Our Fallen Classmates & Faculty
For whatever reason, only known by God, our fellow classmates left us too early. We think of you and shall always cherish life, love and happiness. Even though our journey together was short, we will see you again someday. Bless our fallen Classmates - you are safe now.
Join us during the Friday June 25th Event at the Tulalip Resort as we pay a Special Tribute to our friends.
Daniel Hannon
William "Chris" Bise
Darrin Ballard
Teachers / Administrators / Friends
Along our journey, we looked for leadership to guide us, and show us how successful we can be. They never lost sight of our abilities, and always had our best interests at heart.
Ray Stevenson - Assistant Principal
Pity newcomers who sat down to a Stevenson
family dinner. Butter a dinner roll and it would disappear. Prepare
another, and it, too, disappeared, to the delight of everyone in the
know.
The vanishing bread roll was a little joke played by Ray
Stevenson, known for his love of family, math, coaching and Gold Wing
motorcycles.
"He was funny, sarcastic, athletic, charming and
had such good-looking children," said his daughter, Kelli Jackson. "He
was a storyteller, always holding everyone's attention. If he made you
laugh, he'd say the punch line four more times so you wouldn't stop
laughing."
For extreme fun, he suggested hard work.
At
the family cabin on an island in the San Juans, his children would pile
wood one weekend, then move the pile to a new location the next time
they visited.
"He grew up on a farm," said his son, Brett Stevenson. "He loved working. We'd work nonstop on that wood pile."
Stevenson
melded compassion with discipline in his career as a coach and school
administrator. He attended Idaho State University and the University of
Washington, was dean of students at Ingraham High School in Seattle, as
well as the sophomore football coach under head coach Tony Gasparovich.
He was also vice principal at both Mountlake Terrace and Lynnwood high schools.
Her father would remind his four children that he didn't raise any stupid sons or daughters.
"He
would come home upset because he had to kick a kid out of school for
doing drugs and he would say, 'I'm so lucky my kids would never do this
and are smart and independent enough to make the right choice,'"
Jackson said. "He would be sad because he knew the kind of homes some
of the kids came from and he wanted to help them."
Her father encouraged his children to be good role models.
"People
laugh when I tell them that I am the 'loser' in my family," Jackson
said. "My oldest brother, Brett, owns a television production studio
and an advertising agency; Ken owns his own construction company; my
two older brothers own a building together; Paige is the senior
assistant attorney general (for Washington state) and I only work for
the largest, most successful software company in the entire world."
Her
father, 75, died of natural causes Oct. 22. He was born on Halloween in
Bancroft, Idaho, to Kenneth and Letha Stevenson, and grew up with three
brothers, Wayne, Reid and Odell. He excelled at football at Pocatello
High School and served in the Air Force.
He met his wife, Elsie, at a barn dance.
"They
continued their courtship for 52 years," Jackson said. "They still had
date night every Friday, or so they told me, so I wouldn't drop my kids
off for them to baby-sit. They were always a great team."
Ray
Stevenson is survived by Elsie; children Brett and Nancy Stevenson, Ken
Stevenson, Paige and Steve Dietrich, Kelli and Troy Jackson; and seven
grandchildren.
His dad would drop by his construction sites, said Ken Stevenson.
"My
Dad, with his mechanical mind, walked around looking at all the work
going into the projects," Ken Stevenson said. "He would always find
something amiss and point it out to me, and grin, like he knew I
already saw it."
Punishment for having a smart mouth or not minding mom was always yard work, big time, his son said.
"I
know my brother, and mostly me, had the yard looking like Buckingham
Palace gardens most of the time. He always encouraged me and others to
persevere, be tough and never quit."
His said his father had a
razor-sharp internal aptitude test in his mind. He could sit down with
someone and peg their potential, and what they would be good at in
life. The elder Stevenson loved his Seattle Seahawks charter seats,
riding his motorcycle, and sipping morning coffee with other
enthusiasts at Everett Powersports.
Retired for 20 years, he hung out with a group of World War II veterans who fancied camping in the worst spots they could find.
As
a vice principal, Stevenson wasn't opposed to telling a kid he should
quit school and join the Army. Often they returned and thanked Mr.
Stevenson because they got their lives together in the military.
Teasing
that she was raised by June and Ward Cleaver, daughter Paige Dietrich
said her dad fostered a strong sense of right and wrong in her. He
could fix anything and was there when her Fiat broke down. And her
father had many talents, such as making cotton candy at birthday
parties.
"He must have helped me move five times," Dietrich
said. "I suppose my fondest memories are of us sitting in a room
reading our own books. We weren't talking, but sharing a pastime we
both loved. He was an avid reader, and when he was engrossed in a book,
you could be standing right next to him talking and he wouldn't hear a
word you said."
After their father died, the family heard from
hundreds of former students and athletes, who said Ray Stevenson shaped
their lives.
There are few higher compliments. (From Everett Herald - November 25 2007)