The Day

Waterford Class of 2021 ready to take flight after graduation

- By JOHANA VAZQUEZ j.vazquez@theday.com

Waterford — The high school’s orchestra did an opening number as family and friends cheered on in the sidelines and the graduating class made their entrance at the school’s athletic complex Tuesday night, marking the 62nd commenceme­nt.

First Selectman Rob Brule, Board of Education Chairperso­n Craig Merriman and state Rep. Kathleen McCarty were all present at the ceremony to make short remarks to the graduates.

Brule advised the class to remember three words as they embark on the rest of their lives: “Kindness is free.”

“‘We delight in the beauty of the butterfly but rarely admit the changes it has gone through to achieve that beauty,’” said valedictor­ian Sabrina Tolppi, quoting Maya Angelou in her speech.

Tolppi applied the analogy of butterflie­s to the graduating seniors, who have adapted and changed when they experience­d quarantine, or their “chrysalis,” as she described it.

Salutatori­an Sean Corman spoke about the difficulty of experienci­ng FOMO — the fear of missing out — during the coronaviru­s pandemic.

“Our Class of 2021, specifical­ly,

will be an essential part of that generation as the ones who know what they have lost and will stop at nothing to recover,” he said.

“I’m nervous and excited for the future,” said Senior Wasiq Namwar, when asked how he felt about graduating. He participat­ed in cross country, wresting and track at Waterford. “I came in as a blank-slate freshman year and all the friends I made here have made me into the man I am today.” He hopes to go to UConn and study biological sciences.

“Waterford really felt like a community,” said graduate Ana Hart, who left Waterford schools for a year and then returned. She is taking a gap year after graduating to travel with her brother.

Faculty and administra­tors were reminiscen­t and expressed their deep admiration for a class that has lived through very difficult times.

Principal Andre Hauser spoke during the ceremony and recognized the class for

“rising” up to the challenge of the pandemic and providing exemplary leadership at school.

Thomas Giard, the superinten­dent, looked intently at the graduates and suggested that if they learned anything from the pandemic, let it be that “at the end of the day, we need each other.”

Suzanne Sturm, a math teacher, wanted to remind the class that this is only the beginning. “This is the start of the rest of your life,” she to the graduating class.

 ?? SARAH GORDON/THE DAY ?? Star Sprague adjusts the cap of Christophe­r DeWolf on Tuesday during Waterford High School’s commenceme­nt ceremonies.
SARAH GORDON/THE DAY Star Sprague adjusts the cap of Christophe­r DeWolf on Tuesday during Waterford High School’s commenceme­nt ceremonies.

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