Clarion Girls Through The Years
- Agnes Lum (1975)
- Maile Dale (1976)
- Sabine Kaneko (1977)
- Mayumi Horikawa (1978)
- Naomi Tanaka (1979)
- Setsuko Karasuma (1980)
- Yumi Hasegawa (1981)
- Kaoru Ōtake (1982)
- Emi Kagawa (1983)
- Yuri Kurokawa (1984)
- Masumi Miyazaki (1985)
- Mika Shiokawa (1986)
- Miki Kawashima (1987, real name Daria Kawashima)
- Renhō (1988)
- Megumi Yūki (1989)
- Reiko Katō (1990)
- Shōko Ueda (1991)
- Shiho Shinjō (1992)
- Noriko Tachikawa (1993)
- Misa Takada (1994)
- Chiaki Hara (1995)
- Naoko Izumi (1996)
- Rie Kasai (1997)
- Sayo Aizawa (1998)
- Natsu Tōdō (1999)
- Ai Hazuki (2000)
- Eliana Silva (2001)
- Airi Tōriyama (2003)
- Aoi (2004)
- Miku Sano (2005)
- Uri Yun (2006)
Read more about this topic: Clarion Girl
Famous quotes containing the words the years, clarion, girls and/or years:
“Tis not to see the world
As from a height, with rapt prophetic eyes,
And heart profoundly stirred;
And weep, and feel the fullness of the past,
The years that are not more.”
—Matthew Arnold (18221888)
“Mr. Wiggam, I want you to change the policy of The Clarion. I want you to write a story I should have written myself long ago. I want you to tell the people of San Francisco that no city can exist without law and order. Write a story about that flag, write about what verifies and brings a promise of life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness. There are some people in this town who dont seem to know that. Let The Clarion tell them.”
—Ben Hecht (18931964)
“... the girls who came at dawn
To pay a visit to the young child, and how, when he grew up to be a man
The same restive ceremony replaced the limited years between,
Only now he was old, and forced to begin the journey to the sun.”
—John Ashbery (b. 1927)
“Wondrous hole! Magical hole! Dazzlingly influential hole! Noble and effulgent hole! From this hole everything follows logically: first the baby, then the placenta, then, for years and years and years until death, a way of life. It is all logic, and she who lives by the hole will live also by its logic. It is, appropriately, logic with a hole in it.”
—Cynthia Ozick (b. 1928)