collins

Diane Collins

Phoebe Conklin

�I

Kgp^

\

*

-?^5

K

l
/

\

/;

Elizabeth Duckett

Marilyn DeVault

Caroline Dye

Kris Ehelebe

£- v

a^s.

|.
•'
&amp;

rJ

i

■*k

fe4=&gt;

v

'r‘-j

Linda Fish

Catherine Fitzgerald

Lee Franklin

Joann Glass

Judith Hayward

Joan Hoffman

Mar’lynn Holman

Carolyn McKee

Cathy McLauchlan

Becky Reynolds

Mary Russell

Marylou Sanford
Page 25

�V-

Marian Stone

Julie Strickland

Sydney Sutliff

Micheline Wessler

PuW! 20

Susan Thomas

Emily Zell

Christie Voreas

�}

“Hope springs eternal . . .
Pope

�CLASS OFFICERS: Anne Stevenson, Vice-President; Kathy Kincaid,
Secretary; Diana Beebe, President; Gretchen Graham Treasurer; Jil
Shank Sergeant at Anns.
We are the Seniors great
Please! Let us graduate . . .
W

True sincerity . . . shy . . . but always
a smile ... a bit of mischief . . .
Watchful and purposeful.

Page 28

Nancy Viola Abraham
Nixon, Nevada

�“Bailey”
The proper dress for the proper
place ... at home on the slopes . . .
true gentility . . .
A lively interest in today,
alert for tomorrow.

Maryanne Bailey
Lake Oswego, Oregon

“Beebe”
Sensitive . . . conscientious . . .
challenging . . .
A little crazy—delightfully so . . .
Eager to live life to the hilt . . .
“World, world, I cannot hold thee
close enough!”

Diana Mae Beebe
Portland, Oregon

Page 29

�Petite, quiet . . . reflective . . .
Poetry and painting . . .
Forever doodling . . .
Absorbing knowledge
for creative activity.

Carolyn Alice Bruce
Tigard, Oregon

“Vickii” . . . Bubbly as her name . . .
Laughter, excitement...
“Volleyball tonight after school!”
Optimistic, practical, intrepid

Page 30

Victoria Ann Bublitz
Bellevue, Washington

�“George”
Vitality . . . radiance . . . beauty . . .
Concerned with the essence of things
Unfaltering faith in God and Man.

Georgiana Alexa Calley
Portland, Oregon

Determination . . . curiosity . . .
Conquering all from here to Hong Kong
Successfully bridging cultures . . .
A flair for dancing . . .
Recognizing true values . . .
Keeping spiritual perception.

Nina Cheung Sik Men
Kowloon, Hong Kong

Page 31

�“Shellie”

I

\

Never-ending laughter ... a creative
spirit ... a rebellious soul . .
Questioning, seeking, mapping the way.

Michele Mary Cooke
Portland, Oregon

“Sally”
Virtuoso at the piano . . . inventive . .
romantically idealistic . . . collector
of college catalogues . . .
Looking for the best in everything,
in everyone.

Page 32

Sarah Norvelle Felton
Kennewick, Washington

�• n

“Pat” . . . “Tricia” . . .
An earnest scholar . . . responsive to
the moods of others . . . never
satisfied with the surface of life . . .
Persuasive and persevering.

Patricia Trevor Fisk
Portland, Oregon

The inevitable “funny” . . . impatient
for the weekend ... at ease with
people . . . self-reliant . . . realistic
about the world . . .
Enthusiastic and convincing

Sharon Ann Gallentine
Milwaukie, Oregon

�“Gret”
Rational, practical . . . the New
Yorker . . . her nose always in a book . . .
Philosophizing about the ways of life . . .
Eagerly awaiting tomorrow.

Gretchen Irene Graham
New York, New York

“Jean”
Carrying stacks of heavy books . . .
Riding horses with skill and grace . . .
For “Friends are forever!”

Carol Jean Haug
Beaverton, Oregon
Page 34

�Quietly accomplishing everything . .
Chemistry whiz . . . Literary critic . .
Thoughtful scholar . . . Keeper of the
Round Table . . .
A dedication to music
and small children.

Margaret Ellen Howard
Sherwood, Oregon

“Kathy"
Serenity . . . composure . . . dedication . .
thoughtful and naturally concerned . . .
a light sense of humor . . .
Upholds tradition
and her personal belief.

.
■2.

■

s

■ ?

•

Katherine Karafotias
Portland, Oregon
Page 35

�“Kathy”
“Please call me Katy”
Energy unlimited, unrestrained . . .
Always dieting . . .
Generous consideration for all—
even the underclassmen.

Kathleen Elizabeth Kincaid
West Linn, Oregon

B

“Toni”
Our globe trotter . . . always a
questioner in history . . .
Intellectual curiosity . . .
A straight forward look at the world.

Antonette Miller Lehman
Clackamas, Oregon
Page 36

�“Jayne”
Enjoys life every, every minute . . .
Generous in spirit . . . vitally
interested in people and places . . .
Frankly naive . . . Why not? .

Jane Ardis Lilies
Portland, Oregon

“Maley”
Salsaledo ... a love for the unique
and expensive . . . ready to conquer
the world . . .
Dogmatic . . . determined . . . daring.

Sheila Jean Maley
Condon, Oregon
Page 37

�I

“Betsy"
A true intellectual . . . master of
French, historical novels, and the
fine arts . . . shy ... but firm of
purpose . . .
Headed for far horizons.

Elizabeth Beckett Marsh
Portland, Oregon

“Sue"
Eager to help others . . . Cheerful and
conscientious . . . contributing
whenever and wherever she can . . .
Patient . . . sensitive . . . kind . . .
Good things come in small packages.

Susan Ardel Marston
Peoria, Illinois

Yffi W

�Our “leader" . . . organization plus . . .
“My kingdom for a horse!" . . .
Outdoorsy . . . enthusiastic . . .
Always in a hurry
and definitely going someplace.

Robin Ann Mitchell
Sherwood, Oregon

“Carr"
Known for her “activities" in the
dorm . . . always on the go . . . eager
and ready for tomorrow . . .
Happy and hopeful.

Carolyn Victoria Mary Morris
Cottage Grove, Oregon

Page 3£=

�“Kim’'

Fashion conscious ... a heart of
kindness . . . lover of fun, music, life . . .
knowing and doing the right thing . . .
Loyal and honest.

Kimberly Moyer
Portland, Oregon

“Tai”

Our eccentric authority . . . Egypt,
England, Sitwell, and every place,
everyone . . . artistic ... a campaigner . .
At times . . . rather profound . . .
Perplexing, but stimulating.

Taylor Willard Nylund
Lake Oswego, Oregon
Page 40

�I
“Rafine”
Hawaii in her heart ... a friend to
all ... a Saintly captain . . .
Complex and diversified ambitions.

Robin Kathleen Oliver
Honolulu, Hawaii

“Hi! Have you seen Vic?” . . . vitality . . .
Demanding and giving the best . . .
Excellence in academics, and
activities ... an idealist,
sentimental and romantic . . .
Upward and onward.

Holly Pittman
Lake Oswego, Oregon

Page 41

�Shy . . . soft-spoken ... a gentle
spirit . . . resourceful . . . winsome . . .
Seeking knowledge
and understanding.
;
/

l

Dorothy Anne Read
Vancouver, Washington

“Shelley”

“Where there is a will, there’s
a way . . .” Effervescent . . .
understanding . . . “Home is where the
heart is . .
Capricious, yet constant.

Michele Lorraine Ryan
Eugene, Oregon
Page 42

�A dash of discovery . . . indomitable . . .
constant activity ... an individual
in thought and deed . . .
A whistle down the hall, but underneath
a search.

Jil Lynn Shank
Portland, Oregon

“Annie”
A winning smile ... a loyal friend . . .
Ballet: her first love ... a sensitive
person . . . candid . . .
Above all, gracious.

Anne Stevenson
White Salmon, Washingt
Page 43

�Senior Sentimental Sallies and Sorrows
growing up
out the window
bells after dances
Annie’s chocolate cake
“The Twelfth of Never”
Miss Teenage Portland
Reading Classes, etc. etc.
Mr. Morgan
Hamlet
lost insurance
Alec
transistors
Senior Song—often in vain
frantic DELPHIC deadlines
Moose
“The Group”
white Valiants
B.D.H.
the round table and problems
The Pit
Egyptologist
Mrs. Harrington
The Class of 1966
Page 44

�!

ORGANIZATIONS

585

ffl

“By mutual confidence and mutual aid great deeds
are done, and great discoveries made . . ”
Homer Page 46

i

�Student Council

A medium between the administration
and the students . . . candy sales, uniform
checkers ... a sense of responsibility.

Robin Mitchell, President

iln

FIRST ROW: Robin Oliver. Shelia Maley, Robin Mitchell, Pres., Nora
Brydges, Rec-Sec., Leslie Stevenson. SECOND ROW: Nancy Abraham,
Con-. Sec., Toni Lehman, Kris Ehelebe, Treas., Becky Reynolds, V. Pres.,
Carrie McKee, Betsy Johnson. THIRD ROW: Holly Pittman, Sue Marston, Jayne Lilies, Diana Beebe, Vickii Bublitz, Margaret Howard.
Page 46

�I

I

Delphic

Youth is action ... a theme, some thought
. . . frantic deadlines ... an attempt to
capture the spirit and the mood of this year
... how we live and why.

i
i

l

:

Holly Pittman, Editor

SEATED: Vickii Bublitz, Jayne Lilies, Katherine Karafotias. STAND­
ING: Margaret Howard, Anne Stevenson, Becky Reynolds, Carrie McKee,
Toni Lehman, Holly Pittman, Diana Beebe.

Page 47

�II

Helenas

A belief in the traditions
of the Hall . . . seeking to
keep the intangibles alive.

SEATED: Dorothy Read, Sec., Diana Beebe, Sue Marston, Margaret
Howard. STANDING: Kathi Karafotias, Holly Pittman, Pres., Anne
Stevenson. Betsy Marsh, Robin Mitchell, Toni Lehman.

Altar Guild

Caring for our Chapel:
dusting, polishing, ushering
in fresh flowers ... the work­
ers behind the scenes who
create the revei’ent atmosphei’e.

Holly Pittman, Treas.; Margaret Howard, Pres.; Dorothy Read, Sec.
Page 48

�;
t

:

Art Literature Club
Seeking to create an awareness of the
fine arts and to develop a creative and
artistic spirit within the school.

Anne Stevenson, Sec.; and Sheila
Maley, Pres.

Athletic Commission
Best volleyball team in Portland! . . .
the spirit of action found in skiing or
ping-pong . . . leading the Saints and
the Sinners.

Jil Shank, Robin Oliver, Becky Reynolds, Vickii
Bublitz, Pres.; Shelly Ryan, Toni Lehman, Sec.Treas.; Margret Anderson.

Boarder’s Council
Responsible for boarders’ parties and
pranks ... 8 demerits and . . . “The
Importance of Co-Operation” or scrap­
ing gum from under the table.

SEATED: Margret Anderson, Robin Oliver,
Pres.; Nora Brydges. KNEELING: Nancy
Abraham, Sally Rice, Mary Russell, Vickii Bub­
litz.
Onr..

in

�r1*'
Foreign Affiliations

Widening our horizons from Arundel to
Sapporo with scrapbooks, letters, magazines
. . . some day—a girl.

Val Poullette, Toni Lehman. Pres.;
Joan Hoffman

Junior Red Cross

Whether it be Thanksgiving baskets or
Christmas stockings the girls seek to bring
some small comfort to others.

Marybeth Merwin, Sally
Felton, Nancy Abraham,
Mia Hervin, Sue Marston, Pres.

Nicolodeon

Informing us of the latest happenings . . .
reprimands for the naughty ones and praises
for the deserving . . . the voice of the
students.
n-

Margaret Howard, Editor;
Kay Larson, Advisor;
Pat Fisk. Asst. Editor

�ACTIVITIES

“One can acquire everying in solitude — execpt
character ...”
Stendahl

�V-'

/'w

The place where . . .
Pafrp KO

�Middle School Activities
Happy . ■ impetuous . . .
bursting with energy . • •
Quizzical . . • Always on the go . . .
Seeking a separate place
yet wishing to belong.

•;

�:'. .v ‘ •**. *

September found the “new” seniors re­
turning for the traditional Senior Dinner.
Planning for the coming year brought the
realization that we really 'were the leaders
of the school.

V

■: :t:,1uh u f-uhbb sskthib n
1} !!;:! !; ! l ii
■

mm\ ;i

j«)l;
■

iii!

The familiarity of the old girls and the
apprehension of the new girls were quickly
blended by the relaxed and friendly atmos­
phere of the dining room.
Page 54

ii

I Iill

iiiiiii . '

�Box Lunch Social

I

*
-

A line of wildly-wrapped boxes
filled with delectable somethings and
then there they were . . . our first
social encounter with “the-boys-nextdoor”.

Senior Smile Week

“A friend is someone who likes
you” . . . smile buttons . . . culmi­
nated in the crowning of our Queen
of Friendship.

Page 55

�I

Initiation

The process of turning new girls
into old girls . . . one of the out­
standing social events of the year
. . . the true test of a Hall girl.

Page 56

�Georgiana Calley Day

October 4, 1965

Suprise assembly to honor
our distinguished member—
Miss Teenage Portland!

Red Letter Week

A week filled with sales—Peanuts
Calendars and popcorn balls . . .
Halloween Eve brought the arrival of
“The Great Pumpkin”—and the Belle
of St. Helen’s!

Page 57

�Christmas Dance

Truly a “kick” ... a visit from some
wandering minstrels . . . the warmth of fir
boughs and beribboned gold balls.

Christmas Dinner

Obviously—a great
time!

Page 58

�Sweetheart Dinner

Pink corsages, laughter, the music of the
Jesuit choir . . . most important . . .
our Dads.

Open House

Visitors filled with the typical questions . .
And parents—learning the truth!
Unveiling of Bishop Dagwell’s portrait.

Page 59

�JlUilig

Every Saturday for six weeks . . .
Six-thirty breakfast. . .
Skimming along the air . . .
An exhausted but contented ride home . . .
How many times did you fall???

Volleyball
Saints and Sinners

Best team in the city . . . the exhilaration of
winning . . . the unique ties emerging from
the spirit of action.

Page 60

��Page 62

��■

MAY COURT
Princess Robin

Princess Robin

v
Princess Sharon

Princess Maiy Ann

Mistress of entertainment
Diana

Page 64

Princess Shelly

Princess Anne

Mistress of ceremonies
Georgian a

�:

�I

Cibola rship

Dagwell Cup Award
Holly Pittman
Robin Mitchell

Alumnae

*

o*

&gt;&gt;
0

M

Circle

C/5

V
&lt;tr
Qj

V

Mary Rodney Award
Antonette Lehman

f**tegrV&amp;
Katherine Karafotias

St. Helena Award

Robin Mitchell

Page 66

Jayne Lilies

�i

Fine Arts Award
Jill Shank

National Merit Finalist
Elizabeth Marsh

Delphic Award
Holly Pittman

Drama Award
Diana Beebe

Music Award
Georgiana Calley

Chapel Award
Jayne Lilies

Science Award
Phoebe Conklin

Sportsmanship Award
Rebecca Reynolds

Boarders’ Citizenship Award
Susan Marston

Page 67

�;

Girl of the Month

Friendliness
Robin Oliver

Vitality
Mary Russell

Sincerity
Maryan ne Bailey

Reverence
Katherine Karafotias

Determination
Holly Pittman

Intellectual Curiosity
Rebecca Reynolds

“If you would reap praise, you must sow the seeds; gentle
words and useful deeds.”
Proverbs for Daily Living

Willingness
Antonette Lehman

Sense of Humor
Victoria Bublitz
I

Sportsmanship
Phoebe Conklin

Maturity
Nancy Abraham

�i

ADVERTISING

“Great is advertisement! Tis almost
Fate . . ”
Tennyson

I

Page 69

�Page 70

�.
—

.

