The High Geaduation Ceremony (Page Two)...

Nothing Else Counts In This World!   

Hannah Graduates High School

Hannah is on her way to UCI while Lisa enters High School, exciting times!

Did you know? - The academic cap or square, commonly known as the mortarboard, has come to be symbolic of academia. In some universities it can be worn by graduates and undergraduates alike. It is a flat square hat with a tassel suspended from a button in the top center of the board. Properly worn, the cap is parallel to the ground, though some people, especially women, wear it angled back.

The mortarboard may also be referred to as a trencher cap (or simply trencher). The tassel comprises a cluster of silk threads which are fixed together and fastened by a button at one end, and fixed at the centre of the headpiece. The loose strands are allowed to fall freely over the board edge. Often the strands are plaited together to form a cord with the end threads left untied.

Awaiting The Procession

Did you know? - A procession (via Middle English processioun, French procession, derived from Latin, processio, itself from procedere, to go forth, advance, proceed) is, in general, an organized body of people advancing in a formal or ceremonial manner

Hannah's Graduation From High School
A beautiful day

Hannah's Graduation From High School

Hannah's Graduation From High School
"I've got to get a drink!"

Hannah's Graduation From High School
The band begins to play

Hannah's Graduation From High School
The wise old owl

Hannah's Graduation From High School
The school leaders come forward

The Procession Is Two By Two And Then They Split Right And Left

Hannah's Graduation From High School
Walking on astroturf with heels is not easy

Hannah's Graduation From High School
Tippy toe tippy toe

Hannah's Graduation From High School
Oops.... Where is the bobbie pins?

Did you know? - A bobby pin is a type of hairpin. In British English it is known as a "hair grip", but kirby grip is used as well. It is a small pin or clip, usually of metal or plastic, used in coiffure to hold hair in place. Typical bobby pins are plain and unobtrusively colored, but some are elaborately decorated or jeweled. A bobby pin is a double-pronged hair pin that slides into hair with the prongs open and then the flexible prongs close over the hair to hold it in place. Bobby pins became popular in the 1920s to hold the new bobbed hairstyles.

Bobbie Pin

Hannah's Graduation From High School
Screeching around the corner on two toes

Hannah's Graduation From High School
"Hat straight, head straight?  OK to go"

Hannah's Graduation From High School
"I am here, let the party begin!"

Hannah's Graduation From High School
"I know you guys are out there somewhere!"

Did you know? - The practice of wearing academic regalia in what is now the United States dates to the Colonial Colleges period, and was heavily influenced by European practices and styles. Students of most colonial colleges were required to wear the "college habit" at most times - a practice that lasted until the eve of the American Civil War in many institutions of higher learning.

In some rare instances the practice has persisted, such as at Sewanee, where members of one student society continue to wear the gown to class. After the civil war, academic regalia was generally only worn at ceremonies or when representing the institution.[30] There was not, however, any standardization among the meanings behind the various costumes. In 1893, an Intercollegiate Commission made up of representatives from leading institutions was created, to establish an acceptable system of academic dress.

The Commission met at Columbia College (now Columbia University) in 1895 and adopted a code of academic regalia, which prescribed the cut and style and materials of the gowns, as well as determined the colors which were to represent the different fields of learning. In 1932 the American Council on Education (ACE) authorized the appointment of a committee "to determine whether revision and completion of the academic code adopted by the conference of the colleges and universities in 1895 is desirable at this time, and, if so, to draft a revised code and present a plan for submitting the code to the consideration of the institutional members of the Council."

The committee reviewed the situation and approved a code for academic costumes that has been in effect since that year. A Committee on Academic Costumes and Ceremonies, appointed by the American Council on Education in 1959, again reviewed the academic dress code and made several changes. In the U.S., academic dress is now rarely worn outside commencement ceremonies or other academic rituals such as encaenia.

Hannah's Graduation From High School

Hannah's Graduation From High School
Everybody is happy

Hannah's Graduation From High School
Only a few more minutes

Hannah's Graduation From High School

The Procession Stops And The Band Begins Other Songs

Hannah's Graduation From High School
The seniors had to leave to join the choir for their last time

Hannah's Graduation From High School
Band to the left; choir to the right

Speeches And Special Honors First

Hannah's Graduation From High School
The Principal speaks

Hannah's Graduation From High School
Caught reading the program!

