| 
			
			 “Before we begin our regular commencement 
			tonight,” said combined elementary/high school principal Jim 
			Albertson, “we have a special award to present. Will Windy Wilson 
			please come up here on the stage with us?” 
 Windy looked up at the stage in the gymnasium and all he saw were 
			black choir robes and smiles. He looked at his fellow spectators and 
			all he saw were grins and people sitting down.
 
 “Windy?” said Jim. Windy walked up to the stage and shook hands with 
			the principal. “Put this on.”
 
 Windy draped a black robe around himself and put the mortarboard on 
			his head.
 
 Albertson pulled a piece of paper from his shirt pocket.
 
 “Alphonse Wilson, it is the judgment of your community and friends 
			that no one has ever worked harder for an honorary doctor’s degree. 
			Am I right on that?”
 
 The young graduates clapped and hooted, and so did the audience. 
			Windy looked at the floor and blushed right through his grey beard.
 [to top of second 
            column] | 
            
  
 “We can’t give you an honorary 
			doctorate here because we don’t have one. But your neighbors 
			discovered that you only lacked one class to graduate from high 
			school, and we can do something about that.” “Alphonse Wilson … known to all 
			as Windy … this school … these young graduates … and all your 
			friends and neighbors are proud to bestow upon you an honorary high 
			school diploma.”
 Jim placed a ribbon with a medal hanging from it around Windy’s neck 
			and handed him a rolled-up certificate.
 
 Not too many aging cowboy camp cooks and philosophers receive 
			standing ovations, but then, there’s nothing very ordinary about 
			Windy Wilson and we all know that.
 [Text from file received from 
			Slim Randles] 
			Brought to you by 
			Saddle Up: A Cowboy’s Guide to Writing, by Slim Randles, now 
			available at Amazon.com.
   |