______

.

COMPLI MENTS

t^eb

OF

col Lege

coop
a whole
new world .
with
\
CONTACT LENSES
There is no greater satisfaction to anyone who
wears glasses than the pleasure provided by prop­
erly fitted contact lenses. A whole new world of
unhampered vision and pride in appearance opens
to the wearer. May we offer you the benefit of our
years of experience in fitting and prescribing con­
tact lenses for men and women of all ages?
Dr. Milton Zell
Dr. Jack Patton
Optometrists

Zel,vl Bi os
Optometrists

and Opticians

UOXIISON AT NINTH AVCNUC' CA O-OIO*

3Z03 5. e wocfosrocf^
por^clAnfc, ouggon 97202

Page 71

�■

.

;

’

Best of Luck to
RAISIN BRAIN
from

PRUNE FACE

v
Congratulations

SAGA FOOD CO.
Compliments of

LORRY’S 76 SERVICE
Mr, and Mrs. Harry L. Moyer

Compliments of

MEIER AND FRANK^O.

Cood Luck
to
Class of '66

THE RENNETTS
Best Wishes
to
Class of '66

JOHNSTONE SUPPLY

=;
:
::

Pa;

Page 72

�I

^3
O
O

£

Dl,

c&lt;u

bo
G

• r-i

CQ

o

-4—'

CD

c

•H

W

□

£
c

0
tJi

c

■H

PQ

s

&lt;

P«

2
O
O
PQ

w
PQ
2

G&gt;

h4

c/5

■

P■

c/2
Page 73

�II

.
■

With Sincere Best Wishes
from All of Us at

RADIO CAB

RIDE RADIO CAB
CApitol 7-1212

Page 74

�Congratulations to the Class of '66
DENISE, JILL, KATHY and SALLY

Compliments of

HONEYMAN
HARDWARE

Compliments of
PHOEBE CONKLIN
CAROLYN DYE

Fancy Seeing You Here
KIM, SUE, BETSY, TONI and KATHI

Win A Few . . .
Lose A Few . . .
JAYNE and BEEBE

�__________

'V..'.

I

CONGRATULATIONS TO THE CLASS OF '66

DOOLY &amp; CO.
Insurance Agents and Brokers

KARAFOTIAS GROCERY

1339 S.W. 11th
Portland, Oregon

Good Luck
SHARON CALLENTINE
Compliments of

KALBERER HOTEL
SUPPLY CO.
Best Wishes
SHARI LITTLE and VAL POULETTE

Compliments of
JIL SHANK

�COMPLIMENTS OF

LAWSON
CONSTRUCTION

COLE, CLARK
AND
CUNNINGHAM, INC.
(Insurance Specialists)

�Best Wishes
NANCY ABRAHAM and SALLY FELTON
Compliments of

LANGENDORF
UNITED BAKERIES
Compliments of
!

NANCY McBURNEY and MIA HERVIN

Congratulations '66
ROXANN DAHL
Congratulations and Best Wishes
in the Years to Come

CLIFT WRIGHT
Junior Birdsmen Forever

Lincoln Continental Div.
Dick Niles, Lincoln-Mercury

JULIE and TERRI

C'Bye
Compliments of

BECKY and CARRIE

EPISCOPAL
BOOK STORE, INC.
1310 S.W. Washington
Portland 5, Oregon

Aloha
ROBIN, CARR, CRET and SHEILA

Compliments of
MARY RUSSELL and SUE THOMAS
Compliments of

CANYON GLASS
Cheer Up, It's Bound to Get Worse
SID and PENNY

�__

1

:

COMPLIMENTS OF

THE IRON M. RANCH
Happiness Is Knowing You’re Not
So Dumb After All

\

PLAZA DRIVE THRU CLEANERS

Compliments of

S.W. 10th and Montgomery

MARTI SMITH

Compliments of
THE NICKCALLEYS

Better by Far You Should Forget and Smile
Than That You Should Remember and Be Sad.
VICKII AND HOLLY

Compliments of
BARBARA POND
KRISTY TIMM
Compliments of

ATHENS WEST
Compliments of
PAT and MARGARET

�DELPHIC ACKNOWLEDGEMENT-

Editor in Chief

. Holly Pittman

.

Associate Editor

Becky Reynolds

.

Advertising Editor
Assistant . . .
Business Manager
Copy Editor

.

Paste-up Editor

Anne Stevenson
.

Photography Editor
Assistant
Assistant .
Typing Editor

____

Page 80

....
.

Katherine Karafotias
. . Diana Beebe

.

Layout Editor

Publisher

. Georgiana Calley
. . . Carrie McKee

Art Editor

Advisor

Vickii Bublitz

Toni Lehman
Jayne Lilies
. . Christy Voreas
. . . Nora Brydges
Margaret Howard
. . Carolyn Collett
. . Yearbook House

�</text>
                  </elementText>
                </elementTextContainer>
              </element>
            </elementContainer>
          </elementSet>
        </elementSetContainer>
      </file>
    </fileContainer>
    <collection collectionId="1">
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="1">
          <name>Dublin Core</name>
          <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="1">
                  <text>Oregon Episcopal School Yearbooks</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="41">
              <name>Description</name>
              <description>An account of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="2">
                  <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>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="39">
              <name>Creator</name>
              <description>An entity primarily responsible for making the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="3">
                  <text>Oregon Episcopal School</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="45">
              <name>Publisher</name>
              <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="4">
                  <text>Oregon Episcopal School</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="40">
              <name>Date</name>
              <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="5">
                  <text>1921-1923; 1931-1995</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="47">
              <name>Rights</name>
              <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="6">
                  <text>All rights are reserved by Oregon Episcopal School.</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="44">
              <name>Language</name>
              <description>A language of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="7">
                  <text>English</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="51">
              <name>Type</name>
              <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="8">
                  <text>Yearbooks</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="65">
              <name>Conforms To</name>
              <description>An established standard to which the described resource conforms.</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="9">
                  <text>Describing Archives: A Content Standard (DACS)</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="78">
              <name>Extent</name>
              <description>The size or duration of the resource.</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="10">
                  <text>85</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="79">
              <name>Medium</name>
              <description>The material or physical carrier of the resource.</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="11">
                  <text>bound volumes</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="49">
              <name>Subject</name>
              <description>The topic of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="1298">
                  <text>Students</text>
                </elementText>
                <elementText elementTextId="1299">
                  <text>Junior colleges</text>
                </elementText>
                <elementText elementTextId="1300">
                  <text>Junior college students</text>
                </elementText>
                <elementText elementTextId="1301">
                  <text>High school student activities</text>
                </elementText>
                <elementText elementTextId="1302">
                  <text>Student activities</text>
                </elementText>
                <elementText elementTextId="1303">
                  <text>Student publications</text>
                </elementText>
                <elementText elementTextId="1304">
                  <text>Teachers</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </collection>
    <itemType itemTypeId="1">
      <name>Text</name>
      <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    </itemType>
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="78">
            <name>Extent</name>
            <description>The size or duration of the resource.</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="561">
                <text>1</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="79">
            <name>Medium</name>
            <description>The material or physical carrier of the resource.</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="562">
                <text>bound volume</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="563">
                <text>The Delphic 1966</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="49">
            <name>Subject</name>
            <description>The topic of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="564">
                <text>School yearbooks</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="565">
                <text> Students</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="566">
                <text> High school student activities</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="567">
                <text> Student publications</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="568">
                <text> Teachers</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="569">
                <text>This is an OES yearbook from 1966. 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>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="39">
            <name>Creator</name>
            <description>An entity primarily responsible for making the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="570">
                <text>Oregon Episcopal School</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="40">
            <name>Date</name>
            <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="571">
                <text>1966</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="47">
            <name>Rights</name>
            <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="572">
                <text>All rights are reserved by Oregon Episcopal School.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="44">
            <name>Language</name>
            <description>A language of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="573">
                <text>English</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="43">
            <name>Identifier</name>
            <description>An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="574">
                <text>oes_delphic1966-compressed.pdf</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
    <tagContainer>
      <tag tagId="1">
        <name>School yearbooks; Students; High school student activities; Student publications; Teachers</name>
      </tag>
    </tagContainer>
  </item>
  <item itemId="38" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="40">
        <src>http://archive.oes.edu/files/original/d1f0caedc7a40e0ff76497b5331b58b1.pdf</src>
        <authentication>982ee71b94bd006808bc7126b9876d58</authentication>
        <elementSetContainer>
          <elementSet elementSetId="4">
            <name>PDF Text</name>
            <description/>
            <elementContainer>
              <element elementId="92">
                <name>Text</name>
                <description/>
                <elementTextContainer>
                  <elementText elementTextId="1045">
                    <text>m :■

����1
:

.

Mwm
'

-: - . •••• '

m
w&amp;st“.vis:

,

1

m.

'

i-

■

mM
-v . v/-

- -

mmm

-

4

4. ,4 4 4&amp;
4A;A

■

: : 44lil!
&gt; ^Ammma^m

■

r.Tr-. 4

V &gt;V;5

-

■

.

-

444;44;A4
444

4.

msm

’

■

-'

mm

ill
;
-

.

av-aa- asaaa

mm

,4 44 4A

■

4:;a#

ij*m
.. -

AS III i I

-

.

:A4;?'' '
■

&amp;

74-;

-

,

•-- -

A

:

■-

.
;
'

House of Youth

■-■

4A

:.

A;.--"'.

.
.

;

;

�.

.

I

-- K
■•

- v/:'.
V"

•

\-4

i
=•

.

unknown
-

�;
: \- '-rM)

•:

�I

*
1
i

1
■
K ■
■

r

:

t

i
►

c
p

■

a

i&amp;
■

a

Reality
&amp;

1

�;--V1

-

■

. -;
■

our path to the Future
&gt;1;'

.

.

•

W0&amp; -flfi Hi

ISIS

�ii
I
]
ft
s

a

■&lt;

r

5

l
*

I

I
- 4

M

A keystone removed
Stationary . . .

a broken structure

A light to find, a door to open,
a path to travel.
Thrust, pace, act, go, CO
One objective
A piece of dream, some tools,

I
a

I

I
■
■

:

■
i

a hammer, nails . . .
Love, determination, a saw, some wood,
Hope.
For youth, us.
Because of you
a dreamer.

�Stacks of contracts, unpaid this
paid that . . .
A letter: "I regretfully say that we are unable to ... "
no

A stool, a part of a stool

leatherbound recliner . . .
tired

tired

Forty winks here . . . tired
Statue rest between the promises
Handshaking, smiles, hope.
Time

Time

how impersonal.

Time

"Please sign here, sir." "Madame."
thank you

thank you

Thank you

Indiscreetly brushing your cheek
Courage
How long, how long to build a dream
appointment night

Appointment day

Never a limit
Forever to build a dream
How long?
"You should"
"If"
Complications: "But"
"I'm sorry"

"You're late, sir"

A telephone call at three a.m.

a smile
All trivial
Board meetings, architects. Ford Foundation, despair
Indignation, resolution . . . not shall but Will
Hope always

never

never lost
never

never

A keystone, a path, a hope
some glue, windows
Youth
the young, the Leapers, the Bounders
A book
A Challenger
size number nine nails, a telephone
a dishwasher

the want

the love

Launching tradition, a future
a foundation
A dedication to you . . .
Gertrude Houk Fariss
a dreamer.

new life

the keystone.

=

�■

»
1
I

To the Class of 1965, with lasting affection and the hope that each
of you may experience a

i

\

Journey through Space

i

i

l

/

I
i
:'

. . . And so she took off into space — and it
was weightless and boundless and endless. In
space there was no boundary, no horizon. There
was only a vast freedom, unhampered by limits
set by man, unchallenged by the past, uncharted
for the future. And she revelled in the glory of
spacelessness.
After eons in the great void of space she
glimpsed a star, and the star wakened in her
heart and soul an irresistable yearning to know
what lay upon it and within it. Therefore,
through boundless space, she guided her course
toward the star. At long last, after struggle
through chaos, she touched a mountaintop upon
the star. There she looked down upon fellow
beings, hampered by environment, bound by
limits, yearning for freedom. From afar she
saw slavery and struggle and sin. She sensed
the bondage of human affections, the shackles
of human love, and the chains of human ser­
vice. . . . And so she turned her face again
toward space.
But suddenly all space seemed filled with
a haunting music which swelled forth from
countless stars. Through it floated an infant
chorus, a yearning refrain of women, a swell­
ing chant of men . . . the majestic voice of
humanity. "Help us," they pleaded, "for we
seek to escape our bonds; guide us, for we

yearn for leadership;
can free us."

love us,

for only love

As she listened, she turned her back upon
space and found her way down the mountain­
side. In the valley she saw misery and suf­
fering . . . strength and courage . . . inspiration
and vision For in the valleys of the star, even
as on the earth she had long left behind, there
were people, touching her hand, craving her
understanding, and finding their way into her
heart. As she went among them, she felt
again the burdens of responsibility, the weight
of human ties, the sacrifices of service. And so
she paused for a moment to grieve for the
utter freedom she had abandoned.
But miraculously she could feel no grief
or loss. Space suddenly seemed empty and
alone, without direction or challenge. For in
space there had been no mountain to climb
or no one with whom to climb it . . . There
had been no restrictive ties to bind but no
glorious freedom to grasp. . . . There had been
nothing to limit but likewise nothing to gain.
She had lost the weightlessness and
boundless freedom of space. . . . But her
heart sang, for she understood at last the
meaning of love and sensed in it the pre­
sence of God.
Gertrude Houk Fariss

�!

i

If the evil in the world could be attributed
to ignorance, then I suppose all professors and
teachers would be saints. But to say that, of course,
is to laugh! If the evils of the world were due to
the social system which engulfs us, we would then
be forced to ask who corrupts the social system.
The reason we were able to rebuild St. Helen's
Hall on its present and beautiful site was not be­
cause the State of Oregon gave us enough money
for the old school to provide funds to build a new
one. What we received for the old school was less
than half what the new one cost. The difference
was given by people, and is being given by people,
who believe the only realistic approach to the train­

ing of young people for leadership in the home and
in the community is one which sees human nature
in a Christian perspective. We study history; and
we ought to be able to see that men are by nature
selfish, and are only made into something half
decent by discipline and the grace of God. Religion
is a necessary ingredient, because we are dependent
upon God. It is my fervent prayer that all girls who
are graduated by St. Helen's Hall will have learned
not only reading, writing, and arithmetic but the
joy of life in the Christian Faith. May the Lord be
always with you.
Faithfully, Your Bishop
James W. F. Carmen

�i!
!
i
.
:
ia
.

