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Thinking Things Through

A Tradition of Reaching Out
/^\regon Episcopal School and its parent
At the same time, we are working within our
schools, St. Helens Hall and Bishop
school community to ensure that our curricu­
Dagwell Hall, were founded and developed on
lum is reflective of the global education we want
principles of diversity from which our school
to offer our students, and that our education
benefits today. Mary Rodney left a very strong,
clearly includes multicultural themes. Our
very traditional Episcopal school in the East to
history, religion, arts and literature classes
come to Portland to open a new school. She and
include Asian, African, and European works
i her sister and brother-in-law, Bishop Morris,
and thought, as well as those of North and
were not intent on replicating an Eastern-style
South America, and discussions flow from
school. Rather, they developed a strong sense of
many perspectives, as we have students from
Oregon as God’s Country and named their new
twelve countries attending our classes.
! school after the mountain they loved.
Our teachers arc ever more aware of the need
Right from the beginning they determined to
to focus their professional development on
bring two disparate groups together: urban girls
multicultural issues. Rosa Hemphill’s participa­
from the city of Portland and the daughters of
tion in the delegation to South Africa has
pioneer ranchers from eastern Oregon and
brought greater awareness to all of us of the
Washington. After World War I, as the United
issues involved in cultural integration. Charyl
States became more cosmopolitan and began
Cathey, Angela Hancock, David Gomes and I
It is our hope that...
viewing itself as a global power, St. Helens Hall
will be traveling to Australia next summer as
we are preparing our
was governed by an order of Episcopal nuns, the
part of a Pacific Rim consortium of schools that
students for a rich
Sisters of St. John Baptist. While some may have
includes China, Japan, Indonesia, Australia,
equated nuns with old-fashioned schooling, our
New
Zealand, and Chile, among others. This
experience in a
sisters were quietiy ensuring that students at
group meets biennially to discuss independent
global society.
“The Hall” were well prepared for higher educa­
education, diversity within the schools of each
tion. They founded a junior college at St. Helens
nation, multicultural curriculum, and curricu­
Hall, and prepared women for employment
lum sharing among schools. As a result of this
outside the home. During this period they also began accepting
alliance, our Middle School has been engaged in a wetlands
international students and emphasizing the importance of com­
project involving schools in Australia, Hawaii and California ,
munity service as part of an Episcopal education.
and plans are being made to send between five and ten Middle
Our current effort at creating a diverse school with multicul­
School students to Australia to meet these students and to make
tural themes continues the traditions of St. Helens Hall. We bring
a presentation at the Pacific Basin conference.
It is our hope that through programs like these, and with the
together students of promise from around the world, as well as
from the greater Portland area, who can best benefit from an OES
oversight of our Board Diversity and Outreach Committee, we are
education. Portland is changing. It is a more diverse community
preparing our students for a rich experience in a global society. We
than it was ten or twenty years ago. Oregon Episcopal School is
cannot know where they will live, or whom they will encounter,
but we hope they will walk forward joyfully and unafraid, eager to
changing with the city. We are reaching out to religious, ethnic,
economic and racial communities that may not have been aware
greet the world they encounter, and well prepared to face the chal­
lenges before them. Each generation of students enriches us and
of us in the past, and who may have interest in our mission. In
this way we are attempting to ensure that students of promise
carries us forward on the journey of creating a stronger school.
from many different backgrounds who are well qualified for our
Every fine school is always a work in progress.
school have the opportunity to be considered for admission.

O•
Dulany O. Bennett
Head of School

2

OES AUTUMN 2002

I

!

�:

OES

BOARD OF TRUSTEES
2002-2003
The Rt. Rev. Robert Ladehoff
Chairman of the Board

THE MAGAZINE OF OREGON EPISCOPAL SCHOOL • AUTUMN 2002

Mr. Richard C. Alexander
President
Ms. Julie E. Frantz
Vice President

/j

Contents

Ms. Leslie Workman
Secretary

□

Mr. Greg Morgan
Treasurer
Mr. Wayne Drinkward
Past President
Ms. Mary Foltz
Ms. Elisabeth Lyon
Mr. Alec Macmillan
Mr. Jim McCarter
Mr. Douglas McCaslin
The Rev. Senitilla McKinley
Ms. Susan Phillips
Ms. Susan Robinson
Mr. James Rue
Ms. April Sanderson
The Rev. Stephen Schneider
Mr. Nick Stanley ’83
Mr. Peter Trumbo
Ms. Maryann Yelnosky

FEATURES
4

The Chemistry of Cultures

8

Primary Class Gives the Gift of Time

departments
11

Campus Snaps

12

Capital Campaign

14

Trustees

16

Alumni Profile: Holly Pittman ’65

17

Alumni Calendar

18

Hallways

19

Reunion

Ms. Marietta Lind Kuykendall ’55
President of the Alumni Association

20

Class Notes

Mr. Lawrence W. Harris III
Chair ofEndowment Investment Committee

25

Annual Report

EX-OFFICIO
Dr. Dulany O. Bennett
Head ofSchool

Mr. Peter Bechen
Chair of the Pacific Rim Council
Ms. Liz Perkins
Chair of Volunteers’ Common Link

Editor: Tom Berridge
Design and Layout: Marianna Crawford
Printer. Bridgetown Printing
Photography: Laszlo Bencze, Ten Rosette, Philip McCarty, and OES Communications Staff

=
THE MISSION OF
OREGON EPISCOPAL
is to prepare students with.
higher education and lifelong lean
and to enhance their intellectual pir
social, emotional, spi

.If: .
O'-;

-

£

.

§§g

OES Magazine is published by Oregon Episcopal School,
6300 SW Nicol Road, Portland, Oregon 97223. If you
would like more information on the School, please call
503-246-7771 or visit our website at www.oes.edu.
Front cover photo taken by Lower School parent Teri Rosette shows OES students at the construction
site for the new Math, Science, and Technology Building. From left are Sam Asamow '04, Brian King '04,
Katelyn Brack '04, Nicholas Devich '07, Yvonne Yamanaka '04, and (in front) Britta Ross '07.
Back cover photo: Students in Shelley Stoffer's art class recently created collages inspired by the works
of French painter Henri Matisse. The collage shown here was made by Stephen Talwalkar '13.

OES AUTUMN 2002

3

�'*r^

The Chemistry of Cultures
OES science teacher Rosa Hemphill looks at how South African schools
seek to become catalysts for peace

"T^v espite the distance
buildings. Herzlia is a
JL' and her inability to
Jewish school whose stu­
sleep on airplanes, Rosa
dents are well-prepared
for its challenging cur­
Hemphill was enthusias­
tic about her trip to South
riculum, and whose
Africa. In early August
teachers believe they
she packed her bag and
must reduce the dispar­
embarked on a sleepless
ity between their school
flight from Atlanta to
and schools like Esang­
Cape Town. Fourteen
weni if South Africa is to
hours later, she touched
have a peaceful future.
down, tired, but with eyes
They told the delegation
riveted wide open to the
of Americans about a
sights of a country of
program in which their
beautiful vistas, impover­
students tutor black stu­
ished ghettoes and
dents from Esangweni. It
irrepressible hope for the
reminded Rosa of the
| future. She boarded a bus
AASK program, in which
with 55 other educators to
OES students tutor stu­
tour the divide between
dents from Vose
black and white and see
Elementary, a predomi­
what efforts have been
nantly Hispanic public
made to cross it since the
school
in Beaverton.
OES chemistry instructor Rosa Hemphill is warmly embraced by students from the Esangweni
end of apartheid.
Besides leading to acade­
School in Capetown during a tour of public and private schools in South Africa.
The first stop for Rosa’s
mic improvement, the
programs at both the South African school and at OES bring
delegation was Esangweni School, a public school in one of the
townships where black South Africans were forced to live during
together young people from different ethnic backgrounds. Rosa
apartheid, when a white government decreed that the races
believes such contacts are essential if people are going to work
should be separate and unequal. The delegation bus rolled up to
together harmoniously.
a building surrounded by a fence topped with razor wire, a pre­
“Human nature is to be afraid of what you don’t know,” she
said. “That’s why it is important to know many kinds of people.
caution against scavengers in a place where people fashion
We need to trust that others are just as talented and care as
homes from whatever materials they can find. Rosa and her col­
leagues crossed a bare, dirt schoolyard to enter a building that
much as we do.”
seemed like it had already been stripped of everything of value.
WELCOMING ENVIRONMENT
On the classroom walls, rectangles of less-faded paint showed
The following day provided an opportunity for members of
where chalkboards had been removed. Devoid of plants or
the delegation to talk with each other about their initiatives to
paintings, the drab surroundings were brightened only by the
bridge cultural divides at their schools. The members of the del­
optimism of the students, up to 50 of whom were packed into a
egation had come from private schools in the United States,
classroom. Crisply dressed in uniforms their families had made
Europe and South Africa to join the trip sponsored by the
sacrifices to purchase, the students told Rosa how they hoped to
National Association of Independent Schools (NAIS). Delegates
improve their society. Their voices swelled with the optimism of
from Trinity School in New York told about a program called
people who have recently been freed from a society where
“Prep For Prep,” which prepares minority students to enter the
change was viewed with suspicion and hostility.
private, college-preparatory school. The South Africans
The teachers from the delegation trooped back onto their bus,
responded that they have found it equally important to prepare
which carried them up from the ghetto to a wealthy neighbor­
a college-prep school to welcome students who do not come
hood on Table Mountain, which overlooks Cape Town. They
from upper-income, white families. Creating an atmosphere
passed through the wrought-iron gates to the private Herzlia
where cultural interaction can occur requires more than just
School, where the lush South African flora framed the well-kept

4

OES AUTUMN 2002

�-

enrolling a few nonwhites, they said. Students from different
backgrounds must feel that they are welcome and that their
culture is respected.
Recruiting faculty from diverse backgrounds makes a school
more welcoming, but the South Africans said that task is difficult
because during the apartheid era black teachers did not receive
the level of training that white teachers received. Some schools
have instituted their own training programs, but as in the United
States, well-educated people of color often are lured away by
more lucrative pursuits than teaching. Rosa and others on the
Diversity Committee created by the OES Board of Trustees have
worked on that same challenge. While no targets or quotas are
used, the heads of the Upper, Middle and Lower Schools actively
seek faculty from a variety of backgrounds.
Another element the delegates identified as important in creat­
ing a welcoming environment for all students is achieving a
“critical mass” of different cultural, ethnic and racial groups so

students don’t feel alone in an alien place, but can share their
thoughts and feelings with others from similar backgrounds. The
educators saw an example of that on their trip when they visited
Sacred Heart School in Johannesburg, where about half the stu­
dents are white and half are black or “coloured,” a South African
term for people of mixed race or non white people who have
immigrated from India and other Asian countries. The students
at Sacred Heart told Rosa that they not only attend classes with
students of different races, they also socialize together and estab­
lish friendships. While having a critical mass of students of
different races is important to the quality of the interaction at
Sacred Heart, Rosa also saw the importance of historical factors.
Sacred Heart was in the forefront of schools that challenged
apartheid by enrolling nonwhite students, and the students
expressed pride at attending a school that was in the forefront of
the changes in their nation.
The students Rosa met in the poor schools of South Africa do
Continued on next page

TICKET TO BANGKOK
Six Thai students provide travel tips to family

:
'

I

-v

:
i

The Boorse family is headed to Thailand soon, but they aren’t
waiting until they step off the plane to begin learning about
Thai culture. They have already had an immersion experience
right in their own home.
It happened like this. They were planning a trip to the Asian
country for the Christmas holidays, and they read in the OES
Action newsletter that international students from the Upper
School often appreciate an invitation to visit with an American
family. So Dawn Boorse called Moneeka Settles, who oversees
that boarding program. “Does OES have any students from
Thailand and would a couple of them like to come to dinner?"
she asked. Moneeka checked with the students and promptly
responded, yes, they would like to go to the Boorse home for
dinner — all six of them!
And is there a particular American food they would like to
sample? No, they agreed, they would really love to have Thai
food. So Howard Boorse whipped up a Thai dish - which
received rave reviews - and they supplemented it with Thai
takeout. An international soiree ensued.
"They were a little shy, of course," said Dawn, “but we had
maps of their country and books about their country and asked
them to tell us things they liked about their country and what
they thought we should see.”
The students told them which temples they should visit, and
which would not be worth their effort. They told them where
they could ride elephants. They warned them about how
crowded the cities are, and one student told them about his
visit to the island of Phuket, where the Boorses plan to go.
The international and multicultural aspects of OES were part
of what attracted the Boorses to the school. They want their

Six international students from Thailand visit with the Boorse family. Sitting
on the floor, from left, are Ranond Tanthuwanit '04, Smittada Hongsakul
'04, Howard Boorse, and Dawn Boorse. In back are Oat Aojanepong '04,
Mic Sitachitt '03, Ben Mahasiri '03, Kerati Supaongprapa '06, Andrea
Boorse '14, and Hana Litvin, a friend of the Boorses whose family will
accompany them on their trip to Thailand.

daughter Andrea, who enrolled in the First Grade this year, to
experience different cultures, and they take her with them on
international trips, including their upcoming trip to Thailand.
Even though the international students were much older than
Andrea, they got along well.
“One of the students wrote my daughter’s name out in Thai
characters and she really thought that was great,” Dawn said.
The students from Thailand apparently enjoyed themselves-as
well. As they were leaving, a freshman girl told Dawn that it was
the first time she had ever been in an American home.
“I offered if they ever wanted to come over again, they are
welcome," Dawn said. “It was really a good experience." ■

OES AUTUMN 2002

5

�THE CHEMISTRY OF CULTURE continued from previous page

not have many of the opportunities that are taken for granted
here, but they tenaciously grasp any chance for education that
arises. Rosa talked with students whose families spent all their
extra money just to buy a uniform so they could attend school.
Aware of that sacrifice, the students were striving to learn every­
thing they possibly could. She visited a high school called
Prestige College where the science program had one computer
and a single probe for inputting data, and she couldn’t help but
compare it to OES where dozens of probes make it possible for
all the students to use them to conduct experiments.
She thought Prestige College seemed poor. But then she
visited the Ikaneng School in Soweto, where she learned that the
school has no eighth grade because it has no money to pay a
teacher. The school was trying to organize a library so that after
finishing seventh grade, students could have a place to study on
their own for a year before entering the ninth grade at a high
school. Rosa knew that some of the South African students she
talked with would never go to high school. Those who did go to
high school might not be able to afford to continue through
graduation, much less attend a university. Nevertheless, they
spoke with the conviction that they could improve their lives
and help forge a democratic future for South Africa.

___ _____

prison where Nelson Mandela and other political prisoners were
incarcerated before apartheid finally crumbled in the early
1990s. Her guide, a man who had been imprisoned at Robben
Island for opposing apartheid, showed the delegates a sign that
had been used at the prison to designate the amount of food to
be given to each prisoner. The daily allocation of protein for
blacks was less than the amount given to white prisoners.
“The harshness of the prison really got to me,” Rosa said.
“How can you see two people and not know that they need the
same nourishment?”
It was amazing to her that people emerging from such segrega­
tion and injustice seemed so willing to put the past behind them
and work toward a better future.
“It’s very touching to meet the children and see how hopeful
they are even though there is extreme poverty; you don’t always
see the same kind of hope regarding race issues in the United
States that we saw there,” she said. “There’s a lack of resentment
about the past. A lot of that has to do with the leadership Nelson Mandela and Bishop Tutu. I’m not a very political
person, but it is interesting to see how a brand new democracy
that guarantees rights tries to get those rights to all its people.”
TOWARD THE FUTURE

INJUSTICE AND FORGIVENESS

The child of a Mexican mother and a Mexican-American
father, Rosa has experienced the intermingling of cultures. She
grew up in the diverse culture of San Antonio, Texas, and in her
youth she encountered discrimination because she is Hispanic
and because she is female. However, the virulence of the
apartheid system shocked her. She visited the Robben Island

Head of School Dulany Bennett chose to send a representative
of OES to South Africa, and chose Rosa for that role, because
Dulany recognizes the importance of a multicultural education.
In discussing the path OES is charting into the future,she distin­
guishes between the terms “diversity” and “multicultural.” The
former simply indicates racial composition, whereas “multicul­
tural” describes the educational environment.

AT HOME IN THE WORLD
Glenn Hawkins' friends have introduced him to Asian cultures

s

Glenn Hawkins '03 visits Matsuyama Castle on
the Island of Shikoku with Akira Takahashi '02,
left, and an acquaintance he met In Japan.

6

tepping across the Pacific Ocean
brought Glenn Hawkins’ future into
focus. He already knows what he will do
next summer. He foresees where he will
spend time abroad during college. He’s
thinking about where he will someday
seek a job. All those plans involve board­
ing an airplane for Japan.
Glenn's six-week visit last summer with
his friend Akira Takahashi ’02 fanned his
smoldering interest in other cultures. And
although Japan captured his imagination,
he also wants to experience other Asian
cultures. After he graduates from OES in
June, he will take a trip that likely will

OES AUTUMN 2002

include China, Thailand, Hong Kong, and
Korea in addition to Japan.
“I might make it into a gigantic Asian
tour," he said, explaining that he would
visit with friends in each of those coun­
tries. He has obtained a commitment for
funding from his mother, and he crosses
national borders as easily as most
Americans cross state lines.
Glenn came from Boise, Idaho, last
year to attend OES as a boarding
student, and the experience has given
him a view over the western horizon to
lands where people live, eat, and com­
municate differently from Americans.

�1
“Diversity is more about numbers,” Dulany said. “Multiculturalism is more about the fabric, about welcoming, about
integration, and about everyone’s experience and culture being
equally valued. Multiculturalism means everybody is trying to
learn about each other rather than asking international students
or minority students to come and learn Anglo culture and not
have an opportunity to share their own religious background,
their own ethnic heritage and the histories of their countries.”
Including a variety of cultures in the curriculum is important
to a multicultural school, she said. OES focuses on the Western
tradition because politically, economically and socially the
United States has grown out of that tradition. However, in the
religion department, in the ninth-grade humanities classes and in
English classes, many other cultures are represented. That knowl­
edge of cultures is an essential part of a 21st century education.
“Our kids are going to grow up and they are going to have to
be savvy about international multiculturalism and within the
U.S. because they are going to have to work with people of all
kinds,” Dulany said. “They are going to have clients or partners...
in whatever walk of life they end up in, they are going to have all
these different interactions. Plus as citizens they are going to
have to make important decisions about what kind of culture we
are going to have. If they experience personal interactions with
lots of different kinds of people, their experience is much richer
and their wisdom is greater. If they think the whole world is like
them, they are at a great disadvantage. They will have the oppor­
tunity to interact with whomever they want and will have the
skills to do that. If you talk to any student who has had that
opportunity, they’ll tell you how great it is to get to know people
who are different from them.” ■

Ashleigh Blinkhorn '07 tutors a student from Vose Elementary School.

AARDVARKS LEARN AS THEY TEACH
OES students learn about other cultures as they tutor
ESL students from Vose Elementary School, a public
school in Beaverton in which 13 languages are spoken.
The Vose students are predominantly Hispanic and are
learning English as a second language. Students from
OES tutor the students two afternoons a week, working
one-on-one on their reading skills, in a program called
AASK (Aardvarks Advocate Skills and Knowledge). During
one year of participating in AASK, the Vose students
average a two-year gain in reading skills, and both OES
and Vose students gain from the cross-cultural interaction.

i

Living in the international culture of the
dorms and going to school with people
from many countries has stimulated his
innate interest in the world.
“If I hadn’t come to school here, met
these friends, and gone to Japan, I think
my idea of what I want to do in my life
would be different," he said. "I'm happier
having had this experience."
Being in a foreign culture is not intimi­
dating for Glenn, and as a matter of fact
it is more comfortable in some ways. He
prefers Japanese food to American food,
and he appreciates the way the Japanese
treat one another.
“Even though I didn't understand the
language, I always felt comfortable
there," he said. "People are more

friendly there. It’s ingrained in their
culture to be polite."
He studied Japanese here for a year
before going to Japan, which allowed
him to communicate simple ideas in the
language and gave him a base for learn­
ing more. He stayed for two weeks in the
home of his friend Akira, and Akira’s
mother spoke slowly so he could under­
stand her. As he and Akira traveled
around the country, Akira translated for
him some of the time, but at other times
Glenn managed on his own. He is contin­
uing his study of the language so he can
communicate better the next time he
goes to Japan. He wants to become
fluent enough that he understands not
just the words but also the different style

OES AUTUMN 2002

in which people communicate.
“People are more reserved, and con­
versation is less to the point,” he said.
“They say something and you’re sup­
posed to understand what they mean by
inference. You have to learn the literal
meaning of a phrase and also what to
think when someone says this.”
It helped Glenn to have Akira explain­
ing Japanese culture, and Glenn has
become a translator himself for others,
explaining America to his Asian friends.
In the dorms, he conducts study sessions
about American history.
“They ask questions and I explain
things to them,” he said. “By explaining
it to them, I make sure I know myself
what’s going on.” ■

i

�•

Primary Class Gives the Gift of Time
Children learn and grow at their own pace instead of being hurried along

Matthew Sipowicz, a student in this year's Primary class, enjoying an exciting game of kickball.

