June 26, 2015 • Seaside Signal • seasidesignal.com • 11A Miss Oregon Scholarship Program M On the road to Miss America iss Oregon Scholarship Organization, founded in 1947, is unlike any other group conducting a pageant in the State of Oregon. With a fo- cus on conducting a competition that emphasizes the unique aspect of each young woman and which highlights their personal successes from community service to aca- demics to performing arts, the Miss Oregon Scholarship Organization is so much more than a “stereo- typical” pageant. The organization strives to provide young women with the opportunity to rise to the top. The program is fully com- mitted to motivating and assisting young women in the state of Or- egon to ful¿ ll their individual and professional goals by rewarding its participants with signi¿ cant college and university tuition assistance. Supporting and promoting the self-esteem of the contestants is of the utmost importance to the or- ganization. It is essential that the young women who compete feel a sense of belonging with both her fellow contestants and the larg- er pageant community. The skills learned in the Miss Oregon and Miss Oregon’s Outstanding Teen Pageants have been said to last a lifetime. Contestants gain the abil- ity to speak and perform in public, to serve as leaders in their own communities and to have a sense of con¿ dence in themselves and their abilities. From its signature font to the winner’s crown and sash, the Miss Oregon Scholarship Organization is committed to representing the Miss America brand and the young women we serve with service, scholarship, success and style. Miss Oregon and Miss America paint a vivid picture of the chang- ing ambitions of their contestants. Miss America is a powerful cultural institution that continues to reveal much about our changing nation. But beyond the symbolism lies the human stories which speak of the changing position of women in so- ciety and how the pageant has been a road to personal and professional success. The Miss Oregon Scholarship Organization has created a relevant, forward-thinking public program based upon the sense of tradition that makes the Miss Oregon Pag- eant one of the most popular and anticipated events on the state’s cultural calendar. For more information about Miss America, go to www.MissA- merica.org. Ally Pederson Tamara Evans Kaylee Nelson Alexandra Amber Bailey Pilant Allison Burke Title: Rogue Valley Hometown: Medford, Oregon Age: 18 Platform Issue: Diabetes Education Talent: Vocal Performance – Black Horse and the Cherry Tree Education: Scholastic/Career Ambition: Train Diabetic students internationally Local Pageant: Rogue Valley Schol- arship Program Local Pageant Director: Shannon Monning Scholarship Received: $350 Title: Southern Jewel Hometown: Bend, Oregon Age: 22 Platform Issue: Slavery to Freedom ± +uman Traf¿ cking Awareness and Prevention Talent: Vocal Performance – Via Do- lorosa Education: Bend High School, Oregon Institute of Technology Scholastic/Career Ambition: Obtain Master of Science in Civil Engineering. To design infrastructure in order to build water systems in developing nations. Local Pageant: Southern Gem-South- ern Jewel Scholarship Program Local Pageant Director: Jann Leeper Scholarship Received: $250 Title: Three Rivers Hometown: Eugene, Oregon Age: 23 Platform Issue: CPR: Stayin’ Alive One Beat at a Time Talent: Sassy Jazz Dance – Ruby Blue Education: University of Oregon Scholastic/Career Ambition: Bach- elor’s Degree in Psychology, Teach High School Psychology and Liter- ature. Local Pageant: Three Rivers Schol- arship Program Local Pageant Director: Julie Fleck and Vicki Mills- O’Donnell Scholarship Received: $400 Title: Cascade Hometown: Eugene, Oregon Age: 21 Platform Issue: Fit for Life Talent: Vocal Performance – Orange Colored Sky Education: High School Graduate, Lane Community College Scholastic/Career Ambition: Mas- ters in Social Work, Family and Mar- riage Counselor Local Pageant: Cascade Scholarship Program Local Pageant Director: Julie Fleck and Vicki Mills- O’Donnell Scholarship Received: $900 Title: Marion-Polk County Hometown: Salem, Oregon Age: 21 Platform Issue: Domestic Violence Awareness Talent: Vocal Performance – It’s a Good Thing He Can’t Read My Mind. Education: Oregon State University Scholastic/Career Ambition: Earn Bachelors, then Masters in Commu- nication, Peace Corps Local Pageant: Marion-Polk County Scholarship Program Local Pageant Director: Blaine Barlow Scholarship Received: $1,250 Title: Mt. Hood Hometown: Tigard, Oregon Age: 19 Platform Issue: The Backpack Pro- gram: Feeding Americas Children One Backpack at a Time Talent: Classical Violin – Vivaldi’s Concerto in A Minor, 1st. Movement Education: Tigard High School, Lin- ¿ eld College Scholastic/Career Ambition: Com- plete Bachelors of Science in Nurs- ing and work in Pediatrics. Local Pageant: Cascade Scholarship Program Local Pageant Director: Julie Fleck and Vicki Mills- O’Donnell Scholarship Received: $900 Katie Noyed Cassidy Smith Veronica Norris Liza-May Skeie Ali Wallace Title: High Desert Hometown: Minnetonka, Minnesota Age: 21 Platform Issue: Eating Disorder Awareness Talent: Lyrical Dance – Back to the Earth Education: Minnetonka High School, Arhus Katdralskole Col- lege, OSU Cascades/Central Oregon Community College Scholastic/Career Ambition: Wants to become a Naturopathic Doctor, Peace Corps Volunteer Local Pageant: Hi Desert Scholar- ship Program Local Pageant Director: Ann Fisher Scholarship Received: $250 Title: Douglas County Hometown: Roseburg, Oregon Age: 19 Platform Issue: Community Out- reach: Helping People Help Them- selves Talent: Piano - Vesuvius Education: Roseburg High School, Oregon State University Scholastic/Career Ambition: Ob- tain Biology Degree and Doctorate of Medicine to become an Obstetrician Local Pageant: Douglas County Scholarship