14 Herald - Lantern - Dispatch 19 |une '85
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-^.X" From The Principal IBy Stanley Kotzen Principal. Lower Cape May Regional High School
It is over. In a splash of I color and a wave of emoI tion the Class of '85 has ] moved into the annuals of our alumni and brought to I an end a wonderful year for all of us here at Lower Cape May Regional High. The ceremonies of this rite of passage were very traditional and as these capped and gowned students filed through rows of wellwishers, to the strains of Pomp and Circumstance, they looked exactly like their brother, sisters, parents and grandparents before them. High school commencement is an experience the great majority of us share. It is at the very least a tribute to this country's commitment to public education, and for many immigrant families who came to this land at the i turn of the century it was a I giant step toward realiza- ' tion of the American Dream.
Today, graduation has a slightly different meaning. For many young people it is only the end of this part of their education which will continue in a variety of forms throughout their lives Besides college, there will be business and trade schools, adult education, and lives devoted to learning and selfimprovement. But formally, nothing compares to a high school graduation. College commencements can be deeply moving and symbolic, but they are beyond the reach of much of our society. Often they are impersonal, a characteristic that is never part of the high school experience. MOST OF THESE young people who switch the tassel from left to right have lived their youth together. If not for all of the past 12 years then at least for the past six, and for the most part they know one another pretty well. It is the closest bonding in a group this size that we know in life, and many of us are stirred by those memories with these June ceremonies. Ours had all of the trappings that have become so familiar. There was the note of hope sounded in the speeches of the graduates and the expressions of pride on the faces of family and friends. There was the recognition for outstanding achievement in the form of scholarships and . awards and there was that golden moment for each graduate as they took a diploma in the left hand and accepted the congratulations of the president of the board of Education was the right. If you weren't there at least you get the picture. No matter how much alike these graduations are, each one is very special and unique — particularly when it is yours. Our Class of '85 went out in style as it left the field to the sounds of the recessional graduates became a part of all of us who share that experience Standing on that podium the other night with the graduates behind me and the community of family and friends in front of me. I couldn't help but feel a part of a truly great ritual — and then it was done. The crowd dispensed, the | field emptied, the discarded programs were all that was left. We will do it again next year. It will be all new and exactly the same Amico Joins Debate Cry VINELAND - The call for a debate with the incumbent Republican assemblymen in Cumberland/Cape May has been joined by Peter Amico. Democratic candidate for the assembly. Assemblymen Guy Muziani and Joseph Chinnici were challenged earlier by the second Democratic candidate, Raymond Batten. for such a debate. Amico suggests Ocean City. Wildwood. Cape May, Miilville, Vineland and Bridgeton as sites for such a debate.
GRAND OPENING — Wildwood Crest Mayor Frank McCall cuts a ribbon of 7S-one-dollar bills at grand opening of Crest Pharmacy on New Jersey Avenue. Left is store owner Robert Drewnowski; center, Stanley Gage of the Crest's 75th Diamond Anniversary Committee, to whom the money was donated. Drewnowski's children, in front, are Michael, left, and Robert. r*/' Sandpiper Galerie H i — Now Open for its 22nd ^ Ps season! Come and shop in : the beautiful suburbs of Stone pj" Harbor at 109th St. & 3rd Ave. ; Ksn) 368-2040 J J (fS\ Noon to Five Until Mid-June ( < — ■ tna CONTEMPORARY CRAFTS •j£S| 70t\t «*af «M« (jxto! A(! TOvdk Sp AmrU&ut flLn - ' f. ' -v-* . jw, 'yovu "ft til*"1- • 203 %ln ^ M m-xh . * OPEN DAILY I III I 1 Q I IJwiLUflM RB GALLERIES H STONE HARBOR, NEW JERSEY 19 2nd Avenue at 94th Street El 368-6361 H June 21 • July 4 B-B pj Howard Watson, AWS Ejl El Philadelphia, PA Bel E£fl Watercolors El H AVALON, NEW JERSEY AT THE GOLDEN INN WM Q A CONFERENCE CENTER B=1 78TH A DUNE DRIVE 368-3363 June 19 • July 8 Joyce Marks Hershey, PA \ I Watercolors • [