The first task this morning for the students in Chris O’Toole’s
gift of time, a gift that will stay with them through their school
Primary class is journal writing, and the students want to write
years and throughout their lives.
about Spooktacular, the Halloween festival they attended over
“The lucky kids get to go to primary,” said Monica Mahoney,
the weekend. Chris asks them to tell her key words that she can
who oversees admissions from Pre-Kindergarten through the
write on the chalkboard to help the students with their spelling.
Third Grade. She knows from experience how important it is to
However, the children’s exuberance doesn’t permit them to boil
have that extra year. Her older son went through the Primary
the experience down to a single word. One girl says she wants to
class two years ago, and her younger boy is in the class now.
write about seeing a fortuneteller with a
“We’ve had this program for almost 30
beautiful scarf and a sparkling crystal ball
years, so we know it works,” Monica said.
and a prediction of a prince in her future.
“These kids succeed if they get that extra
... a gift that will stay with
She doesn’t have a key word, she has a
time.”
novel, and she plans to write the whole first
The need for extra time has nothing to
them through their school
chapter in her journal today. In fact, she
do with the children’s innate intelligence. It
will write one sentence: “At Spooktacular I
is simply a matter of needing to grow in
years and throughout
saw a fortuneteller.” Then she will dig out
one or two areas. For example, a student
may know what the letters of the alphabet
her crayons and start drawing a picture of
their lives.
the gypsy woman.
look like, but he may lack the fine motor
At this point the girl’s advanced verbal
skills to reproduce the letters with a pencil.
skills are more developed than her atten­
In the Primary class, students sometimes
tion span and writing skills. By the time she enters the First
paint their letters with watercolors instead of using a pencil. A
Grade, she will have acquired the ability to maintain her focus
brush is easier to manipulate, and the bright colors make writing
on the complex task of writing. Meanwhile, she and her class­
seem more like play and less like work.
mates are in the Primary class, where they can learn and play and
“Most of the primary children are very, very bright children
grow at the pace that’s right for them. They are being given the
who have strengths in some areas and developmental issues in

8

OES AUTUMN 2002

�I

others,” Chris said. “The beauty of Primary is it has academic
work in the morning and individualized reading, writing and
playtime in the afternoon.”
The room itself reflects that mixture of work and play, with
desks at one end and a rug with a rocking chair at the other. The
children effortlessly pass between the two parts of the room, in
one moment engaged in an activity that seems like kindergarten,
in the next moment doing a lesson on a first-grade level. They
also get personal attention from the teacher in the afternoon.
While classmates are playing or working individually, each child
takes a turn sitting with Chris in the hallway. The student reads
to her from a book or shows her a journal entry. It allows Chris
to check how each student is doing.
“Usually the main focus is reading,” she said. “I have children
who are emergent readers to children who are reading on the
third- and fourth-grade levels. It’s a huge span of skills, but
because I have that one-on-one time I can take the child from
wherever he or she may have been and move them along.”
Attending to the needs of each child, which is a hallmark of
OES, was the reason the Primary program was created. In the
1970s, educators began to take note of research showing that
children develop at different rates, and that not all 6-year-olds
are ready to sit at a desk for long stretches of reading and writing
and math. The research explained why some bright children did
not do well in class, and schools responded by moving up the
cutoff date so children would turn six before they started first
grade. That helped, but OES took an additional step. If some
children are not ready for first grade, then why not create a level
at which they can begin doing academic work but with more
flexibility than first-grade classrooms generally permit? The
Primary class was instituted in the 1973-74 school year to
provide that flexibility.
A thorough admissions process is designed to make sure each
child is in an environment where he or she can succeed. The
children are evaluated by teachers and specialists,
who look at the academic, emotional, and social
development of the child. If the student can
benefit from more time to develop in one of those
areas, then a year in the Primary class is recom­
mended. The decision is then discussed with the
child’s parents,
“It’s a hard concept for parents to grasp that
children are being asked to use a huge array of
skills to learn to read and to write and to under­
stand math concepts,” Chris said. “All of those
things require a great orchestration of attention

and memory. The children are being asked to delay gratification
and to stay focused on something even if they are really not that
interested.”
Some children may have the requisite academic skills but need
more time to develop emotionally so they will be able to apply
those skills. Otherwise, their emotions may interfere with their
learning.
“They must be able to put aside the emotional pieces that are
going on inside their heads and focus on something else,” Chris
said. “We as adults have trouble doing that sometimes too, but
children have way more of those things coming into play.”
Boys are often advanced in gross motor skills but lag in fine
motor skills, which are needed for writing. Some people believe
boys simply mature more slowly than girls, but Chris believes
that the activities boys are more likely to participate in can slow
their development of writing.
“Commonly boys come to Primary because the focus of their
Continued on next page

(Top) Benjamin Brisk and Alexandra Ulmer construct
an elaborate structure for their dinosaurs. (Bottom
left) William Rosch at his desk working on a Halloween
writing project. (Bottom right) Kristin Grant, hard at
work on her life-size self-portrait.

OES AUTUMN 2002

9

�PRIMARY C LASS continued from previous page

early years has been on fast, active play, and they haven’t taken
up a pencil for writing or a drawing tool for drawing, and so
their fine motor skills are not developed,” she said. “Also, the
fast, active children aren’t keen on sitting for a long period of
time.”
Other children simply don’t develop an early interest in
reading and writing because they are busy doing other things. If
academic work is forced on them, they will dislike school, but if
they come to it in their own time, they become interested. In
Primary, instead of a heavy diet of academics, the children have
an opportunity to do fun, enriching activities. They explore the
forest habitat on campus and sometimes create theater produc­
tions. Chris is also developing a computer lab outside in the
hallway, and her students do service learning projects with their
fifth-grade buddy class.
“Some children just really need more time to play,” Chris said.
“When you give them more time to play, toward the middle or
end of Primary they suddenly see all these children around them
learning how to read, and they think, ‘Hey that looks like fun; I
think I’ll stop playing now and I’ll learn how to read.’” ■

I

Rosalind Sullivan-Lovett takes a break from afternoon playtime to
enjoy a book with Primary teacher Chris O'Toole.

Extra Year Pays Dividends Later

w

hen Kenny Gundle entered
the Primary class, he
didn’t think much about it. But as
time goes on, he realizes more
and more how that decision in
1988 helped him.
"Some of my friends went to
first grade and I didn’t; it was
never something that was made
a big deal, and that was great,”
he said recently, speaking by
phone from his dorm room at
Stanford University, where he
decided to go to school after

Primary class.
"I think that everyone has to
proceed at their own pace, and
almost regardless of whether
you're a summer birthday or a
during-the-year birthday, some

r1

people might not be ready for
First Grade at a specific age.
It’s great to spend another
year at that age letting yourself
become ready for grade
school," he said. He doesn’t
remember feeling at all as if he

Kenny Gundle in 1988

Kenny Gundle today

graduating as a valedictorian of
the OES Class of 2001. "Looking back at it now, I think it was a
great decision."
When Kenny's Kindergarten teacher told his parents, John and
Susan Gundle, that Kenny should go into the Primary class, they
were quite surprised. Susan explained their reaction: "He was
extremely bright so we said, really? His teacher felt the added
year would give him more advantage socially. She said she
thought it was best, and we thought she knew best because she
saw him in a classroom setting. She knows the kids and she
knows the first-grade curriculum."
Kenny’s birthday is in June, which means he would have been
one of the younger children if he had entered the First Grade. He
says he is glad he was allowed to grow up a little more in the

10

were repeating Kindergarten.
“It’s not kindergarten all

over again. I didn’t see any similarities between Kindergarten and
Primary, and I didn’t see a lot of repeat in First Grade from
Primary. It flowed very well,” he said. Of course, the year of
Primary meant that he was one of the older children in his class
in First Grade and thereafter. That allowed him to fit in better
socially, and he says that later on he reaped a big reward from his
elder status.
"As soon as Middle School hit and people realized, ‘That kid is
going to have a car his freshman year,’ it became a huge advan­
tage to be older," he said. And the benefits just keep accruing.
Even in college he feels fortunate to have an extra year of maturity.
"Overall it’s a great social advantage to be six months older
than it is to be six months younger,” he said. ■

OES AUTUMN 2002

�■ CAMPUS ■ SNAPS ■
Middle Schoolers Tour Memorials
A pilgrimage to 14 memorials and sacred spaces on the OES
campus culminated with the blessing of the new Wetlands Mural on
the west wall of the Middle School. For the “Sacred Path Chapel”
service in October, MS students toured the sites, saying a prayer at
each one. At the end, they converged on the new mural, which was
created by students guided by a professional artist and encouraged by
teacher Toni Holmberg. The mural was completed last summer and
represents the community’s commitment to caring for the Earth
through passion, study and hard work.
Elise Marsh 07 holds the holy water during the blessing of

■ ■ ■

the mural on the wall of the Middle School in October.

Pre-Kindergarten Goes Camping
The adventurous Pre-Kindergarten class of Sherry Eder and Candelaria Davis went on
an October “campout” in the OES forest. The children hiked to the woods, where parent
volunteers had set up tents and built a fire. The children sang around the campfire,
roasted marshmallows, made leaf rubbings and played games. Then they hiked back
down to school, smelling of woodsmoke. Parents who helped out were Melanie Gilbert,
Margie Nielsen, Bill Pavlich, Charles Nielsen, Dan Clark, Chih-Ching Chang, Ella Essieh,
Atiq Bajwa, Adrienne Wilson, Kimberly Crouch and Keith Packard.
■ ■ ■

Great Gourds, What a Halloween!
Lower School children brought their jack-o-lantems to school
in late October for the annual Pumpkin Carving Celebration.
Their creations reflected plenty of youthful imagination as well as
some technical help from the parents. The jack-o-lantems were
viewed by the judges, who ruled, as always, that everybody wins.
Each child received a prize for his or her entry.

Candelaria Davis helps
Clara Collins roast a
marshmallow during the
pre-kindergarten campout
in the OES woods.

I
Ruth Narode '13 was

Students Take Cousteau on Wetlands Tour

among Lower School stu-

Jean-Michel Cousteau discusses OES wetlands studies with chemistry stu­

Filmmaker and ocean conservationist Jean-Michel Cousteau
talked with OES students about their studies of the school wet­
lands during his visit in October. Cousteau, whose father
Jacques popularized oceanography, first gave a talk to a gather­
ing of all Middle School students. He told them a story about a
boy who made it his life mission to bring wells to dry African
villages. “Don’t ever give up,” he urged the students. “You can
make a difference.” A number of students stood up and
described aspects of their wetlands studies. Then Cousteau
walked to the wetlands with Upper School chemistry students
who are conducting experiments on water quality. They told
the conservationist how they are using internationally accepted
methods of documentation so their work will be useful to those
who will make decisions about protecting the watershed.
Cousteau’s visit was part of the Science, Technology and Society
Lecture Series, of which OES is a sponsor.

dents, from left, Kwang Bae ’05, In Chang Seo '04, and Jesse Lowe '04.

OES AUTUMN 2002

11

�CAPITAL CAMPAIGN

An artist's rendition of the new Math, Science.and Technology Building

A HOME FOR EXCELLENCE
As the OES science program’s reputation grows,
students and faculty are getting a facility equal to their aspirations

T

he list of semi-finalists for the Siemens-Westinghouse
Competition in Math, Science &amp; Technology came out in
October, and the state-by-state listing makes it clear that a few
schools around the nation are powerhouses when it comes to
science. It’s also very clear that Oregon Episcopal School is
among the best of those schools. It was third in the nation in the
number of semifinalists.
Among Oregon schools, OES is the undisputed leader. Of the
nine semifinalists from Oregon, eight were from OES. Those
eight students, all seniors, are Henry Hirsch, Karl Kuchs,
Tianhui (Michael) Li, Ashley Morganstem, Katherine Murphy,

12

Andrew Platt, Leslie Taylor, and Mariam Totonchy. Ashley and
Leslie went on to become regional winners and are competing in
Washington, D.C., this month.
A school becomes a national leader when exceptional students
work with exceptional faculty in an exceptional facility. OES has
accomplished the feat with only two of those three ingredients,
but the exceptional facility is on the way. Construction of the
new Math, Science, and Technology Building is progressing
according to schedule and will be complete in time for the
beginning of classes next fall. Besides three labs for physics,
chemistry and biology, the new building will contain a fourth

OES AUTUMN 2002

�CAPITAL CAMPAIGN

The increased space will also allow development of an initiative
laboratory space for student research projects, eliminating the
to share the success of the research-based science program with
need to frequently set up and take down projects that are under
teachers from throughout the region. In November, OES faculty
way. It will also upgrade the mathematics program, with more
presented a two-hour program on the topic to the Northwest
convenient access to modern technology allowing for daily use
Regional Conference of the National Science Teachers
of that technology in a more student-centered program. The
proximity to the science classrooms and teachers should allow
Association. The presentation may be expanded as a summer
some interdisciplinary work between math and science.
workshop for regional teachers. The facilities could also be
The MST Building provides the physical setting for a style of
shared with organizations such as Saturday Academy, in which
teaching for which OES is becoming known. The Upper School
students from OES and beyond work with professional scien­
tists, or with our summertime AASK program.
science curriculum begins with physics in freshman year, and
The MST Building is the first stage in a capital improvement
then moves on to chemistry and biology, the reverse of most
high school curriculum models. Recommended by many leading
plan that includes renovation of the Upper School, building a
new performing arts building, and making
scientists, including Nobel Prize winner Leon
the campus more friendly to pedestrians.
Lederman, this approach to science education
The MST Building provides the The improvements are being made on a
allows students to develop comprehension
based on previous knowledge.
pay-as-you-go basis, and the $7.2 million
This “physics to chemistry to biology”
physical setting for a style of
cost of the MST Building is about 70
approach is combined with project-intensive,
percent funded. The remaining 30 percent
hands-on curriculum. Beginning in the sixth
teaching for which OES is
must be raised by the time the construc­
grade, every science student completes an
tion is completed.
annual research project. Students hypothe­
becoming known.
When the MST Building is finished, OES
size, research, test, and draw conclusions
students will move further in the direction
using scientific principles and models. Many
of doing research that matters. Already, stu­
students continue a specific scientific study over the course of
dents are doing research on the OES wetlands that can be used
several years, building on previous research and skills to delve
by officials who are making decisions about how to protect the
deeper into the project. By the time they are in high school, they
watershed. In another project last year, two students from OES
may be collaborating with research scientists, and several stu­
won a national award for investigating a method of “storing”
dents have been listed as co-authors on papers presented by
solar energy through a chemical reaction.
Portland-area scientists to the national community.
The work that is being done by student-scientists at OES isn’t
OES also plays an important role in regional science educa­
just teaching them how to have a positive impact on the world
tion. The OES Science Symposium, now in its 15th year,
when they become adults. It is allowing them to have an impact
now and to experience the thrill of making discoveries that will
provides an opportunity for 40 students from local high schools
bring a better world into being. Soon they will do their work in a
to join OES students. The new building will permit an increase
facility that is equal to their aspirations. ■
in the number of students from other schools in the program.

OES AUTUMN 2002

13

�TRUSTEES

TRUSTEES KEEP OES ON COURSE
Five new members join Board while two veterans retire
ELISABETH L. LYON

Elisabeth L. Lyon

Elisabeth has returned to the Board, on which she served from 1993-98, serving as presi­
dent from 1993-95. She chaired the Endowment Committee from 1997-2001 and also has
chaired the Lower School Parent Association Link. She was presented with the Cecil W.
Drinkward Award in 1998 for her sendee to the school. Elisabeth has a B.A. from Mt.
Holyoke College, and she received a master’s degree from the University of Pennsylvania.
She has served on the boards of numerous nonprofit organizations. Her daughter Makely is
a senior, and her son Baker graduated last spring.

LAWRENCE ‘TIGE’ HARRIS

Lawrence 'Tige' Harris

Tige Harris serves on the Board as an ex officio member representing the Endowment
Investment Committee, which he chairs. He is Senior Vice President and Chief Investment
Officer for U.S. Trust. Prior to joining U.S. Trust, he was president of Lombard Odier Inc.
in New York. He was a resident of Portland from 1977 to 1984, serving in the venture
capital industry and as Chief Investment Officer for Capital Consultants, Inc. from 1980 to
1984. Tige earned his B.A. in history from Dartmouth College in 1963 and an MBA from
Stanford University in 1968. He is president and founding director of the Education
Empowerment Fund and served as a lieutenant in the U.S. Navy during the Vietnam era.
Tige has three children — Wil ’87, John ’89, and Maryjane ’93.

REV. SENITILA MCKINLEY
I

I

L 4ft

Senitila, who joins the Board this year, was born and raised in the Kingdom of Tonga in
the South Pacific. She met and married David McKinley, moving to Waldport, Oregon, in
1978. While raising their two daughters, Senitila attended night school where she learned to
read and write English. In 1996, after a three-year study at the Episcopal School for the
Deaconate, she was ordained a Deacon. She is currently serving at St. Luke’s by the Sea in
Waldport. Senitila is the founder and director of Seashore Family Literacy, a volunteerdriven program that provides free literacy services to the surrounding community,
including computer skills, reading, math, family literacy, and English as a Second Language.
Senitila is employed full time by Lincoln County School District as a family advocate. She
lives with her husband David in Waldport. They have two daughters, Melaia and Luana ’02.

Rev. Senitila McKinley

NICK STANLEY’83

Nick Stanley

14

New Board member Nick Stanley was born and raised in Portland. He attended
Georgetown University and worked for CMS Companies, a private investment banking firm
in Philadelphia, before moving back to Portland in 1990. He purchased Fine Arts Graphics
in 1990 and sold the company to ImageX.com in 1999. Nick is currently president of
Stanley Investment &amp; Management, a private investment company, as well as the Honorary
Consul to the Kingdom of Thailand. He currently serves on boards for OHSU Foundation,
St. Anthony Village Enterprise, Services for All Generations Enterprises, Oregon
Independent College Foundation, House of Umoja, Self Enhancement Inc., Social Venture
Partners - Portland, Legatus - Oregon, and Pacific Crest Outward Bound Schools, and
serves on the board of advisors for World Affairs Council of Oregon. He is married and has
one son. Nick attended the OES Lower School.

OES AUTUMN 2002

�TRUSTEES

LIZ PERKINS

Liz Perkins

Liz Perkins represents Volunteers’ Common Link as an ex officio member of the
Board. She is the parent of a sixth-grader, Todd, and has two grown children, Rachel, 27,
and Eric, 26. Before becoming the chair of Volunteers’ Common Link, she served as
auction chair and chair of the Lower School PAL. Liz was born in New York and raised
in Florida, where she attend Florida Southern University. She moved to the Portland area
five years ago, settling in Lake Oswego where she is a member of Christ Episcopal
Church. She says she values the warm environment OES provides for her son and appre­
ciates the blend of spirituality and education the school offers. “I feel very grateful for
this place,” she said.

MATT ESS I EH
Matt Essieh left the Board in June ’02 after completing a second three-year term.
During his time on the Board, he chaired the Governance Committee, which oversees the
appointment and election of trustees; served on the Executive Committee, which
includes the bishop and other officers; and was on the task force for diversity, whose
work he says he is particularly proud of. Matt is president of EAI Information Systems, a
13-employee company in Beaverton that sells technology products and services that help
retail banks and insurers manage their investment products. He and his wife Ella are the
parents of Janet ’16, Morayor ’09 and Kwame ’07.
■ ■ ■

Matt Essieh

MUNRO RECEIVES DRINKWARD AWARD
Former trustee David M. Munro has
been named as the recipient of the Cecil

to the board again in 1995 after returning
to Portland from a three-year stint as asso­

W. Drinkward Award for Trustee Excellence.
The award is named in honor of Cecil W.
Drinkward, a past parent and member of

ciate director of planned giving at Stanford
University, his alma mater. For the next six
years, Munro provided counsel in the area

the OES Board of Trustees who served
from 1983 tol990, and was president of
the Board from 1986-1988. The award is

of planned giving, bylaw revision, and
endowment management. He was instru­
mental in drafting the bylaws organizing
the endowment committee of the Board of

given from time to time to trustees whose
service to OES exemplifies the meritorious
traditions of stewardship, vision, and dedi­

Trustees, and he served on the committee
for a number of years.

cation to the mission of the school.
Munro is a partner in the law firm of

In presenting the award to Munro, Board
President Richard Alexander said, "OES is

Miller Nash LLP. His practice includes
estate planning and estate and trust

incredibly fortunate to have had the wise
counsel of David Munro. David is a man of

David M. Munro
administration. He began his service as a
trustee in 1979 and was instrumental in helping the
school establish its first planned giving program. He con­
tinued to serve on the board until 1981. He was elected

great integrity and great talent, and he
exemplifies the kind of leadership provided by Cecil
Drinkward for whom the Drinkward Award is named. We
are deeply indebted to David for his loyal service.”