I
:
.
«

s

. .

SL&lt;;

1 I

i\
ii
?! i

J

Youth

tA

questioning
dreaming
questing
rebelling
soaring
ii’

�.
:

I

i

'

:

Seeking a Philosophy for Existence

�'Sim

m

u

�.
■

Physiognomy of youth

•

.

�Manifestations of grief

�soothed only by the whisper of history
i.

;

�Stance becomes
adamant
colossal

*

t

the will
the time
the future

�Acquisition

of knowledge

the wise shall

seek

wisdom their

reward

�!

I

A book—some letters

*
■
►

*
*
0

i
i
i

deciphered by the heart of man

the memory
5

(

memory that builds

t
Retrospection

j

the afterthought

}
■
■

;
I

?

i

meditation

�The goal of man

Not just to exist

but to live

�:
4

*

1 !

1

An inkling

an uplifting

?

Ei

a quest

»

1

!

- i

-...... .^7--

�The Beat Generation

�■

■'

ni &amp; h

m

: -9
&amp;8

j

fallal

3
%

pMJ*
fe.

i

'

43

r.
I;
if

if

f

!!

I

j
i
f
.

Exist

A puppet?

r

•.
i

�(
YOUTH
the promise of today . . .
of tomorrow

■\

�■S'/jM|.7S
*.•••: - - '4s&amp;&gt; .

&amp;. ys£?p

Jjljii'

-; -'«A

a*

�?

I

:
'
Gayness

merriment
the laughs

the banter

�1
i

}

!

Music

i
ms

I

To nourish the heart

►

inspire the mind

*
1

l.
k

*

excite the blood
soothe the soul

:

release the imagination
enrich the understanding

�serenity
calmness
tranquility
rest

t*

�The smell of the wood

the hallways

Everywhere

■:

1

:
I

■1

�A tree—

alone

Everywhere

�A memory of love
■

loyalty

remembrance

sincerity

!
Believing faith

i
a trust

;

!

T

:

I
i
■■

i

�humorou*
The human
the living drama of life

��I

Participating in the life of the Hall

�i“

* -•
-

!

i

m

f

■St

•-

i

j

..‘V

ros.n
*^i - -

f*w:'

j

F&gt;-

Returning

!

j

�'A:

Senior Dinner

'

-;,^\vvr
.
v

�i

1

:

The Picnic

�\

Initiation

Josephine

�:

A Dedication
y ■

Iry-'.-'-r V'"'

?V:

k

i

\:

�\

•••S'

V

&gt;+

m

*

XV'

\ ;

Jte?p
asfer W’+gL'

r—

ss
«?

&gt; »»

t«S

5*^'

:•&gt;.

r.

.: _&gt;

7^&amp;

■

v

^

\xi -'
,.^i

‘V

/ • igopi,''

&gt;., fe&amp;L
^

i

lC

’ft

fc*f-

ax

" * '■ f •-■ aV1

VIS

p.i':

A\

Christmas Dinner

St. Nicol's Gift
Shoppe

�ji

=-&gt;aa*3
■?T'

s*

^BSCS^prpJ
.
V

r
l.'-r •' ■

I

:

i

I

k il

�Christmas Formal in January

�&amp;

Junior Red Letter Dance
!

1

Sophomore "Valley of
The Jolly Green Giant"

�Organizations..
and their leaders
Student Council
Ellen Hafner
Delphic
Virginia Troute
Boarders1 Council
Patricia Dean
Altar Guild
Jan Pennington
Foreign Affiliations
Susan Kasper
Red Cross
Lillian Eaton
Helenas
Carol Merritt

'

��I

Challengers
Experienced
to you in leaps and bounds
We corfie

�"Knowledge alone
Nature,

is the

being

of

Giving a soul to her manifold features,
Lighting through the paths of
primitive darkness
The footsteps of.Truth and the vision
of song."
Bayard Taylor

Kilimandjara

Carolyn Collett

"Talent is nurtured in solitude; char­
acter is formed in the stormy billows
of the world."
Goethe

Torquato Tasso
Carolyn Harrington

"Wisdom and goodness are twin born,
one heart must hold both sisters, never
seen apart."
Cowper

Evelyn Strahan

Expostulation

�"Wisdom does not show itself so much
in precept as in life—in a firmness of
mind and mastery of appetite. It
teaches us to do, as well as to talk;
and to make our actions and words
all of a color."
Seneca

Epistles XX

Father Greenfield

"The reason firm, the temperate will,
Endurance, foresight, the strength and
skill."
Wordsworth

Mr. Hodgdon

�"Elegant as simplicity, and warm as
ecstasy/7
Cowper

Table Talk

!

I

Vaunda Carter

"It is energy—the central element of
which is will — that produces the
miracles of enthusiasm in all ages.
Everywhere it is the main-spring of
what is called force of character, and
the sustaining power of all great
action."
Samuel Smiles

Character

i

=

Helga Daret

;&gt;

\

.

"But they whom truth and wisdom lead
Can gather honey from a weed."

Cowper

Elizabeth Johnson

Pineapple and Bee

�j

"The more a man looks at a thing,
the less he can see it, and the more a
man learns a thing the less he knows
it."
Chesterton

Isabelle McKirdie
"While words of learned length
and thundering sound
Amaz'd the gazing rustics
rang'd around."

Lenore Klink

Goldsmith

"Gentle of speech,
beneficent of mind.
Wise to resolve, and
patient to perform."
Homer

Odyssey
Carolyn Paige

The Deserted
Village

�\
■

"The most manifest sign of wisdom
her state
is a c° ntmued, cheerfulness:
. .
is like that of things in the regions
above the moon, always clear and
serene.
/1

Montaigne

Essays

?

■IF:

TT

Marylahan Picht

I

.

■•••

&amp;

14

iSS

^ T :

-•#

t

An honest man, close-buttoned to
the chin, Broadcloth without, and a
warm heart within."
Cowper

[

Epistle to Joseph Hill

I

v

\

\

\

t
i
Carl Reynolds

"I am not a teacher: only a fellowtraveler of whom you asked the way.
I pointed ahead—ahead of myself as
well as of you."
Shaw
Ruth Rose Richardson

i

�"Worth, courage, honor, these indeed
Your sustenance and birthright are."
E. G. Stedon

Beyond the Portals

Diana Rorer

Cheryl Shanks
"Great art is as irrational as great
music. It is made with its own
loveliness."
George Jean Nathan

"And still they gazed, and still the
wonder grew,
That one small head should carry all
it knew."
Goldsmith
Irene Wolfson

The Deserted Village

�i

a

«

I

i!

Behind the scenes

i

: z
■

the internal —
r

.
:
;

result:

-•V
■

the external
'

■

»

�"Good morning, St. Helen's
Hall, may I help you?"
Always smiling, joking, friendly

Mrs. Scott

Mrs. Dunford
Bearer of good tid­
ings— warning slips
Contracts, typing
Phone calls
"I'm sorry but
she's busy."

Mrs. Burke
Another "Good morning."

Interviews, typing,
pictures.

pushing buttons, answering
intercom. "Yes, I'll find her"

This paper by 2 p.m.
"Smile, please"

Mrs. Larson

�1

s

"Where are the 920's?"
stacking
checking
finding, putting out
never enough books to fill the shelves

Mrs. Bronaugh
Money money
$$$
organize and find
pay this
collect for that

Mrs. Kimble and Mrs. Lichter

"No talking"
Detention
Mexican bag
cross-word puzzles
quiet quiet quiet
Mrs. Christensen

�1

"Ouch"
A band-aid, please
Pills for this
Always the thermometer

"Don't forget to sign out"
chit books, "lights out"
"Oh, Girls!"
guides
friends
Makers of the home away from home
Mrs. Flaherty

Housemothers

Wash, clean, scrub
scour shine polish
It's done—
beauty
Mrs. Townsend and the Stellas

�;j
il

Is

Connoisseur's delight
Delicacy to the taste bud

"Pal"
Chief cook and bottle washer
P.S. (Curtis jr., too)

If it weren't for them .
Thousand dishes a day
time, clock

Billie, Carolyn, Lorraine, Ruby, Leora, Bessie
v

\

Busy busy
Caretakers of our home
fix this, replace that
plumbers builders handy men

Frank and Ken

�t

a Beginning

�?

'

I

1

!
-V
1

■

:r

•-

�the Tomorrow

�class of 1968
The beginning

h.\
Cocoon

i

I

i

something to build

3

custom
Tv- .

v

their

future
nora bridges

laura cahan

terri cass

sharon colgan

niki davis

marty goff

marcia hanson

leslie harrison

mia hervin

julie johnson

v

janie kennerly

�tina love

barbara pond

betty rennett

sally rice

sherry simon

sheri smith

leslie Stevenson

lianne swanson

stefani swanson

holly thompson

�class of 1967

accustomed
but still unsure
metamorphosis begun
formula to follow
a start

%

Pi

Mi
;■

[:•

IN

J

I

I

i

sheri stark
president

mary russel
vice-president

kris ehlebe
secretary

kathy cousins
treasurer

jane adams

margret anderson

candy bailey

diane collins

‘

;
i

i

?

mm;
$
:
:

V

si

A
\VJ
!■

n
IS

■

&lt;L
shelley cooke

k

L.

J

-

;

r

£

\

marilyn de vault

/
carol grey

i

A

t

joan hoffman

i

�marilynn holman

cynthia humphrey

jackie lawton

helen inglis

mm

r
!
■

;
/

L

(i-

F:
I

. -'3F

1

:

becky reynolds

susan seeds

penny skates

julie Strickland

W'A

L-t •

i±-

'
5

&amp;

P

m■

t-:
!

candy swanson

susan thomas

.

J
julie van houten

�tony lehman
president

vicki bublitz
vice-president

robin mitchell
secretary

margaret howard
secretary

class of 1966
Chance of reflection
An opportunity
Growth
Upreaching

Learning
mary anne bailey

nancy abraham

diana beebe

:!
!

i .

m
;•

il

susie bell

carolyn bruce

georgianna calley

nina cheung

;

'■!

:
:

t
!

!

sandy cheney

suzy durant

sally felton

sharon galletine

�gretchen graham

holly pittman
kimberly moyer

dorothy reed

jill shank

kacey smith

anne Stevenson

�I

:

•-r

�,v.

• -

- S:

Z-i

'

.

■

r

-

I

:.

_

‘r

'. .. .■ •■■'

l

-

But O :hk~: It is the Beginning
• • •

.

■

■"K*«s;s&gt;h«

■

:

■■

�I

Patient, but waiting for the time, the place,
the challenge that excites . . .
Loyalty • . . what deeper test of friendship?
Master and driver of a green monster . . .
(Commercially known as a jeep) . . .
“Can’t wait ’till the week-end . . . ”

Christina Ann Autzen

Irresistably likeable . . . and fun . . .
like sparkling wine . . .
Rising to the surface like bubbles,
the famous Bildsoe “asides” . .
Underneath the fun ... a search . . .

i

:

:
:
:

Heidi Burgess Bildsoe

�A bright smile and sparkling eyes . . .
a natural bent for advertising . . .
Patiently plodding every inch of the way
through Gaul with long-dead Caesar!
Lover of home ... of cars ... of horses . . .
“Want a ride, anyone?”

Nancy Jane Bishop

High spirited . . . great fun . . .
Eagerness to please . . .
Enthusiastically singing . . . doxology . . .
folk songs . . .
Guitar strings plinking in firelight . . .
candlelight . . .

Roberta Susan Blackstone

�The absent minded scholar . . . “Tomorrow ’nd
tomorrow ’nd tomorrow . .
Number one hate ... a dirty bathtub
Lovely to look at . . . nice to be with . . .
a mind of her own . . .

Sue Carol Bunch

Books . . . beauty . . . meaning in
everything . . .
Demanding the age-old “Why ?”
Seeking in Sartre, Camus, an answer;
in people, an answer . . .
A guitar . . . music ... a quest . . .

Susan Shelby Carr

�!

I

A firm hand ... a ready smile ...
A genuine interest in everyone . . . especially
the ill-at-ease or the sick-at-heart . . .
A skilled equestrienne . . . compassionate . . .
self-disciplined . . .

!

Patricia Ellen Dean

Organizations . . . organizations . . .
From Jobs Daughters’ Honored Queen to
state finals in 4-H Club . . .
friendliness . . . helpfulness . . .
Questions . . . “But
“What if
Never afraid of one more job . . .

i

!!
I-

Lillian Alice Eaton

�\

A new generation ... a new breed . . .
Sometimes confident, sometimes unsure . . .
Fighting every step of the way to resist
pressures above, behind, around . . .
“Cool it, gang!”
New York . . . New, new, new . . .
A new way of life . . .

L

v

r.'^j

r:

Linda May Fore

I

“A dreamer of dreams” . . .
A seeker ... a searcher . . . alone
On the horizon of discovery . . .
Who walks the wood at sunset . . .
Who keeps counsel with her
Who listens intently to “the
other drummer” . . .

k
Martha Josephine Fox
■

»

�Quiet and serene on the surface . . . but to those
who knew her . . . well . . .
Still watei's lie deepest!
Inclined towards the golf course and the Beavers . . .
“Doesn’t any college teach Italian?”

Natilie Giustina

“Ellie”

Antiques, antiques . . . and a
pinch of poetry . . .
Dramatic ability and a soul
for music . . .
Lovely of face, and a lover of
pranks . . .
Always a friend . . .
A leader, but most of all . . .
A lady.

I

A-

Ellen Elizabeth Hafner
:

�=

i

\
i

Jeannie . . .
Striking in appearance . . .
our lady of the late night calls!
On a tight rope she w^lks with virtuosity . . .
Caustic . . . yet her eyes betray the milk
of human kindness . . .

Jean Ellen Haile

Sophisticated . . . polished . . .
seemingly unperturbed....
The voice that goes so well with a
flare for acting . . .
Always among people . . . why not?
Living is being with people . . .
Acting is interpreting people . . .

\

Katherine Elizabeth Jeffcott

�I

“Did I get any mail?"
“Yes, but only six letters . . .”
Popular, energetic, conscientious, sociallyconcerned is our “Kasper” . . . Queer idea
that rules are meant for keeping . . .
Fantastic amount of mail . . .

Susan Elizabeth Kasper

: -

“Vacation near, diet here.”
Exotic tastes for madras wares . . .
“Who rattled your cage?” “Grab a hat, boys!” .
Lots of humor, but lots of depth . . .
that’s our “Mare”
Often obstinate, even headstrong—
even sometimes right.

!

;

Mary Carol Lampson

�An individual perfectionist . . .
self sufficient . . .
So near and yet so far . . .
Has found her own laws . . . somewhere . . .
on the rugged heights . . .
Skiing . . . mountain climbing . . .
Adventure beckoning upwards . . .
just beyond . . .
But always upwards . . .

Heidi Luella Mclsaac

Dedicated scholar . . .
unquenchable thirst for experience . . .
Finds inspiration in a brush . . .
Puts you at ease . . . comfortable . . .
comforting . . .
Commutes to New York.

Carol Irene Merritt

�Quiet . . . welling up from character,
denoting strength . . .
Intent, intense, self-disciplined, a scholar
The Nicolodian—“Where there’s a will,
there is a way!”
Integrity . . . humility . . .

