We are excited that the time for our Grade 8 Graduation Ceremonies has arrived. Our Grade 8 students will be graduating onto high school at the end of this year and we are celebrating their hard work and success at our graduation ceremony tomorrow. Parents, guardians, family members and friends are welcome to come and see our graduates cross the stage to receive their elementary diploma. This right of passage is one of many that these students will encounter in their educational lives but it is a special one because it marks the beginning of their journey towards adulthood. We are proud of each and every one of our students and wish them well as they move forward to continue their educational career. Good luck Wildcats! Come back and visit us!
January 1 marks the New Year in the Gregorian calendar, and is celebrated by many communities world-wide. Korean New Year was originally a lunar festival, called Son-nal, held at the beginning of the second new moon after the winter solstice (December 21 or 22). Nowadays, New Year's is often celebrated on the solar New Year, January 1st. Many Korean families use this day to honor ancestors, have special food, and play traditional games. Oshogatsu (January 1-3) is an important festival for many Japanese people. Some gather with friends and families to say good-bye to the old year at forgetting parties. They also say hello to the New Year. Many Japanese, some of whom practice Shintoism, welcome in the New Year with prayers for renewal of hearts, good health, and prosperity. In North America, January 1 has become a day for Buddhists of all schools to attend a special service in the local temple. For many people, New Year's Eve is a secular holiday and has become an occasion fo
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