OES AUTUMN 2002

15

�ALUMNI PROFILE

:
|

A Life in Archaeology
By Holly Pittman, Bishop Benjamin Wistar Morris Distinguished Alumni
student who was interested in and knowl­
nlike most archaeologists, I
did not know that was what
edgeable about the Scythians, I was cheap
I would become when
labor for some of the hard work of
playing in the backyard at the age of
putting together an international exhibi­
six. Rather it evolved gradually
tion. I was hired by the Met for about five
through a series of short-term, rather
cents an hour and put to work on the
practical decisions based on what I
catalog, the plans for the exhibition, and,
was good at and what 1 enjoyed.
when the material came, the physical
When I graduated from St. Helens
examination of it.
Hall, I thought that I would be a
The Metropolitan Museum had an
chemist. 1 had loved chemistry at the
opening for a beginning-level curator,
Hall, fascinated by how ingenious
and because we had had such a fine
and clever it was. But after two
working relationship during the exhibi­
semesters of chemistry at Bryn Mawr
tion, I was offered the job. I stayed at the
College, it was obvious that I was not
museum for almost 15 years as a curator.
meant to be a chemist. My other love,
Early on, one of my responsibilities was
Holly Pittman '65 was honored with this year’s Bishop
also defined at the Hall, was for Latin
to
participate in excavations supported
Benjamin Wistar Morris Distinguished Alumni Award
and for history of all kinds. It was
by
the museum. I went to Iran in 1976
for her work in the field of archaeology.
those two early joys that gave me the
and again in 1978 to a most important
first clues to where I would end up. The one thing that had been
ancient city in Iran, ancient Anshan, modern day Malyan. Some
missing was an understanding of the importance of visual
4000 years ago it was the highland capital of the region, and the
symbols, art and material culture.
archaeological remains of that city are rich with information
When I got to the middle of my junior year of college, I was
about those people.
not sure what I wanted to do, since chemistry was out. So I
decided to stop the clock and go to work for a while. That was
TJ rom the material excavated at that site I found my dissertaprobably the best decision that I have ever made. I went to New
A tion topic, and I began to address the kinds of problems
York City, I got a job as a secretary in an architect’s firm, and I
that I have found most interesting throughout the course of my
saved enough money to go to Europe on a four-month tour. It
life as an archaeologist. I wrote my dissertation on a very
was there, in Florence, Italy, that I discovered art. Another thing
common type of artifact in the ancient Near East. That artifact
that I learned about on the trip was the existence of the field of
type is called seals. They can come either as stamp seals or as
archaeology. I stayed on the island of Crete for a month and
seals shaped as a cylinder. Both types of seals were engraved by
visited many sites, some of which had ongoing excavations. The
the ancient people with pictures and with writing. The seals
last basic principle I learned on that trip was that I wanted to be
were used to impress images into the clay that was used as the
able to travel to other countries and participate in other cultures
material for writing and other kinds of activities. Seals were
on a regular basis throughout my life. During that time, it
used in antiquity much as they are used now. Think of a
clicked that my interest in ancient languages, my love for other
customs seal, in which a lead plug is impressed with the words
cultures, and my desire to spend time in those cultures through­
or symbols engraved on a metal or stone surface. Or a notary’s
out my whole life was leading me to a life in archaeology.
seal, which squeezes paper with the engraved surfaces of the
After I finished my BA at Harpur College, a State University
notary stamp. Just as now, the seals in antiquity carried infor­
of New York school in Binghamton, I started the doctoral
mation that was important somehow. I spend a great deal of my
program at Columbia University in the Department of Art and
time looking at seals of different times and periods to answer
Archaeology, and I began working with the doyenne of ancient
some of the many questions that can be asked about the ancient
people and their way of life. Unfortunately, the revolution in
Near Eastern art, Dr. Edith Porada. I began to excavate right
Iran meant that we were unable to go back to continue our
away, first going to Cyprus, but my interests began to develop
more toward one of the heartlands of civilization, Mesopotamia
excavations.While the Museum became involved in other exca­
vations
after 1978, none were as engaging to me as my early
and Iran. In particular, I fell in love with the art of the ancient
work
in
Iran.
nomadic peoples of western Iran and their neighbors to the
After
15
years in the museum, I began to feel that I wanted to
north of the Black Sea, the Cimmerians and the Scythians. It so
be
in
an
environment
where I could teach and do more research
happened that coming to New York at that time was the “block­
than was possible in the busy life of a major museum. I was very
buster” exhibition of the treasures of Scythian art, to be shown
lucky to be selected in 1989 to fill a position that was available at
at the Metropolitan Museum of Art. Being a third-year graduate

16

OES AUTUMN 2002

�ALUMNI CALENDAR

the University of Pennsylvania teaching art and archaeology of
Mesopotamia and Iran in a department of Art History. In 1994
I was also appointed a curator in the University Museum, and
in 1996,1 was the founding director of a new Center for
Ancient Studies.

'»

v

n 2001 it was possible to return to Iran, and I revived the
project that had long been dormant. I designed and led an
archaeological tour in 2001, and this fall I led a revised version
of that tour. In 2001 after the tour, I attended an international
conference on the archaeology of southeast Iran. There were
only four international archaeologists there, but there were at
least 50 Iranian archaeologists and more than 500 students, all

i

hungry to begin the discussion about the ancient cultures of
Iran after a period of about 20 years of neglect. My plans are to
participate in and develop, to the degree possible, the kind of
lively fascinating community of students and scholars who want
to excavate and reconstruct the details of the life of those ancient
people. Through these efforts we can, I believe, not only know
more about them but also about humanity at large, how it solves
problems, and how it works together.
I am honored to receive the distinguished alumni award of
Oregon Episcopal School. Making the decision to go to St.
Helens Hall all those years ago was the first of a long line of deci­
sions that have led me to be lucky enough to be able to have a
good life as an archaeologist. ■

ALUMNI EVENTS CALENDAR 2002-2003
SATURDAY, DECEMBER 21 ■

E2 TUESDAY, MAY 13 C3

Recent Alumni Holiday Gathering

Mt. Hood Speaker and Eucharist

Watch your mailbox for location.
Alumni from the classes of ’85 -’98 are welcome.

OES Campus, Speaker TBD
E3 WEDNESDAY, MAY 14 S2

Mt. Hood Service Day

FRIDAY, JANUARY 3 S3

Alumni Basketball Tournament

Join students for community service.

On campus, 7 p.m.
The second annual battle between the alumni and Upper

m FRIDAY, JUNE 6 a

Class of 1953 Reunion

School Varsity teams.

Come and catch up with old friends and participate In the
Graduation ceremonies for the class of 2003.

TUESDAY, JANUARY 7 a

Young Alumni Day
OES Campus, noon
The classes of 1999 through 2002 join current seniors to
discuss college choices, transitions, and life on a college

REGIONAL EVENTS
S3 THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 27 m

campus. Alumni will also have the opportunity to socialize
with faculty and with each other.

NYC After-Work Social
Join Alumni Director Lisa DeGrace and favorite faculty for

a WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 26 Hi

after-work drinks and snacks.

All-School Play

m FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 28 E2

OES Campus, 7:30 p.m.

Boston After-Work Social

See your favorite faculty on stage!

Join Alumni Director Lisa DeGrace for drinks and snacks.

m WEDNESDAY, MARCH 19 3H

BEND DATE TBA a

Chamber Music on Tap

Join us for our first social in Bend. There are over 70 alumni

Bridgeport Brewery, 5:30 p.m.

living in the Bend area!

Join us for great music (a trombone quartet!), delicious pizza,
and drinks in a low-key, festive environment.
ESI SUNDAY, APRIL 13 w

Two Sisters and a Piano, by Nilo Cruz

r.3 LINCOLN CITY DATE TBA n

St. Helens Hall Luncheon
We will hold our second annual luncheon for our Northern
Coast St. Helens Hall alumnae.

Artists Repertory Theatre
Play at 2 p.m., dinner to follow at Cassidy’s

m SEATTLE AFTER-WORK SOCIAL DATE TBA ■

OES AUTUMN 2002

17

�B

!

■ HALLWAYS ■
for the Alumnae of St. Helens Hall

Donations from the scrapbooks of Martha
Bullwinkle Dorrell '73 (pictured above, left)
and Jean Groves Bullwinkle '37 (above right).
At right is the Kindergarten class of 1960-61.

DONATIONS FILL GAPS IN HISTORY
Several alumni responded to a recent appeal for OES memora­
bilia. Frances Watzek Warren *33 sent her yearbook and
diploma, which is the only diploma the school possesses from
that era. Jean Groves Bullwinlde ’37 and her daughter, Martha
Bullwinkle Dorrell 73, donated two scrapbooks with newspaper
clippings that document the transition of St. Helens Hall from
the downtown location to the present site. They also donated
brochures, student newspapers, art lit magazines, Lower School
class pictures, and Martha’s class ring. Janelle Johnson Jimerson

18

76 gave the school some student newspapers, a school letter,
and her design for the old belltower.
Alumni Director Lisa DeGrace said the donated memorabilia
is invaluable from a historical standpoint, providing a very
detailed and personal record of the school’s past. She added that
looking over the mementos is very entertaining: “It’s fun to see
what remains the same and what changes.”
If you would like to donate memorabilia, please call Lisa at
503-768-3153 or email her at degracel@oes.edu. ■

OES AUTUMN 2002

�■ REUNION ■
Betty Wright Recalls the Good Old Days

•'/

Parents often chide themselves for not
One story was both touching and
keeping a notebook of the funny things
humorous. One of Betty’s achievements as
their children say. Betty Wright needn’t feel
principal was the expansion of the library,
regret over lost quips. She kept a book in
but there wasn’t enough money for new
which she described humorous moments
carpeting. So the whole school began donat­
from her 11 years as a principal of the
ing Green Stamps to pay for new carpeting.
Lower School. During a luncheon in which
The children helped lay the Green Stamp
she was made an honorary alumna of
books out on the floor and count them
Oregon Episcopal School, she regaled the
several times until finally they had enough
crowd of 40 with stories from her tenure.
to buy the carpet. The new carpet was
Her anecdotes included remarks by stu­
installed, but when the children saw what
dents, including one boy who was caught
their Green Stamps had purchased they were
fighting and explained, “It’s not my fault.
shocked. “They expected green carpet but
He hit me back.” Of course, parents do
we had purchased burnt orange,” Betty said.
funny things, too, which might be where
Betty’s tenure at the helm of the Lower
some of the children get their ideas. Betty
School was remembered fondly in
Honorary Alumna Betty Wright was honored at
told about one time when the father of a
remarks by Chuck Reynolds ’69, Arthur
a luncheon at the Portland Golf Club during
student offered to match the money raised
Daret ’82, who attended the Lower School
reunion weekend in October.
for an important school project. Alas, the
when Betty was the Head, and fellow
donations came in slowly, and so his wife
teacher Helga Daret. Betty was a teacher
sneaked in without his knowledge and made a big donation that
and administrator at St. Helens Hall from the mid-1950s until
he then matched.
her retirement from OES in 1979. ■

i

Getting together for an art project during the reunion were, from

From left, Lisa Wong '79, biology instructor Peter Langley, and

left, art teacher Sue Jensen and Class of '92 alumnae Jennifer

Regan Leon '82 look at ducks during a tour of the OES wetlands

Bornholdt, Aki Suzuki and Joanne Lau.

on reunion weekend.

Class of ’92 Strikes Gold

Ducks and Aardvarks Sighted

Three members of the Class of ’92 celebrated a “golden”
anniversary when they joined art teacher Sue Jensen to make
gold-leaf greeting cards. The reunion weekend event attracted
Jennifer Bornholdt ’92 of California, Aki Suzuki ’92 of Tokyo,
Japan, and Joanne Lau ’92 of Portland. Jennifer and Joanne took
art classes with Sue when they were students at OES. They mar­
veled at the spacious art facility in Bishop Dagwell Hall, which
was home to the Middle School when they attended OES.

A group of rugged outdoors enthusiasts donned rubber boots
to tour the OES wetlands during Homecoming Weekend. Upper
School biology instructor Peter Langley told them about the
flora, the fauna, and the conservation issues surrounding the
pond and marsh along Nicol Road. With their school-issued
binoculars, the trampers picked out several species of ducks, but
the nutria apparently were in hiding. Participating in the tour were
Lisa Wong ’79 and her husband Patrick, Kevin Cavanaugh ’82,
Regan Leon ’82 and Adrienne Mikeworth-West ’82.

OES AUTUMN 2002

19

�. J.

I
V.i
»

i

CLASS ■ NOTES

■

.

1940’s
Elizabeth Shipe Jones ’45
I gave up committee and volunteer work
several years ago. We do some traveling,
but mostly stay close to home where we
care for our four-legged animals. We still
have three horses, but don’t ride very often.
Our grandchildren are scattered around the
world with careers and schooling - the
nests are empty, and that is good. Our farm
requires a minimum of care so we have
time to pursue retirement activities:
reading, shop work, and throwing away all
the stuff we no longer need to keep.

1950’s
Sally Cohn ’52

For the latest on Sally’s whistling career, see
www.thewhistler.com/sally.html
Geraldine Filion Schwab ’52
So sorry to inform you that two months
after our 49th wedding anniversary in June
my dear husband Chuck Schwab was killed
in an auto accident.
Jean Adams Davenport ’53
Currently I am a pastor, funeral
director/owner, music teacher, and grand­
mother of 13 with one great-grandchild
and another on the way.
Yvonne Wright Johnson ’53
Currently I am retired, and we are resum­
ing our love for traveling following my
husband’s successful kidney transplant in
November 2001. Praise God! Keeping busy
as a Master Gardener, bowling in a league,
hiking and doing Community Bible Study.
Eight members of our family live in the
Bend area. There are always threads of
activities that weave us together as we con­
tinue on this earthly path. Our first
great-granddaughter was born in May
2001. She is a joy, and brings pride as a
seventh-generation Oregonian. Looking
forward to seeing 1953 grads.
Barbara Greene Phillips ’53
Currently I am an author, trainer, and
mediator. See the website
mvw.crtraining.com for details.

Martha Scarbrough ’72
I live in Los Angeles and work at a soup
kitchen on skid row.

1960’s
Becky Reynolds ’67

I am still enjoying teaching fifth grade stu­
dents these days. The last two summers
Jerry and I have been exploring the world
of boating on French canals. Very fun! I
probably will not make this year’s big
reunion but I think of you all.
Betsy Johnson ’69

Representative Betsy Johnson is seeking reelection to her seat in the Oregon House of
Representatives. She won both the
Democratic and Republican nominations
in the May primary. As a first-term legisla­
tor, Rep. Johnson served on the full Ways
and Means Committee; General
Government Subcommittee, Ways and
Means; Transportation and Economic
Development Subcommittee; and was vice­
chair of Smart Growth and Commerce. She
currently serves on the Emergency Board.
Editor's note: Betsy won the race with 67
percent of the vote.

Chris Lin 'll

Even though I did not graduate from OES,
I always remember the two years that I
spent as a boarding student during my
sophomore and junior years. I just want to
say hi to Mary, Tracy, Nancy, Matt, Ray,
Melanie, Scott, Marian, Neil, Evan, Tray,
George, Ed, and all the rest of the people
who made those two years so memorable.
Katharine Sammons ’79
Vivian Simone Pinger was born to
Katharine Sammons and Steve Pinger on
Monday, July 1, 2:34 a.m., weighing 7 lbs. 5
oz. and measuring 21.5 inches. “Great
birth. She is beautiful and healthy. Mother,
Father, Sister are working out the details.
Say a prayer and sleep for us.”

1980’s
James Cheung ’82

1970’s
Mary Critchlow ’72

Please pass the word on to my classmates
that I will be out of the country this year
starting in September and I won’t be able to
attend the reunion. I hate to miss the 30th!
I will be on sabbatical doing educational
work in various countries, while my 16year-old son will be in Spain with the AFS
exchange program. Say hello to all and tell
them to stay healthy enough to
make it to our 40th. Email:
critchlowm@hotmail.com

My family and I are having good time in
Hong Kong. My son, Michael, is about 5
years of age. He is energetic and enjoys
playing with Thomas the Tank Engine at
home. I am still working at DBS Kwong On
Bank in Hong Kong as senior relationship
manager and I really miss you all. Golfing is
getting more and more popular in Hong
Kong and I try to play once every two
weeks. Laura, I am glad to hear about you
and your family in the school’s magazine.
You are so marvelous with two lovely

Frederick Ellis ’72
Fred Ellis Jr. is still living in the
San Juan Islands with his wife,
Barbara, and their three sons.
They’ve recently added a new
daughter to their family, 7-yearold Reyna Johana from Guatemala,
When arborist Fred isn’t tending
to trees on the islands, he’s playing
with the kids!

The wedding of Lorca Fltschen Smetana '87

20

OES AUTUMN 2002

�KATHERINE EKLUND STEEN '88
INTERVIEWED BY HILARY HELGESON ’04
Years at OES... Katherine was a “lifer" at
OES. She lived in the same house the
whole time she went to school here,
which meant she made the same drive
every day for 12 years.
Avoided “clothing crime"... Her mother
had a hard time with her when she was in
Middle School because she took so long
to choose her clothes in the morning. She
says it was almost a crime to wear the
wrong shirt. Everything had to be perfect.
Looking back, she thinks it might be a
good idea for the students to continue wearing uniforms through Middle School,
even though she recalls the uniforms as being “not terribly fashionable."
Tears at graduation... "Graduation was beautiful. The choir sang and I just wept
the whole time."
Fourteen years after OES... Katherine went to Vassar, earned a teaching certifi­
cate, and then returned to Portland and earned a master's degree in education.
She started "slinging espresso" while teaching private lessons in the afternoons,
and then managed the kids’ section of festivals.com.

kids... I will be happy to know more about
you and other guys with us in the same class.
Jennifer Trudeau Graylands ’84
I’m finally back in Portland! (Well, Tigard
actually... but close enough). I decided the
commute from Seaside to St. Vincent’s was
too far (after 1.5 years!) and talked my
family into moving back to the city. So, new
house, same job. If anyone has a need for a
computer geek, my husband is looking for
work. Our daughter started middle school
and is loving it so far. Our two dogs aren’t
so sure about not having the beach to run
on, but they are adjusting! Hope to run into
some fellow alumni downtown, at the mall...
Julie Reid Douglas ’85
I am always anxiously awaiting the latest
Belltower, as I love to read the alumni notes
and hear about my classmates, and/or
dorm-mates. I thought I should share some
info too! I live in Nashville with my
husband Scott and our two boys, Dylan (5
years) and Ethan (11 mos.).

Greg Simon ’85

We recently transferred to the Seattle area
where I am the district manager for an
international logistics firm called Danzas
AEI Intercontinental. Charmian and I are
enjoying our 13th year of marriage. We
have been blessed with two boys, Hayden,
4, and Chandler, 2. They keep us busy
pretty much from sunup to sundown.

was not good for me. However, I would love
to hear what everyone in the Class of ’87 is
up to. I am currently a national sales trainer
for a mortgage company here in San Diego.
Bobby Lee *88
Left Eugene and currently living in
Portland, working as a director for a non­
profit in downtown. I often work out with
Dylan Coulter from class of 1989.
Mary Waite Garvey '89
I just had a baby... Edward (Ned) Hugh
Garvey, Aug. 31, 2002.
Cris Harris ’89

Mary and I are well, if very busy with work
and efforts to restore the property we
bought (in Ohio). We love it, and the last
owners did great work on it, but they left us
a bit to do. We’ve been wiring, and replac­
ing a boiler (did you know that an old cast
iron boiler weighs like 3000 lbs. and has to
have its pipe elbows broken out with a
sledgehammer? Did you know that if you
don’t wrap a towel around the elbow, the
pieces of cast iron can fly across the room
and put you in the emergency room waiting
for sutures while people who are hurt by
reasons other than their own stupidity get
care?) painting, mowing, planting gardens,
and trying to keep a 100-year-old barn
from doing what gravity and the weather
have been convincing it to do all this time.
I’m finishing my second week of class
today, teaching humanities and junior
English to a diverse bunch of kids who talk
with a different accent than OES kids, but
are pretty much the same good souls.

Lorca Fitschen Smetana ’87
I couldn’t make the reunion but I thought
I’d write with an update. I was married
(near Bozeman, Montana) on July 28 of
this year to Dusan Smetana, a wildlife pho­
tographer from Czechoslovakia. I am
teaching critical thinking to freshmen now
at Montana State University, and am pretty
darned happy. I hope you’re doing well,
too! See the link
www.corvusresearch.com/indexNved.htm.
James Nudelman ’87
I apologize for this late response regarding
the OES Reunion. I would love to attend,
but my girlfriend is moving down to San
Diego this week so unfortunately the timing

OES AUTUMN 2002

Scott Klemp '87 and his new wife Fran were
married in August 2002.