Janet Pennington

“I’m so-o-o-o fat!”
Energy unquenchable . . .
enthusiasm unlimited . . .
Essentially genuine . . .
essentially concerned . . .
Still . . . essentially dramatic . . .
And oh! the fantastic costume of the
Hi-Board!

►
Constance Coro Rathbun

�Constant sense of humor . . .
A deep-rooted sincerity . . .
Courageous after lights out . . .
Incessantly dieting . . .
But oh, that lust for popcorn . . . how many
calories to a cup?

-

Laura Ann Shaeffer

C.T.

party every week-end
(emphasis on every) . . . artistic talent . . .
Decorating inqenuity . . . originality
What would our decorations be
without Cinda?

Lucinda Lee Taylor

�!

“Janie” ...
Lover of horses, of plays, of books, of
“thinking things out” . . .
Sometimes funny . . . always sincere . . .
Devotion to Scio . . . Jack London . . .
folk songs . . .

i
!

i

■

.

Alice Jane Thielson

Why? Why??? Life is all a
question mark ...
Who? What? How? Where? When?
Eager, inquiring mind . . . love of
far places . . .
European traveler . . .
A once for anything and everything . . .

Anne Stephanie Thompson

�i

!
;

■

I

“Gin” . . . green eyes . . . personality plus . . .
Deadlines, deadlines, deadlines . . .
Efficiency expert . . . colleges . . .
only one matters . . .
Gibran . . . poetry . . . advertising . . .
enthusiasm . . .
Never quits—never . . .

! ■

i

:
:

Virginia Kay Troute

Bright-hearted . . . insistent . . .
“This is true!” Spinner of tales and
weaver of dreams . . .
writing, her joy . . .
Leading, not led . . . ability to organize,
put order in place of chaos . . .
Quicksilver . . . never out of her
element

Ellen Louise Wheeler

�1
-

■:

Will we ever forget:
Josephine's ride in the elevator
Peyton Place
Bunch's Travels
Barry
morning buzzers
45° dorms
3 a.m. fire alarms
Steve
"The Group"
Mr. Curtis and Little Curtis
Tobie
"Tobacco Road"

Peter
"There's no business like show business."
Those phone bills—from Washington State to
Washington, D.C.
Sunday mornings in the dorms
madras shorts
Fritz
"He's good to me."
a date with the slinky green man
dented '64 Galaxies
Chinese food after parties
our pastry cook on Northvale Way
bubbles in the wine
Spring
leaving
returning
crying
the class of 1965

�m

i
i

■

.

i

i

Well done

1

Vi1

�.

thou good and faithful

�i

Honors
Jan Pennington

Mary Rodney Award
!

Alumnae Circle
Leadership
Scholarship

Loyalty
Integrity
!

Virginia Troute
Ellen Hafner

Dagwell Cup

Carol Merritt

r

I

!
\
St. Helena Award
Ellen Wheeler

;

�;t

National Merit Finalist

Martha Fox

I
F

Delphic Award
Virginia Troute

Drama Award
Ellen Hafner

Music Award
Patricia Dean

*

Chapel Award
Jan Pennington

5

Boarders' Citizenship Award
Natalie Giustina

�Girl of the Month

Virginia Troute
Loyalty

Susan Carr
Friendliness

Ellen Wheeler
Originality

Susan Bunch

Nina Cheung
Industry

1
i!

it.
!!
:;
;

Constance Rathbun
Humor

Mary Lampson
Integrity

Natalie Giustina
Organization

’

'

Marty Fox
Fortitude

Jane Thielson
Sincerity

)-

�J

t

/
■

Loyal friends... tried and true

�DIAMOND FUEL CO.
Burner and Heating Service

We Service All Makes
24 HOUR SERVICE

WE GIVE GOLD BOND STAMPS

4145 S.E. Powell Blvd.

PR 5-8661

If No Answer

�HOME OF THE MT HOOD SKI SCHOOL
o
o
&lt;
\

m
7&gt;
z

H
2 r&gt;

X

r ^
r

cd
&gt;

?5

£
H

n

■v

3&gt;'

j

2

Mi*-- 90

T&gt;

o
rn
O
o
o
z
c&gt;

5

&gt;
-&lt;

X ,_ O
— — X H

r -n &gt; x

r H p "
©&gt;

0 ONViraOd JO 1SV3 S31IW ji

�;
;

With Sincere Best Wishes
from All of Us at

RADIO CAB

RIDE RADIO CAB
CApitol 7-1212

i

�Compliments
of

DAWSON,

DOOLY
&amp; CO.

i

i

i

I

TURNER
&amp; JENKINS

Insurance Agents
and

INC.

Brokers

Board of Trade Building
ADVERTISING

CA 6-2392
Pittock Block
921 S.W. Washington
Portland, Oregon

�Compliments of

LORD ELECTRIC COMPANY
1034 S.E. Water Avenue
Portland, Oregon

COLE, CLARK
and
CUNNINGHAM, INC.
(Insurance-Specialists)

PORTLAND 4, OREGON

�I
Compliments of

TOM

Compliments of

BENSON

BURNS

GLASS

HOFFMAN

CO.

�Compliments of
LARRY'S UNION SERVICE

Compliments of

LANGENDORF
UNITED BAKERIES

;

Compliments of

THE
REED
COLLEGE
BOOKSTORE

Compliments of

}

9
IS

PHOTO

Billings, Montana

Compliments of

HOFFMAN
CONSTRUCTION

�Compliments of
MEIER FRANK CO.

(arnation

AMERICAN
LINEN
SUPPLY

■

It Pays to Keep Clean

FRESH MILK • ICE CREAM • COTTAGE CHEESE

JOSEPH'S SALON OF BEAUTY
2105 W. Burnside
Portland, Oregin

Compliments of
EPISCOPAL
BOOK STORE INC.

KALBERER
HOTEL
SUPPLY

1310 S. W. Washington
Portland 5, Oregon

CO.

HILLISON CLEANING
AND DYEING CO.
1717 S. W. 11th Avenue
CApitol 8-6976

LOSLI INC.
5808 S. W. Hood Avenue
Portland, Oregon
CH 6-5446
SHEET METAL

403 N.W. 5th Avenue
Portland, Oregon
CApitol 7-1 161

�.
.
;

Delphic Acknowledgements
EDITOR IN CHIEF

....... Virginia Troute

ASSOCIATE EDITOR

........ Holly Pittman

BUSINESS MANAGER

............. Martha Fox

ADVERTISING EDITOR

..........Carol Merritt

COPY

...... Jan Pennington
Heidi Mclsaac

i

:

■

i -'

1
.1

■

LAY-OUT EDITOR ..........

...... Jan Pennington

ART EDITOR ....................

....... Lucinda Taylor

PASTE-UP EDITOR

........... Susan Kasper

PHOTOGRAPHY EDITOR

Constance Rathbun

DELPHIC ADVISOR........

....... Carolyn Collett

PHOTOGRAPHY ..........
PUBLISHER ................

......... Gladys Gilbert
.....Yearbook House

�I

!

nmm house
KANSAS CITY, MISSOURI 64106

LITHO. IN U.S.A. BY YEARBOOK HOUSE

���..............

■

....... -■
: :
; v ;• ,:;::, v ,

■

..i:^®s==a=

mmsJmmmsm mms*
zr.

- ' - . .'

■ • ■VKa,:Slv,=,.,„:,:~.
:
■- . \ ... ;~.v;

*

SSsSSSS“&lt;•••

' :

-

■

.':V.r:.;

:

•..

: : i ^
•■•

..

•.

•

••

'•

•••:

•:

■'

iJS*..

;r*\,

.

—r

^,•,;

y-y

................
V- XU . v,.: .::•':V:
...........
•. . "' V.

■

aSsBsii'

yy
:

v

V.. V

’7 / ■ .
•

:

-

‘

■

.

■

.

.

•,

■

i.,.
■

-

�</text>
                  </elementText>
                </elementTextContainer>
              </element>
            </elementContainer>
          </elementSet>
        </elementSetContainer>
      </file>
    </fileContainer>
    <collection collectionId="1">
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="1">
          <name>Dublin Core</name>
          <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="1">
                  <text>Oregon Episcopal School Yearbooks</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="41">
              <name>Description</name>
              <description>An account of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="2">
                  <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>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="39">
              <name>Creator</name>
              <description>An entity primarily responsible for making the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="3">
                  <text>Oregon Episcopal School</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="45">
              <name>Publisher</name>
              <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="4">
                  <text>Oregon Episcopal School</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="40">
              <name>Date</name>
              <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="5">
                  <text>1921-1923; 1931-1995</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="47">
              <name>Rights</name>
              <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="6">
                  <text>All rights are reserved by Oregon Episcopal School.</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="44">
              <name>Language</name>
              <description>A language of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="7">
                  <text>English</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="51">
              <name>Type</name>
              <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="8">
                  <text>Yearbooks</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="65">
              <name>Conforms To</name>
              <description>An established standard to which the described resource conforms.</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="9">
                  <text>Describing Archives: A Content Standard (DACS)</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="78">
              <name>Extent</name>
              <description>The size or duration of the resource.</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="10">
                  <text>85</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="79">
              <name>Medium</name>
              <description>The material or physical carrier of the resource.</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="11">
                  <text>bound volumes</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="49">
              <name>Subject</name>
              <description>The topic of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="1298">
                  <text>Students</text>
                </elementText>
                <elementText elementTextId="1299">
                  <text>Junior colleges</text>
                </elementText>
                <elementText elementTextId="1300">
                  <text>Junior college students</text>
                </elementText>
                <elementText elementTextId="1301">
                  <text>High school student activities</text>
                </elementText>
                <elementText elementTextId="1302">
                  <text>Student activities</text>
                </elementText>
                <elementText elementTextId="1303">
                  <text>Student publications</text>
                </elementText>
                <elementText elementTextId="1304">
                  <text>Teachers</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </collection>
    <itemType itemTypeId="1">
      <name>Text</name>
      <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    </itemType>
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="78">
            <name>Extent</name>
            <description>The size or duration of the resource.</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="547">
                <text>1</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="79">
            <name>Medium</name>
            <description>The material or physical carrier of the resource.</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="548">
                <text>bound volume</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="549">
                <text>The Delphic 1965</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="49">
            <name>Subject</name>
            <description>The topic of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="550">
                <text>School yearbooks</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="551">
                <text> Students</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="552">
                <text> High school student activities</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="553">
                <text> Student publications</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="554">
                <text> Teachers</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="555">
                <text>This is an OES yearbook from 1965. 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>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="39">
            <name>Creator</name>
            <description>An entity primarily responsible for making the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="556">
                <text>Oregon Episcopal School</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="40">
            <name>Date</name>
            <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="557">
                <text>1965</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="47">
            <name>Rights</name>
            <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="558">
                <text>All rights are reserved by Oregon Episcopal School.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="44">
            <name>Language</name>
            <description>A language of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="559">
                <text>English</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="43">
            <name>Identifier</name>
            <description>An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="560">
                <text>oes_delphic1965-compressed.pdf</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
    <tagContainer>
      <tag tagId="1">
        <name>School yearbooks; Students; High school student activities; Student publications; Teachers</name>
      </tag>
    </tagContainer>
  </item>
  <item itemId="37" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="39">
        <src>http://archive.oes.edu/files/original/e06c1c80e58a26ed03fd8f373794c020.pdf</src>
        <authentication>74429d344cfaac34253322e1f6746b81</authentication>
        <elementSetContainer>
          <elementSet elementSetId="4">
            <name>PDF Text</name>
            <description/>
            <elementContainer>
              <element elementId="92">
                <name>Text</name>
                <description/>
                <elementTextContainer>
                  <elementText elementTextId="1044">
                    <text>t

{

�2&gt;Jphic 1964
St. Men’* J4Jt\
porttand, Oregon

D,'Me
A Guiding .................................
Administration and Faculty
A Parting ........................
The Senior Class
A Glimpse Of The Fut lire
The Underclassmen
An Obligation And A Participation
Organizations
A Stroll Around The Campus ........
Campus Scenes
A Fellowship .........................................
Activities
A Rewarding .................... ....................
Honors
An Assistance .......................................
Advertising

..

7
IQ

29
39
45
53
. 61
65

�f
'‘

v •
-

9

*

’

i.

i
,

y

.-

;

* *

. t

•'j

l..

v;r. •••
&lt;•

■«

.»/•
p."

&lt;T.

&gt;

•

•’

#?■* :'l
/•? •,•• : '

-'■

X

.
;-irf r‘

//■

i

•
r f-

V*‘ •

*

-* r-

&gt;

■-,

.
/* r &amp;-'

■

». r

r

&gt;• •

' "'3
&lt;! ir

•

’.tyy ':

, - W £;V

»-&gt;At: ,

*i y

\ t ..

/

*■&gt;

■ .&lt;

vl

••

«

.

■?/

-*

V

•&gt;.

✓•

J,
« “*

-

&gt; 2

.*V

r

f&amp;fM'&amp;M*
&gt; “&gt;V
?&lt;U-\

■J

•./■-* .; *.V* :

'MSmmm.

•;\

»

•

$»*' m/

M

-'V.?' . *•

I
►i*

•

:-

c‘v

i - *-.

Hy? %r&lt;*&gt;v'
•*•&gt;•%**
vt
V

V;
&gt;'

*3

.

‘.'6. -

; *, ,&lt;v:. 4 r/v. •..

WfMi-:-:'- m.iv
•V
Vi-

v

*../;*&gt;•&gt;

&gt;7’*&gt;

i •

■■

■*-.'*'

_■

■r-

'V..

T_

‘

^'Vl: TA^'i»

;-.. &gt;

. j

;2;»;
V
/■'•'J.

m
m
f.-JZ

v4

.*r’

|

, *;

’

:
-

&gt;

�■:

^jt^edication

There is a proverb which says. Without vision, the people perish.
Certainly, in the progression of the years, the world in which we live
must adjust and change. This process might well result in utter chaos,
were it not for vision. At St. Helen’s Hall, the adjustments and changes
of almost a hundred years have enabled it to continue through times of
adversity as well as through times of prosperity. Hand in hand, the
school has grown with the history of the state which fosters it. It has not
been the vision of one person, or even that of a single group of persons
which has insured the continuation of St. Helen s Hall, but the vision
of many people, and the work and loyalty and dedication on their part
which have accompanied the vision.
The early founders of St. Helen s
Hall, Bishop Morris, Bishop Scott. Mary Rodney, the first headmistress,
the Sisters of St. John Baptist, under whose capable leadership the school
flourished for many years, the Bishops and the clergy of this Episcopal
Diocese, in particular Bishop Dagwell and Bishop Carman, who has
been the driving force behind our present move, the various Boards of
1 ruslees, the Alumnae Association, the present director of the school.
Gertrude Houk Fariss, whose steadfast faith in the school has never
wavered, and many others who have served quietly and constantly.giving
of their time and resources to further Christian education, all have shared
in the vision. It is to these people who have worked ceaselessly to carry
on St. Helen’s Hall that we gratefully dedicate the Delphic of 1964.
Those who are deeply involved with the Hall feel a sadness at leav­
ing the school where traditions abound, where all the qualities that
dignify an old school are present. But we will be assured that the ideals
which have characterized the old school, loyalty, dignity, and integrity
will build the foundations of the new. And with a tear for the memories
of the past, and a smile for the promises of the future, we make St.
Helen s Hall in its entirety, its past, its present, its future, an integral
part of our own lives.

