What a wonderful memoir of those special times, gamagin! I remember seeing Jean Claude towering above the congregation in the back row at 11:00 am Sunday Mass.
Other random memories:
Buildings: When I was at HNA (class of '60), the boarders lived on the top floor of the HNA building - sadly, now The Academy retirement community, devoid of all the wonderful mahogany and, saddest of all, without the elegant parlor that topped the long staircase of the main entrance. My heart fell when I visited there a few years ago and saw the parlor had given way to an enclosed space.

The school exterior appeared in the 1993 movie, Benny and Joon, starring Johnny Depp and Mary Stuart Masterson.
Holy Names Building: What an elegant old building it was, so perfect for a girls' academy! I always entered the door on the Mission Avenue side, but the main entrance on the front of the building was impressive. At the top of the long flight of stairs, the Parlor was on the right, filled with elegant french provincial furniture and a big gold harp. Aside the parlor was a little alcove atop the stairs, which contained a small table. Toward the end of my sophomore year, I was unfortunate enough to have my desk in Sister Sheila Mary's home room, rifled by the good Sister Sheila, who confiscated a masterful collection of notes which my best friend Nancy and I whiled away class time composing for each other, complete with unladylike language and unflattering images of teachers we did not like (chin whiskers included). Sister Sheila was sufficiently appalled to call my mother for a meeting of the three of us in that alcove above the main stairwell, there for me to read the notes aloud in the presence of my sainted mother.
Sidenote about HNA and the rich and famous: A friend of mine told me a funny story about her friend from those days, the now famous tell-all biographer, Kitty Kelley, who was compelled by her mother to spend at least some time during our HNA tenure (she was in the class of '59) boarding at HNA. I can't imagine what Kelley had done to cross her mother, because as I recall she was ASB president and a pillar of the HNA community. In any event, Kitty put some of her chums up to the task of visiting the Kelley home (on High Drive, as I recall - Dad was the prominent attorney William Kelley of Davenport Kelley Witherspoon & Toole) and distracting Kitty's mother long enough that some in the group were able to sneak up to Kitty's room and toss a couple of prom dresses out the window to waiting co-spirators below, so Kitty would be able to attend the Autumn Whirl, the big dance.
Kitty's since had a pretty interesting life and career, apparently no worse for the wear from what were likely some trying teenage times in Spokane.
Gonzaga Law School: I was trying to remember where the law school would have been located when Frank Burgess attended, I think starting in '65. I know that it eventually ended up in the old Webster School building, but I remembered that building stood empry for many years when I was a child. The answer can be found here, in this history of the law school:
1960s - Present
University President Father John Leary, S.J., seized the day when Spokane School District 81 put a nearby vacant grade school up for bid in July 1962. Webster School, built in 1901, had been the victim of a fire in 1945, been restored as a trade school, and finally left empty for several years. Father Leary acquired the building for $115,000. The old Webster school would be the home of the law library for the next thirty-eight years. Until the mid 1970s, the law library was open twenty-four hours a day, seven days a week, often unstaffed, on the honor system.
In the 1970s, the law school, formerly a night school, began offering day classes. Explosive growth quickly followed. The law school underwent several renovations in the early 70s. On November 7, 1971, a new wing of the library was dedicated. Further renovations in 1972 and 1973 also changed the shape of the library.
By the 1990s, the law school occupied the old Webster school and several adjacent buildings. Under Dean John Clute, fundraising was begun to build a new law school. The class of 2000 was the last to graduate from the old law building.
When I was googling "Webster School," I found this interesting tidbit in a snippet from the book Bing Crosby: A Pocketfull of Dreams - the Early Years, 1903 - 1940, which I gather indicates Bing attended Webster School, future site of the old Law School: