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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,

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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.

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To the Class of 1965, with lasting affection and the hope that each
of you may experience a

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Journey through Space

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. . . 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

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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

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dreaming
questing
rebelling
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the future

�Acquisition

of knowledge

the wise shall

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�The goal of man

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but to live

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of tomorrow

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enrich the understanding

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the hallways

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remembrance

sincerity

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�Christmas Formal in January

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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

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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

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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

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"But they whom truth and wisdom lead
Can gather honey from a weed."

Cowper

Elizabeth Johnson

Pineapple and Bee

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"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

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"The most manifest sign of wisdom
her state
is a c° ntmued, cheerfulness:
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is like that of things in the regions
above the moon, always clear and
serene.
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Essays

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An honest man, close-buttoned to
the chin, Broadcloth without, and a
warm heart within."
Cowper

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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

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�"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

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�"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

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"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

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"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

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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
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Busy busy
Caretakers of our home
fix this, replace that
plumbers builders handy men

Frank and Ken

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The beginning

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nora bridges

laura cahan

terri cass

sharon colgan

niki davis

marty goff

marcia hanson

leslie harrison

mia hervin

julie johnson

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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

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sheri stark
president

mary russel
vice-president

kris ehlebe
secretary

kathy cousins
treasurer

jane adams

margret anderson

candy bailey

diane collins

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cynthia humphrey

jackie lawton

helen inglis

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susan seeds

penny skates

julie Strickland

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susan thomas

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�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

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susie bell

carolyn bruce

georgianna calley

nina cheung

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sandy cheney

suzy durant

sally felton

sharon galletine

�gretchen graham

holly pittman
kimberly moyer

dorothy reed

jill shank

kacey smith

anne Stevenson

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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 . . .

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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

�!

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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 . . .

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Lillian Alice Eaton

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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 . . .

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Linda May Fore

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“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” . . .

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Martha Josephine Fox
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�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.

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Ellen Elizabeth Hafner
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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 . . .

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Katherine Elizabeth Jeffcott

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“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

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“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.

!

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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 . . .

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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

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“Gin” . . . green eyes . . . personality plus . . .
Deadlines, deadlines, deadlines . . .
Efficiency expert . . . colleges . . .
only one matters . . .
Gibran . . . poetry . . . advertising . . .
enthusiasm . . .
Never quits—never . . .

! ■

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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

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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

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Well done

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thou good and faithful

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Honors
Jan Pennington

Mary Rodney Award
!

Alumnae Circle
Leadership
Scholarship

Loyalty
Integrity
!

Virginia Troute
Ellen Hafner

Dagwell Cup

Carol Merritt

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St. Helena Award
Ellen Wheeler

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National Merit Finalist

Martha Fox

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Delphic Award
Virginia Troute

Drama Award
Ellen Hafner

Music Award
Patricia Dean

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Chapel Award
Jan Pennington

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Boarders' Citizenship Award
Natalie Giustina

�Girl of the Month

Virginia Troute
Loyalty

Susan Carr
Friendliness

Ellen Wheeler
Originality

Susan Bunch

Nina Cheung
Industry

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Constance Rathbun
Humor

Mary Lampson
Integrity

Natalie Giustina
Organization

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Marty Fox
Fortitude

Jane Thielson
Sincerity

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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

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With Sincere Best Wishes
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RADIO CAB

RIDE RADIO CAB
CApitol 7-1212

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�Compliments
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DAWSON,

DOOLY
&amp; CO.

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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

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Compliments of

TOM

Compliments of

BENSON

BURNS

GLASS

HOFFMAN

CO.

�Compliments of
LARRY'S UNION SERVICE

Compliments of

LANGENDORF
UNITED BAKERIES

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THE
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Compliments of

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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

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Delphic Acknowledgements
EDITOR IN CHIEF

....... Virginia Troute

ASSOCIATE EDITOR

........ Holly Pittman

BUSINESS MANAGER

............. Martha Fox

ADVERTISING EDITOR

..........Carol Merritt

COPY

...... Jan Pennington
Heidi Mclsaac

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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

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KANSAS CITY, MISSOURI 64106

LITHO. IN U.S.A. BY YEARBOOK HOUSE

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�</text>
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                <text>This is a collection of yearbooks from the Oregon Episcopal School (OES). The bulk of the yearbooks are from St. Helen's Hall, with yearbooks also from the Junior College as well as Bishop Dagwell Hall. The title for the OES yearbook evolved from The Delphic to The Legend-Delphic. The title for the Junior College Yearbook was The Scintilla.</text>
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