Page E

�;
!
,V'

2)

Page 4

�I

m

emoriam

The custodian of the Great Gate waited only a
moment—then turned the key. Some pilgrims lin­
gered—in agonizing indecision, half within the
portals—half without. But this man had come very
quickly—just one last step—and the door was
closed.
The man’s eyes were bewildered and tired—the
smile, polite but uncertain—
"My car—? My door key—? What did I do with
my vestment case?" — he fingered his cross for
com fort.
"Don’t worry,” said the custodian—
"They’ll be all right. We have other things to at­
tend to now. Sit there — pointing to an old leather
chair — surprisingly like the man’s favorite at the
Arlington Club. It felt like his chair, loo.
— "What would you like to do. now you are
here? We re not idle, you know. The Master has
complete know ledge of your talents, but he prefers
that you decide for yourself what line you wish to
follow —
Would you preach, my friend? —
— A forefinger gently pulled at the white collar
— "No — pi ease don’t ask me to preach. 1 ve written thousands of speeches, given thousands of talks
and addresses — preached and preached, until my
throat ached with it Untold numbers have listened
— but so few really heard what I said. It did so
little good — all those words — I can t do it any
more" —
Would you be chairman of several Boards —
o man?’
“No. no — not thatl

arguing, the bickering. So tired ol seeing the
bol of Christ emblazoned over the doors of
tutions — then carefully excluded from their
mittee meetings. No — I would really rather

sym­
Insti­
com­
not.

— "You have had much success in gathering
funds for the work of Our Lord — perhaps this
again — you will do? ’
— "I can t — not any more. I smiled, to soften
men s purse strings. I cajolled, I fraternized. I
wheedled. I needled. I begged and I berated, because
I knew I was asking for God — and it was for the
good of man . They gave — some did — but not for
God — but for mel I couldn’t make them under­
stand. They weakened and sickened me to the core
of my being. They loved me — but not God. I
couldn’t build the bridge — they wouldn t let me.
— I’m afraid to ask — any more.
— “Will you travel — for God — in this Kingdom?”
"Miles and miles I drove. I flew — I rode — I
walked. With joy I did it. Years and years of joy
I had in those miles — seeing new faces, greeting
old friends — administering the rites of my beloved
Church. Until 1 realized that the miles were like
a spider’s web — stretching from my own center
of loneliness. Because — in the round white collar,
preaching integrity, honesty, fidelity and brotherhood — a man is lonely — unless he compromises.
No more — in pity — let me stand still."
— "Your friends are legion — their love of you
is great. Will you counsel, advise and teach? — I
can’t suggest much more —’
"I loved my fellow men. Perhaps, in part be­
cause of my need for their love and companionship

I am so weary from the

Page 5

�i

i

.1

mi

•j

in return. TKey could have helped me be strong­
er than I was. Instead many were tolerant and af­
fectionate toward my weaknesses. This, in me, they
accepted — in legion — for their own comfort and
peace of mind. My counsel, advice and teaching
were received by the few who loved the Lord /
lived to follow. I can’t try this again.” —
— "What then.. man, will you do? We serve
here, with joy. toward the fulfillment of our talents — at whatever task we choose." —
The custodian of the Gate broke off, to inspect
a small hand tugging importunately at his robe.
He looked down into a small shining face — up­
turned in incredulous delight — and he listened, as
a tiny boy-angel burst forth in rapture —
"I know him1 We all know himl He’ s our friendl
Can’t he play with us — and teach us — while

we re living here with God — all us little angels?

— The man stood up — ready now to leave behind the old leather chair. One hand outstretched
to small welcoming fingers. Weariness erased, lone­
liness gone forever. His round face transformed by
complete joy and the promise of fulfilling service.
Home at last — with blue eyes a-twinkle, and lips
twisted in the familiar puckish grin.
He reached in his vest pocket for the watch that
chimes, and for the ball that opens to make a cross,
as hand in hand they went, into the greater reaches
of the Kingdom.
The custodian of the Gate — celestial quill in
hand — made his entry.
"His greatest talent, given with joy — to the
service of God — for all Eternity ’ — Benjamin
Dunlap Dagwell.
Phyllis Carman

\f

I

Page 6

��)

i
armen

I

i^oarcl oj ^JruiteeA
U

0 0£^QO

fL,.

a

=■' 5i'

k-«*”

-•
n

4. fffi

l.r V

!

\

Y

":if'

«i
a&gt;
f

y y’

-•

Wm&gt;
m

Hi

i- 4
Z-4

\'V ^

-7S.V

...:‘,te»
t-v M l

;/

1.1

BWACpKCRa°J,fTre Rev.ErRiG&amp;ar,iotMUr C ^Tt^’ ^ N-, Reynolds. The Rt. Rev James
H. Greenfield. FRONT ROW: Mrs Gertrude Houlf Fn * ,luLMr J^ot)er*I A- Leedy. The Rev. Robert
Fulop. Me. Mac E. Heitzhausen, Mrs RonaS^J.
b!’Bruno.’ ^ ^

Page 8

i

I

�h

^fairector

GERTRUDE HOUR FAR1SS

“............... All the rarest hues of human life
Take radiance, and are rainbow d out in tears.
To the Class of 1964:
Yes, there have been tears, and there will be more,
as we say goodbye to familiar scenes and loved
places. But the tears are indeed filled with the
rarest hues of human life—radiant with happy mem­
ories, beloved friendships, precious knowledge, and
soaring hopes. These we have shared during this
last year together at the old Hall.
There s been a tear mingled with each of the
happy times we have had. But all of the tears together have created a beautiful rainbow bridge,
joining and comingling the old that we love and
cherish with the new that we grow to love as we

create. Finally, the bow losses shape and becomes
simply a suffusion of warm radiance, for there is
nothing left to bridge. All of it—the memories, the
friendships, the knowledge, the hopes, the tears and
all of it is St. Helen s
smiles, the past and futur

Hall.
Each of you is and always will be a part of it. You
leave something of yourself in it; you take something
out of it with you. What you leave will be here al­
ways—a part of you, woven into the life of the Hall.
What you take you will have always—a part of
the Hall hidden in your mind and heart.
May the tears and smiles of each of your lives be
blended always in the radiance of the rainbow—for
the rainbow is known as "the smile of God".

Page 9

�I

_ y itlt n in M Ira lion

Mrs. Strahan was born in Sausalito, California.
Later she moved to Toronto. Canada where she re­
ceived part of her early schooling. She attended high
school in Portland, and was awarded a B.A. degree
from Oregon State University. She then taught Home
Economics at Washington High School in Portland.
Later she traveled to Washington. D. C. as a repre­
sentative for the Department of Agriculture and Bureau
of Fisheries. Mrs. Strahan then toured through the
southern states. lecturing under the auspices of various
colleges. She was married in Washington. D. C., and
lived for a time in New York City. Mrs. Strahan then
returned to Portland and came to St. Helen s Hall
as resident director. In addition to these duties, she
serves as a dvisor for the Boarders Council.

EVELYN STRAHAN

Mrs. Collett was born on the seacoasl of North
Carolina, but received her primary education in Oregon. She attended St. Helen’s Hall Junior College.
and went on to the University of Washington where
she was awarded B.A. degrees both in drama and in
literature, magna cum Iaude, and won a Phi Beta
Kappa key. She attended Columbia University in
New York on scholarship, receiving her M.A. as partial
fulfillment toward a doctorate's in the field of Shakespearean drama. She did advanced work in method
acting under Madame Maria Osespenskaya. Returning
to the West Coast Mrs. Collett taught at St. Helen’s
Hall Junior College for several years before her mar­
riage. Afer residing for some years in Bucks County.
Pennsylvania. Mrs. Collett returned again to the west
and to St. Helen’s Hall. She is the mother of five
children. Besides teaching voice and diction, drama,
and Christian Ethics. Mrs. Collett is College Counselor.
Delphic Advisor, advisor for Student Council, and
Administrative Assistant to Mrs. Fariss.

CAROLYN COLLETT

Page 10

�Father Greenfield was born and raised in Portland.
He entered Reed College here, but interrupted his
education for three years to join the Navy.On return­
ing to Reed, he received a B.A. degree.
After graduate work at Berkeley, California, Father
Greenfield went to Oxford University in England,
B. Litt degree. In rather rapid
where he earned
sequence came a return to Oregon, where he was vicar
of five parishes, a subsequent returned to Oxford
where he received a Ph.D. degree. Before returning to
the United States, he made an extensive trip through
Europe by bicycle.
In 1957 Father Greenfield joined the faculty at St.
Helen s Hall where he serves in the role of Chaplain
and teaches courses in Religious Education. At the
same time he became vicar of St. Michael s Episcopal
Church in Newberg. In addition to these duties, he is
at present the chairman of the Ecumenical Committee
for the Diocese of Oregon, the chairman of the Division
of Faith and Order for the Portland Council of
Churches, the chairman of the Art and Architecture
Commission for the Diocese, and Chaplain to the
Society of St. Paul.
THE REVEREND R. H. GREENFIELD

A native of Illinois. Mrs. Harrington began to study
music early in life. With a thorough knowledge of
voice and organ, she received her Bachelor of Music
degree from Westminister College in Princeton, New
Jersey. She had previously received a A.B. degree
with English as a major. She began to teach soon
after her graduation, and. after a period of time in
Ohio, she came west to Portland, and joined the faculty
of St. Helen’s Hall. Besides teaching music apprecia­
tion and directing the choir, Mrs. Harrington plays the
organ in chapel services, is the Senior Class Advisor,
Admissions Director, and in the absence of Miss McKirdie is advisor to the National Honor Society. Not
the least of her accomplishments is the fact that Mrs.
Harrington has a daughter who is an alumna of the
Hall.

CAROLYN HARRINGTON

Page 11

�ft
CARL REYNOLDS
Mr. Reynolds was born in Portland, and spent bis early life here.
Several years later, be moved with bis family to Palo Alto. California, and
later attended Stanford University where be received bis B.A. and M.A.
degrees. Mr. Reynolds moved to Portland in 1951. Soon after, be started
teaching art at St. Helen s Hall, and continued until 1962, when be left to
spend a year in Switzerland. He returned in the fall of 1963. At present.
Mr. Reynolds teaches Ancient and Medieval History at St. Helen s Hall,
and Art History at Portland State College. He also owns and operates
Multorpor, a ski resort at Mt. Hood, and is the father or four Hall students.

Dr. Reynolds came to St. Helen s Hall in a round-about way. He was
born on a farm in Nebraska. His family soon afte r moved to Portland, and
be attended the University of Oregon where be received bis B.A. in math­
ematics and bis M.A. in Sociology. He then moved to California and re­
ceived bis Pb.D. in Economics and Sociology from Stanford University.
Shortly after bis graduation be took up the career of teaching, and taught
at Stanford for thirty years with the exception of the year which be spent
at the University of Hawaii. He has also taught in summer sessions in
schools all around the country. He graciously emerged from retirement in
the emergency caused by the illness of Miss McKirdie, to teach Modern
European History at St. Helen s Hall. His family includes two sons and
many grandchildren, the latter of which have been largely "Hall-educated I

Page

�DAVID MORGAN
Mr. Morgan was born in Worcester. Massachusetts, and thus grew up
on the Atlantic side of the United States. He was graduated from Syracuse
University with a B.A. degree in History and Fine Arts. After doing graduate
work to enable him to teach, Mr. Morgan taught high school in the upper
New York State area for three years. In 1960 he took a year of advanced
study at the University of Redlands in California, after which he moved
to Portland with his wife, and began teaching at St. Helen’s Hall, where
he conducts classes in history and art appreciation. Since his arrival at
St. Helen s Hall, he and his wife have adopted a son.

MAXINE JOHNSON

Mrs. Johnson, our Modern Problems teacher, is another native Portlander. She attended the University of Oregon, the University of California
at Berkeley, and Portland State College, where she received her B.S. in
Social Science. She then went to Reed College and obtained her M.A. T.
In the past, before Mrs. Johnson came to St. Helen s Hall, besides teaching,
she served as the Oregon State Secretary for Senator Richard Neuberger.
Although her husband and family of four children occupy much of her
time, Mrs. Johnson is planning to work for her Ph. D. in United States
History at the University of Oregon next year.

Page IS

�RUTH ROSE RICHARDSON
head of our English Department, also teaches a freshman class in Old
r., Miss Richardson,
,
1 estament, and nets as Junior Class Advisor. She was bom in Oregon, and this state has re­
mained her permanent home although she has traveled through the United States and Europe.
She came as n junior in high school to St. Helen's Hall, and graduated president of the Senior
L-lnss. Miss Richardson received her B A. ut the University of Oregon, then went to the Uni­
versity of North Carolina for her M.A. Returning to the west, she attended Claremont College
and, later. Hanford, for graduate work in English. During World War II Miss Richardson
served as an Otlicer in Naval Aviation, being primarily concerned with airways and airport con­
trol. Miss Richardson began her teaching career in the California public schools, but later returned
in a teaching capacity to the Hall. Outside of her Hall career Miss Richardson is nt present the
National Scholarship Chairman of Delta Gan mm I’mternily.

II
LENORE KLINK
Mrs. KJink. who teaches fresh
v-.,..man English, was bom in Portland, nnd brought up here as
well. She attended St. Helen’s Hall Junior College, and subsequently transferred to the University
ol Oregon,
where
she ,was graduated with a B A. in English Literature The yeor following her
■
x,
graduation. Mrs. Klink taught at Sandy Union High School in Oregon
She then came to
”cIen s. Hal1* and. ,a“8h‘ °
variety of subjects at the High School and Junior College,
including fencing and other courses in physical education. After two years she married and
moved to San frandsco to raise her family of two children. Her home now established in Port
lund again, Mrs. Klink at present divides her interests between teaching nt the Hall nnd serving
as rirst Vice-President of the American Association of University Women.

Page 14

�:-v-

!

Madame Wolfson is Europe’s gift to St. Helen’s Hall. Born in Breslau,
Poland, and brought up on the border between France and Germany,
"Madame’’ is actually a native of both countries. She received the European
equivalent of B.A. and M.A. degrees from the King Fredrick Willhelm
University in Breslau. Since coming to the United States, Madame Wolfson
has taught French and German from Georgia to Oregon, on both the high
school and college level. At St. Helen’s Hall Madame Wolfson teaches
French and German, but she is also active outside the Hall, teaching
French and German at Portland State College, conducting numerous
summer workshops for language teachers, and spending a great deal of
her ’’spare” time with her family of four children and many grandchildren.
As a side-line. Madame is Portland’s most fabulous and famous artiste
in fancy pastries, an art brought with her from abroad. The birthdays of
resident students and of faculty members are enriched by her artistry.

IRENE WOLFSON

DIANA RORER

Mrs. Rorer. who was born in Tacoma. Washington, is another faculty
member who is an alumna of St. Helen’s Hall. She attended the Hall for
her entire high school education, and then went on to Reed College, where
she was awarded her B.A. degree in literature. Mrs. Rorer remained in the
Portland area, married, and taught Latin for a year at Madison High School
before returning to St. Helen s Hall in 1962, as a teacher instead of a pupil.