21

�:!
CLASS NOTES

)

Coordinator. This October I’ll be a brides­
maid in Sidney Joanne Bennington’s
wedding (she graduated with my brother in
’94) along with her sister Sherrill (OES ’91)
and Hillary Ecklund (OES ’88, my sister’s
year, I think). Busy busy!

;

Clair Clark Wiles ’91

I am fulfilling my dream of teaching social
studies at the high school level. It is an
excellent lesson on karma!
Courtney Brown ’92
Russ Beutler '90 and daughter Madeline enjoy time
in Barcelona, Spain. Russ and family spent several
months working in Europe this year.

1990’s
Sharon Eileen Gebbie ’91
I am doing very well. I’m teaching two
courses at the University of Illinois, grading
another, being an instructor for the Ida B.
Wells Home School, and I’m also the local
YWCA’s new Youth Mentor Program

After clerking for a justice at the Vermont
Supreme Court I accepted a position as
staff attorney practicing public interest
environmental law in Taos, NM at the
Southwest regional office of the Western
Environmental Law Center (WELC).
WELC has litigated some of the nation's
most important environmental cases,
including the first case to protect the
Northern Spotted Owl. My dream job!

Adam Price '93 at his wedding to Sandra Fried (not
shown) with a handful of OES Alumni (left to right)
Tom Tewksbury '93, Gerald Park '93, best man
Rowan Price '91, Graham Gamache '93, Amara
Gamache '18, Adam Price, Ali Ajami '93, Andrew
Morris '01, Elliott deBruin '93.

Annette Koegler Kloeppel ’92

day. Up to date: I work as a school psychol­
ogist for the Puyallup school district. My
husband and I had our daughter, Elsie Ann,
in November of 2000. We also have our
adopted Greyhound, Dayton.

Favorite moment at OES: latex appreciation

Tricia Kreinberg '92

Tricia is working as a pediatric oncology
nurse at Emanuel.
CHUCK REYNOLDS ’69

Griffith Owen ’92

INTERVIEWED BY KENT SAITOH '03

CampusPoint is doing very well, we have
very good relationships with local employ­
ers of all sizes, gas in the tank, and
phenomenal employees.

History was captivating... Chuck remembers
the history teachers, especially Donald
Coldberg, being extraordinarily interested in
their subject and extremely passionate in their
teaching. “The history teachers got me
hooked," he said. From 1976 to 1986, Chuck
taught history at OES.

:

Strict dress code... A corduroy jacket, slacks, a
white shirt and a tie were required to be worn
every day. He said students expressed their
individuality by wearing garish ties.

Tessa Williamson White '92

Tessa works at Yahoo in the Bay Area. She
got married at the Governor Hotel in May,
Corbet did the wedding. In the wedding
party was Courtney Brown ’92. In atten­
dance were Kyle Williamson ’97, Tricia
Kreinberg ’92, Shannon Dooley ’92, and
Tara Sorensen Witt ’92.

Science has changed... When Chuck attended
Bishop Dagwell Hall, there were no science projects or individual research assign­
ments. However, one teacher did take forays into the wetlands —with his shotgun
and dog!

*=

Vietnam War years... A Green Beret soldier spoke at a school assembly in 1965 or
1966. It was before opposition to the war had grown, but Chuck remembers that
some faculty members and students questioned the soldier about why the United
States was involved in Southeast Asia. By the time he graduated, anti-war sentiment

?

was quite strong among the faculty, but he doesn't remember students expressing
opposition, perhaps because they were too busy with their schoolwork.
Thirty-three years after Bishop Dagwell Hall... Chuck is an attorney and a graduate
of Stanford University. His daughter Margaret graduated from OES in 2000, and his

il

son Mackenzie is a senior.

•••
.

i

22

OES AUTUMN 2002

Class of 1992 at 10 year reunion: Annette Kloeppel,
Tara Sorensen Witt, Charlie Adams, Ayesha Ahmad,
Jessica Davidson DuMone, Griffith Owen

�CLASS NOTES

Tara Sorensen Witt '92
Thanks to everyone who was able to make
the reunion on Oct. 5. It was great to see
old friends and catch up. I was amazed at
the people who traveled in for the event.
Kudos to Aki who came all of the way from
Japan! Ayesha was nice enough to capture
the night in pictures, so check out:
www.mrl.ucsb.edu/~aahmad/OES_reunion
_2002/index.htm

SUSANNAH VALATKA '60
INTERVIEWED BY ASHLEY MORGANSTERN '03
Describes St. Helens Hall In the 1950s...
The whole school was very formal, which
pleased Susannah. “I liked the formality and
wished it had been even more formal," she
said. There was a daily uniform inspection,
first by faculty, then by students. Untidy
clothes, such as a torn stocking, were not
tolerated, and untidy students were forced
to clean up. The purpose of OES, as
Susannah understood it, was to teach
young girls how to be ladies. At St Helens
Hall they were taught proper manners,

Erin Boyle ’95

Hey! After graduating from Lewis and
Clark College in 1999 with a degree in
anthropology and sociology I took off for
six months and traveled around India and
the Middle East. After reluctantly coming
home I settled in Olympia, Washington,
and worked with at-risk youth in a crisis
residential center. Now I am living in
Miami, working for the University of
Miami on a CDC research grant looking at
HIV/AIDS in the Haitian community and
getting my masters in special education.
Would love to hear from everyone and
anyone and all are welcome to come visit
the sun! Blessings, Erin.
erinboyle2001 @yahoo.com

attire, and conduct, while being provided with a rigorous academic schedule.
Remembers traditions... A "silly" tradition were initiations for new students,
which were modeled after initiations of college sororities. Students would wear
radishes around their necks or have to roll around in spaghetti. On the serious
side, there was a formal Christmas Pageant each year and it was an honor to be
chosen to portray the Virgin Mary.
Changes she recalls... The curriculum emphasized science and math more after
the Russians sent Sputnik into space.
Forty-two years after St. Helens Hall... Her profession is being a college registrar,
in which she is aided by the command of English she gained at St. Helens Hall.

Joe Ferguson Calderon ’95

I am starting a business called GaitSetter™
that sells custom orthotics ... I just started
the company this week.
Woody English ’95

I’m studying at the Sorbonne in Paris for
the year before going back to get my
master’s in the USA.
Jon Reali ’95

I am currently a summer associate with
Blakely, SokolofF, Taylor &amp; Zafman LLP, a

patent law firm in Lake Oswego. I’ll gradu­
ate in 2003 from Notre Dame with a joint
JD/MBA.
Adam Greene ’96

I finally finished my undergraduate degree
at Bowdoin College (Com sci major, Bio
minor) in December. The six-year program
actually does exist... and it is not so bad! I
went on to do some graduate research in
Computational Chemistry (surprise,
Rosa!), but was sucked away to Wall Street
to work with a group that does quantitative
and statistical modeling of the market. I
never saw myself working on the street, but
I still avoid having to wear a suit and a tie!
While I consider this just a short excursion
before I try something else, NYC is fantas­
tic, and a wonderful place to continue my
dancing hobby, adam.greene@bowdoin.edu
Evan Seifert ’96

Felicity Shoulders Whelan '98 at her wedding
to Matthew Whelan

Evan Seifert is now in the Peace Corps in
Mauritania, West Africa. He started train­
ing in early June and will move to Kiffa in
early September.

OES AUTUMN 2002

Chris Edell ’97

Currendy I am working as a management
consultant at a consulting firm in San
Francisco.
Jeff Kinzer ’97

I am attending Portland State University.
Masa Kobayashi ’97
Masa graduated in October as vice-repre­
sentative of the Class of’02. He was
recruited by Mitsubishi and begins with
them in November.
Kyle Williamson ’97

Kyle just got his BA from the University of
Oregon.
Allison Winningstad ’97
I think it’s high time I sent an update... I
ran into Coleen Conkey at Stanford’s the
other day (right before the Bruce
Springsteen concert! He rocked!), and she
reminded me that people do read these (I
do too)! Well, it’s time to leave the country:
I’m leaving at the end of September to go to
Kyrgyzstan for the Peace Corps. I’ll be

23

�CLASS NOTES

Rebeka Held '01 in Croatia

teaching English (and trying to stay warm!)
That’s the big news ...
Kiruthi Njenga ’98

I finished my undergraduate studies at
Willamette University this May, and now I
am pursuing a Master’s in Computer
Science at Tufts University. School is great,
but I am still an aardvark at heart.
Ian Ruder ’98

Ian Ruder, OES ’98, has been appointed by
Governor Kitzhaber to the State Board of
Higher Education.
Felicity Shoulders Whelan '98
My husband, Matthew Whelan, is from
Beaverton, and we met in high school. We
had Father David Pace officiate at the small
ceremony, which was held in the
Shakespeare Garden of the Portland
International Rose Test Gardens (what a
mouthful, you should see the invitations!).
Some of my OES friends attended, and
Rose Whitmore, Class of’98, was one of my
bridesmaids! We had the reception at the
Oswego Heritage House, and we honey­
mooned on the coast!... It was very nice to
see Father David again, and we both really
enjoyed our pre-wedding chats with him he is as wise as he is funny. And of course, I
had asked Father David to officiate at my
wedding when I was in middle school, so I
had to follow through :)

24

2000’S

In Memoriam

Kimberly Spears ’00
Kimberly earned a two-year UC LEADS
grant, from the University of California at
Santa Barbara. The program began with her
spending this summer working with Dr.
Jeff Stopple, professor of mathematics in
Number Theory. She presented the results
of her work at the Academic Research
Consortium, and her research publication,
“Computing the Incomplete Gamma
Function,” appears in the Proceedings of
the ARC. The grant provides research funds
and stipends for the next two years at two
UC campuses, and also includes trips to
professional conferences and visits to
various graduate schools of mathematics.

Elizabeth Sewall Mason ’25
Elizabeth died July 14, 2002. After gradu­
ating from St. Helens Hall, Elizabeth
graduated from the University of
Washington and became a homemaker.
She moved to Black Butte Ranch about
1985 and returned to Portland in 1999.
In 1934, she married Henry Mason; he
died in 1973. Survivors include her sons,
Russell, Thomas and Michael; nine
grandchildren; and eight great-grand­
children.

Katherine Wrenn ’00
Katherine was awarded the Frederick N.
Zeiner Award, for a sophomore pre­
medical student, in recognition of academic
achievement reflecting the standards set by
Professor Zeiner.
Rebeka Held ’01

Just wanted to drop a little note hoping you
haven’t forgotten about me, because I still
remember all of you from OES and miss
you a lot! Currently, I’m a sophomore at
Zagreb Med School and am living in the
dorms with some friends. This summer I
had Kristi McKean visit me in Croatia for a
few days, but I hope I’ll be able to come to
Portland again sometime soon and see
some of the “OES people” as well. Wishing
all of you well! Ciao!
Marshall Hoffman '01

Beginning my first year at the US Naval
Academy.

Correction
A room shown in a photograph in
the summer issue of the OES magazine
was misidentified as the “Wreck
Room.” The room at St. Helens Hall
was actually called the “Round Table
Room” and was used as a senior study
hall and for club meetings. We regret
the error.

!

I

Betty Lou Roberts ’36

Betty Lou died Aug. 22, 2002.

I

Thelma Amacher Zertanna '39
Thelma died June 18, 2002. After gradu­
ating from St. Helens Hall, “Buddy” was
a secretary for General Motors. In 1941
she married Robert E. Zertanna; he died
in 1972. She married Vic Doherty in
1990. Survivors include her husband;
daughter, Nancy Winkelman; son, Mark
Zertanna; and sbt grandchildren.

i

Dorothy Stauffer ’40
Dorothy died July 6, 2002.
Rochka Cogan Premo ’47
Rochka died Sept. 6, 2002. A Portland
resident all her life, Rochka graduated
from St. Helen’s Hall and Portland State
College. She received a master’s degree
from Oregon State University. She
taught high school for Portland Public
Schools and, most recently, for Forest
Grove High School. In 1964, she married
Ron Premo. Survivors include her
husband; daughters, Julie Zara
Heartwood and Diana Callihan; sons,
Dan Taylor and Steve Premo; five grand­
children; and three great-grandchildren.
Tucker Livingstone ’72
Tucker died September 28,2002.

OES AUTUMN 2002

I

�I

1

i

ANNUAL REPORT
i

i

2001-2002

�w*

!

■

ANNUALREPORT
r~rr7~:—~?v:’.-.V7n «----- .---t—a

GIFTS TO THE SCHOOL
sen

THE OES ANNUAL FUND
Source

Alumni
Current Parents
Parents of Alumni
Grandparents
Faculty and Staff
Friends
Corporations
Foundations

Donors

Gifts

222
477
105
45
63
14
10
15

$ 40,616
233,030
53,177
8,672
3,271
26,191
10,601
34,227
$409,785

Total Annual Fund Gifts: 951

$10,453,088
746,949
409,785
386,699
179,540
329,488

Tuition and Fees
Endowment and Interest
OES Annual Fund
After School Programs
Transportation
Other

TOTAL INCOME: $12,505,549

!

NEW GIFTS TO ENDOWMENT
Anonymous (2)
The Fields Family Fund:
Philip, Elizabeth, Amy &amp; Terry
Paul Gerhardt Jr. Endowment
T. J. Kempton Endowment
OES Memorial Endowment

$ 10,308
18,827
66,544
500
3,745

Total Endowment Gifts: $ 99,924

EXPENSES
CAPITAL GIFTS
Meyer Hall Pledge Payments
Capital Campaign—Phase I

Compensation 69.7%

Financial Aid 5.5%

Physical Plant 7.5%

Institutional Support 8.6%

Compensation
Physical Plant
Financial Aid
Institutional Support
Food Service
Other

$8,718,272
930,224
690,832
1,079,334
331,396
750,983

AASK Program
Athletic Department
Boarding Program
Financial Aid
Labyrinth
Libraries
Middle School Discretionary
Middle School Science
President’s Award Math &amp; Science
Technology
Upper School Religion
Upper School Science
Miscellaneous

.

165

TOTAL ALL GIFTS: $4,751,494

OES AUTUMN 2002

life

$ 46,881
1,500
5.000
1.000
453
5,383
500
10,255
7,500
1,057
1,000
1,000

'V

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Total Special Gifts: $ 81,694

TOTAL EXPENSES: $12,501,041

26

4,156,865

SPECIAL PURPOSE GIFTS

Other 6.0%

*-

3,226

Total Capital Gifts: $4,160,091

Food Service 2.7%

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$

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�ANNUAL REPORT
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GIVING SOCIETIES

The following individuals and organiza­
tions have made gifts or commitments to
the Annual, Capital, and Endowment
Funds at leadership levels between July 1,
2001 andJune 30,2002

Bishop’s Circle
Gifts of $10,000 or more
Anonymous
Dick &amp; Carilyn Alexander
Peter &amp; Missy Bcchcn
Narjala &amp; Shanda Bhasker
Don &amp;f Brenda Chambers
Peter Chang &amp; Jennifer Xia
Collins Foundation
Steve &amp; Tina Donovan
Wayne &amp; Julie Drinkward
Bob &amp;r Pam Dreisin
Edward E. Ford Foundation
Stuart &amp;r Susan Emmons
Matt &amp;r Ella Essich
Paul Farago
Susan Thayer Farago
Amy Fields '62
Paul &amp; Nancy Gerhardt
Steve &amp; Pam Grant
Intel Foundation
Dick &amp; Maryjaffc
Elisabeth &amp; Peter Lyon
Alee &amp;• Laurie Macmillan
Jim &amp;: Mary McCarter
Meyer Memorial Trust
Greg Diane Morgan
David &amp; Anne Munro
Frank &amp;t Karen Parker
Josef Bohunka Rosch
Jerry Tcri Rosette
April Sanderson
Shoaib &amp;: Cathy Tareen
The Oregon Community Foundation:
The Keller Fund &amp;
the Anna Wheeler Hayes Fund
Mark Workman '69 &amp; Leslie Workman
Masatoshi &amp; Susan Yamanaka

Belltower Circle
Gifts of $5,000 to $9,999
Dulany Bennett
Lee &amp;: Irene Dulin
The Flora Family Foundation
Hoover Family Foundation
Juan Young Trust
Ed &amp; Margaret Kushner
John &amp;■ Tina Lauerman
Janet Lawson
Wes &amp; Nancy Lcniana
Doug &amp; Mimi McCaslin
Tatiana Mollcr-Lawson
Craig Murphy &amp; Julie Frantz
Gar)’ Pope
Evan &amp; Rebecca Roberts
Rose E. Tucker Charitable Trust
S. J. &amp; Jessie E. Quinney Foundation
United States of America
President’s Award for Math &amp; Science
Jeff &amp; Lynn Wolfstonc

Mary Rodney Circle
Gifts of $2,500 to 54,999
Jennifer Black
Robert Brisk &amp; Monica Mahoney
Charyl Cathey &amp; Joe Ccniccros
Charles Schwab Corporation Foundation

I John &amp; Deborah Chessar
C.R. &amp; Glen Duffic
Brent Ercnscl 74 &amp; Nina Ercnscl
; Bob &amp; Carole Freitas
I Sidney Gold
| George &amp; Marsha Goodman
I Greg &amp; Michele Goodwin
Mr. Jong Koo Huh &amp; Ms. Hyemin Lee
Jackson Foundation
Morgan Stanley Dean Witter, Inc.
Michael Moser &amp; Barbara Ports
, Tamara Sclfridgc Musser 74 &amp; Peter Musscr
I Dong-Kyu Park &amp; Kycong-Hcc Lee
' Jim Rue &amp; Mignon Mazique
' Robert &amp; Jill Schccr
j St. John the Baptist
| Bill &amp; Comic Stevens
Robert &amp;r Elizabeth Tsao
Scckin &amp; Tuba Unlu
Wells Fargo Bank
Ms. Kyung Ha Yoon
Tim &amp; Carol Zuckcrt

Leadership Circle
Gifts of $1,000 to S2.499
AARP Andrus Foundation
Charles A. Adams
Jane &amp;Jim Adams
Adams Foundation
Keith &amp; Sharon Barnes
Stan 67 Dixie Bland
Sharon &amp;Joc Cade
Charlie &amp; Lyn Cameron
Ken &amp; Pam Cany
Ding &amp; Patsy Chan
Richard &amp; Nancy Chapman
Raymond Srjosic Cheng
Mr. Sung-Min Choi &amp; Ms. In-Sun Kim
Ad nan &amp; Brenda Cobanoglu
Constnictivc Management Foundation
Gary &amp; Martha Curry
Gar)- &lt;5? Cathy Dcsrochcrs

Jamie Dickey &amp; Ross Ungerlcidcr
Jim Dix &amp; Candace Gray
Tina Enberg &amp; Clarice Johnston
Woody English &amp; Annie Terr)’
Steve &amp;r Nancy Eylcr
Brad &amp; Kami Fraley
D.W. &amp; Kathleen Froom
Raj &amp; Shelly Garg
Ted &amp; Cindy Gaty
Margaret &amp; Peter Goldberg
Scott &amp; Sarah Grewc
Halton Foundation
Ken &amp; Ginger Harrison
Mary Hclikson
Vaughan Hill
Ed &amp; Edmay Honeycutt
Joe &amp; Trish Howell
Dorothy &amp; Fred Huey
James Huffman &amp; Leslie Spencer
Kevin &amp; Willcmijn llcisin
John &amp;Jill Inskeep
Mikio &amp; Cheiko Ito
Betsy Johnson ’69
Elizabeth Johnson
David &amp; Eileen Johnson
Craig &amp; Lynne Johnston
Rt. Rev. Robert L. LadchofT
Mr. Chun-Yo Lai &amp; Mrs. Wei-Tzu Lin
Bill &amp; Dorothy Lake
Tom &amp; Pat Landye
Dan Laun '90 &amp; Betsy Laun
Man-Woo Lee &amp; Young-Mee Bang
Mr. Jong Min Lee &amp; Mrs. Eun Hwan Kim
Brian &amp; Betsy Leonard
Dennis &amp; Sandy Lcybold
Joanne Miller Lillcy ’47
John &amp; Priscilla Longficld
Mike &amp; Cynthia Louaillicr
Greg &amp; Amy Lowes
Kathleen MacNaughion &amp; Jocelyn Somers
Scon &amp; Kathy Mary
Beth Mason