Program Local Pageant Director: Summer Fox Scholarship Received: $6,400 Title: City of Sunshine Hometown: Aurora, Oregon Age: 18 Platform Issue: Griselda Project Talent: Lyrical Ballet - Bloom Education: North Marion High School, Oregon Institute of Technol- ogy Scholastic/Career Ambition: Bach- elor of Science in Diagnostic Medi- cal Sonography Local Pageant: Klamath County – City of Sunshine Scholarship Pro- gram Local Pageant Director: Jann Leep- er Scholarship Received: $3,800 Title: Bandon Cranberry Festival Hometown: Bandon, Oregon Age: 17 Platform Issue: Band for Everyone Talent: Alto Sax – Georgia on my Mind Education: Bandon High School Scholastic/Career Ambition: Mas- ters in Hospital Administration Local Pageant: Bandon Cranberry Festival Local Pageant Director: Robin Koch Scholarship Received: $1,000 Title: Portland Hometown: Portland, Oregon Age: 21 Platform Issue: Traumatic Brain In- jury: Education and Awareness Talent: Lyrical Dance - Latch Education: Sunset High School, Portland State University Scholastic/Career Ambition: Grad- uate from Portland State University with honors and pursue a career in the ¿ lm industry. Local Pageant: Three Rivers Schol- arship Program Local Pageant Director: Julie Fleck and Vicki Mills- O’Donnell Scholarship Received: $360 Phillips: ‘We call ourselves a pageant family and we really are’ Phillips from Page 1A the Miss Portland pageant — Phillips was herself a theater major at Portland State University and very anti-pageant — that is, until one of her friends became Miss Oregon, and it sucked her in, she said. In the early 1970s, Phil- lips started working on the Miss Portland pageant, which is a preliminary to the Miss Oregon pageant. When she moved to Sea- side in 1979, her husband, Steve, was running the Miss Oregon Scholarship Program as a co-executive director. Seven years later, it was Phillips. “I always laughingly say I didn’t like the way he was running it, so I took over,” she joked. Around the time of transition, the Phillips- es and a few others had recognized the program needed to grow in terms of the scholarship dollars distributed, and they knew the way to do that was by setting up a nonpro¿ t foundation with a sepa- rate board of directors. The Oregon Scholarship Foundation now handles the scholarship money for Miss Oregon, as well as the memorial scholar- ships the Phillips family set up in the name of their daughter, Tiffany. When reÀ ecting on which aspect of the pro- gram she takes the most KATHERINE LACAZE PHOTO Dana Phillips has been the executive director of the Miss Oregon Scholarship Program since 1986, but has been involved with the program since 1979. She is retiring after the 2015 Miss Oregon Pageant, held in Seaside from June 24 through 27. pride in, Phillips said it would have to be that the ¿ rst Miss Oregon, Jo Ann Amorde, is still involved, although now at a local level as she progresses in age. “We have so many of our past contestants, past Miss Oregons, past Miss Oregon families, past con- testant families still being involved in the pageant,” Phillips said. “We call ourselves a pageant family and we really are.” That became evident in a personal way when the family lost Tiffany in a car accident in 1998 shortly after she turned 17. Phillips was supposed to À y to a National Asso- ciation of Miss America State Pageants meeting in New York when the acci- dent occurred. She didn’t attend the workshop, but when her counterparts heard what happened, “the phone calls kept coming in,” she said. They also raised about $50,000 to set up a memorial fund in Tiffany’s name. Tiffany — a 6-foot-4 star athlete — was never a contestant herself, but she liked the behind-the- scenes aspect and was close to the Miss Oregon winners who would stay with the family, Phillips said. “She was one of those young ladies who was always willing to help others and believed in making sure people under- stood that you can pick up your own bootstraps and you do whatever you want to do,” she said. Tiffany “was a miracle child,” and though she was unexpected, Phillips said. “We were so bless- ed to have had her, but too short.” Her spirit re- mains, however. “She’s my guardian angel,” Phil- lips said. Having Tiffany also gave Phillips a deeper un- derstanding and ability to form relationships with the Miss Oregon winners. Growing up, she didn’t babysit and she didn’t like being around children. “Then Tiffany came into my life,” she said. “It just gives you an insight, to have a little person that you made and that you can sit there and enjoy and mentor. It gives you an in- sight that I wouldn’t have had without that. I didn’t really have the true heart of it until I had my own child. And I think that’s one of the reasons Steve and I have stayed so in- volved is because of the heartache so many of these young people go through in life because they don’t have or come from loving families. And there isn’t anybody to be supportive and there isn’t anybody to lift them up and say, ‘you can achieve whatever you want to achieve.’” From not being partic- ularly fond of children, Phillips now has been “accumulating daughters in a special way by being involved in this organiza- tion” for several decades. “These young ladies are the legacy that we’ve helped build in this pro- gram,” she said. “Our daughters — our Miss Oregons — are very spe- cial.” A Tradition of Excellence Since 1961 D inner a va ila ble in Astoria , Sea side, L incoln City & N ewport 35 Breakfast Varieties served anytime with specialty pancakes made from scratch Try ou r g ou rm et bu rg ers, sou ps, ch ow d er, steak s, seafood , pasta an d d esserts! A STO RIA 146 W . BOND (503 ) 3 25-3 144 Brea kfa st, L u nch & D inner s r r TM SE A SID E 3 23 BROADW AY (503 ) 73 8-7243 Brea kfa st, L u nch & D inner C A N N O N BE A C H 223 S . 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