�11

CAROLINE PAIGE

I

Miss Paige was born in Fargo. North Dakota. She received Her early
education in Minneapolis, Minnesota. Moving west, she came to Portland
and attended St. Helen’s Hall for three years. Following her graduation,
Miss Paige went to the University of Washington where sh e was awarded
a B.S. in mathematics. Miss Paige is a member of Delta Kappa Gamma
Honor Society. Her first year of teaching was spent at Brunot Hall in Spo­
kane, Washington, an Episcopalian Girls’ School, where she was principal
of the elementary department, and taught seventh and eighth grades. She
then moved to Portland to teach at St. Helen’s Hall. Other teaching exper­
iences outside the Hall included the years she taught at Cleveland High
School as chairman of the mathematics department. At the Hall, Miss
Paige teaches algebra, geometry, and trigonometry. In addition to this she
is advisor to the Altar Guild. To Miss Paige, St. Helen’s Hall is both voca­
tion and advocation. The highest values of the school are woven into the
very tapestry of her being.

p
ELIZABETH JOHNSON
Mrs. Johnson was born in Michigan. At an early age she left the
United States to live in Alberta, Canada. After returning to the United
States. Mrs. Johnson attended the University of Washington, majoring in
pre-medicine and chemistry. After receiving her B.S. degree, she taught sci­
ence for one year on the high school level, then went to Mills College in
California where she studied bio-chemistry and was awarded an M.S.
degree. On leaving Mills, Mrs. Johnson was married and lived in Pennsyl­
vania and Georgia before coming back to Portland. In addition to teaching
science at the Hall, Mrs. Johnson is advisor to the Sophomore Class, to the
Hall Red Cross chapter and to the Foreign Affiliation Club. She is the
mother of two daughters and one son, proud grandmother of four.

!

I

Page 1G

�■

•;
:

CHERYL SHANKS
Our art teacher. Mrs. Shanks, is a native Portlander, and spent her early life here. Briefly she deserted Oregon to attend Scripps College
in California for two years, but then she transferred back to the University of Oregon, from which she was graduated with a B.A. in Art His­
tory. Since that time. Mrs. Shanks has done graduate work at Portland State College, Lewis and Clark College, and the Portland Art Museum.
For two years she fought art and physical education at Holy Child Academy. Currently, in addition to teaching nrt at St- Helen s Hall. Mrs.
Shanks is a wife and mother, successfully dividing her time between her school and home-making careers.

11 ELGA DARET

Mrs. Darct was
her degree in health
time as a supervisor
serves as udvisor for
manages to find time

"bom nnd bred” in Portland She attended Lewis and Clark College, starting out in pre-nursing, but eventually
and physical education. Mrs. Dnret not only worked for ninny years at Emmanuel Hospital but also served for a
on the Portland Park Bureau. At St. Helen's Hall Mrs. Dnret is an instructor in Physical Education and First
the Athletic Commission. Although Mrs. Daret's main occupation outside of leaching is taking care of her infant
to lake Hall students skiing in season up to Multorpor

obtaining
period of
Aid and
son. she

Miss Vuundn" who has tuught Modem Dance nt the Hall for four years, was born in Portland and studied ballet here as a child. She
attended Mills College, where she majored in Fine Arts and was graduated with a B.A. degree. Mrs. Carter, involved at the present time in
many projects concerning the dance, is married and has two small children
She founded the Portland Modem Dunce Center—the first school of this
type in the city, She is the artistic director for the Portland Dance Company, and also lectures in Dance at Portland Stnte College. Miss Vnunda s
fundn men lal goal is to develop modem dance os an independent theatrical art in Portland.

VAUNDA CARTER
Page 17

�Staff

:
;

Lell !o Right: Inga Dunford. Secretary to Mrs. Fariss: Edna Bowman.
Night Receptionist; Bette Holman. Day Receptionist.

Helen Kimball, Financial Assistant

Ethel Christenson. Study Hall Proctor

HOUSEMOTHERS, left to right: Fmncinc Arvin. Elizabeth Ackridge,

J

Page 18

Nellie Mitchell, Hazel Davis. Ruth Lofslrom.

Mae Townsend. Nurse

��OFFICERS- Left to Right: Barbara Lancaster, Secretary; Julie Krause
\ ice-President: Julia Booth, Picsidenl: Susan Ramsey, Treasurer
Every class, such as the Senior Class, manifests
familiar traits through the years: but each somehow
manages to keep its own personality and spirit,
which distinguish it from all other classes. The
Senior Class this year is characterized by its exuberance and drive. Intangible school spirit brought
forth by each class is most clearly shown in its
handling of traditional projects, from the Fresh man-

if

Judith Ann Agather
Bellevue, Washington

Since her “arrival’’ two years
ago, Judy, with her quiet ways and
gracious manner, has become a
definite part of Hall life. A manyfaceted personality she is a romantic, but at the same time can work
up a boundless enthusiasm for
anything. Serene and unaffected.
Judy exercises strength in a velvet
glove, she combines charm with
intelligence.

Page 20

Senior Dinner to the Dutch Auction. On a more
prosaic basis, from day to day. I lie Seniors display
the exemplary characteristics of warmth and sincer­
ity. These qualities emanate from each member of
the class and embrace every other student at the
Hall. The Seniors deeply hope the essence of the
two qualities will be a lasting gift of their particular
class to the new St. Helen’s Hall.

�T'

Julia Booth
Portland, Oreg on

TV"

;
With unwavering loyally to the
Hall and to her friends, Julia is
known for standing up for what is
right, and holding fast to the high­
est standards of conduct. A pure
cullurist, romantic and idealistic,
she derives more pleasure from
Vivaldi and the Bronte s than the
usual senior delights. Reliable al­
ways. steadfast unwaveringly. Julia
deserves the privilege of bearing our
cross as senior class president.

i
Sandra Leimomilani Dobson
Honolulu, Hawaii

Sandi. our delicate little snow
bunny, shows her exuberance for
life in challenging ski slopes, as
well as in expending her ever-present energy in school activities. Al­
ways dreaming of her far-off h ome
in Hawaii. Sandi has a smile as
bright and a presence as warm as
the atmosphere of her own fair
islands.

Page 21

�Linda Julie Krause
Portland, Oregon

An avid lead er o f her class, J*
makes her thoughts and opin*‘
known with a forthright sp
backed up by eager pursuit. I*
tense situation needs release &gt;—
can count on Julie to remedy m=
ters and show them in an entir
different light by one o f her mecapers. Her class loyalty is *-■
wavering and can best be shown the things she has done to m£»“
the class of '64 a busy and acl»one.

Barbara Lancaster
Bellevue, Washington

With a vivacious zeal that seems
to conquer all the wo rids little
problems. Barbie takes on every­
one s joys and sorrows as her own.
Her blond head can be seen here,
there, and everywhere as she runs
busily from one activity to another,
using her vivid imagination and vi­
tality to brighten everyone’s spirits.
Rich in personality. Barbie has
seemingly inexhaustible resources
of friendship for all.

Page 22

�'
!

Joan Livingston Lasselle
Tigard, Oregon

;
I

Ask any senior if they have ever
known a time when this girl goes
around with a frown or looking
outwardly depressed, and we are
sure that none of them could remember such an occasion. Joanie
can best be recalled to us by her
enthusiastic response to everything
in which she has a part. As our
Delphic editor-in-chief, we all are
confident that anything done under
her auspices is sure to turn out to
be a masterpiece! With a twinkle
in her eye and a joy in every word,
she shines as a completely unselfish
person who is equally devoted to
her friends and to her ideals. Her
gracious manner in accepting the
inevitable is one which we all
admire.

i

Jj

Katharine Douglas McKirdie
Portland, Oregon

WW-*:

\

\

xs
V»

t

;

Often rebellious in spirit. Kafee
will forever desire the unconquer­
able. Aided by an artistic ability
with an affinity for the abstract.
she is an outstanding personality
in the class. Unknown to many is
the fire within her that persistently
compe Is her to seek truth above all.

Page 23

�Robin Anne Paisley
Yakima, Washington

It is often said that an attract*^
face reflects a warm personality
This thought is especially tru
when applied to Robin, for sh
possesses a warm tranquility tha
enhances her appeal. She is equals
artistic, observant, and indepcnd
ent, all of which combine to pro
duce an impression of a uniqu«
individual.

Judith Parrott
Potrland, Oregon

Talkative and friendly is Judy,
whose laughter and smile are ever
present in our class. Her main in­
terest is in drama, as shown through
her sensitive relation to her envi­
ronment. Quiet in her manner, but
strong in her beliefs, she stands
apart as a distinctive personality
which we admire.

Page 24

�Mary Susan Ramsey
Portland, Oregon

Seuss is the most distinctly indi­
vidual member of the senior class.
She combi ncs a pure free spirit with
a dramatic, yet sometimes impish
manner. Along with her flare for
the theater and uninhibited gaiety.
Seuss s undemanding generosity
will be remembered at the Hall for
a long lime to come.

Nancy Thalia Reynolds
Seattle, Washington

Nancy, with a twinge of "Beyond
the Fringe" in her every pun, makes
each class room a debating ground.
Always with her nose in the New
Yorker or the Times, she is the
class authority on the latest. Her
versatile character and her power
of expression will always stand out
in our minds as those of a pure
intellectual.

Page 25

�Roberta Gail Rogers
Longview, Washington

Constantly striving to do h—
best, Robbie is a classmate ths*
can always be depended upon tz
gel a job done correctly, efficientlyand with eagerness and enthusiasn—
Her neat and orderly manner *
carried out in her endeavors as we™
as in her appearance.

Merry Kathleen Sell
Tacoma, Washington

Outspoken and poised. Kathy is
the very spark of our class life.
Though at times her longue can be
rather sharp, she is quick to recog­
nize the value of an idea or of a
person. Her enjoyment of music is
evident not only in her serious
voc alizing in the chorus, but also
in her impromptu dancing in the
dorms. In tense situations. Kathy
can always get things going again
by the right word or gesture.

Page 26

�Barbara Lee Shank
Portland, Oregon

Naturally out-giving of herself.
Barb has made friends with everyone in the past two years since she
has come to the Hall. Always
willing to get a job done, she is
inevitably first to volunteer for
committee work in class meetings
or student council, an example o I
her drive toward school spirit and
unity. Although Barb expresses her
opinions strongly with vigor and
force, she is equally willing to lis­
ten to and often to accept the opin­
ions of others. With her matter-offactness and her cheerful laugh, she
is a charming facet in the personal­
ity of our class.

Janice Louise Swanson
North Bend, Oregon

Projecting the image of a tall,
blonde Viking, which she is. Jan
has maintained the highest of scho­
lastic achievements through her
strong academic diligence and com­
petitive spirit. She possesses an
unusual sense of dedication to the
traditions and the standards of the
Hall, yet her warm character pro­
vides a firm bond with her fellow
students.

Page 27

�Rebecca Catherine Weissert
Pendleton, Oregon

I

r

Airy an d exuberant, known to all by tbe clomp of her saddle shoes.
Becky brings an effervescent gaiety
to the numberless activities to
which she contributes. She com- fll
bines a mischievous spirit with ^
practical restraint, enabling her to
maintain a high scholastic standard
as well as to keep in the swing oi
things.

£

t
V-

f.

^JJ^appineSA i5 . . .

•&gt;

Judy Agather when everyone is in un iform;
Julia Booth when she has an organized class meeting;
Sandi Dobson in a warm bubble-bath after skiing;
Julie Krause when she gels her own way;
Barb Lancaster on graduation day;
Joan Lasselle when the Delphic deadline is over;
Kafee McKirdie at the cafe:
Robin Paisley when the phone rings;
Judy Parrott when she speaks up in class;
Susan Ramsey with a flower in her hair:
Nancy Reynolds when she wins an argument:
Robbie Rogers when she gels a good grade;
Kathy Sell when she is biting her fingernails;
Barb Shank when she finds a parking place:
Janice Swanson when she gets her braces off;
Becky Weissert during vacation.

Page 28

�-- •
:w-.
*3W •
£*•
&gt;-

- • ..

•; • *■- w*
:

■

?ir»*

•-,r

�3

umor

CLaAS

CLASS OFFICERS. Lefl lo Right: Jane Tliielsen. Secretary; Ellen Wheeler.
Vice-President; Kathy Jeffcotl. President; Roberta Blackslone, Treasurer.

There are several factors about this year’s Junior
Class which distinguish it as one of the most
enthusiastic and energetic St. Flelen s Flail has ever
had. Although the class is exceptionally large, the
flood of new Juniors has only added lo its high
spirits. Full of excitement, the Juniors have been
ready and willing to lake on the full load of
responsibilities of the year — Red Letter Week.

culminating in tlie Red Letter Dance, and most
important of all, llie Junior-Senior Prom. Their
zest for living and versatile imaginative qualities,
along with their spirit of leadership, make it certain
that these Juniors, as they go forward to become
the first senior class in the new St. Helen s Flail,
will create precedents worthy of being followed by
all the succeeding classes.

!

I

Gail Adams

Linda Allen

Christina Autzcn

Roberta Blackslone

Lynn Braincrd

Sue Bund

■.

Page 30

Judy Cam mack

�Susan Carr

Pally Corbin

Linda Fore

Marlha Fox

Natalie Giuslina

Ellen Hafner

Jean Haile

Pauline Hoffine

Katharine Jeffocll

Susan Kasper

Mary Lampson

Darla McClain

Palricia Dean

Heidi Mclsaac

Lillian Ealon

Carol Merrill

Page 31

�Shelley Olson

Jan Pennington

Constance Rathbun

Laura Shaeffer

Sally Smith

Roberta Spinning

Lorcna Strickland

Suzanne Strong

Lucinda Taylor

Jane 1 hielsen

Anne 1 hompson

Virginia Troute

Ellen Wheeler

Heidi Bildsoe

Page 32

�CLASS OFFICERS. Left to Right: Toni Lehman. Secretary: Katharine Kara
fotias, President; Holly Pittman. Treasurer; Vichy Bublitz. Vice-President.

The sophomore year is always a period of tran­
sition. Theirs is a time for the strengthening of lies
and for the ma Ling of bonds that will stand them
in good stead as upperclassmen. The class members
enter activities with a joyful, cooperative wholeheart­
edness I he great event of their social year is the
Sophomore Dance. This gives the class a chance to

Victoria Bublitz

Mary Anne Bailey

Carolyn Bruce

Cheryl Buck

show its own originality and creativity to the rest of
the school. The Sophomore Class has grown, as the
year has advanced, in a deepened and thoughtful
realization of the great opportunities ahead of it.
A serious sense of values is the important quality of
this class. Its goals arc set far ahead and the experi­
ence of soon becoming upperclassmen is the first step
in the realization of those goals.

Tina Batori

Susan Buckles

Dianna Beebe

Michele Cooke

Page 33

�Sally Felton

Patricia Fisk

Bonnie Hampton

Linda Herr

Margaret Howard

Katherine Karafolias

Antonetle Lehman

Shelia Maley

1

t
Elizabeth Marsh

Susan Marslon

Kimberly Moyer

Taye Nylund

Page 34

Virginia Merrell

Robin Oliver

Carolyn Morris

Holly Pittman

�Barel Plynipton

Jill Shank

Mary Anne Shank

Susan Solinskv

Eileen Udaloff

Page 35

�L man

a

aid

CLASS OFFICERS. Leit to Right: Sherry Stark. Treasurer; Candy Swanson,
Secretary; Melanie Adams, Vice-President; Becky Reynolds, President.

