As more than 500 freshmen filed past cheerleaders and shouting students into the gym of their new (albeit 149-year-old) school, the 71-year-old educator who has led St. Paul Central High School for more than two decades gave each of them a high-five.
It was hard to tell who was more excited — the incoming ninth-graders or their principal, Mary Mackbee.
"This never gets old. This is exciting," a beaming Mackbee said as the theme from "Rocky" reverberated off the gym walls.
"This and graduation are reminders of why we do this."
Mackbee has been principal of Central, Minnesota's oldest public high school, since 1993. She joked that she gave herself the job right after then-Superintendent Curman Gaines decided to remove her as the district's director of secondary education.
It's a move for which Mackbee is thankful. She said being a high school principal is what she was meant to do. Those who have spent years working with her, and for her, agree.
"Mary Mackbee is the only principal I know that knows 99 percent of all the kids' names when they come through the door of Central High School," said longtime Central parent Margaret Coleman, who estimates that she has had 70 kids — her own and foster children — attend the school during Mackbee's tenure.
"They respect her and she respects them."