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

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

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�THE SUNDAY OREGONIAN, SEPTEMBER 14, 1980

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

■

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

17

�Freshmen
Backpack In
Mt. Jefferson

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

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Blind Poem

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

�International
Day Most
Festive Ever

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

21

�Students Aid Community

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Work Service

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

�Highest Turnout Ever For Halloween

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

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Beach Day •/

The Big Splash!

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

cycle 1 and cycle 2
meeting on alternate days.

New PANYC Schedule
A llows Greater Diversity

26

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

27

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

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

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Hard Work Brings 1981 Yearbook In Spring

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AdvisorEditor.
Layout

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

Middle School Editor:
Melmda Larsen

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

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

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

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Plays Seattle, Faculty

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

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

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

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

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J.V. V-Ball
Preps for
Strong Varsit)

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Cross Country Team Small But Powerful
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The team: Chris Cutler, Babok Abbas-Zadeh, Jack McConn, Drew Bates, Carlos Graham

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

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�MIDDLE
SCHOOL
SOCCER

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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Ruth Preston, Dawn Bleakley, Christianne Biggs, Betsy
Lematta, Pam Cornell, Jenny Kirkman, Adrienne Green, Betsy
Bosen, Kelly Dwyer, Elizabeth Vanderveer

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

51

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

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�Chuck Warren Shannon Pettit, Christine Menefee, Glen Patrizio, Kim West, Scott Nacke, Pat McCally, Angel
Ellison, Mel Murphy, Ann Highet, Jenny Heyneman, Dawn Drew

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Diana Smith
Liz Coletti
Beth Kempton

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

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

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life is not
worth living.
-Socrates

There is no royal road to
science

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Helen Achilles

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

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

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

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

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

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

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58

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

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

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

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

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

Chris Cutler
59

�I
.

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

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A tomato does not communicate with a
tomato, we believe. We could be wrong.
— Gustav Eclesten

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

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

60

�rtflu-bnlfrn Pi &gt; Doo^la.5

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

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

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

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

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

61

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

i

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

I

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

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

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Never trust a knight with BLUE TEETH"

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

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

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

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

63

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

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

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

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We're but little happy,
If I could say how much.
■

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I know these words sound strangely,
coming from me, but I'm no angel
nor was meant to be.
- Moliere, Tartuffe
Those of you who think you are perfect, are annoying those of
us who are
- Anonymous

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65

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

t

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

Marleine Hofmann

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

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

Jenny Horniman

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

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

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

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

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

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I LOVE YOU BILLIE

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

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

69

�Payman Mehrassa

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

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

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

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

Fri anbligenbri, Lange leve Suerige

Constantine Petropoulos

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73

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

I

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

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

Bonnie Potts
74

�!

Nader Rassouli

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

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

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

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75

�Benjamin Sebastian
Sawyer IV

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

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

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

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

76

�Born to be wild
—Steppenwolf

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Toby Sawyer

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

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

77

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MAINE!

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

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Les grandes pensees viennent du coeur.
- Vauvenargues

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

Karin K. Tinning

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

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

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And 000, I like the sound
of harmony from time to time
I really do believe
in some kind of tomorrow
when it speaks to me

-Janis Ian

80

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

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Tammy Wang

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

You're never too old to learn.
—Anonymous

Sailors do it out at sea.

So long, OES

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81

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

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

i.tter
Them

itheronly said.

Chester I told you

v^ai-.the only one to see the
is Of Blueland

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was nothing on if but a ting golden Keu,
and Alices ftrst idea was -that thismiant
belong to one of the doors of the hal
but; alas! either the locKs were tools rye
ortheK^was1oosmaii;but atanyrarte
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on the second time round, sne came upon
a low curtain sne had not noticed before,
and behind it was a lithe dcoraboutfi-f'

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teen inches high - she tried the little
olden Keu in the locK,and toherqreat
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The seasons thevj go found and round
and the pain+cd ponies go upanddoum.
Were captive on a carousel of time.
We cant return we can only loot;
behind from where, we came •
And go round and round and round
on the circle game.
Tom Mitchell

84

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

Robert Leitch

Mark Gilley

Alex Lingas

Wendy Guyton

Heidi Lulich

Ruth Hagemann

Jennifer Miller

Jami Jacobson

John Saunders

Craig Johnson

Mark Stuart

Jack Kent

Ali Tabatabai

Stacey Kesterson

85

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

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Upper School Art

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�Kitchen Workers

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

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

102

PRESIDENT.

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

VICE PRESIDENT
SECRETARY.
TREASURER
SENIOR REPS.
JUNIOR REPS:

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

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

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

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

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Traditions Continued

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

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

�In Memory of Billie Bootsma
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Class of 1980

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

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

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

S

Tagore Straybirds XLIV

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CLOTHING AND
ACCESSORIES
FOR INFANTS,
CHILDREN AND
YOUNG JUNIORS

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

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

233-7123

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

Quality services
and low prices

�Bollons § Poss, Inc.

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

MILK—-ICE CREAM
COTTAGE CHEESE

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

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

CARL w. POSS, JR.

Vancouver. Wash. 98660

JOHN H. BOLLONS
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RADIO CAB

Fryer Tuck
6722 S.W. Capitol Hwy.

COMPANY

246-7737

THE

GOLDSMITH
CO.

Portland-Seattle

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�Sponsors

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Mr. and Mrs. Bosen

Mr. and Mrs. Harris III

Dr. and Mrs. Parker

Mr. and Mrs. Nozel

Mr. Goemann

Mr. and Mrs. Lynch

Mr. McClave

Mr. and Mrs. Fergison

Mr. Rieland

Mr. and Mrs. Diment

Richard Gessford

Mr. and Mrs. Grover

Mr. Fletcher

Mr. and Mrs. Byrd

Mr. and Mrs. Larsen

Mr. and Mrs. Johnson

Bassit Corp.

Mr. and Mrs. Geary

Dr. and Mrs. Isaak

Dr. and Mrs. Ellison

Lome Johnson

Mr. and Mrs. Achilles

Lillian Douglas

Mr. and Mrs. Stephenson

Mr. and Mrs. Landye

Mr. and Mrs. Leon

Mr. and Mrs. Raleigh

Mr. and Mrs. Coletti

Mr. and Mrs. Lemotta

Gordon Fromm

Ruth Jackson

Dr. and Mrs. Vanderveer Jr.

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PIZZA
AND
ROCK-N-ROLL!

Marleine Hofmann
is a
crazy driver

Best Wishes
Seniors
—A Friend

Support the
Donut Boycott
NO 35C DONUTS!

Congratulations
Eighth Grade
—from a happy

Message to the
Eighth Grade1
Pax Vobiscum1

Aardvarks
Eat
Falcons

Mom and Dad

Mrs H

ROCK
LOBSTER

MAXIMUM BUST

Mozzarella
is on
Gene's roof'

Illigitimus
Non
Carborundum

(Calvin Klein
Goodbye OES

juxtapose
corlen
immutable
lethargic
dearth
ubiquitous

Credits
ARTWORK

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

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

Jenny Kirkman
Sue Blanchard
Kate Loggan
Lynne Sadler
Jim Lekas

123

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REAL MEXICAN FOOD
FOOD TO GO-LUNCH-DINNER

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

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DON'T FORGET YOUR

SPRING SUPPLEMENT

AVAILABLE AT O.E.S.

SEPTEMBER 1981

BANKER□
RESIDENTIAL REAL ESTATE SERVICES

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

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Call
Mary Coletti
Saleperson
Specializing in
country properties

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��</text>
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