OES AUTUMN 2002

Tom &amp; Michelle Matson
Greg McCoy
Linita McDonald
Paul Norman &amp; Sandra S. Miles
Michael Morey &amp; Leslie Mackenzie
Rocky &amp; Dcsirea Muraoka
Nike, Inc.
Northwestern Mutual Life
Ingolf &amp; Peggy Noto
Thomas Page &amp; Guherine Riffe
Dr. Young Sup Park &amp; Dr. Mi Ja Lee
Tom &amp; Liz Perkins
Mark &amp; Eileen Pilkcnton
Chris &amp; Kelley Platt
Peter &amp; Debra Pollard
R. B. Pamplin Corporation
Ralph &amp; Adolph Jacobs Foundation
Clent Richardson 79 &amp; Sharon Richardson
Tim &amp; Jan Rippey
James &amp; Shirley Rippey
Kathryn Rippey
Susan &amp; Tom Robinson
Nancy Stoltc Rosenfeld '37 &amp; William
Rosenfeld
David Rurnkcr &amp; Susan Phillips
Bill &amp; Carolyn Saiget
Samuel S. Johnson Foundation
Geraldine Hanny Sargent '35
&amp; Howard Sargent
Jeff &amp; Fern Selvala
Dr. Wan Chul Seo &amp; Mrs. Jae Ran Ko
Allen &amp; Susan Shelby
Manu &amp; Anurec Sitachitt
Jesse Smith &amp; Maryann Yelnosky
Phil VanderWeelc &amp; Joan Snyder
Greg &amp; Roxanne Speehl
Henry Stevens 79 &amp; Kim Stevens
Tim &amp; Ann Stout
Todd &amp; Carrie Stucky
John &amp;r Girol Stull
Elizabeth Pownall Swindells ’34
Hitoshi &amp; Kaoru Tani

27

�AUliUAL REPORT
Dave &amp; Ann Taylor
Tektronix Foundation
David &amp; Nanc&gt;' TcnHulzcn
Ned Thanhouscr
The Campbell Group
Steven &amp; Jackie Thomas
Terry &amp; Chcri Tolar
Peter Sr Michelle Trumbo
US Bancorp
Istnvar &amp; Rachna Uttamchandani
John &amp; Fran von Schlcgell
Frances Watzek Warren '33
Mrs. Helen Weber
Tyrone &amp; Bonnie Wei
Steve &amp; Patty Williams
Dolores &amp; Norm Winningslad
Allen &amp; Rebecca Wirfs-Brock
Peter Wolochow &amp; Joanne Kahn
Norman &amp; Harriet Workman
Dr. Yusuke Yoshizawa
&amp; Dr. Shigemi Yoshizawa
Christopher Zimmerman &amp; Emily Burch

Hall Street Club

i

Gifts of $500 to $999
Marci Lematta Abel ’84 &amp; George Abel
Anonymous
Nora Auseklis
Mr. Chang Man Bac
&amp; Ms. Soon Kcun Kim
George &amp; Joy Bean
Curt &amp; Leslan Carlson
Matthew Casimo &amp; Sheila Casimo
Mr. Jui Mou Cheng
&amp; Mrs. Hsiu-Man Cheng-Chen
Suresh &amp; Aruna Chittor
Corbel &amp; Myra Clark
Chris Cooper
Hal &amp; Kim Curtis
Chris &amp; Ann Davis
Lisa DcGracc
Chris &amp; Cindi Dcvich
Harriett Dixon
Bradly &amp; Chikako Doane
C.R. Duffic Jr. 71 &amp; Janet Duffic
Robert &amp; Jeannette Durst
Bart Eberwein
Michael &amp; Melissa Eshelman
Kathryn Findlay 90
Don &amp; Marta Furman
Michael Gerhards
&amp; Rebecca Martin-Gerhards
Les Godowski Sr Ellen Bcilstein
Joe &amp; Hannah Graziano
Jack &amp; Dannt Greene
Kris &amp; Steve Gregg
Cam Groner &amp; Nancy Cowgill
Atul &amp; Banita Gupta
Steve &amp; Karen Haas
Charles Sr Gwen Hahn
John &amp; Carol Hamilton
Chip &amp; Molly Harris
Sandy &amp; Jeri Haskins
Vcm &amp; Leslie Hcc
Jim &amp; Carol Hibbs
Charmian Kolar Hilleary '42
Sr Langdon Hilleary
Mark Sr Barbara Hochgcsang
OJ Sr Diane Hubbell
Kathryn Reynolds Janssen '71
&amp; Laurence Janssen
Jeff Sr Krissy Johnson
Michael Sr Darlene Kaempf
David Kaplin &amp; Ccrinda Survant
Pat &amp; Sam Karamanos
Patricia Kelley ’55
Andrew Klingensmith Sr Carol Durham
August Sr Malle Kollom
28

Scan Kuni '81
Elizabeth &amp; Ted Lamm
Dr. &amp; Mrs. Joong Kic Lee
Fernando &amp; Dolores Leon
Liza Lillcy '74
Mr. Hoon Lim &amp; Ms. Sook Kim
Calvin &amp; Justina Lin
Nhan &amp; Thalia Luong
Tom Marshall &amp; Carol Joseph
Atsuko Matsuyama
Tom &amp;r Karen McClung
Craig McClure
Katherine McCoy
lan &amp; Sarah McDonald
Robert Neuberger &amp;r Mar)' Ann McDowell
Mentor Graphics Foundation
Merrill Lynch &amp; Co.
Roger &amp; Jodcc Midura
John &amp; Bonnie Moorhead
Don &amp;r Alicia Morissctlc
Chuck &amp; Linda Morrow
Dusan Mosscrop Susan Ccssor
• Dzung Nguyen &amp; Merry Tran
Margie Nielsen
Chris &amp; Kelly Palmedo
Wu-Yi Peng &amp; Cathy Lee
Jay &amp; Debra Platt
Dilip &amp; Urmila Ratnam
Carl Riddick &amp;r Man' O'Hcarn
| JeffRippey
I Mitsuru &amp; Sayumi Sato
I Tom &amp;r Jennifer Saunders
i Tad &amp; Georgia Savinar
i Dave Sebastian
&amp; Sharon Anderson-Sebastian
Jeff &amp;r Amy Sills
Steve Slovic &lt;Sz Rhonda Schwartz
Frances &amp; Currin Snipes
j Abhi &amp; Linda Tahvalkar
j Larry &amp; Kim Teufel
I The May Dept. Stores Co. Foundation
Peter &amp; Laurie Turney
C. Norman Turrill &amp; Joanna M. Cain
Yasasuda &amp;r Yoshiko Uechi
United Way of the Columbia Willamette
Hans &amp; Giscla Walitzki
Frank &amp; Jane Warren
Kevin &amp; Kimberly White
John &amp; Kathy Wicst
Hugh &amp; Viola Williams
Scon &amp; Jaci Wilson
Don &amp; Stephanie Wirfs

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Anniversary Rose Club
Gifts of $300 to $499
The Rev. Val Ambrose
Sanket &amp; Rachita Atal
Dennis Sr Lynn Baker
Jonathan Sr Bonnie Barg
Charles Bassford &amp; Yen Pham-Bassford
Charles BcJIvillc &amp; Ellie Tatum
Atul Sr Ruchi Bhargava
Yan Sr Natalya Borodovsky
Vadin Bourenin Sr Lauri Newton
Morris &amp; Elizabeth Button
Mr. Dae Soo Choi &amp; Ms. Joyce Shin
Barr&gt;' Daigle ’80
Sr Bronwen Edwards-Denney
Bill Davenport Sr Janet Maurer
Duane Sr Prudence Denney
Chris Sr Judy Dem
Kathleen Dodds
Ashesh Sr Raju Doshi
Marc Fcldcsman Sr Susan Wolf
Friends of OES Library
Tomoko Kyuzaki Fukai ’91 Sr Reiji Fukai
Tony &amp; Julie Furnary
Barbara &amp; Michael Gaines

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Stu &amp; Gail Goossen
Bob &amp; Suzanne Greenberg
Kent &amp; JoAnne Grewe
George &amp; Betsy Grimes
Ashwani Gupta &amp; Annalisa Ferguson
John Hall '80 &amp;r Julia Hall
Jeff Shyla Hanson
Robert &amp; Alana Hill
Gar)’ &amp; Ruth Hiraki
BobJohnson
Hal Terry Kennel
Douglas Kezeor 78 &amp; Patricia Kczcor
Jansi &amp; Chris King
Susan Krohn Koc 78 &amp; Richard Koc
Charlie &amp; Kristi Kuchs
Marietta Lind Kuykendall ’55
&amp; Glen Kuykendall
Tsutomu &amp; Yukic Kyuzaki
Paul &amp; Karen Lakin
Patrick &amp; Annette Lee
Nels Lewis &amp; Debbie Olds-Lcwis
Shari Little '69
Steven Lovett &amp; Constance Sullivan
Omid &amp; Nikki Meshkin
Rick &amp; Elaine Millar
Malt Miller
Sarah Collins Milliken ’68
&amp; William Milliken
John Sr Lynne Morrison
Eric &amp; Ying Multancn
Srinivasa Nagalla &amp; Sandhya Koppula
Jin &amp;Julicann Park
Peninsula Community Foundation
Karl Sr Cindy Plummer
Jim Sr Terry Putnam
Chuck Reynolds ’69 Sr Chris Reynolds
Joe Robertson
Ed Sr Nancy Rubovits
Hiroshi Sr Masami Saitoh
Jim &amp; Jane Sassalos
Charles Sr Eliza Schaeffer
The Rev. Stephen Sr Ann Schneider
Donald Sr Catherine Shaw

OES AUTUMN 2002

Steve Smith &amp; Colleen Connolly
Nick &amp;: Lyn Spitz
Doug &amp; Frey Stearns
K7 &amp;r Nandini Tiruvallur
Mike &amp; Alainc Warfield
Richard Wcstlund ‘69 &amp; Jana Wcsilund
David Wilson &amp; Nancy Greene

Founders Club
Gifts of $150 to $299
Jasmin &amp; Amra Ajanovic
Philip &amp;r Babctic Allen
Norma Fisher Atkins ’57
Mark Bajorek &amp; Susan Palmiicr
Ronald Benton Kim Jensen
John &amp; Dace Berzins
John Bissonncuc &amp; Virginia Smith
Sally Stevens Bjerklie '61 &amp; James Bjcrklic
Pamela Cornell Bless ‘83 &amp; Michael Bless
Jack Boon '69
Glenn &amp; Molly Brack
Audra Braun '41
Paul &amp; Cindy Bukcr
Leslie Stevenson Campbell ’68
&amp; Douglas Campbell
Sam Campbell &amp; Dee Madden ’80
Cliff &amp; Sally Canepa
Chris Carlson &amp; Sanae Ota
Robert Carson &amp; Diane Polscer
Bob &amp; Jan Cassidy
Kevin Cavanagh '82
Ron Narodc &amp; Sarah Cleveland
David Colton
Dorothy Conklin
John &amp; Anne Coulter
Harold &amp; Merry Demarest
Doug &amp; Sharlenc DesRochcrs
Scott Docneckc '84
David &amp; Wan Donaldson
William &amp; Carla Dorsey
Jamie Sr Jan Duckworth
Nora Dunning
Franklin Sr Bunny Dyer

�ANNUAL REPORT

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Al &amp; Carla Eisner
Lou &amp; Mama Elliott
Stanley &amp; Gigi Epstein
Craig &amp; Mar)' Foltz
Fred Ey &amp; Anne Keller
Mark &amp; Karla Fant
Louis Fernandez &amp; Linda Blakely
First Union Securities. Inc.
Jerry &amp; Sally Fish
Kyle F re res '94
William &amp; Lara Garrett
Maty Waite Garvey '89 Sr George Garvey
Kristine Gcbbic
Jay Gerard
Dwainc &amp; Betty Gipc
Dan &amp; Linda Gipc
Tom &amp; Joyce Gordon
Joel &amp; Eeva Gray
Diana Barnard Gray '54
Brian &amp; Gina Grccncn
Robert &amp; Sybil Grissom
John &amp; Susie Gundle
Amy Hacssler
Patricia Bcndshadlcr Hamilton '44
Sr John Owings
David Hassin &amp; Mary McDonald-Lewis
Charlie &amp; Kathy Haugh
Lcs &amp; Pat Hclgcson
Rosa &amp; Del Hemphill
Tom &amp; Judi Hcnklc
William &amp; Cindy Hergenhan
Henry &amp; Sharon Hewitt
Margaret McKenzie Himoff '63
&amp; James Himoff
Barbara Freeman liinman '49
Stephen Hiroshige &amp; Belinda Calabia
Warren Hirsch &amp; Katharine Loggan
Gary &amp; Ericka Hoffman
Bruce &amp; Sherrie Holliday
Robert &amp; Mar)» Holmstrom
Habib &amp; Faezeh Homayoun
Lyall &amp; Vicki Howell
Paula Hunger

| Martin Vlach
Gregory &amp; Carol Swcigcrt
Ed &amp; Aurelia Hunt
Dan Roscnhousc Sr Pam Waidman
Target
Judd &amp; Kristen Janes
Gordon Sr Nancy Whitehead
Mr. &amp; Mrs. Morton Thalhimer Jr.
John &amp; Clare Jaramillo
Tom Wilson Sr Dicdre Cain
Anne Thanhouscr
Sue Jensen
Allen &amp; Rebecca Wirfs-Brock
Stephen &amp; Carole Thomas
Jancllc Johnson Jimerson 76
Mark Workman ’69 &amp; Leslie Workman
Thomas Thornton
&amp; Lee Jimerson
I
Matti &amp; Najla Totonchy
Mark &amp; Alice Kcmball
j Class of 2003
Helen Kirschner Townes ’85
Mr. Jacwook Kim
Sr John Townes
&amp; Mrs. Misook Hwang Kim
Doug Baldwin &amp; Jane Unger
Alice Kimball Trcwhclla '41
I Dulany Bennett
Mr. &amp; Mrs. Jac Kim
&amp; Charles Trcwhclla
Doug Sr Carole King
Karen &amp; Jeffre)' Carrithers
I Jon &amp; Barbara von Behren
The Kiplingcr Foundation
Trina Chen
Paul &amp; Jonalyn Wallace
William &amp; Maty Klingensmilh
Omer Ertur St Kathleen Palmer
Eric Walters &amp; Sonia Sachdcv
Anneliese Knapp
John &amp; Sylvette Esbenshade
Steven &amp; Elizabeth Warnckc
Adam Kobos '91
Paul Farago
James Weber 74
Milton Kokubun St Wen-Lin Wang
Grant &amp; Maty Ellen Farr
David Weiss &amp; Gail Monahan
Paul &amp; Lynnsly Kollar
Ted &amp; Cindy Gaty
Bill Whitsell '81 &amp; Wendy Whitscll
Kerry &amp; Carrie Krause
Michelinc &amp; Raymond Ghattas
Allen St Rebecca Williams
Wally &amp; Cathy Krieger
Donna Gokcay
Tara Sorensen Witt '92 &amp; Troy Wilt
Mar)' Charlton Labadic ‘49
George &amp; Marsha Goodman
James Wolfston &amp; Katharine Ridley
Maty &amp; Bob Laird
Greg &amp; Michele Goodwin
Mr. Michael Wray
Nancy Walden Larsen ’58
Stu &amp; Gail Goossen
Mr. &amp; Mrs. Tatsuro Yada
Joan Lasscllc '64 &amp; Stanley Shell
Sandy &amp; Jeri Haskins
Yvonne Yamanaka '02
Richard Lazar
Robert &amp; Susan Hatfield
Mrs. Anna York
Jeffrey &amp; Janet Leon
Gail Hawkins
Robert Licbman &amp; Elaine Friedman
Maty Helikson
Mr. &amp; Mrs. Dwight Lindholm
Mr. Jong Koo Huh &amp; Ms. Hyemin Lee
Bob &amp; Leigh Linncll
Charlie &amp; Kristi Kuchs
Richard &amp; Amy Linvillc
Bill &amp; Monica Kwitman
John N. Longficld
Mr. Jong Min Lee &amp; Mrs. Eun Hwan Kim
ex -———.
Michael Loy &amp; Bette Yada
Warren Hirsch &amp; Kate Loggan
Evelyn Zehntbaucr Lundgren ’32
Elisabeth &amp; Peter Lyon
Steve &amp; Natalie Maizels
The following individuals have made
Beth Mason &amp; Michael Willson
Bill &amp; Anne Malloch
Paul Norman &amp; Sandra S. Miles
gifts to our Annual Fund betweenJuly l,
Kenneth &amp; Deborah Marsh
Greg &amp; Diane Morgan
2001 andJune 30,2002
Pam &amp; Bob Matheson
Muthoni Mugo
David &amp; Eileen McFall
Craig Murphy &amp; Julie Frantz
PARENT GIVING
Tom &amp; Cammic MeGuirk
Angie Nguyen
Class of 2002
Ajay &amp; Sona Melira
Chris &amp; Kelley Platt
Gary &amp; Beverly Melon
Jamey &amp; Darlene Potter
Jane &amp; Jim Adams
Larry &amp; Carolyn Miller
Chuck Reynolds ’69 &amp; Chris Reynolds
i John Sr Dace Berzins
Rob &amp; Sally Miller
Mark Rosenberg &amp; Ilcne Safyan
Ding &amp; Patsy Chan
Eileen Mueller
Hiroshi &amp; Masami Saitoh
Mr.Jui Mou Cheng
Robert Mueller
Paul Sauer
&amp; Mrs. Hsiu-Man Chcng-Chcn
Ralph &amp; Susan Nelson
Manu &amp; Anurcc Sitachiu
Gary &amp; Laurie Crossman
Natalie Giustina Newlove ’65
Ron &amp; Marydcc Sklar
Gar)’ &amp; Martha Curry
&amp; Robin Newlove
Dave &amp; Ann Taylor
Ken &amp; Leslie Dale
Paul Northrop &amp; Kelly Northrop-Taylor
Ned Thanhouser
Doug &amp; Sharlcnc DcsRochcrs
Jim O'Donnell '69 &amp; Mariette O'Donnell
Susan Thayer Farago
Steve &amp; Nancy Eylcr
Joe &amp; Suzic Opsahl
Brian Thomas
Jerry &amp; Sally Fish
Brian &amp; Kimberly Orahood
Matti &amp; Najla Totonchy
Angela Hancock
Oregon Jewish Community Foundation
Carlene &amp; Andy Traverso
Fritz &amp; Maggie Hayes
David &amp; Judy Osgood
C. Norman &amp; Joanna Turrill
Mr. &amp; Mrs. Mikio Ito
Kirk Sr Jill Parker
Kris Van Hatcher 70 &amp; Karen Van Hatcher
Michael &amp; Darlene Kaempf
Mr. &amp; Mrs. Chavalit Pattamanuch
Jon &amp; Barbara von Behren
Jim &amp; Leslie Kcmpscll
Mark &amp; Rosanne Perry
Hans &amp; Giscla Walitzki
Mr. Jacwook Kim
Paul &amp; Pamela Petroff
Richard Wcstlund ’69 &amp; Jana Wcstlund
&amp; Mrs. Misook Hwang Kim
PGSrE National Energy Group
John &amp; Kathy Wicst
Jansi &amp; Chris King
Holly Pittman '66
Ms. Kyung Ha Yoon
Andrew &amp; Carol Klingensmilh
David &amp; Sue Porter
Patricia &amp; Jack LeRoy
Jamey Sr Darlene Potter
Class of 2004
Richard Sr Amy Linvillc
Frank &amp; Carol Powers
Elisabeth &amp; Peter Lyon
Stark Sr Sheila Ackerman
Ed &amp; Nancy Rochelle
David &amp; Senitila McKinley
Herman Asarnow Sr Susan Baillci
Tony Russo &amp; Cissy Lilvin
Larry Sr Carolyn Miller
Robert Sr Susan Aughenbaugh
Duncan Sanderson
Ralph &amp; Susan Nelson
George Sr Joy Bean
Stephen Schcrr &amp; Kathleen McCarthy
Wu-Yi Peng &amp; Cathy Lee
Yan Sr Natalya Borodovsky
Robert &amp; Car&gt;- Schcrzcr
Bob Sr Elena Peterson
Glenn St Molly Brack
Paul Schlcsingcr 70 &amp; Fern Schlesinger
Frank St Carol Powers
Roy Sr Nancy Breen
Steve Sr Jan Schmidt
Nasrin Sr Maty Rahatzad
Sharon Sr Joe Cade
Edward Schuman &amp; Carole Quick
Bill St Carolyn Saiget
Harvey Sr Sylvie Carp
Patsy &amp; Miles Seeley
David Sr Judy Schiff
Corbet St Myra Clark
Chris &amp; Sarah Shaver
Donald Sr Guhcrinc Shaw
Chris Cooper
Robert Smith 77 &amp; Lianc Smith
Susan Shortridge
Paul Cooper
Marcia Sparling &amp; Michael Coppock
Doug Sr Frey Stearns
John Sr Anne Coulter
Paul Kcown &amp; Clyte Spcidcl
Karen Steingart
Bill Davenport Sr Janet Maurer
Craig &amp; Sally Slack
Mr. Sr Mrs. Yasusada Ucchi
Bob Sr Pam Dreisin
David Sr Libel Sirciff
Lucille Van Houten
Pamela Georges
Bob Sweeney
Irene Vlach
Jay Gerard

