Serving Waitsburg, Dayton and the Touchet Valley
PRESCOTT - Amanda Beckman plans to study pre-law. Iris Batalla wants to become a dental hygienist. Nora Almanzar may enroll in a police academy and become a professional sniper. Cesar Munguia will attend WSU to study business and accounting. Joe Purdin and David Brock plan to enroll in Walla Walla Community College's welding program.
The Tigers in the Class of 2011 all have a vision of their future which began at their commencement on Friday night, capping high school careers as athletes, honor students or simply making all the way to graduation.
"Each of us has a different way and pace of traveling down this path," said Munguia, his class' valedictorian told the many teachers, relatives and community members who came to celebrate their graduation.
"There are many memories that left behind and you will all be missed," he told Prescott High School's teachers and staff in particular. "Thank you for all that you have done for this class of 2011."
Sixteen Tigers graduated in a sunset ceremony at the gym that marked Dr. Bill Jordan's first commencement as the district's superintendent. They chose for their class motto: "Hope sees the invisible, feels the intangible and achieves the impossible."
Some graduating Tigers already reached high during their years at Prescott, with athletes like Munguia, Purdin, Batalla, Beckman, Brock, Isabel Benito, Guillermo Hernandez, Jose Esquivel and Miguel Velazco all excelling in their sports ranging from soccer to basketball and contributing signifi cantly to the Waitsburg- Prescott sports combine.
Senior Tigers also won more than $8,200 in scholarships to support their higher education goals after high school.
Jordan, who was one of two commencement speakers, had a few sage words of his own for the seniors' next stage in life: keep your word, treat people better than they expect, be of service, take the time to listen to others, do the right thing, have courage and never be afraid to try something new.
And finally, "don't confuse your career with your life," he said before shaking each of the graduates hands and turning the podium over to Teacher of the Year Mark Grimm.
Grimm's speech included some candid ribbing of each of his departing students (Miguel Rubio's yellow shoes, Almanzar's perfect nails, Amelia Lopez's record-setting parental notes) and an observation about the nature of Prescott High.
"This school is all about sharing," Grimm said. "Families come through. That's the cool thing about this school: You're all such wonderful people."
Graduate David Brock introduce the class song, "Time To Grow Up," which was written especially for the occasion by James Corbin, a singer song writer from North Carolina who now lives in Seattle when he's not serving in Iraq.
"How many times have I cursed those old orchards and wheat fields that block the sun from my eyes," the song's second verse goes. "For some unknown reason, I'm not ready to leave em much to my bewildered surprise."
To Corbin's down home country folk lyrics, each of the seniors had a chance to find their parents in the audience, hand them a yellow rose (one of the class flowers) and embrace them in a long held school tradition.
"As parents, you should be extremely proud," high school counselor Marianne Newell said before she and business manager A.J. Jacobson started their long list of scholarship recipients. "This truly is an outstanding class."
High school principal Jodi Thew handed the graduates their diplomas, after which Hugo Puhua invited the gathered to the graduation reception in the school's multipurpose room.
2011 PRESCOTT HIGH SCHOLARSHIPS
Senior Scholarships:
Prescott Memorial Scholarship Fund Valedictorian
Award $150 Cesar Munguia
Prescott Memorial Scholarship Fund Salutatorian Award
$100 Iris Batalla
Lions Club/Sam Erwin Memorial Scholarship $1000
Amanda Beckman
Presented by Matt Tunnell
Prescott Education Association Scholarship $ 5 0 0
Guillermo Hernandez
PHS Alumni Class of 1960 Memorial Scholarship $780
Joseph Purdin
Aiyeku-Turner/Jackson Family Scholarship $500 Cesar
Munguia
Jacobson Family Scholarship $500 Cesar Munguia
Jacobson Family Scholarship $495 David Brock
Gailord and Jean Nelson Scholarship $500 Amanda
Beckman
A.C.E. Award $350 Amanda Beckman
Prescott Booster club $500 Amanda Beckman, presented by Michelle Brock
Gaylord and Jean Nelson Scholarship $500 Amanda
Beckman;
Blue Mt. Community Foundation William & Delora
Harpe Scholarship $1,000, Isabel Benito, presented by
Lawson Knight
Blue Mt. Community Foundation Ralph & Delora
Harpe Scholarship $1,500 David Brock
Blue Mt. Community Foundation Keith & Helen Fenner
Scholarship $595 David Brock
Rasty E & Nona Ketcherside Scholarship $1,500 David
Brock
The Times Community Service Scholarship $500 David
Brock, presented by Imbert Matthee
Prescott Booster Club $1,000 David Brock, presented by
Michelle Brock
Rotary $1,000 Cesar Munguia, presented by Terry Keske
Blue Mt. Community Foundation William & Delora
Harpe Scholarship $1,000 Cesar Munguia, presented by
Lawson Knight
WSU Gear-Up $2000 Cesar Munguia
WSU-Future Cougars of Color Award-Renewable for 4
years $5,000 Cesar Munguia
Alumni Scholarships:
PHS Alumni Scholarship $767 Morgan Beckman
PHS Alumni Scholarship $767 Rocio Escalante
PHS Alumni Scholarship $767 Julio Almanzar
Prescott Education Association Scholarship $400 Alisha
Marshall
Prescott Education Association Scholarship $500 Andrea Cruz
Columbia Basin College Foundation, Leuita P. Mathiowetz Scholarship $1000 Andrea Cruz, presented by Brenda
Boone
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