(L to R: Janine Mizgier, Bella Watz and Lilly Tagg celebrate their graduation from Stissing Mountain High School in Pine Plains on June 24. Credit: Deborah Maier.

Midmorning rain and the threat of more did nothing to dampen the spirits of graduates and attendees at Stissing Mountain High School’s commencement ceremonies on June 24. The school’s large auditorium was packed, with standing room at the back filled. 

All stood for the processional, aided in its timing by personal messages spoken to each graduate by class advisor and special education teacher Carol Stracher, accompanied by band and choir renditions of traditional ceremonial tunes led by Erin Marlow and Alec Sisco, arranged with harmonies. 

A brief welcome by Principal Christopher Boyd was followed by remarks from Anne Arent, the president of the Pine Plains Central School District (PPCSD) Board of Education, who began by recognizing a milestone in board history: the service of class of ‘23 President John Bopp III as the board’s first student member. 

Arent also noted that this particular class of 67 graduates had all been schooled together since their earliest days at Cold Spring Elementary, and are thus known to each other and to administrators as a cohesive group that served to unite the northern and southern portions of the Pine Plains district. Arent’s own youngest child received her diploma from her proudly emotional mom and Boyd as well as PPCSD Superintendent Brian Timm. 

Addressing the class of ’23, Arent noted, “You are artists, engineers, volunteers,” and as she continued, lights went out on the assembled members onstage, as well as in the auditorium, when an audience member standing at the bank apparently leaned on a light switch. Arent handled it with aplomb and ended by urging students to “stand up for what you believe in, even if you are standing alone.” 

In his remarks, Timm noted a recent New York state award given to PPCSD for its “scholar athletes,” those who maintained at least a 90% score in their academics. He urged all the graduates not to fear failure but to embrace it as a means of learning how to be better.  Be great at what you pursue, he said, by first consistently being good. 

Student essays by Sidney Neil Stracher and Autumn Rae Prezzano urged fellow graduates to hold on to the cohesiveness they experienced as students once they venture out to the wider world, and to trust in themselves to achieve their dreams. “Your life is your life; know it while you have it” and live it to the fullest, both essayists urged. 

The awareness of the preciousness of each life was echoed in Salutatorian Gina Marie Kirk’s request for a moment of silence for the passing in February of Noah Thompson, who was to have graduated from Webutuck High School this year and was known by many in Pine Plains. 

Raegan Marie Smith and Arely Soria, who are both National Honor Society members and two of 14 Pine Plains graduates with the Seal of Biliteracy. Soria’s cap reads in Spanish, “To my parents, who arrived with nothing and gave me everything.” Credit: Deborah Maier.

Valedictorian Amanda Dillinger praised her classmates’ robust response to the community service requirements that showed their awareness and empathy for those less fortunate. 

Diploma presentations elicited hoots and shouts of joy and encouragement from friends and family members, and the recessional was marked with fist bumps, hip bumps, and other brief duos as each pair of graduates found novel ways to mark their coming separation from their 13-year cocoon. 

As rain held off for a time, graduates, friends and family members gathered in the school’s front courtyard. The tossing of mortarboards had been forbidden, but many of those grad hats were collaged, painted and inscribed with wry or inspiring messages, each as unique as its graduate. 

 

This article comes courtesy of The Millerton News.    

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