February 11, 2009 9:29 PM
- Text
A Gloomy Graduation Day
(AP)
The memory of slain classmates hovered over the graduation ceremony for students at Santana High School, the site of a deadly shooting rampage during the school year.
The mother of Randy Gordon, one of the two students who died in the violence, walked onto the stage Thursday in a graduation gown and accepted the diploma he was to have received.
As Gordon's name was called first, several doves were released into the air and the crowd of students and families stood applauding. His mother, Mari Gordon-Rayborn, exchanged long hugs with school Principal Karen Degischer and others.
In recalling the March shooting, which also killed freshman Bryan Zuckor, Degischer expressed gratitude to "those of you who gave of yourselves to save lives and comfort others this spring.
She said the attack had resulted in the school community growing together "in one heart."
"Randy and Bryan will always remain in that heart," she said.
The March 5 shooting, which also wounded 13 people, allegedly was carried out by a 15-year-old freshman, Charles Andrew "Andy" Williams.
Gordon, 17, died after he was shot in the back. A distance runner on the school track team, he had planned to join the military after graduating.
Zuckor, a 14-year-old freshman, was a comic daredevil who dreamed of becoming a stunt man or a doctor, according to his friends and family.
In speaking during Thursday's ceremony, valedictorian Aemon Cannon remembered that Santana High's students had seen "two sparrows fall."
As time goes on, he said, it is his hope that the community's pain "will not turn our heads from the stars."
"The class of 2001 has not and will never be ruled by hate," he said.
More than 370 seniors wearing robes in the school's purple and white colors marched onto the lush green football field to the rhythm of "Pomp and Circumstance" on a picture-perfect afternoon
Parents smiled and waved to their children and recorded the event with video cameras. Nearby, the large satellite dishes of television crews popped up over the crowd.
Security was tight, with seniors being patted down before entering the field. Authorities said the step was taken every year to keep seniors from carrying beac balls, water guns, alcohol or other disruptive items into the ceremony.
As a precautionary measure, however, the school district called in extra sheriff's deputies, said Jim Esterbrooks, a county education department spokesman.
Near the graduation stage, several photographs taken as part of a senior project were displayed, representing hope for the future and the "healing" that took place after the assault.
Outside the campus, community members held up signs reading "Seek tolerance, not hate," and "God loves everybody." Ten protesters from Kansas also held signs that said the acceptance of gays in public schools created moral problems that led to the shooting.
The attack was the nation's deadliest high school shooting since the 1999 massacre at Columbine High School in Colorado, which left 15 dead.
Williams, who was arrested in the school bathroom where he allegedly opened fire, has pleaded innocent to two counts of murder and 26 other felony charges. A preliminary hearing is scheduled for July 17.
© MMI The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed
The mother of Randy Gordon, one of the two students who died in the violence, walked onto the stage Thursday in a graduation gown and accepted the diploma he was to have received.
As Gordon's name was called first, several doves were released into the air and the crowd of students and families stood applauding. His mother, Mari Gordon-Rayborn, exchanged long hugs with school Principal Karen Degischer and others.
In recalling the March shooting, which also killed freshman Bryan Zuckor, Degischer expressed gratitude to "those of you who gave of yourselves to save lives and comfort others this spring.
She said the attack had resulted in the school community growing together "in one heart."
"Randy and Bryan will always remain in that heart," she said.
|
Gordon, 17, died after he was shot in the back. A distance runner on the school track team, he had planned to join the military after graduating.
Zuckor, a 14-year-old freshman, was a comic daredevil who dreamed of becoming a stunt man or a doctor, according to his friends and family.
In speaking during Thursday's ceremony, valedictorian Aemon Cannon remembered that Santana High's students had seen "two sparrows fall."
As time goes on, he said, it is his hope that the community's pain "will not turn our heads from the stars."
"The class of 2001 has not and will never be ruled by hate," he said.
More than 370 seniors wearing robes in the school's purple and white colors marched onto the lush green football field to the rhythm of "Pomp and Circumstance" on a picture-perfect afternoon
Parents smiled and waved to their children and recorded the event with video cameras. Nearby, the large satellite dishes of television crews popped up over the crowd.
Security was tight, with seniors being patted down before entering the field. Authorities said the step was taken every year to keep seniors from carrying beac balls, water guns, alcohol or other disruptive items into the ceremony.
As a precautionary measure, however, the school district called in extra sheriff's deputies, said Jim Esterbrooks, a county education department spokesman.
Near the graduation stage, several photographs taken as part of a senior project were displayed, representing hope for the future and the "healing" that took place after the assault.
Outside the campus, community members held up signs reading "Seek tolerance, not hate," and "God loves everybody." Ten protesters from Kansas also held signs that said the acceptance of gays in public schools created moral problems that led to the shooting.
The attack was the nation's deadliest high school shooting since the 1999 massacre at Columbine High School in Colorado, which left 15 dead.
Williams, who was arrested in the school bathroom where he allegedly opened fire, has pleaded innocent to two counts of murder and 26 other felony charges. A preliminary hearing is scheduled for July 17.
© MMI The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed
Latest Now in National
- Whitney Houston's body moved from hotel
- Induced labor allows dying Texas man see daughter
- Induced labor allows dying Texas man see daughter
- Former Pa. DEP chief on contaminated water from gas drilling
- Whitney Houston's daughter taken in ambulance
- NJ man who shot off-duty officer must pay $5.9M
- Autopsy on Whitney Houston to begin Sunday
- Experts: Stanford's trial not won with 1 witness
- Drillers cut natural gas production as prices drop
- Man charged in plot to kill Utah governor
- Nature: Bobcats riding out the snow
- US seeks to mine social media to predict future
- RI player wins $336 million Powerball jackpot
- How the revolution became digitized
- Celebs mourn Whitney Houston at Clive Davis event
- The nation's weather
- Whitney Houston fans pay emotional tribute
Latest CBS News Headlines
on Facebook Most Discussed Stories
on CBS News
- Carnival goes to the dogs with Rio pet parade
- Arab League wants UN peacekeepers in Syria
- Investigators seek answers to Houston's death
- Investigators seek answers to Houston's death
on Facebook Most Discussed Stories
on CBS News