Bewilderment and delight are universal in the
altitude of freshmen everywhere on first arriving in
high school; but these traits soon give over to a more
serious spirit of vitality and loyalty to their respec­
tive schools. This year’s freshmen at St. Helen s Hall
have displayed these characteristics as well as an
eager anticipation for their life on the new campus.

Jane Adams

Shelley Chichester

A firm spirit of leadership has been apparent from
the beginning in the Freshman Class. It is probable
that they will use it well in creating a strong founda­
tion for the part their class will play in the new
school.

Margaret Anderson

Candace Bailey

Linda Brace

Diane Collins

Donna Delrick

Kristina Ehelcbe

�Diane Hartje

Joan Hoffman

Catherine Marshall

Rebecca Reynolds

Candace Swanson

Marly nn Holman

Kristin Johanns

Julie Strickland

Julie van Houten

Page 37

�-

I

►

&lt;

I he Library oflers a quiel study place.

1

i
i

•!
*
!

PW.

Boarding students relax in the dorm.

Page 38

��!

couna•j

■

i

Carol Merrill
Vice-President

Rebecca Weisserl
Trcosurer

Margaret Howard
Recording Secretary

Jan Pennington
Corresponding Secretary

Judy Agather
President

r

The Student Council is the link which connects various student organiza­
tions, as well as all the girls within the student body, with the administration.
It makes decisions, in conjunction with the administration, on questions con­
cerning the student body. Besides the presidents of all organizations, the student
council includes officers elected by the student body, to represent them as a
whole, presidents of each class, and representatives from each class.

REPRESENTATIVES — Front Row, Left to Right: Virginia Troule, Janice Swanson. Ellen Hofner.
Katharine Karafotias, Julia Booth, Kathy Jeffcott, Julie Strickland, Becky Reynolds, Dianu Beebe.
SECOND ROW: Joan Lassellc, Barhurn Shank. Becky Weissert, Sandi Dobson, Katherine McKirdie.

Page 40

�I

Virginia Troulc
Advertising Editor

Julie Krause
Business Manager

Joan Lasselle
Editor-in-chief
Becky Weissert
Lay-out Editor

Barbara Shank
Photography Editor

1

t

Sandi Dobson

Art Editor

Nancy Reynolds
Copy Editor

Roberta Rogers
Paste-up Editor

The purpose of the Delphic yearbook is to catch and hold the significant
events of the past school year. This is accomplished by the individual contributions
of each member of the staff to provide a perfect whole. Members are chosen
by the editors of the inner staff.

STAFF, Left to Right: Chrissy Aulzcn. Marty Fox. Susan Kasper. Ellen Hnfncr. Katharine Knrnfotins.
Julia Booth, Kathy Jcffcotl, Connie Ratlihun. Molly Pittman. Toni Lehman.

:
1

Page 41

�den (Siounci■l
The boarders have a voice in their government by means of the
Boarders Council. Elected by the students in the Residence Depart­
ment of the Hall, its members carry out much of the necessary discipline,
and make decisions which pertain to their own welfare.

Rebecca Weissert
President

r

SEATED Lcfl to Right: Mary Lompson, Ellon Wheeler.
Kathy Sell. Vichy Bublilz. Pal Dean. Sancli Dobson.

STANDING: Eileen Udaloff.

onor
Formerly known only as Helenas, the honor society of St. Elelen’

Hall has now become a branch of the National Ho nor Society. As an
organization. Helenas members assist Father Greenfield in the daily
chapel services. Membership is awarded to girls with high scholastic
standing and strong character.

Janice Swanson
President
Page 42

LEFT TO RIGHT: Ellen Hafner. Virginia Troutc, Carol Merritt. Jan Pennington, Janice
Swanson, Judy Agalher, Julia Booth, Nancy Reynolds, Jonn Lasselle.

�•i
!
i

:
:

ishing parties, to buying nee
girl may join.

;

i

mm?
ft :
l

w

*.*!, i ’■■ kmmfwimm
f
\c\
.&lt;

‘

c

I

Ellen Hafner
President

I

LEFT TO RIGHT- Holly Pittman. Treasurer: Ellen Hafner. President: Roberta Rogers.
Secretary.

lion3
St. Helen's Hall has. in the last five years, become affiliated

formed to keep up a correspondence with these schools. 1 o do this it
collects a scrapbook of Hall events to send to these countries, provides
pen pals for interested Hall girls, and. two years ago brought a boreign
Exchange student to the Hall from Southern Rhodesia.

Sandi Dobson
President
Mrs. Joseph Fulop. Alumnae President, presents gifts from Koran Girls* High School to Judy
Agather and Saudi Dobson.

Page 43

�ti letic C^aommiision
The Athletic Commission has its origins in the Girls' Athletic Assoc­
iation. The girls interested in joining participate in a variety of sports through­
out the year. New members are elected by old members on the basis of their
contributions in athletic activities, and their sportsmanship.

i

■

I

Katherine McKirdie
President

r

FRONT ROW from Left to Right Kimberly Moyer. Natalie Guistino, Linda Allen. Ly mi Brninerd.
Jane Adams, Becky Reynolds. Linda Fore, Eileen Udalof. BACK ROW: Joan Hoffman, Margaret
Howard. Pauline Hoffine, Suzanne Seeds, Virginia Merrill. Susan Buckles. Holly Pittman. Roberta
Blackstone, Roberta Spinning, Candy Bailey. Margaret Anderson. Jane 1 biclsen, Sally Smith. Beret
Plympton. Robin Oliver. Julie Strickland. Shelly Olsen NOT PICTURED Kathy Sell and Barb am

Shank.

roii
The Red Cross is a service organization that in addition to maintaining ,
its own offices, works through various schools. At St. Helen’s Hall, the Red
Cross has fund-raising projects to help the needy in Portland, and also serves
other organizations such as the United Good Neighbors and the March oi
Dimes. Any girl who is interested may join.

Virginia Troute
President
Page 44

Robcrtii Rogers. Susan Kasper. Cundy Bailey, Virginia Troute. Susan Buckles.

��school . .

ar

le

la

-

Ilie very heart of the

��m..
SCOTT HALL*—cloaking tlie laughter and voices of its residents through
the years . . .

�•;*

'-A.Vis

�M* i. y. ■ :

;

���^j)~ellowsliip . . •

�Senior

inner

At the Senior Din ner the seniors meet for the first time as a class to discuss
and plan the important events of the new school year.

'I

tesratt sz-JUt tsaSr&amp;A

J

H
Page 64

The Old Girl-New Girl Tea brings all the students of St. Helen s Hall to­
gether for the first time in an enjoyable afternoon. Many friendships and acquaint­
ances are here formed, as big sisters meet little sisters, and classmates, old and
new. hail one another.

�t^ed cjCetter VUeeL and &lt;2)
ance

During Red Letter Week the Junior Class
strives to raise money for the Junior-Senior.. Prom.
This year the original theme, Way Out. simu­
lating outer space, inspired such projects as the
selling of "Benjy Dee” dolls, and school address
books. The week culminated in the informal
Red Letter Dance which followed the same theme.

LEFT TO RIGHT Princess Darla McClain. Princess Lucinda Taylor.
Belle of St. Helen’s Ellen Hafner. Princess Connie Ratlifcun.

�ridtmad
^jlormal
Again the Christmas Formal lived
reputation for fun and gaiety through
Belles et Beaux . which was carried
appropriate decorations of silver bells
bows.

Page 56

up to its
its theme
out with
and blue

�QiridtmaA 2)inner
The warmth and laughter which annually pervade the Christmas Dinner,
although saddened this year by the absence of Bishop Dagwell, made the dinner
meaningful and memorable occasion to everyone.

i

C^LridtmuS f-^lc

ay

's theme of the traditional Christmas play, acted and sung by the
speech and drama classes, and the choir, was The Light of the World.
It
eloquently expressed the spirit of hope and renewal characteristic of the season.

Page 57

�i

7y

czLJinner
Dauiatgerrlf)inn‘iCiPai!eCl “1“' °f, the year's mOS', delighlful 'vents, the Father-

WhtfanDd,r^tirnt,:Ke S‘rlS f° eni°y WHh "leir

"" «"»*»«

g
1

The Seniors enjoyed their
weekend as guests of the Carl
Reynold’s family at thei r mounlain home. Mrs. Harrington and
Mrs. Rorer accompanied the
class.

Page 58

�I
.
:.
!
■

■

.
■

!

Page 59

�The May Court is elected by the student body
to rule over the May Fete. Seven girls from tbe
Senior Class are chosen to be on the court, by
popular vote, on the basis of poise and beauty.
The girl receiving the highest number of votes
reigns as the May Queen.

51

Princess Robin Paisley

Princess Judy Agather

J

Queen Sandi Dobson

Princess Barbara Shank

Princess Barbara Lancaster

Mistress of ceremonies
Ellen Hafner

Princess Roberta Rogers

Page 60

Princess Joan Lasselle

��J4,onori
fc-

j

**■-

q

s.
I

Alumnae Circle Award
Judy Agather

Alumnae Circle Award
Janice Swanson
^Alumnae Circle sAivarJ
This award is given to those seniors
who have demonstrated throughout
their years at the Hall the three-fold
aspects of academic accomplishment,
leadership, and loyalty to the school.
The winner of the Mary Rodney
Award automatically becomes a mem­
ber of the Alumnae Circle.

Alumnae Circle Award
Joan Lasselle

Alumnae Circle Award
Julia Booth
Wary Rodney Jla,ard
Dagwell Cup

Mary Rodney Award
Tliis award is given to the senior
who best reflects Miss Rodney’s ideal
of education of the heart as well as
of the mind .

£bayUJ( £ur
This award honors a Junior who
exemp lifies Christian living.

Janice Swanson
Page 62

Judy Agather

�I

Almnae Award
for
Religious Education
Janice Swanson

Delphic Award
Joan Lasseile

Drama Award
Susan Ramsey

Fine Arts Award
Nancy Reynolds

Chapel Award
Ellen Hafner

Boarder Citizenship
Award
Ellen Wheeler

Science Award
Carol Merritt

Music Award

Sportsmanship
Award
Vicki Bublilz

Kathy Sell

Page 63

�jn

Julia Booth
Warmth

Ellen Hafner
Sportsmanship

Jan Pennington
Generosity

Joan Lasselle
Integrity

Rebecca Weissert
Radience

||

Judy Agalher
Good Grooming

Page 64

Julie Krause
Industry

Susan Kasper
Sense of Humor

��HOME OF THE MX HOOD SKI SCHOOL
O

o

&lt;

I *

£

r ^
r

cd

z
£
m

O

H

^3

r%

&gt;
»i&gt;: ISO

o

3&gt;

o
*&gt;
m
o
o
o

2

'=fw

wffis:

c&gt;

&gt;

5

7&gt;
rn

&gt;

r -n &gt; i
r H ^ m
©&gt;

&gt;

jjt-

ONViryOd
Page 66

JO 1SV3 S31IW £S

�PORTLAND OIL
COMPANY

Exclusive Distributor
UNION OIL CO. OF CALIFORNIA

Quality Heating Oils
Metered Deliveries
Guaranteed Burner Service

Budget Terms
24 Hour Telephone Service
. . . The Finest
3333 N. W.
St. Helen's Road
Page 67

�With Sincere Best Wishes
From All of Us at

RADIO CAB

r

Ride Radio Cab

CApitol 7-1212

3

Page 68

��Compliments

of

Compliments
of

DAWSON,
TURNER

A

&amp; JENKINS
INC.

FRIEND
ADVERTISING

Pittock Block
921 S.W. Washington
Portland, Oregon

Page 70

�i

- ,

DOOLY &amp; CO.

■

:

Insurance Agents
and
Brokers

Board of Trade Building

CA 6-2392

Compliments of

LORD ELECTRIC COMPANY
1034 S. E. Water Avenue

Portland, Oregon

Page 71

�1

COLE, CLARK
and

CUNNINGHAM. INC.

Insurance • Specialists

Portland 4, Oregon

PORTLAND
CANNING CO.

Sherwood, Forest Grove, Ore.

Packers of Fruits and Vegetables
Grown in the

I

SALI5HAN

one of the most
distinctive beach community
developments anywhere

160 homesites with beach, bay or golf
links views or fronts. Nine-hole tournament
golf course ready for play in early 1963.
Beach club membership with privileges
of club house, large heated pool, tennis
court, children's play area. Fishing, hunt\
ing, boating, outdoor living, relaxing. Mild
climate. Private roads, sewage system,
underground power, light, telephone, TV
lines now installed. Protective restrictions
OSSSSSs*d and lease procedure.

VISITORS
WELCOME
Visit SAL/SHAN Soon

Tualatin Valley

ONLY 63 MILES FROM SALIM
3 MILES SOUTH OF TAFT ON U S. 101
For brochure write
SALISHAN Properties Inc ,
Glenedcn Beech, Ore90n

�Compliments of
FULTON
PROVISION CO.
Portland's Finest Independent Dairy
6333 S. W. Macadam Avenue
Portland 1, Oregon

SUNSHINE DAIRY
Compliments of
MILK — ICE CREAM
COTTAGE CHEESE

EPISCOPAL
BOOK STORE INC.

BE 4-7526

1310 S. W. Washington
Portland 5, Oregon

Compliments of
CORBIN OPTICAL CENTER
TONSETH'S FLOWERS

908 S. W. Broadway Street

Compliments of

422 S. W. Morrison
Portland, Oregon

KALBERER
HOTEL SUPPLY CO.

MR. &amp; MRS.
ROBERT JOHNSON

403 N. W. 5th Avenue
Portland, Oregon
CApitol 7-1161

Page 73

�Compliments of

ROCKWOOD UNFINISHED
FURNITURE CO.

LANGENDORF
UNITED BAKERIES

18206 S. W. Stark
Protland, Oregon
MO 5-6411

ISsauty

Gui

V.

SCHOOL OF HAIR DESIGN
726 S. W. Fburth Are
Pborn CA«0»91-2
PorUlBd, Or\;'f

SCHOOL OF BEAUTY
2S6 Hi£&amp; Sreel JTfe.
~ Phone EMJ-6S00
2H»tti^'Orefnn

iM

if

LOSLI INC.

Compliments of

5808 S. W. Hood Avenue
Portland, Oregon
CH 6-5446

COWL'S COFFEE CO.

SHEET METAL

Page 74

COLLEGE OF BEAUTY
326 S Main artel
Phone CR 6-1761
Pendlelnn, Oregon

cookies*9^'

107 S. W. Washington
Portland, Oregon

Compliments of

Compliments of

A FRIEND

MEIER FRANK CO.

�I
J

HILLISON CLEANING
AND DYEING CO.

WAFEE &amp; LEUSS

1717 S. W. 11th Avenue
CApitol 8-6976

BURKHARDT'S FLOWERS
2405 W. Burnside
Portland, Oregon

JAFFE'S IONE PLAZA
BEAUTY SALON
1717 S. W. Park Avenue
Portland, Oregon

228-7606

Compliments of

KARL J. KLEIN JEWELER
806 S. W. Broadway
Portland, Oregon

NORDSTROM'S SHOES
Downtown

JOSEPH'S SALON OF BEAUTY

Lloyd Center
Eastport Plaza

2105 W. Burnside
Portland, Oregin

YOUNG'S

GOWN SHOP

southwest tenth at montgomery
parking at tenth-street entrance

ESItr»*|V

tmm
M*

£•«—ui

Home of Young sophisticated fashions . . .

