This past Tuesday, my daughter Emma graduated from Parkland High School. Fifty one years ago. I graduated from Slatington High School. The two ceremonies could not have been more different. I know that is partly generational and partly the huge difference in the size of the graduating class.
On a hot summer evening, in June of 1970, I and my 120 fellow classmates walked, from the school, to Alumni Field. We took our seats on bleachers set up on the football field. It was really hot, but at least it wasn’t raining. We listened to the guest speaker talk about how depressing some of our popular music was. Then we listened to our salutatorian, Patty Daubenspeck, give her speech. That was followed by our valedictorian, Maryann Everett, delivering hers. We collected our diplomas. Thank you, Mr. Kemp. Our hats were thrown into the night air and off we went to the Slatington Moose Clubhouse for our graduation dance. Good times!
This past Tuesday, Emma and her just under 1000 classmates gathered in the halls of Allentown’s PPL Center and gradually filled the gym floor with red and grey graduation caps and gowns. The PPL Center technology was in full force as each graduate’s name made its way around the hall on the electronic banner that surrounds the gym. Also on the Jumbotron, each graduate’s senior picture and name were broadcast to the crowd. There was no guest speaker. There is no longer a valedictorian nor a salutatorian. Instead there was a class speaker, a senior woman with a 4.85 GPA, headed to MIT, and who is also a published author. That was followed by a few quick speeches by school officials and the passing out of diplomas. The distribution of diplomas took about 90 minutes. One graduate did a backflip on stage. Emma did not know who it was, the disadvantage of a large class. Hats were thrown in the air, of course! The processional began and the graduates were to meet their parent at the corner of 7th and Linden. Good times!
You can see the difference in the two ceremonies. But, do you know what was exactly the same? The excitement for what lies ahead. The memories of thirteen years of public education. The sense of an end and a beginning. The realization that this may be the last time that you may see most of these people. The epiphany that we are adults now and that our next milestones may be college graduations, discharges from the armed forces, or first full time jobs. After that, marriages, children, and grandchildren. Divorces, deaths, and retirements.
Whether it is looking at my classmates next to me in 1970 or looking at Emma and her thousand fellow graduates, my heart fills with the wonder of life. What is in store for each of these human beings? My heart fills with love and the hope that each one of them has a wonderful life. I can think how far I have come in those 51 years. It has had its ups and downs, but you know what? I wouldn’t have wanted to miss a second of it. Good luck to all of the 2021 graduates! And to my fellow graduates, I miss you all. see you at the next reunion!