Hannah's Graduation From High School
The debate team did a marvelous job

Hannah's Graduation From High School
"Ok Ok, I know it is soon now!  Silly Principal, P comes right after A "

Hannah Is Called To The Platform

Hannah's Graduation From High School
Gee, meeting the Principal and I am not in trouble!

Hannah's Graduation From High School
The names are being read and Hannah is next

Hannah's Graduation From High School
Only 2,000 people are watching you... Don't be nervous

Hannah's Graduation From High School
The longest ten feet in my life

Hannah's Graduation From High School
"OK, hand it over!"

Hannah's Graduation From High School
It's mine!

Hannah's Graduation From High School
"Quick, snap the pictures!:

Did you know? - The tassel worn on the mortarboard or a tam seems to provide, by tradition, the greatest opportunity for latitude in American academic dress. It has been black, or represented the university's colors, or the colors of the specific college, or the discipline. The tassel has also been used to indicate membership in national honor societies or other awards. However, strictly speaking, the ACE code states that "The tassel should be black or the color appropriate to the subject, " and only makes an exception for the gold tassel.  Just as for the use of velvet headwear, the gold metallic tassel is reserved for those entitled to wear the doctoral gown. Only one tassel is worn at a time.

Hannah's Graduation From High School
Back to my seat and then the party can begin

Hannah's Graduation From High School
"They brought out the red carpet just for me?"

Did you know? - A red carpet is traditionally used to mark the route taken by heads of state on ceremonial and formal occasions, and has in recent decades been extended to use by VIPs and celebrities at formal event. More generally "red carpet treatment" and "rolling out the red carpet", refer to any special efforts made in the interests of hospitality.

The earliest known reference to walking a red carpet in literature is in the play Agamemnon by Aeschylus, written in 458 BC. When the title character returns from Troy, he is greeted by his vengeful wife Clytemnestra who offers him a red path to walk upon:

"Now my beloved, step down from your chariot, and let not your foot, my lord, touch the Earth. Servants, let there be spread before the house he never expected to see, where Justice leads him in, a crimson path."

Agamemnon, knowing that only Gods walk on such luxury, responds with trepidation:

"I am a mortal, a man; I cannot trample upon these tinted splendors without fear thrown in my path."

Oriental carpets in Renaissance painting often show rugs and carpets, patterned but with red often the main background color, laid on the steps to a throne, or on a dias where rulers or sacred figures are placed.

A red carpet was rolled out to a river to welcome the arrival of United States president James Madison in 1821.

Hannah's Graduation From High School
"This is steep!"

Hannah's Graduation From High School
"A few more steps and they cannot grab me back!"

Hannah's Graduation From High School

Hannah's Graduation From High School

Hannah's Graduation From High School
Back to her seat for a few more names

Hannah's Graduation From High School
"I am on my way"

Hannah's Graduation From High School

Hannah's Graduation From High School
More congratulations

Hannah's Graduation From High School

Hannah's Graduation From High School

Hannah's Graduation From High School

Hannah's Graduation From High School

Hannah's Graduation From High School
"I can do this"

Hannah's Graduation From High School
"Ah... where is the beach ball??"

Hannah's Graduation From High School
The final countdown begins

Hannah's Graduation From High School
"... with the authority vested in my by the State of Confusion...."

Hannah's Graduation From High School
Moving the tassels to the graduated side

Hannah's Graduation From High School

Did you know? - The mortarboard is generally believed by scholars to have developed from the biretta, a similar-looking hat worn by Roman Catholic clergy. The biretta itself may have been a development of the Roman pileus quadratus, a type of skullcap with superposed square and tump and is now known as the Bishop Andrewes cap. The mortarboard may also have been influenced by practices in Islamic madrassas. It was originally reserved for holders of master degrees (the highest qualification in mediæval academia), but was later adopted by bachelors and undergraduates. In the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries corner-cap (catercap in the Marprelate tracts) was the term used .

Traditionally they throw them in the air after the announcement of their confirmation of their graduation.

Hannah's Graduation From High School
She said she would wait on the field for us

Hannah's Graduation From High School
Aunt Sue hugs the graduate

Hannah's Graduation From High School

Proud Mom and Dad

Hannah's Graduation From High School

Hannah's Graduation From High School
Friends join in on the congratulations

Hannah's Graduation From High School

Hannah's Graduation From High School
Friends

Hannah's Graduation From High School

Hannah's Graduation From High School

Go Back Home Awaiting The New Graduate

Page 1 - The Trip  |  Page 2 - The Graduation  |  Page 3 - Party Time