ANNUAL FUND

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AnriUAL REPORT

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Bob dr Suzanne Greenberg
Shelley Hanccy
Lcs &amp; Pat Hclgcson
Milind &amp; Parizad Karnik
Doug &amp; Carole King
Mariann Koop-McMahon
&amp; Hale McMahon
Cabin &amp; Justina Lin
Eric &amp; Joan Lowe
Roger &amp; Jodee Midura
Marlin &amp; Sally Morris
Dana Mosher Lewis &amp; Tom Lewis
Dr. Young Sup Park &amp; Dr. Mi Ja Lee
Mark &amp; Rosanne Perry
Paul &amp; Pamela Petroff
Joanna Picchi
Bill &amp; Carolyn Saiget
Dr. Wan Chul Sco &amp; Mrs. Jae Ran Ko
Deborah &amp; Robert Shorten
Carla &amp;r Inoccncio Sosanya
Gregor)- &amp; Carol Sweigert
Jamie Dickey &amp; Ross Ungcrlcider
Seckin &amp; Tuba Unlu
Nancy &amp; Doug Van Allen
Jeff &amp; Lynn Wolfstonc
Masatoshi &amp; Susan Yamanaka
Yusuke &amp; Shigemi Yoshizawa

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Class of 2005
Ellen &amp; Michael Adams
Jane dr Jim Adams
Jasmin &amp; Amra Ajanovic
Peter Auseklis
Nora Auseklis
Mr. Chang Man Bae dr Ms. Soon Keun Kim
Ajay &amp; Shila Bhatt
Steve &amp; Bonnie Brennan
Julie Cudahy &amp; David Richardson
Chris &amp; Judy Dem
Deborah Draper
Amy Haesslcr
Lynda &amp; David Hartzell
Fritz &amp; Maggie Hayes
Mar)’ Helikson
John &amp; Marty Kuhr
Ed &amp; Margaret Kushner
Mr. Chun-Yo Lai &amp; Mrs. Wei-Tzu Lin
Paul dr Karen Lakin
Prof. Man-Woo Lee
dr Mrs. Young-Mee Bang
Robert Licbman dr Elaine Friedman
Mr. Hoon Lim dr Ms. Sook Kim
C. Allen Logan
James &amp; Denise Lundbladc
Mai-Lill Magi
Rein Magi
Brian dr Lisa Marsh
Atsuko Matsuyama
Kathleen McFall
John dr Bonnie Moorhead
Michael Morey &amp; Leslie Mackenzie
Greg dr Diane Morgan
Michael dr Barbara Moser
Robert Mueller
Eileen Mueller
Angie Nguyen
D.K. dr Kyeong-Hcc Park
David dr Sue Porter
Susan dr Tom Robinson
Ed dr Nancy Rochelle
Tom &amp; Jennifer Saunders
Tad dr Georgia Savinar
Stephen dr Kathleen Schcrr
Robert dr Cary Schcrzer
Steve dr Colleen Smith
B.K. dr Kumud Srinivasan
John dr Carol Stull
Hiloshi dr Kaoru Tani
30

■

■

Anne Thanhouscr
Ned Thanhouscr
Brian Thomas
Mr. C. Norman Turrill
&amp; Dr. Joanna M. Cain
Hans &amp; Giscla Walilzki
Steven &amp; Elizabeth Wamckc

i

|
i
;

Class of 2006
Mark Ace
Keith &amp; Sharon Barnes
Jim &amp; Linda Blinkhorn
Steve dr Bonnie Brennan
Richard &amp; Nancy Chapman
John &amp; Anne Coulter
Bill Davenport &amp; Janet Maurer
John dr Ulla Drcll
Brian Foulkcs &amp; Fernanda D’Agostino
Cam Groncr &amp; Nancy Cow’gill
Steve &amp; Karen Haas
Charles &amp; Gwen Hahn
Gar)’ &amp; Ericka Hoffman
Tanja Vasiljcvic Horvat 74 &amp; Nino Horvai
Henry Kaplan &amp; Marni Glick
David Kaplin &amp; Cerinda Survant
Paul Kaptur &amp; Laura Hope
Arif &amp; Faiza Karcem
;
Milind &amp; Parizad Karnik
;
Paul &amp; Karen Lakin
I
John &amp; Priscilla Longfield
Alee &amp; Laurie Macmillan
Kenneth &amp; Deborah Marsh
Tom &amp; Carol Marshall
Steven dr Anita Mitchell
Helene Phillips
Daniel Reisberg &amp; Friderike Heucr
Jeff Rippey
i
Kathryn Rippey
Tim &amp; Jan Rippey
Bill &amp; Carolyn Saiget
Jim &amp; Jane Sassalos

Michael &amp; Dorothy Schock
Frances &amp; Currin Snipes
Ernie &amp; Erika Staley
David &amp; Libel Streiff
David &amp; Nancy TenHulzen
Larry &amp; Kim Teufel
Jamie Dickey dr Ross Ungcrlcider
Kris Van Hatcher 70 &amp; Karen Van Hatcher j
Jon dr Barbara von Behren
!
!
! Martha &amp; Mark Warrington
Morris Wcstlund 75 &amp; Paula Westlund |
John &amp; Kathy Wiest
Mr. Peter Wolochow dr Ms. Joanne Kahn !
Mark Workman ’69 &amp; Leslie Workman i
Joe &amp; Lyn Zenisek
Class of 2007
Annemaric Carlson
Bob &amp; Jan Cassidy
John &amp; Deborah Chessar
Kevin dr Grace Cheung
Paul Cooper
Chris Cooper
Chris dr Judy Dem
Chris dr Cindi Dcvich
Wayne dr Julie Drinkward
Matt dr Ella Essieh
Steve dr Nancy Eyler
Brad dr Kami Fraley
Deborah Garvey
Dan dr Linda Gipe
Scott dr Sarah Grewc
Steve dr Karen Haas
Sandy dr Jeri Haskins
Jim dr Carol Hibbs
Kevin dr Willcmijn Ilcisin
John dr Jill Inskeep

Craig &amp; Lynne Johnston
Scan Kuni ’81
Ed &amp; Margaret Kushner
Richard Lazar
Greg &amp; Amy Lowes
Mai-Lill Magi
Rein Magi
Brian &amp; Lisa Marsh
Beth Mason &amp; Michael Willson
Mike McArthur-Phillips
Greg McCoy
Katherine McCoy
Cindy McEnroe dr Joe Colctto
Michael Morey &amp; Leslie Mackenzie
John &amp; Lynne Morrison
Chuck &amp; Linda Morrow
Michael Moser &amp; Barbara Ports
Paul dr Mat)- Oldshuc
Kirk &amp; Jill Parker
Chris &amp; Kelley Platt
Jim dr Tcrr&gt;’ Putnam
Tim &amp; Jan Rippey
Robert &amp; Jill Schcer
Patsy &amp; Miles Seeley
Mike &amp; Janice Shainsky
Nick &amp; Lyn Spitz
Todd &amp; Carrie Stucky
Bob Sweeney
Gregor)’ &amp; Carol Sweigert
Robert &amp; Elizabeth Tsao
Jill Welsh
Steve &amp; Patty Williams
Class of 2008
Philip Allen &amp; Babette Faris
Amber Altman &amp; Monica Storey
Gene &amp; Toni Allman
Stan &amp; Dixie Bland
Cliff &amp; Sally Canepa
Don &amp; Brenda Chambers
Richard &amp; Nancy Chapman
David Colton
Julie Cudahy &amp; David Richardson
Rich &amp; Leah Davidson
Cameron Denney &amp; Ncylc Hunter
David &amp; Wan Donaldson
Steve &amp; Tina Donovan
Tina Enberg
William &amp; Lara Garrett
Deborah Garvey
Les &amp; Ellen Godowski
Tom &amp; Joyce Gordon
Alex &amp; Karen Grauert
Ashwani Gupta &amp; Annalisa Ferguson
Amy Haesslcr
Charles &amp; Gwen Hahn
Robert &amp; Alana Hill
Gar)’ &amp; Ericka Hoffman
Lyall &amp; Vicki Howell
BobJohnson
Clarice Johnston
Jim &amp; Leslie Kcmpscll
Cindy &amp; Hollis Knowles
Milton Kokubun &amp; Wen-Lin Wang
Kerr)’ &amp; Carrie Krause
Paul &amp; Karen Lakin
Patrick &amp; Annette Lee
Tom MeGuirk &amp; Cammic Brim
Rick dr Elaine Millar
John dr Lynne Morrison
Thomas Page dr Catherine Riffc
Paul dr Pamela Petroff
Jay dr Debra Platt
Benjamin Priest dr Nancy Hclmsworth
Lee Pritchard
Jeff Rippey
Kathryn Rippey
Tony Russo dr Cissy Litvin

Plul VanderWccle 6? Joan Snyder
Peter dr Michelle Trumbo
Peter &amp; Laurie Turney
Ann dr Bill von Ofenheim
Kent Wadsworth dr Twila Coleman
Tyrone &amp; Bonnie Wei
Steve &amp; Patty Williams
Jeff &amp; Lynn Wolfstonc
Mr. Peter Wolochow &amp; Ms. Joanne Kahn
Class of 2009
Philip &amp; Shannon Alexander
Charlie &amp; Kathy Allcock
Jonathan &amp; Bonnie Barg
Keith &amp; Sharon Barnes
Charles Bcllvillc &amp; Ellic Tatum
Narjala &amp; Shanda Bhasker
Jim &amp; Linda Blinkhorn
Matt &amp; Sheila Casimo
Brian dr Nadine Coushay
Kathleen Dodds
Steve &amp; Tina Donovan
Matt &amp; Ella Essich
Matt &amp; Diane Evans
Fred Ey &amp; Anne Keller
Brad &amp; Kami Fraley
Tony &amp; Julie Fumary
Raj dr Shelly Garg
Kent &amp; JoAnne Grewc
Jack Griffith dr Abigail Buenafe
Cam Groncr &amp; Nancy Cowgill
Atul &amp; Banita Gupta
David Hassin &amp; Mar)' McDonald-Lewis
Charlie &amp; Kathy Haugh
Fritz dr Maggie Hayes
Ed &amp; Edmay Honeycutt
Joe dr Trish Howell
Ken dr Karen Janoff
Mariann Koop-McMahon &amp; Hale McMahon
Jeffrey &amp; Janet Leon
Michael Loy &amp; Bette Yada

,
OES AUTUMN 2002

�ANNUAL REPORT

Nhan &amp; Thalia Luong
Steve &amp; Natalie Maizcls
Matt Miller
Steven &amp; Anita Mitchell
Chuck &amp; Linda Morrow
Ingolf &amp; Peggy Noto
Mark Bajorck &amp; Susan Palmitcr
Kirk &amp; Jill Parker
Tom &amp; Liz Perkins
Jim &amp; Terry- Putnam
Robert Sr Jill Schccr
Michael &amp; Dorothy Schock
Karen &amp; Phil Seder
Jeff &amp; Amy Sills
Craig &amp; Sally Stack
Andy Sr Mihae Tallian
Abhi Sr Linda Talwalkar
Shoaib Tarccn &amp; Catherine Filgas
Allen &amp; Rebecca Williams
David Wilson &amp; Nancy Greene
Don &amp; Stephanie Wirfs
Class of 2010

;
:
!

|
i

Jonathan &amp; Bonnie Barg
Karsten Sr Stephanie Beckmann
Naijala Sr Shanda Bhaskcr
Debra Sr Neal Bridgncll
Mark Sr Marianne Brooks
Deborah Buckmastcr
Paul Sr Cindy Bukcr
Cliff Sr Sally Cancpa
Ken Sr Pam Carty
Ron Narodc Sr Sarah Cleveland
Fred Sr Peg Edcra
Don Sr Marta Furman
Michael Gcrhards
Sr Rebecca Martin-Gcrhards
Stephen Sr Clare Gracf
Alex Sr Karen Graucrt
Joel Sr Eeva Gray
Jack Sr Dannc' Greene
John Sr Susie Gundlc

Julie Hallcnbcck &amp; Carla Heckrodt
Kevin &amp; Willcmijn Ucisin
Jiou-Pahn &amp; Suh-Fcn Lee
Kenneth &amp; Deborah Marsh
Tom &amp; Karen McClung
Robert Ncubcrgcr &amp; Mary Ann McDowell
Eric &amp; Ying Multancn
Srinivasa &amp; Sandhya Nagalla
Paul Northrop &amp; Kelly Northrop-Taylor
Joe &amp; Suzie Opsahl
Kinh &amp; Ngan-Lien Pham
Jay &amp; Debra Platt
Peter &amp; Debra Pollard
Daniel Rcisbcrg &amp; Fridcrikc Hcuer
Duncan Sanderson
April Sanderson
Jeff &amp; Fern Sclvala
Phil VandcrWcclc &amp; Joan Snyder
Marcia Sparling &amp; Michael Coppock
Larry &amp; Kim Teufel
Terry &amp; Chcri Tolar
Peter &amp; Michelle Trumbo
Robert &amp; Elizabeth Tsao
Ann &amp; Bill von Ofcnhcim
John &amp; Fran von Schlcgell
Mike &amp; Alainc Warfield
David Weiss &amp; Gail Monahan
Jill Welsh
Morris Wcstlund 75 &amp; Paula Westlund
Doug &amp; Gwen Whitmore
James Wolfston &amp; Katharine Ridley

Class of 2011
Rick Sr Lisa Apau
Ying-l lao Sr Angela Au
Charles Bassford Sr Yen Phatn-Bassford
Brad Baughcr Sr Toni Holtnbcrg
Atul Sr Ruchi Bhargava
Chris Sr Yoshiko Cataldo
Don Sr Brenda Chambers
Suresh Sr Aruna Chinor
Hal Sr Kim Curtis

*

Cameron Denney Sr Ncylc Hunter
David &amp; Wan Donaldson
Marc Sr Susan Fcldcsman
Raj Sr Shelly Garg
Dan &amp; Linda Gipc
Brian &amp; Gina Grccnen
Kent &amp; JoAnnc Grewe
Ashwani Gupta &amp; Annalisa Ferguson
Mark &amp; Barbara Hochgcsang
Mark &amp; Lisa James
BobJohnson
Jeff &amp; Krissy Johnson
Craig &amp; Lynne Johnston
Hal Sr Terry' Kennel
Jay &amp; Ycon Kim
Simon &amp; Karen Lcvcar
Nels &amp; Debbie Lewis
Doug &amp; Corn Lindholm
Mike &amp; Cynthia Louaillier
Steve &amp; Constance Lovett
Nhan &amp; Thalia Luong
Ian &amp; Sarah McDonald
Dana Mosher Lewis &amp; Tom Lewis
Craig Murphy &amp; Julie Frantz
Chris &amp; Kelly Palmcdo
Mark &amp; Eileen Pilkenton
David Rumkcr &amp; Susan Phillips
Steve &amp; Jan Schmidt
Mike &amp; Janice Shamsky
Greg &amp; Roxanne Spccht
Tim &amp; Ann Stout
Shoaib Tarccn &amp; Catherine Filgas
Nagcndra &amp; Parimala Tirumali
Kathryn Underhill
Paul &amp; Jonalyn Wallace
John &amp; Kathy Wiest
Randhi Wilson
Class of 2012

Anonymous
Charles Bellvillc &amp; Ellic Tatum
Charlie &amp; Lyn Cameron
Bob &amp; Diane Carson
Chris &amp; Ann Davis
Bart Ebcrwcin
Stuart &amp; Susan Emmons
Mail &amp; Diane Evans
Louis Fernandez &amp; Linda Blakely
David Forman
Tony &amp; Julie Fumary
William &amp; Lara Garrett
Scott &amp; Sarah Grewe
Atul &amp; Banita Gupta
John Hall '80 &amp; Julia Hall
John &amp; Carol Hamilton
Jeff &amp; Shyla Hanson
Vem &amp; Leslie Hcc
Robert &amp; Alana Hill
Habib &amp; Faczch Homayoun
Judd &amp; Kristen Janes
John &amp; Clare Jaramillo
Debra Lazzarctli
Brian &amp; Betsy Leonard
Dennis &amp; Sandy Lcybold
Kathleen MacNaughton &amp; Jocelyn Somers
Bill Malloch &amp; Anne Lipsiiz Malloch
Scott &amp; Kathy Mary
Katherine McCoy
Greg McCoy
Eric &amp; Ying Multancn
Ingolf &amp; Peggy Noto
Krishnan Palaniswami &amp; Aniiha Krishnan
Mark Bajorck &amp; Susan Palmitcr
Karl &amp; Cindy Plummer
Valeric Rullman
Karen &amp; Phil Seder
Jeff &amp; Fern Selvala
Brett &amp; Julie Sheppard

Class of 2013
David &amp; Elke Abrams
Philip &amp; Shannon Alexander
Charlie &amp; Kathy Allcock
Dennis Sr Lynn Baker
Mary Boal
Robert Brisk &amp; Monica Mahoney
Ron Narodc &amp; Sarah Cleveland
Jim Dix &amp; Candace Gray
Bradly &amp; Chikako Doanc
William &amp; Carla Dorsey
Fred Ey &amp; Anne Keller
David Forman
Tony &amp; Julie Fumary
Joel &amp; Eeva Gray
Brian &amp; Gina Greenen
Jack Griffith &amp; Abigail Buenafe
John Hall '80 &amp; Julia Hall
Joe &amp; Trish Howell
James Huffman &amp; Leslie Spencer
Heidi Larkins Imayama '89
&amp; Takaaki Imayama
Jeff &amp; Krissy Johnson
Hal &amp; Terry’ Kennel
John &amp; Han Lee
Brian &amp; Betsy Leonard
Mike &amp; Cynthia Louaillier
Greg &amp; Amy Lowes
Dec Madden '80 &amp; Sam Campbell
Tom &amp; Michelle Matson
Craig McClure
Ajay &amp; Sona Mehra
Omid &amp; Nikki Meshkin
Brian &amp; Kimberly Orahood
Chris &amp; Kelly Palmedo
Kinh Pham &amp; Ngan-Lien Nguyen
Abhi &amp; Linda Talwalkar
Becky &amp; Day Tooley
Eric Walters &amp; Sonia Sachdcv
Kevin &amp; Kimberly White
Scott Sr Jaci Wilson
Jim &amp; Kassic Wolfston
Anita Wray
Class of 2014
Sanket &amp; Rachita Atal
Karsten &amp; Stephanie Beckmann
Tom &amp; Katie Bcrge
Vadin Bourcnin &amp; Lauri Newton
Steve &amp; Bonnie Brennan
Debra &amp; Neal Bridgncll
Chris Girlson &amp; Sanae Ota
Raymond &amp; Josic Cheng
DS &amp; Joyce Choi
Adnan &amp; Brenda Cobanoglu
Brian &amp; Nadine Coushay
Jay Crary &amp; Jennifer Hubbert
Hal Sr Kim Curtis
Barry Daigle *80 &amp; Bronwcn EdwardsDenney
Chris Sr Ann Davis
Ashesh Sr Raju Doshi
Jamie &amp; Jan Duckworth
A1 Sr Carla Eisner
Mark Sr Karla Fant
Brad Sr Kami Fraley
Bob Sr Carole Freitas

31

OES AUTUMN 2002

-

Alan Sr Diane Shiffer
Marcia Sparling &amp; Michael Coppock
B.K. Sr Kumud Srinivasan
Craig &amp; Sally Slack
K7 Sr Nandini Tiruvallur
Bill Whitsell '81 Sr Wendy Whiiscll
Jon &amp; Carol Willie
David Wilson Sr Nancy Greene
Anita Wray
Edmund Yuan &amp; Mindy Loebner

■

.

•

�ANNUAL REPORT
Sieve &amp; Pam Gram
Julie Hallcnbcck &amp; Carla Heckrodi
William &amp; Cindy Hergenhan
Gar)' &amp; Ruth Hiraki
Janelle Johnson Jimerson 76
&amp; Lee Jimerson
Mark &amp; Alice Kcmball
Mike &amp; Elizabeth Kortenhof
Dennis &amp; Sandy Lcybold
Bob &amp; Leigh Linncll
Scott &amp; Kathy Mary
Dusan Mosscrop &amp; Susan Cessor
Rock)' &amp; Dcsirea Muraoka
Dzung &amp; Merr)’ Nguyen
Margie Nielsen
Keith Packard &amp;r Laura Nepveu
Jin &amp; Julieann Park
Dilip &amp;r Urmila Ratnam
Paula Rhodes
Girl Riddick &amp; Mar)’ O Heam
Jerry &amp; Ten Rosette
Steve Slovic &amp; Rhonda Schwartz
Henry Stevens 79 &amp; Kim Stevens
Mike Stoll
Todd Ulmer &amp; Clare Rathbone
Mike &amp; Alaine Warfield
Bill Whitsell '81 &amp; Wendy Whitsell
Edmund Yuan &amp; Mindy Loebner
Christopher Zimmerman &amp;r Emily Burch

I
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| I

i
i
{

!