Page 75

�:•

i
;

If

;!

i

Page 76

�I

EDITOR-IN-CHIEF............
BUSINESS MANAGER.....
ADVERTISING EDITOR ..
STAFF........................ .

____ .___ ___________ Joan Lasselle
.......... ....... ...................._ Julie Krause
.......... .... .................... Virginia Troute
......... Jan Pennington, Chris Autzen,
Patty Corbin, Jill Shank
COPY EDITOR .......
------ ---- -------------- Nancy Reynolds
STAFF................
Julia Booth, Toni Lehman, Marty Fox
LAY-OUT EDITOR
------- .------------------- Becky Weissert
STAFF...............
........-...— Susan Kasper, EHie Hafner
ART EDITOR...........
....... ...... .... .... Sandra Dobson
PASTE-UP EDITOR
..................... Roberta Rogers
STAFF ...... ........
.......................... Holly Pittman
PHOTOGRAPHY EDITOR............. ..................... .... Barbra Shank
DELPHIC ADVISOR.............. ... ...... ..... ...............
CarolynCollett
PHOTOGRAPHY ....................... ..... . ............. ...... .......... Don Breck
PUBLISHER.................. ............ ....... . ................
Yearbook House
END SHEET SKETCH...................... ....... ..... Louis Crutcher A.I.A.

Page 77

�Senior

AGATHER. JUDITH
14843 S. E. 50th
Bellevue. Washington

BOOTH. JULIA
1040 Lombard
San Francisco. California

DOBSON. SANDRA
5253 Oio Drive
Honolulu. Hawaii

!
KRAUSE. JULIE
16320 N. E. Multnomah
Portland. Oregon

LANCASTER. BARBARA
1658 105lh Avenue S.E.
Bellevue. Washington

LASSELLE. JOAN
12175 S. W. Bull Mountain
Tigard. Oregon

McKIRDIE. KATHERINE
1209 S. W. Sixth Avenue
Portland. Oregon

I

PAISLEY. ROBIN
4901 Sunset Drive
Yakima. Washington

J
Page 78

Transfer from Bellevue 3; Mistress of Ceremonies.
May Court 3; May Court 4; National Honor
Society 4; Honor Roll 5; Student Councd Presi­
dent 4; Girl of the Month 4; Volleyball Captain
3; Athletic Commission 4; Skiing 3.4.

Senior Class President; National Honor Society
3.4; Honor Roll 2; Girl of the Month 4; Delegate
to Religious Conference 3; Student Council 4.
Altar Guild 1.2.3.4; Delphic 1.2.3.4; Library
Club 1.2.

Foreign Affiliations 3,4; President 4; Altar
Guild 1.2.3,4; Delphic 3; Art Editor 4; Student
Council 4; “Belle of St. Helen's" 3: May Court
4; Boarders* Council 2.4; Athletic Commission
2.3.4; Skiing 2.3.4.

Foreign Affiliations 1,2; Junior Class Vice-Presi­
dent; Senior Class Vice-President; Delphic
1,2.3; Business Manager 4; Red Cross 1.2:
Bedell’s Hi-Board 3: Library Club 1.2: Girl ol
the Month 4.

Transfer from Bellevue 3; May Court 4: Senior
Class Secretary.

Transfer Irom Tigard 2; Sophomore Class T reasurer Altar Guild 2.3.4; Secretary 3; Honor Roll
5; Denton Award 3: Delphic Assistant Editor 0;
Delphic Editor in Chief 4; National Honor Soc­
iety Treasurer 4: Athletic Commission 4; Student
Council 4; May Court 4; Girl of the Month 4;
Foreign Affiliations 3.4; Skiing 2.3.4; Volleyball
Team 2.3.

Meier 6 Frank Hi-Board 4; Skiing 1.2: Athletic
Commission 2.3; President 4: Delphic 1.2.3;
Volleyball 1.2.

Transfer from Yakima 3; May Court 4.

�PARROTT. JUDITH
8120 S. W. Barnes Road
Portland. Oregon

Transfer from Sunset High School 2: Junior Red
Letter Court: Drama 3.4.

RAMSEY. SUSAN
1115 S. W. King Avenue
Portland, Oregon

Junior Class Treasurer. Senior Class 1 reasurer:
Drama 2,3.-1.

S

REYNOLDS. NANCY
6365 Beach Drive
Seattle 16. Washington

Transfer from Seattle 2; Foreign Affiliations 2.3:
Honor Roll 2.3: Altar Guild 2.3: Delphic 2;
Delphic Associate Editor 3: Copy Editor 4: Jun­
ior Class Secretary; Delegate to Religious Conferonce 3: National Honor Society 4; Newspaper
Editor 4.

ROGERS. ROBERTA
2205 Olympia Way
Longview, Washington

Transfer Irom Longview 2: Altar Guild 2.3.4;
Secretary 4; Boarders Council Vice-President 3:
Red Cross 4: Girl of the Month 3: Delphic Paste
Up Editor 4: May Court.

SELL. KATHLEEN
8430 South 18th
Tacoma 66, Washington

Transfer from Tacoma 3: Delphic Staff 3;
Chorus. Librarian 4; Boarders’ Council Treas­
urer 4; Skiing 3.4: School Song Lender 4: Ves­
pers Organist 4.

SHANK. BARBARA
12520 S. E. Ridgecrest
Portland. Oregon

Transfer from Clackamas 5; Delphic 5.4; Pho­
tography Editor 4; Metropolitan Youth Commis­
sion 3.4; May Court 4; Altar Guild 3.4; Student
Council Representative 4; Nordstrom s Hi-Board

:

4.

SWANSON. JANICE
425 Simpson Avenue
North Bend. Oregon

YVEISSERT. BECKY
524 N. W. 3rd Avenue
Pendleton. Oregon

Secretary Sophomore Class: Delegate to Relig­
ious Conference 4; Religious Education Award
1.2.3: Junior Class President; National Honor
Society 5: President 4; Boarders Council 1.2.3;
Delphic 1.2,5: Skiing 1.2.3: Horseback Riding 1;
Volleyball 1: Altar Guild 2.5; Foreign Affiliation
2: Newspaper Staff 4; Secretary Red Cross 1.
Student Council Representative l; President of
Freshman Class: Altar Guild 1.2.3; Foreign
Affiliations 1; Junior Red Letter Court; Student
Council Treasurer 4: Boarders Council Presi­
dent 4; Delphic 1.2.3.4; Layout Editor 4; Girl ol
the Month 4; Floor Chairman 5; Skiing 1.2.3.4:

Glee Club 1.
Page 79

�Ackridge. Elizabeth 18
Adams, Gail 30
Adams Jane 36. 44
Agolhcr, Judith 20. 40. 42. 43. 44. 54. 60. 64
Allen, Linda 30. 44
Anderson. Margaret 36. 44
Arvin. Francine 18
Autzcn, Christina 30. 41
Bailey. Candace 36, 44
Bailey. Maryanne 33
Batori, Tina 33
Beebe. Diana 35. 40
Bishop. Nancy 30
Blackstone. Roberta 30. 44
Board of Trustees 8
Booth. Julia 20. 21. 40. 41. 42. 54. 64
Bowman. Edna 18
Brace. Linda 36
Brainerd. Linda 30. 44
Bruce, Carolyn 33
Bublitz, Victoria 33. 42. 44

Buck. Cheryl 33
Bunch, Sue 30

James W. F. 8

Cooke, Michele 33

Dagwell, The Rt. Rev Benjamin D. 4
Daret. Helga 17
Davis. Hazel 18
Dean. Patricia .31. 42
Detrick. Donna 36
Dobson. Sdndm 21. 40. 41. 42, 43. 44. 54. 60
Dunford. Inga 18
Eaton. Lillian 31
Ehelebe, Kristina 36
Fariss. Gertrude Houk 9
Felton. Sally 34
Fisk. Patricia 34
Fore. Linda 31. 44
Fox. Martha 31. 41
Fulop. Mrs. Joseph 43
Giuslina. Natalie 31. 44
Greenfield. The Rev. Robert H. 11
Hafncr. Ellen 31. 40. 41, 42. 43. 55. 60. 64
Haile, Jean 31
Hampton. Bonnie 34
Harrington, Carol 1 1
Hartje. Diane 37
Herr, Linda 34
Hoffinc, Pauline 31. 44
Hoffman, Joan 37. 44
Holmun, Bette 18
Holman. Mar lynn 37
Hownrd, Margnrel 34, 40, 44
Jeffcoat,
Johanns.
Johnson,
Johnson.

Katherine 30, 31. 40. 41
Kristin 37
Elizabeth 16
Maxine 13

Karofotias. Katherine 33, 34. 40, 41
Kasper, Susan 31. 41. 44. 64
Kimball. Helen 18

Page 80

Maley. Sheila 34
Marsh. Elizabeth 34
Marshall, Catherine 37
Marslon. Susan 34
McClain. Darla 31. 55
Mclsaac, Heidi 31. 44
McKirdie. Katherine 23. 40. 44, 54
Mcrrell, Virginia 34. 44
Merritt. Carol 31. 40. 42
Mitchell. Neely 18
Morgan, David 13
Morris. Carolyn 34
Moyer. Kimberly 34, 44

Oliver. Robin 34, 44
Olson. Shelley 32. 44

Corbin. Patty 31

I

Lnmpson, Mary 31. 42. 44
Lancaster. Barbara 20. 54. 60
Lasselle. Joan 23. 40. 41. 42. 44. 54, 60. 64
Lehman, Antonette 33, 34. 41. 44
Lofstrom, Ruth 18

Nylund. Faye 34

Buckles. Susan. 33, 44

Cammack. Judith 30
Marman, The Rl. Rev
Carr. Susan 31
Carter. Vanda 17
Chichester. Shelley 36
Christensen, Ethel 18
Collett. Carolyn 10
Collins. Diane 36

Klink. Lonorc 14
Krause, Julie 20, 22. 41, 54. 64

Paige. Caroline 16
Paisley. Robin 24. 54. 60
Parrott. Judith 24
Pennington, Jan 32. 40. 42. 44. 64
Piltnmn. Holly 33. 34. 41. 43. 44
Plymplon, Barct, 35. 44
Ramsey. Susan 20. 25. 54
Rathbun. Constance 32. 41. 55
Reynolds. Cnrl N. 12
Reynolds. Dr. Charles 12
Reynolds, Nancy 25. 41. 42. 44
Reynolds. Rebecca 36. 37. 40. 44
Richardson, Ruth Rose 14
Rogers. Roberta 26. 41. 43. 44. 54. 60
Rorcr. Diana 15
Scott. Louise 18
Seeds. Suzanne 44
Sell, Kathleen 26. 42. 54
Shneffcr. Laura 32
Shank. Bnrbara 27. 40. 41. 54. 60

Shank, Jill 35
Shank. Mary Anne 35

Shanks. Cheryl 17
Smith. Solly 32, 44
Solinsky. Susan 35
Spear, Linda 35
Spinning. Roberta 32. 44
Strahan. Evelyn 10
Stark. Sherry 36. 37
Strickland. Julie 37, 40, 44
Stricklknnd. Lorena 32
Strong. Suzanne 32
Swnnson. Candice 36. 37
Swanson, Janice 27. 40. 42, 54
Taylor. Lucinda 32. 55
Thiclscn. Jane 30. 32. 44
1 hompson. Anne 32

Townsend. Mae 18
Troute, Virginin 32. 40. 41. 42, 44
Udaloff. Eileen 35, 42. 44
van Houlen, Julie 37
Weissert, Becky 28, 40. 41, 42. 54, 64
Wheeler. Ellen 30. 32. 42. 44
Wnlfson, Irene 15

�</text>
                  </elementText>
                </elementTextContainer>
              </element>
            </elementContainer>
          </elementSet>
        </elementSetContainer>
      </file>
    </fileContainer>
    <collection collectionId="1">
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="1">
          <name>Dublin Core</name>
          <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="1">
                  <text>Oregon Episcopal School Yearbooks</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="41">
              <name>Description</name>
              <description>An account of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="2">
                  <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>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="39">
              <name>Creator</name>
              <description>An entity primarily responsible for making the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="3">
                  <text>Oregon Episcopal School</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="45">
              <name>Publisher</name>
              <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="4">
                  <text>Oregon Episcopal School</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="40">
              <name>Date</name>
              <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="5">
                  <text>1921-1923; 1931-1995</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="47">
              <name>Rights</name>
              <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="6">
                  <text>All rights are reserved by Oregon Episcopal School.</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="44">
              <name>Language</name>
              <description>A language of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="7">
                  <text>English</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="51">
              <name>Type</name>
              <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="8">
                  <text>Yearbooks</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="65">
              <name>Conforms To</name>
              <description>An established standard to which the described resource conforms.</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="9">
                  <text>Describing Archives: A Content Standard (DACS)</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="78">
              <name>Extent</name>
              <description>The size or duration of the resource.</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="10">
                  <text>85</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="79">
              <name>Medium</name>
              <description>The material or physical carrier of the resource.</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="11">
                  <text>bound volumes</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="49">
              <name>Subject</name>
              <description>The topic of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="1298">
                  <text>Students</text>
                </elementText>
                <elementText elementTextId="1299">
                  <text>Junior colleges</text>
                </elementText>
                <elementText elementTextId="1300">
                  <text>Junior college students</text>
                </elementText>
                <elementText elementTextId="1301">
                  <text>High school student activities</text>
                </elementText>
                <elementText elementTextId="1302">
                  <text>Student activities</text>
                </elementText>
                <elementText elementTextId="1303">
                  <text>Student publications</text>
                </elementText>
                <elementText elementTextId="1304">
                  <text>Teachers</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </collection>
    <itemType itemTypeId="1">
      <name>Text</name>
      <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    </itemType>
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="78">
            <name>Extent</name>
            <description>The size or duration of the resource.</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="533">
                <text>1</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="79">
            <name>Medium</name>
            <description>The material or physical carrier of the resource.</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="534">
                <text>bound volume</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="535">
                <text>The Delphic 1964</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="49">
            <name>Subject</name>
            <description>The topic of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="536">
                <text>School yearbooks</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="537">
                <text> Students</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="538">
                <text> High school student activities</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="539">
                <text> Student publications</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="540">
                <text> Teachers</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="541">
                <text>This is an OES yearbook from 1964. 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>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="39">
            <name>Creator</name>
            <description>An entity primarily responsible for making the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="542">
                <text>Oregon Episcopal School</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="40">
            <name>Date</name>
            <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="543">
                <text>1964</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="47">
            <name>Rights</name>
            <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="544">
                <text>All rights are reserved by Oregon Episcopal School.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="44">
            <name>Language</name>
            <description>A language of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="545">
                <text>English</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="43">
            <name>Identifier</name>
            <description>An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="546">
                <text>oes_delphic1964-compressed.pdf</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
    <tagContainer>
      <tag tagId="1">
        <name>School yearbooks; Students; High school student activities; Student publications; Teachers</name>
      </tag>
    </tagContainer>
  </item>
</itemContainer>
