Date: Fri 26-Jun-1998
Date: Fri 26-Jun-1998
Publication: Bee
Author: MICHEL
Quick Words:
schools-graduation-class-'98
Full Text:
Class Of '98 Says Farewell -- Buy Not Goodbye
(with cut)
BY MICHELE HOGAN
The band was playing on the left. Family and friends cheered and applauded
from the right. Billowing clouds were overhead. Members of Newtown High
School's class of 1998 filed across the grass and were seated in the center of
Bruce Jenner Stadium Monday evening for graduation.
One by one, local dignitaries stepped up to the podium with words of
inspiration and encouragement for the 247 graduates seated before them.
Chuckles erupted from the stands and the green as teacher Robert McHugh smiled
and told the graduating class, "Don't be surprised when you begin to act and
look like your parents."
Seniors snickered back, and within moments several enormous beach balls
bounced back and forth through the neat rows of graduating seniors, eliciting
more cheers from the crowd of parents and friends in the stands.
A high-spirited celebration of accomplishment and freedom, students still
could not forget the people they would soon be missing. The graduating class
had pulled together as a family, and now they saw it coming to a close.
As they prepared to move on to a new chapter in their lives, Valedictorian
Michael Oristaglio touched the hearts of students and parents alike.
Michael told the them that there are many words he could say, but "one word we
shouldn't say is `goodbye.'"
He said through their four years in the high school, they had said goodbye to
their mascot; at times they may have felt they were saying goodbye to their
sanity.
He gently reminded them: "We let go. We were able to smile and move on. Say
thank you for one or two or 50 special people, but don't say goodbye."
There were muted giggles when he reiterated, "Don't say `Ciao.' Don't say `See
ya dude.'"
Then he paused. The crowd hushed. "Don't say `I love you.'" Again, silence. "I
love you."
"I love you. Some things are better left unsaid. Don't say goodbye." Silence.
Graduates names were called. Hands were shaken. Diplomas given.
Mortar boards were thrown to the wind when the last diploma was in hand.
There were then tearful embraces, touching remembrances, excited talk of the
future, but no "goodbyes" were heard on that crowded green Monday night.