Class of 2015

?:

Anonymous
Ying-Hao &amp; Angela Au
Vadin Bourenin &amp; Lauri Newton
Robert Brisk &amp; Monica Mahoney
Paul &amp; Cindy Buker
Peter Chang &amp; Jennifer Xia
Jim &amp; Stephanie Hcyndcrickx
Stephen Hiroshige &amp; Belinda Calabia
James Huffman &amp; Leslie Spencer
David Kaplin &amp; Cerinda Survant
Doug &amp;r Corri Lindholm
Ann Highet Liss '82 &amp; Jon Liss
Don &amp; Alicia Morisscite
Dave Sebastian
&amp; Sharon Anderson-Sebastian
Chris &amp; Sarah Shaver
Allen &amp; Susan Shelby
Steven &amp; Jackie Thomas
Ishwar &amp; Rachna Uttamchandani
Ed &amp; Peggy Vcntham
Tim &amp; Carol Zuckert

.
\

1936

Margaret Smith Dietrich
1937

Nancy Stolte Roscnfcld
1939
Betty Kirk Duncan
1941

Alice Kimball Trcwhclla
1942

Charmian Kolar Hillcary
1943

Mar)- Scrruys Alfontc
Sylvia Thomas Boydston
Jean Ainslie Kalahan
1944

Elizabeth Parker Belles
Patricia Bcndshadler Hamilton
Gloria Jokstad Jones
1945

Patricia Walker Ackerman
Chiane Gcrow Kathrens
Susan Teague Lake
Catherine McRae Thompson
1946

Barbara Hcnton Marontate
1948

Ann Adams Davis
1949
Gloria Spencer Crowson
Bonnie Dunbar Hahn
Barbara J. Hinman
Mar)' Charlton Labadic
Amaryllis Lilies Powell
1950
Diane Dawson Schulz
1951

Marilyn Bernstein Fulop
Ann Butterfield Hayes
1952

Sally H. Cohn
1953

Yvonne Wright Johnson
1954

Merrily Pittman Hansen
Eleanor Wcincl
1963

Franccl Hill Becker
Margaret McKenzie Himoff
Nan Butler Perron

1965

1943

Ellen Wheeler Guest
Heidi Bildsoc Hansen
Lillian Eaton Kusick
Natalie Giustina Ncwlovc

Dorothea Thomas Guynup

1966

Jemison Cain
Patricia Kelley
Marietta Lind Kuykendall
Virginia Euwer Wolff

Sheila Malcy Bates
Katherine Karafotias
Anionctie Lehman
Elizabeth Marsh
Carolyn Morris Matney
Holly Pittman

1956
Susan Dodge Moore

1967

Evelyn Zehntbaucr Lundgrcn
1933

Doreen Plympton Strong
Frances Watzek Warren
1934

Elizabeth Watkins Jorgensen
Elizabeth Pownall Swindells
Ruth Simmonds Tunturi
1935

Lillian Brooke Austin
Geraldine Hanny Sargent

1957
Norma Fisher Atkins
Margaret Keiter Lapic
1958

Nancy Walden Larsen
1959
Alice Harrington Davino
1960

Carol Pope Carney
Judy Carson Kauffman

Carolyn McKee Gardner
Rebecca Reynolds
1968

BISHOP DAGWELL HALL
1968

Nicholas Peachy
1969
Jack Boon
Hart)’ O’Donnell
Charles Reynolds
Richard Wcstlund
Mark Workman

I

!
:

1970

Leslie Stevenson Campbell
Marcy Drain Jordan
Sarah Collins Millikcn
Mia Hcrvin Moore
Barbara Pond Scott

Scott Boguc
Paul R. Schlcsingcr
Kris Van Hatcher

1969
Sharon Little

1972
Stephen Cuffcl
Frederick Ellis Jr.

1971

.

1947

Joanne Miller Lillcy

1971

Cornelius R. Duffie Jr.

Kathryn Reynolds Janssen

1961

Sally Stevens Bjerklie
| Mary Dobson
32

Frances Robertson Mieschcr
1941

1955

1932

1940

Audra Braun
Helen Richards Schafer

ST. HELENS HALL

1930
Lela Coe Meyer
Helen Malarkey Thompson

Elizabeth Little

1964

Diana Barnard Gray

Helen Abbott

1935

Joan Lasscllc
Nancy Reynolds

ALUMNI GIVING
1926

JUNIOR COLLEGE

1972

Constance Ridgway Thompson

:
\

OES AUTUMN 2002

�ANNUAL REPORT
Susan Krohn Koc
Kim Ritter
1979
Norma Dulin
Maggie Grocning
Robert S. Holden
Kevin P. Kraft
R.E. Richardson
Henry Stevens
Elizabeth Laun Ursin
1980
Carrie Cool
P. Beresford Daigle
Elizabeth Draper
John Hall
Dee Madden
! 1981
Anna L. Fear
Drue Fergison
Scan Kuni
i Michelle Fromm Massic
Benjamin Sawyer
William Whitscll Jr.
1982
Kevin Cavanagh
Dawn Drew Dufort
| Carolcc A. Larsen
| Ann Highet Liss

OREGON EPISCOPAL SCHOOL
1973
Martha Bullwinklc Dorrcll
Drew Ercnscl
James Mosher
1974
Barbara Babson
Brent B. Ercnscl
Tanja Vasiljevic Horvat
Liza J. Lillcy
Laura Maeda
Max Miller Jr.
Tamara Sclfridgc Musser
Karen Noack
Osa Arnold Schultz
Autumn Alexander Skeen
James Weber
1975
Margaret Rogers Furlong
Barbara Bolton Hopewell
Ellen Montague
Christian Seaborn
Morris Wcsilund
Nancy Woodworth Young
1976
Anonymous
Janclle Johnson Jimerson
Laurie Marble
Kathy Allen Ormseth
Lenhart Stevens
Rick Zurow
1977
Elizabeth Grimes Hanenkrat
Robert Smith
Susanna Dant Soper
Tracy Wong
1978
Estelle Kelley
Douglas Kczcor

1983
Pamela Cornell Bless
1 Christian Boatsman
Adrienne L. Green
Jennifer Kirkman
1984
Marci Lematta Abel
Scott Docncckc
Thomas Hayes

Provash Budden
Kathryn Findlay
Stephen Gregg
Daniel Laun
Ashlcigh Asaph O’Brien
Philip Polsky
Valerie Harriman Warren
Kar-Yee Wu
1991
Ian Johnston
Tomoko Kyuzaki Fukai
Adam Kobos
Sarah Bcchcn Raymond
Clair Clark Wiles
1992
Courtney Brown
Tara Sorensen Witt
1993
Kevin Holliday
Tom Tewksbury
1994
Todd Crawford
Kyle Frcrcs
Margaret Spring
1995
Jose Calderon
Daniel Drinkward
John Harwood
Larisa Meisenheimer
Andrea Orfanakis
1996
Galena Kline
Carl Russell
1997
Jonathan Kowolik
Eric Wittmaycr

1985
Daniel D. Drew
Jennifer Gentry
James Isaak
j Helen Kirschncr Townes

1999
Callic Souther

| 1986
Tammy Brooks
Elizabeth Highet Green
Deborah Rath Kennison
Lisa Laufenberg Luna

2001
Bennett Cohen
Elizabeth Kuto

1987
Chelsea Emery
Chall Fry
Kate A. Kcncmcr
Aimee Froom Levy-Thiebaut
Theresa Webster
1988
Ayden Adler
Marilyn Drinkward
Heather Harrison McKinney
Evan H. Roberts
Lance D. Steinberg
1989
Danicla Brod
Andy Duggan
Amy Higgins Fleming
Mary Waite Garvey
Heidi Larkins Imayama
David Russell
Susie Sotka
Margaret Nichols Stedman
1990
Russel R. Bcutlcr

Marianna Crawford
Gary Crossman
Candelaria Davis
Lisa DcGracc
The Rev. Michael Devenney
Cynthia Doran
Pam Dreisin
Marilyn Drinkward '88
Sharon Eder
Karen Fink
Pat Freeman
Michcline Ghattas
Sidney Gold
David Goodman-Farley
Joel Gray
Nancy Gray
Angela Hancock
Terry Hansen
Gary Havlik
Rosa Hemphill
Diane Herschleb
Jim Heynderickx
Stephanie Heynderickx
Toni Holmberg
Tanja Vasiljevic Horvat 74
Paula Hunger
Connie Irwin
Susan Jensen
Janie John
Carla Judge
Nancy Keating
Jane Kenney-Norberg
Sue Knight
William Lamb
Peter Langley
Sue Larson
John Lauerman
David Levine
Lisa Lockwood
Katharine Loggan
Joan Lowe
David Lowell
Darelc Lowry
Thelma Lowry
Judy Lynch
Monica Mahoney
Cindi Marshall
Sheila Matsuda
Atsuko Matsuyama
Craig McClure
Cindy McEnroe
Christina Meyerhoff
Dana Mosher Lewis
Karen Murray
Kathy Narraraorc
Carolyn Neighbor
Christine OToolc
The Rev. David Pace
Lou Paff
Jill Parker
Suzanne Paroulck
Jean Patsis
The Rev. Lou Ann Pickering
Judy Pinkerton
Gary Pope
Lauran Pratt
Jcannic Ravvley
Amy Rheingans
Lynne Sadler
Anna Schatz
Debby Schauffler
Janet Schilling
Niki Scott
Karen Seder
Florence Sclvidgc
Monccka Settles
Bev Shue
Alice Simpson

2000
Bradford Miller
Colin Williams

FACULTY &amp; STAFF
Jane Adams
The Rev. Val Ambrose
Mary Barthclemy
Elaine Bartsch
Diarmad Bash
Bradley Baughcr
Donna Beemer
Dulany Bennett
David Bermudez
Dennis Black
Bonnie Brennan
Steve Brennan
Debra Bridgncll
Robert Brisk
Sharon Cade
Lcslan Carlson
Karen Carrithers
Charyl Cathey
Wendy Chesney
The Rev. Corbet Clark
Myra Clark
Wendy Cogan
Scott Corns
Karen Corsini
Kevin Cold

QfiS AUTUMN 2002

;
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:
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I

I
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i

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33
ft

tri

�If

______

■I*-'
-■

\

Deborah Smith
Paula Spooner
Bonnie Stankc
Susan Stark
Adam Steele
Wendy Steele
Hope Stevens
Linda Stewart
Shelley Stoffcr
Soledad Taylor
Becky Toolcy
Helen Kirschner Townes *85
Carlcne Traverso
Kris Van Aukcn
Kris Van Hatcher 70
Jon von Behren
Ann von Ofcnheim
Pat Walhood
Giscla Walitzki
Doug Whitmore
Alysa Williams
Rebecca Williams
Carol Zosel

'

I
!
&lt;

PARENTS OF ALUMNI

i

Colleen Acres &amp; William Rabiega
Dick &amp; Carilyn Alexander
Gretchen Amann
Bob &amp; Kathleen Ames
Maggie Andrews &amp; George Swope
James &amp; Mar)' Asaph
Peter &amp; Missy Bechen
John Bissonnette &amp; Virginia Smith
Dr. Mrs. Robert Blakeley
Jean &amp; Kathy Brault
Dave &amp; Ann Bronson
Tammy Brooks '86 &amp; Jose Morales
Sally Brown
Morris &amp; Elizabeth Button
Joyce Campbell
Sharon Chapman
Mr. Sung-Min Choi &amp; Ms. In-Sun Kim
Lynne &amp; Mitchel Cohen
Mrs. Dorothy Conklin
Harold &amp; Merry Dcmarest
Wendy DeRham
Cynthia Doran
C.R. &amp; Glen Duffie
Robert &amp; Jeannette Durst
Franklin &amp; Bunny Dyer
Sherry &amp; Norman Eder
Lou &amp; Mama Elliott
Woody English &amp; Annie Terry
Karen &amp; Richard Fink
Bruce &amp;r Charlotte Fiske
D.W. &amp; Kathleen Froom
Helen Frye
Barbara &amp; Michael Gaines
Kristine Gebbie
Sidney Gold
Nancy &amp; Bob Gray
Joe &amp; Hannah Graziano
i
Kris &amp; Steve Gregg
George &amp; Betsy Grimes
Robert &amp; Sybil Grissom
Chip &amp; Molly Harris
Ken &amp; Ginger Harrison
Rosa &amp; Del Hemphill
Tom &amp; Judi Henkle
Diane &amp; Kent Herschleb
Bruce &amp; Sherrie Holliday
|
Robert &amp; Mary Holmstrom
I James &amp; Anne Holtz
Hugh &amp; Danielle Howard
I
Wren &amp; Leigh Hudgins
I Ed &amp; Aurelia Hunt
I Randy &amp; Jeane lies
Bud &amp; B. Mary Inkster

34

ANNUAL REPORT

David &amp; Eileen Johnson
Pat &amp; Sam Karamanos
Nancy Keating
Paul &amp; Lynnsly Kollar
Wally &amp; Cathy Kricgcr
Tsutomu &amp; Yukie Kyuzaki
Mar)’ &amp; Bob Laird
Bill &amp; Dorothy Lake
Bill &amp; Marilyn Lamb
Ronald &amp; Lourdes Landry
Peter &amp; Kathy Langley
Nancy Walden Larsen ’58
Sue &amp; Ron Larson
John &amp; Tina Laucrman
Wes &amp; Nancy Lcmatta
Fernando &amp; Dolores Leon
Joanne Miller Lilley ’47
Dr. &amp; Mrs. Robert Mathcson
Rob &amp; Sally Miller
Jeanette Morales
Jonathan &amp; Marjorie Nichols
Rev. David &amp; Jeanne Pace
Jean &amp; Paul Patsis
Mr. &amp; Mrs. Chavalit Pattamanuch
Rev. Lou Ann &amp; Jim Pickering
Gar&gt;’ Pope
Chris &amp; Betsy Pope
Charles Norecn Reali
Joe Robertson
Ed &amp; Nancy Rubovits
Susan &amp; Scott Russell
Mitsuru &amp; Sayumi Sato
The Rev. Stephen &amp; Ann Schneider
I Mar)’ &amp; Jack Schunk
Jack &amp; Pat Semura
Joel &amp; Sandra Shilling
Bcv &amp; John Shue
Ronald &amp; Barbara Sorensen
Ed Sotka
Paul Kcown &amp; Clyte Spcidel
Bonnie &amp; Roger Stankc
Bill &amp; Comic Stevens
Shelley &amp; Fred Stoffer
Stephen &amp; Carole Thomas
Thomas Thornton
Alice Kimball Trcwhella ’41
&amp; Charles Trcwhella
Ed &amp; Wendy Ulman
John &amp; Kathy Utz
Gary &amp; Shirley Voclkcr
Patty &amp; Dale Walhood
Bob &amp; Jane Winger
Dolores &amp; Norm Winningstad
Norman &amp; Harriet Workman
Louisa &amp; Harvey Zendt
Carol &amp; Chuck Zosel

GRANDPARENT GIVING
Mrs. Eleanor Barry
Mrs. Betty Bcilstein
Mr. &amp; Mrs. David Brisk
Mrs. Evelyn Crossman
Ms. Miri Davis &amp; Mr. Carter Morey
Dr. 6r Mrs. Duane Denney
Mr. &amp; Mrs. Alan Doody
Mrs. Nora Dunning
Mr. &amp; Mrs. Stanley Epstein
Mr. &amp; Mrs. Dwaine Gipe
Mr. &amp; Mrs. Richard Hayes
Mr. &amp; Mrs. Robert Hcndren Jr.
Mr. Vaughan Hill
Mr. &amp; Mrs. O.J. Hubbell
Mr. &amp; Mrs. Lee Keeling
Mrs. Betty Kjar
Dr. &amp; Mrs. William Klingensmith
Mrs. Annclicse Knapp
Mr. &amp; Mrs. August Kollom
Mr. &amp; Mrs. Dwight Lindholm

Mr. Robert Linville
Mrs. Bcmicc Litvin
Mr. John N. Longficld
Mr. &amp; Mrs. Frank Mako
Mrs. Anna Maurer
Mr. &amp; Mrs. John McClure
Mrs. Linita McDonald
Mr. &amp; Mrs. David McFall
Mr. &amp; Mrs. Gar)' Melon
Dr. &amp; Mrs. David Osgood
Mr. Wayne Phillips
Mr. &amp; Mrs. James Rippcy
Mr. &amp; Mrs. Norman Savinar
Mr. &amp; Mrs. Charles Schaeffer
Mr. &amp; Mrs. Ted Schecr
Dr. Edward Schuman &amp; Ms. Carole Quick
Ms. Bessie Smith
Mr. &amp; Mrs. Morton Thalhimcr Jr.
Dr. &lt;Sz Mrs. Robert Wallace
Mr. Frank M. Warren Sr.
Mr &amp; Mrs. Robert Wechsler
Mrs. Viola Williams
Mr. Michael Wray
Mr. &amp; Mrs. Tatsuro Yada
Mrs. Anna York

FRIENDS

I
;
j
j
!

Anonymous
Ronald C. Benton
Julia Cule
Barbara J. Davis
Cathy Dcsrochcrs
Bishop Robert L. Ladchoff
Jim &amp; Mar)' McCarter
Doug &amp; Mimi McCaslin
Thomas C. Monahan
Dave &amp; Anne Munro
Dr. Josef &amp; Bohunka Rosch
Manvel Schaufflcr
Brooke Veltrie
Yvonne J. Yamanaka ’04

CORPORATIONS
First Union Securities, Inc.
Merrill Lynch &amp; Co.
Metropolitan Group
Morgan Stanley Dean Witter, Inc.
Nike,Inc.
Northwestern Mutual Life
PG&amp;E National Energy Group
Target
Tektronix Foundation
US Bancorp

SPECIAL PURPOSE GIFTS
| AASK

Dick &amp; Carilyn Alexander
Rev Val Ambrose
1 Herman Asarnow &amp; Susan Baillet
I; Brad Baughcr &amp; Toni Holmbcrg
Peter &amp;r Missy Bcchen
John &amp; Dace Berzins
Patrick &amp; Virginia Birklc
Rob Bnsk &amp; Monica Mahoney
Sharon &amp;Joc Cade
Corbel &amp; Myra Clark
Constructive Management Foundation
Harriett Dixon
FOUNDATIONS
Wayne &amp; Julie Drinkward
Adams Foundation
Paul Farago
BP Amoco Foundation
Friends of OES Library
Charles Schwab Corporation Foundation
Clarence &amp; Myrtle Rae Greenwood
Deluxe Corporation Foundation
Henry &amp; Sharon Hewitt
Intel Foundation
Jim &amp; Carol Hibbs
The Kiplingcr Foundation
Hoover Family Foundation
The May Dept. Stores Co. Foundation
Jackson Foundation
McKesson Foundation
Dick &amp; Maryjaffc
Mentor Graphics Foundation
Juan Young Trust
Oregon Jewish Community Foundation
Scan McEnroe
Peninsula Community Foundation
Dave &amp; Anne Munro
Pfizer Foundation
Susan &amp; Tom Robinson
Ralph &amp; Adolph Jacobs Foundation
Rose E. Tucker Charitable Trust
S. J. &amp; Jessie E. Quinncy Foundation
Patsy &amp; Miles Seeley
United Way of the Columbia Willamette
Paul Kcown &amp; Clyte Spcidel
St.John the Baptist
Hope Stevens
Susan Thayer Farago
The Oregon Community Foundation
Cathy Walitzki '03
Hans &amp; Gisela Walitzki
Allen &amp; Rebecca Williams

OES AUTUMN 2002

■

�ANNUAL REPORT

John &amp; Mary Withers
Ann Wolfstonc
Mark Workman ‘69 &amp; Leslie Workman
Joe &amp;: Lvn Zenisek
Birthday Books
David &amp; Elke Abrams
Ying-Hao &amp; Angela Au
Dennis &amp; Lynn Baker
Jonathan &amp; Bonnie Barg
Keith &amp; Sharon Barnes
Narjala &amp; Shanda Bhasker
Vadin Bourenin &amp; Lauri Newton
Debra &amp; Neal Bridgncll
Robert Brisk &amp; Monica Mahoney
Paul &amp; Cindy Bukcr
Cliff &amp; Sally Canepa
Robert Carson &amp; Diane Polscer
Ken &amp; Pam Cany
Mail &amp; Sheila Casimo
Don &amp; Brenda Chambers
Raymond &amp; Josic Cheng
Dae Soo Choi &amp; Joyce Shin
Ron Narodc &amp; Sarah Cleveland
Adnan &amp; Brenda Cobanoglu
Karen &amp; Charlie Corsini
Brian &amp; Nadine Coushay
Jay Crary &amp; Jennifer Hubbert
Hal &amp; Kim Curtis
Jim Dix &amp;r Candace Gray
Bradly &amp; Chikako Doanc
Fred &amp; Peg Edcra
A1 &amp; Carla Eisner
Fred Ey &amp; Anne Keller
Marc Fcldcsman &amp; Susan Wolf
Louis Fernandez &amp; Linda Blakely
Brad &amp; Kami Fraley
Bob &amp;r Carole Freitas
Tony &amp; Julie Fumary
Sandeep &amp; Mona Garg

Ian &amp; Sarah McDonald
Hans &amp; Giscla Walitzki
Robert Neuberger &amp; Mary Ann McDowell Allen &amp; Rebecca Williams
Tom MeGuirk &amp; Cammic Brim
' Wolf Camera, Tigard
Don &amp; Alicia Morissette
T.J. Kempton Endowment
Tom Lewis &amp; Dana Mosher Lewis
Craig Murphy &amp; Julie Frantz
Mr. &amp; Mrs. Ted Lamm
Srinivasa Nagalla &amp; Sandhya Koppula
Dzung Nguyen &amp; Merry Tran
Labyrinth Project
Paul Northrop &amp; Kelly Northrop-Taylor
Anonymous
Ingolf &amp; Peggy Noto
Brad Baugher &amp; Toni Holmberg
Joe &amp; Suzic Opsahl
Margaret Stevens Blake 77 &amp; Larry Blake
Brian &amp; Kimberly Orahood
Robert Brisk &amp; Monica Mahoney
Thomas Page &amp; Catherine Riffc
Barry Daigle '80
Mark Bajorek &amp; Susan Palmitcr
&amp; Bronwen Edwards-Denney
Jin &amp;r Julicann Park
Stuart &amp; Susan Emmons
Kirk &amp; Jill Parker
Kathleen MacNaughton &amp; Jocelyn Somers
Kinh Pham &amp; Ngan-Licn Nguyen
Dee Madden '80 &amp; Sam Campbell
Helene Pihl Phillips
Laurie Schaad
Jay &amp; Debra Platt
Tim &amp; Ann Stout
Karl &amp; Cindy Plummer
Kevin &amp; Kimberly While
Peter &amp; Debra Pollard
Bill Whitsell '8land Wendy Whitsell
Kim Porter
Anita Wray
Jim &amp; Terry Putnam
Paula Rhodes
Middle School Discretionary
Carl Riddick &amp; Mary O’Hcam
Robert &amp; Jill Schccr
Jerry &amp; Tcri Rosette
David Ru inker &amp; Susan Phillips
The Lyon Family Fund
April Sanderson
Elisabeth &amp; Peter Lyon
Mike &amp; Tricia Savin
Steve &amp; Jan Schmidt
Master Plan - Middle School
Dave Sebastian
Robert &amp; Jeannette Durst
&amp; Sharon Anderson-Sebastian
Wells Fargo Bank
Jeff &amp; Fern Sclvala
Chris &amp; Sarah Shaver
MS Celebration Book
Allen &amp; Susan Shelby
Keith &amp; Sharon Barnes
Brett &amp; Julie Sheppard
CUff &amp; Sally Canepa
Alan &amp; Diane Shiffer
Don &amp; Brenda Chambers
Marcia Sparling &amp; Michael Coppock
Chris &amp; Cindi Devich
Henry Stevens 79 &amp; Kim Stevens
William &amp;r Lara Garrett
Wayne &amp; Julie Drinkward
Steve &amp; Pam Grant
Abhi &amp; Linda Talwalkar
Tina Enberg
Alex &amp; Karen Grauert
Steven &amp; Jackie Thomas
Kent Jo Anne Grewe
i Jack &amp; Danne Greene
Terr)’ &amp; Chcri Tolar
Terry Hansen &amp; Paula Spooner
, Brian &amp; Gina Grccncn
Kathryn Underhill
Kevin Ucisin &amp; Willemijn Bcurskens-Ilcisin
John &amp; Fran von Schlcgcll
Kent &amp; JoAnne Grewe
Bob Johnson
Scott &amp; Sarah Grewe
Paul &amp; Jonalyn Wallace
, Craig &amp; Lynne Johnston
Julie Hallcnbcck &amp; Carla Hcckrodt
Eric Walters &amp; Sonia Sachdcv
Clarice Johnston
John &amp; Carol Hamilton
Morris Wcstlund 75 &amp; Paula Wcstlund
Craig &amp; Lynne Johnston
Robert &amp; Alana Hill
Kevin &amp; Kimberly White
Paul Kaptur &amp; Laura Hope
Gary &amp; Ruth Hiraki
Bill Whitscll '8land Wendy Whitscll
Milton Kokubun &amp; Wen-Lin Wang
Mark &amp; Barbara Hochgcsang
John &amp; Kathy Wicst
Greg &amp; Amy Lowes
Ed &amp; Edmay Honeycutt
Allen &amp; Rebecca Williams
Mai-Lill Magi
Joe &amp; Trish Howell
Randhi Wilson
Tom Marshall &amp; Carol Joseph
Janies Huffman &amp; Leslie Spencer
David Wilson &amp; Nancy Greene
Cindy McEnroe &amp; Joe Coletto
Kevin Ucisin &amp; Willemijn Bcurskens-Ilcisin Edmund Yuan &amp; Mindy Loebner
Tom MeGuirk &amp; Cammic Brim
Heidi Larkins Imayama '89
Christopher Zimmerman &amp; Emily Burch
Kirk &amp; Jill Parker
&amp; Takaaki Imayama
Tim &amp; Carol Zuckert
Jay &amp; Debra Plan
T. Mark James &amp; Lisa Do
Chris &amp; Kelley Platt
Fields Family Fund:
John &amp; Clare Jaramillo
Jim &amp;r Terry Putnam
Philip, Elizabeth, Amy &amp; Terry
Bob Johnson
Kathryn Rippey
Jeff &amp; Krissy Johnson
Amy Fields ‘62
Tony Russo &amp; Cissy Limn
Craig &amp; Lynne Johnston
Robert &amp; Jill Schccr
Mark &amp; Alice Kemball
Financial Aid Gifts
Patsy &amp; Miles Seeley
Hal &amp; Terry Kennel
Todd &amp; Carrie Stucky
Tyrone &amp; Bonnie Wei
Jay &amp; Ycon Kim
John
&amp; Kathy Wicst
Mike &amp; Elizabeth Kortenhof
Gifts in Kind
Debra Lazzaretti
Debra &amp; Neal Bridgncll
MS Science Program
Ncls Lewis &amp; Debbie Olds-Lcwis
Bullscyc Glass Co.
Dr. &amp; Mrs. Frank Parker
Dennis &amp; Sandy Leybold
Raymond &amp; Josic Cheng
Bob &amp; Leigh Linncll
Brian Foulkcs &amp; Fernanda D’Agostino
OES Endowment
Brian &amp; Tamy Linver
Friends of the OES Library
Anonymous
Ann Highet Liss '82 &amp; Jon Liss
Charles &amp; Catherine Johnson
Kathrinc Grinnell
Steven Lovett &amp; Constance Sullivan
Katayama Framing
Halton Foundation
Greg &amp; Amy Lowes
LS PAL
Dorothy &amp; Fred Huey
Dee Madden '80 &amp; Sam Campbell
Dee Madden '80 &amp; Sam Campbell
Ruth Simmonds Tunturi ’34
Steve &amp; Natalie Maizcls
Chris &amp; Kelly Palmedo
Cindi &amp; Bill Marshall
Karen &amp; Phil Seder
Paul Gerhardt Mem. Scholarship
Scott &amp; Kathy Mary
Bill &amp; Barbara Spears
Mr. &amp; Mrs. Paul Gerhardt
Tom &amp; Michelle Matson
Lynn Turrill
OES AUTUMN 2002

35

i

.

1

�ANNUAL REPORT
Resident Dept. Gifts
Lee &amp; Irene Dulin

THE BELL SOCIETY
S3

Susan Elizabeth McClave Schol
Virginia Tyler

The Bell Society honors and
recognizes individuals who have
U. S. History Department
either made a current gift to the
Hillary’ Barbour
Endowment or included Oregon
Episcopal School in their estate
U.S. Library Gifts
plans. In the past year the school has
Chris &amp; Kelley Platt
James &amp; Ann Waldman
received gifts from trustees, alumni,
Mrs. Helen Weber
faculty, current and past parents, and
members of the greater Portland
U.S. Religion Gifts
community.
Tom &amp; Pat Landye
A gift to the Endowment provides
Upper School Jazz Band
funds that continue to grow, in per­
Harvey &amp; Miriam Rogers
petuity, for the benefit of the entire
school community. By generating
Upper School Science
income beyond tuition, the
Peter &amp; Margaret Goldberg
Endowment directly helps students
US Athletics
and teachers at Oregon Episcopal
Chris &amp; Kelley Plan
School through increased funding
for student financial aid, faculty
salaries, teacher professional develop­
ment, and enrichment programs for
students.
A gift to Oregon Episcopal School
Endowment allows the school to
In honor of Dr. Lamb
attract and retain teachers and stuHarvey &amp;r Miriam Rogers
j dents of the highest quality.
In honor of Deborah Smith &amp; Ben |
Walsh Wedding
Bell Society Members
Hillary Barbour
| Anonymous (9)
! Charles A. Adams
In honor of Sharon Cade
j Richard and Carilyn Alexander
Mrs. Linita McDonald
Jane Mount Ammcrman '35
Patricia and James Appcrson JC '48
In memory of Geoffrey Camp
Peter and Missy Bechen
Mary Bedwcll Bedwell-Bothwell '41
Maiy &amp; Craig Foltz
Dulany Bennett
The Rev. James T. Boston
In memory of Mary Filgas
Joe and Sharon Cade
Shoaib Tarecn &amp; Catherine Filgas
Jo de Bruin
Harriett Dixon
In memory of Pat Apperson
Wayne and Julie Drinkward
Anonymous
Stuart and Susan Emmons
Dorothy Sloan Huey
Matt and Ella Essieh
E. Amy Fields '62
In memory of Rhoda Statter
Susan Findlay
Kathrine N. Grinncll
Craig and MaryFoltz
Paul and Nancy Gerhardt
In memory of TJ Kempton
Joanna Jenkins Hall '25
Julie Hallenbcck and Carla Heckrodt
Mr. &amp; Mrs. Ted Lamm
Sandy and Jeri Haskins
Jim and Barbara Herbold
In memory of Jim Murphy
Bruce and Sherrie Holliday
James &amp; Ann Waldman
Susan Lake Howell '39
Gordon and Marian Janney
In memory of Susan McClave
Susan Jensen
Virginia D. Tyler
Elizabeth Johnson '69
Lenore Lavanture Klink '35
In honor of Middle School
Sean Kuni '81
Teachers
The Rt. Rev. Robert L. Ladehoff
Mark Workman *69 &amp; Leslie Workman
Caroline Litzcnberger
John and Priscilla Longfield
Bequest
Peter and Elisabeth Lyon
Ruth Simmonds Tunturi '34
Alec and Laurie Macmillan
Paul Gerhardt
Patricia Simmons Maulbetsch '41
Jim and Mary McCarter
Doug and Mimi McCaslin
Miles and Libby Merwin

MEMORIALS &amp;
HONORARIUMS

36

Heather Michct 74
Dave and Anne Munro
Lou and Lynn Paff
June Dunbar Phillips ’51
Gary Pope
Richard and Quinland Porter
John and Sylvia Rath

Silent Auction Set up
Julie Fumar)'
Kimberly White
Special Appeal Video
Mr. Goodman-Farlcy’s Class
Lynne Johnston
Elizabeth Tsao
Aruna Chittor

raur.T7 ■ r.t

Sponsorship
Kay Brantley

LEADERSHIP
sara

Auction Committee 2002
Chairs
Lyn Cameron
Kathy Mary
Advertising
Urmila Ratnam
Pam Grant
Rhonda Schwartz
Tricia Savitt
Alumni Liaison
Janellc Jimerson
Auction Coordinator
Wendy Cogan
Birthday Parties
Mona Garg
Catalog
Ellen Bcilstcin
Anne Keller
Children's Art
Anita Wray
Children’s Video
Sam Campbell
Kristen Rcverman
Class Liaison
Jill lnskccp
Jaci Wilson

Clean-up
Elkc Abrams
Computer Operations
Dixie Bland
Decorations
Linda Blinkhorn
Cindy Plummer
Director of Development
John Lauerman
DJ and Dancing
Kathy Haugh
Food and Beverage
Tina Donovan
Liz Perkins
Invitations
Amy Lowes
Debra Platt

Volunteers
Annie Lipsitz
Diane Shiffer
Will Call
Rebecca Williams
Allen Williams
OES Fund Leadership

j Chair
Chris Cooper
Lower School Chair
DannC Greene
| Middle School Chairs
Nancy Greene
Upper School Chair
Jansi King
J Alumni Chair
! Marietta Kuykendall ’55
Past Parent Chairs
Susie Gundlc
GRADE CHAIRS
Jackie Thomas
j Prc-K
I Kindergarten Urmila Ratnam
Primary
Carole Freitas
First
Jaci Wilson
Second
Betsy Leonard
Third
Janice &amp; Mike Shainsky
Fourth
Pam Carty
Fifth
Kami Fraley
Sixth
Dixie Bland
Seventh
Ella &amp; Matt Essieh
Eighth
Sharon Barnes
Ninth
Ed &amp; Margaret Kushncr
Tenth
Janet Maurer
Eleventh
Ann Taylor
Twelfth
Jansi King
STAFF/FACULTY CHAIRS
Lower School
Suzanne Paroulck
Sue Stark
Middle School
Karen Seder
Upper School
Cris Harris '89

Live Auction
Lynne Johnston
Elizabeth Tsao
Aruna Chittor

Jon von Behrcn

Parlies - Lower School
Julia Hall

We have made every effort to ensure

Parties - Middle School
Brenda Chambers
Photographer
Tcri Rosette
Procurement
Candace Gray
Jim Dix

OES AUTUMN 2002

r

Staff

the accuracy of the information in
this report. If we have made an error
please accept our apologies and
contact the Development Office at
503-768-3153 so that we may
correct it. Thank you.

i

!

;

�II IB

ANNUAL REPORT

Building Our Children’s Future
THE CAMPAIGN FOR OES
In the fall of 2001, under the leadership of Wayne Drinkward,
OES began the early stages of a multi-year $28 million capital
campaign designed to maximize the potential of each of our stu­
dents. Plans call for the ambitious capital investments in three
defining elements of an OES education: a school community
made up of students of promise, an unmatched and dedicated
faculty, and top-notch facilities supporting world-class teaching
and learning. The outstanding generosity of the donors listed
below made it possible for us to break ground in June for our
new Math, Science, and Technology Building. Gifts were also
made for the renovation of the Upper School and for the
school’s endowment. We are grateful for their support.

Dick &amp; Carilyn Alexander
The Rev. Val Ambrose
Anonymous
Peter &amp; Missy Bcchcn
Dulany Bennett
Narjala &amp; Shanda Bhaskcr
Robert Brisk &amp; Monica Mahoney
Sharon &amp;Joc Cade
The Campbell Group
Curt &amp; Lcslan Carlson
Charyl Cathey &amp; Joe Ceniccros
Don &amp; Brenda Chambers
Peter Chang &amp; Jingwei Xia
Collins Foundation
Lisa DcGracc
Harriett Dixon
Steve &amp; Tina Donovan
Bob &amp; Pam Dreisin
Wayne &amp; Julie Drinkward
Edward E. Ford Foundation
Stuart &amp; Susan Emmons
Matt &amp; Ella Essich
Paul Farago
Kathryn Findlay ’90
The Flora Family Foundation
Mar&gt;’ &amp; Craig Foltz
Sidney Gold
Halton Foundation
Joe &amp; Trish Howell
Intel Foundation
Dick &amp; Mar)'Jaffe
Betsy Johnson ’69
Elizabeth H. Johnson

The Keller Fund of The Oregon
Community Foundation
j Ed &amp; Margaret Kushner
Marietta Lind Kuykendall ’55
&amp; Glen Kuykendall
Rt. Rev. Robert L. Ladchoff
John &amp; Tina Lauerman
Elisabeth &amp; Peter Lyon
1 Alec &amp; Laurie Macmillan
! Jim &amp; Mar)' McCarter
Doug &amp; Mimi McCaslin
Linita &amp;John McDonald
Greg &amp; Diane Morgan
Craig Murphy &amp; Julie Frantz
Meyer Memorial Trust
R. B. Pamplin Corporation
Gary Pope
Susan &amp; Tom Robinson
Jerry &amp; Tcri Rosette
Jim Rue &amp; Mignon Mazique
David Rumker &amp; Susan Phillips
Samuel S. Johnson Foundation
April Sanderson
Jesse Smith &amp; Maryann Yclnosky
The Rev. Stephen
&amp;r Ann Schneider
Shoaib Tarcen &amp; Catherine Filgas
Susan Thayer Farago
Michelle &amp; Peter Trumbo
Jeff &amp; Lynn Wolfstonc
Mark Workman ’69
&amp; Leslie Workman
Masatoshi &amp; Susan Yamanaka

V-.-Sfii

2
Head of School Dulany Bennett at the groundbreaking in June

Campaign Steering Committtee
Wayne Drinkward, Chair
Dick Alexander
Peter Bechcn
Dulany Bennett
Rob Brisk
Tina Donovan
John Lauerman
Elisabeth Lyon
Susan Robinson
Teri Rosette

3
&amp;

OBS AUTUMN 2002

37

|

�.11

11
.
■

RESTRICTED ENDOWED FUNDS

i

Scholarship
Anonymous (3)
Barclay Ball-McCall Scholarship
John C. &amp; Mary Bechen Memorial Scholarship Fund
Louise Donaldson Memorial Scholarship
Gertrude Houk Fariss Scholarship Fund
Edward E. Ford Scholarship Fund
Paul Gerhardt Memorial Scholarship
Melba Byrom Hess Scholarship
Jane Hiller Endowed Scholarship Fund
Jack S. Howard Scholarship Fund
Helen Curtis Hyde ’29 Endowment
Samuel S. Johnson Foundation Scholarship
Edith Landry Endowment
Lenore Lavanture Klink ’35 JC Endowment
Mollie McCrea Scholarship
Barbara Hirschi Neely Memorial Scholarship
OES Endowment Scholarship
Reader’s Digest Endowed Scholarship Fund
Betty Lou Roberts ’36 Endowment
St. Helens Hall Endowment Alumnae Scholarship
David Sellers Memorial Scholarship
Louise Washburn Trust
Peter &amp; Julie Neupert-Stott Scholarship Fund
Auction Scholarship Fund

(

I
U

!

!i

Other
Bernice Bean 72 Endowment
Benjamin D. Dagwell Endowment
Faculty Enrichment Endowment Fund
Edward E. Ford Endowment Fund
T.J. Kempton Endowment
Learning Skills Dev7Grover Fund
Lower &amp; Middle School Professional Growth
J. Milne Manson
Music/Economics Faculty Endowment
Mt. Hood Memorial
Ruth Rose Richardson ’36 Memorial Fund
Mary G. Stephenson Endowment
Winningstad Chair in the Physical Sciences

Guest Artist
Teacher Retirement Benefits
Faculty Endowment
Faculty Endowment
Coaching Salaries
LS Teacher Training
Faculty Development
Student Award
Music/Economic Salaries
Art Experience
English Dept.
Faculty Grant
Science Dept.
Total Restricted Endowment Funds:

Amount Expended

Market Value

$ 7,032
16,779
1,380
2,773
1,316
3,409
11,440
36,082
7,734
1,771
12,524
2,959
11,442
1,905
5,497
15,571
16,047
5,191
9,888
11,155
1,764
1,884
1,100
2,394

$147,100
345,095
28,383
57,036
27,065
70,103
282,789
742,101
159,064
36,426
257,571
60,863
235.322
39,170
113,053
320,247
330.323
106,768
203,363
229,423
36,271
38,743
22,632

S

$

207
12,428
2,548
16,416
912
2,649
22,332
51
7,641
2,989
3,646
3,106
30,357

4,260
255,596
52,411
337,617
18,885
54,479
459,297
1,054
157,161
61,475
74,989
63,878
624,346

—:~i

Amount Expended

Market Value

$177,491
15,224

$3,650,435
313,120

1,673
2,514
3,456
44,768
1,139
12,303
5,115
70

34,408
51,710
84,510
920,750
23,421
253,025
105,206
5,757

;
:

!
;;

X

Vi

Total Board Designated Endowment Funds:

$263,753

$5,442,342

Total Endowment Funds:

$558,072

$11,545,944

i!

I

Other
Frances Spaulding Charlton ’22 Endowment
Henry Failing Fund
The Fields Family Fund: Philip, Elizabeth, Amy and Terry
Beatrice L. Gerlinger Endowed Chair in Mathematics
Eola Richards Keller T2 Endowment
OES Memorial
Cynthia Coats Railton ’53 Endowment
Helen Van De Water

38

f

$6,103,602

$294,319

BOARD DESIGNATED ENDOWED FUNDS
Scholarship
Spencer R. Collins Scholarship Fund
Katharine Graham Barbey Scholarship Fund

*

OES AUTUMN 2002
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Parents: If this issue is addressed to your son or
daughter who no longer maintains a permanent
address at your home, please notify us of the correct
new mailing address by contacting: Lisa DeGrace at
503-768-3137 or dcgraccl@oes.edu. Thank you.
OREGON EPISCOPAL SCHOOL
6300 S.W. Nicol Road
Portland, Oregon 97223

Non-Profit
Organization
U.S. Postage
PAID
Permit No. 334
Portland, OR

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ADDRESS SERVICE REQUESTED

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