Page 8 - February 2017 Voices
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were all friends. It was a family.”                      he was many times in Washington, D.C. with
         I asked Don to share some of his personal            Edith Green, U.S.  House of Representatives.
     history.                                                 Stan Swan spent his career assisting politicians and
         “I grew up on a dairy farm and also a poultry        helping the public. He retired and spent his free time
     farm in northern Washington,” he said. “We also          raising flowers and playing golf.  (1987 press photo).
     had pigs and horses.                                         As the interview came to a close, I asked Don
         “I was married to my first wife for 62-1/2
     years. I’ve been married to June for about 8 or          what were some of his fondest Toastmasters
     9 years. Between us we have six kids, so we all          memories over the past 63 years.
     get together occasionally.”                                  “Friends really,” he said, “it’s the friends
         “We live on 3-1/2 acres here in Gresham.”            you meet during that period of time. They just
         I asked if he had recruited any of his kids          welcome the opportunity to say hello and shake
     or grandkids to become Toastmasters. He said             your hand. That means a lot to me.
     he’s tried, but so far no one has taken him up               “Toastmasters has been of value to me over
     on his offer!                                            the years. There have been doctors, money
         Don doesn’t remember how many times                  management individuals, preachers—a number
     he’d worked his way through the Compentent               of them have been very knowledgeable and
     Communication manual. Unfortunately, he had              helpful to me in my life.”
     a fire eight years ago that burned his manual                I asked Don who he would like to touch in the
     collection. He knew that Toastmasters has records
     of his accomplishments if he really needed them.         world, given his long history with Toastmasters.
     So far he hasn’t needed them.                                “The individual who would probably get more
         When I shared that I had my own pile of old          use out of Toastmasters is somebody who is just
     manuals, he advised, “If you go through those            coming out of college or high school and has a
     manuals, one at a time, you’d have a better              job. Someone who wants to increase their salary.
     education than if  you’d taken speech in college.”       You have to push yourself to get out there.”
         We switched gears and began talking about                Don’s final words to everyone were “stick to
     the leadership track Toastmasters offers.                it. Finish your manuals, and you will come out
         “When people come in,” Don commented,                better in life.”
     “and the company knows they‘re in Toastmasters,
     that’s showing leadership right there. They seem
     to get recognized more often, by the company
     for the help then can give, and their careers go
     much further.”
         I asked Don to share about some of the
     people he’s coached and mentored over the
     years who went further in their careers because
     of Toastmasters. “I could name half a dozen or
     so,” he said. He mentioned a couple by name,
     and I’ve added a little background on each.
         Ross Morgan, senator from Salem was the
     first he mentioned. Mr. Morgan was elected to
     the Oregon Senate in 1967; he procured the original
     funding to build Mt. Hood Community College, for
     which he was named the school’s first “patron saint.”
     Ross left the senate in 1969 to become administrator
     of the employment division for the State of Oregon. He
     was later elected national president of the Interstate
     Conference for all 50 state employment agencies,
     based in Washington, D.C. He later became an
     administrative law judge; was state chairman of the
     Employment Appeals Board and was a 30-year state
     of Oregon retiree. A lifelong member of Toastmasters
     International, Mr. Morgan had a remarkable career as
     a persuasive public speaker. (Funeral notice published
     in The Oregonian on September 2, 2009.)
         Stan Swan was in the Democratic Party, but               Don’s 90th Birthday Party - April 11, 2014




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      VOLUME 3 ISSUE 6  DECEMBER, 2016                                      VOLUME 3 ISSUE 8 FEBRUARY, 20178
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