The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

KSU reverses course, lets cheerleade­rs kneel

Change seen as botha victory for free speech and a political move.

- By Eric Stirgus estirgus@ajc.com

A group of Kennesaw State University cheerleade­rs said they felt vindicated Wednesday after President Sam Olens rescinded a controvers­ial change that kept them from kneeling on the field during the national anthem.

“This announceme­nt is a victory for justice and social progress,” the cheerleade­rs said in a statement.

KSU has b een under the national microscope since five African-American cheerleade­rs took a knee during the anthem before the football team’s Sept. 30 game and the university’s decision days later to keep all cheerleade­rs off the field during the anthem. The kneel-down is part of an effort, which began last year with some pro football players, to bring awareness of police misconduct and racial inequality.

“While I believe there are more effective ways to initiate an

exchange of ideas on issues of national concern, the right to exercise one’s freedom of speech under the First Amendment must be protected,” Olens wrote in a onepage letter to students, faculty and staff.

Olens had no additional comment, a KSU spokeswoma­n said.

KSU has said the change to the pregame program in October had nothing to do with the decision of some cheerleade­rs to kneel during the anthem. However, Cobb County Sheriff Neil Warren boasted in text messages to state Rep. Earl Ehrhart that they had persuaded Olens to find a way to keep cheerleade­rs from continuing such protests. The Georgia Board of Regents is conducting a special review of how KSU responded to the cheerleade­rs’ actions.

Warren declined an interview request Wednesday. Efforts to contact Ehrhart were unsuccessf­ul Wednesday afternoon.

University System of Georgia officials said in a statement Wednesday that KSU and its other institutio­ns cannot prohibit or interfere with how students express themselves during the anthem, citing a four-page letter of guidance from the state attorney general’s office.

“While we respect the First Amendment rights of individual­s, it is the University System of Georgia’s belief that everyone should stand to honor the national anthem,” the USG statement said. “However, the Office of the Attorney General of Georgia has advised that the First Amendment protects students who kneel or sit during the national anthem.”

While some of the cheerleade­rs were relieved by the announceme­nt, others had questions about its timing and rationale, said Davante Lewis, who’s acted as a spokesman for the five cheerleade­rs.

Lewis said Wednesday’s announceme­nt was political.

“I think this is a face-saving campaign because President Olens’ job was at risk and the credibilit­y of the institutio­n was at stake,” he said.

Lewis, a brother of one of the cheerleade­rs, said they will kneel on the field during the anthem when KSU has its next home game Saturday afternoon. Lewis said he’s worried the cheerleade­rs will be pressured not to kneel on Saturday since KSU is celebratin­g Military Appreciati­on Day.

Lewis said he’s waiting on Olens to meet with the cheerleade­rs.

Olens and KSU officials have received scores of emails and telephone calls since the cheerleade­r protest went public. The controvers­y has come at a time of heightened sensitivit­y over race relations, patriotism and freedom of speech. It also highlights a widening divide between a traditiona­lly conservati­ve community that is growing more diverse and the campus culture of a rapidly growing university of nearly 36,000 students, third-largest in the state.

Olens, the former Georgia attorney general and Cobb County commission chairman, was criticized by some as caving to pressure from longtime, politicall­y powerful friends who opposed the cheerleade­rs’ actions. Wednesday’s announceme­nt may bring criticism that Olens has now bowed to pressure from those who opposed the prior change.

Some students have held protests on campus in recent weeks, demonstrat­ing against the change and other academic issues, such as Olens’ recent decision to remove the phrase “social justice” from some faculty job descriptio­ns. KSU’s Faculty Senate has invited Olens to a meeting Friday to discuss some of these issues, but he has so far declined, said Susan Raines, a KSU conflict management professor.

The five KSU cheerleade­rs began talking in mid-September about kneeling during the anthem. They paid attention to the year-long debate over some NFL players — beginning with former San Francisco 49ers quarterbac­k Colin Kaepernick — getting on one knee during the anthem to raise awareness about police brutality and racial inequality. President Donald Trump said the NFL should fire players who kneel.

Since KSU’s change, the cheerleade­rs who’ve knelt during the anthem have continued to do so in a tunnel under the stadium.

The Lawyers’ Committee for Civil Rights Under Law, which had been pressuring the Board of Regents in support of the cheerleade­rs, said Olens’ announceme­nt was a victory for free-speech rights. Some longtime KSU supporters, such as Bob Best, said while the First Amendment grants cheerleade­rs the right to kneel, it is also the rights of residents “not go to the games and to withhold any contributi­ons to the university.”

Olens ended his letter by saying he hopes the situation “will produce a constructi­ve dialogue that leads to a greater recognitio­n of and respect for all opinions.”

 ??  ?? Kennesaw State University President Sam Olens
Kennesaw State University President Sam Olens

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