Chattanooga Times Free Press

Cheers replace protests at UGA commenceme­nt

- BY FLETCHER PAGE AND CASSIDY ALEXANDER

ATHENS — Thousands of students filed into Sanford Stadium under sunny skies, the air warm and breezy with no humidity.

They wore black caps and gowns, many with red stoles, and sat in white folding chairs on a white plastic temporary floor on the grass field, their families in the stands around them, and cheered and smiled and laughed and waved as a University of Georgia jazz ensemble and marching band filled the air with music.

Amid weeks of student demonstrat­ions over the war in Gaza that have spread across many colleges, including briefly on the UGA campus, seniors gathered there Friday night for an undergradu­ate commenceme­nt ceremony that featured plenty of pomp and little protest.

Many seated on the football field hadn’t been able to gather for their high school graduation­s four springs ago, when the COVID-19 pandemic hit.

“Many of you had a drivethrou­gh (high school) graduation ceremony or a ceremony conducted on Zoom as you and your family sat together on the sofa in your home,” making Friday night’s commenceme­nt “even more special,” Jere Morehead, UGA’s president, told the large crowd.

“I hope you feel a spectacula­r sense of achievemen­t as we celebrate all that you had to overcome over the past four years and all that awaits you in the bright future ahead,” he added to cheers.

The famous hedges lining the field weren’t as high and manicured as during fall football season. Many of the hedges were pulled up and replanted earlier this spring.

But the stands were nearly half-full in the cavernous stadium, perhaps 40,000 strong, as family, friends, faculty and alumni gathered to honor this year’s more than 8,000 graduating seniors at Georgia’s flagship public university.

While commenceme­nt proceeded as planned at UGA, other schools shifted gears in recent days. Columbia University canceled its university-wide commenceme­nt ceremony after studentled protests over the IsraelHama­s war. Emory University in Atlanta cited safety concerns and moved its graduation ceremonies off-campus.

UGA’s commenceme­nt ceremony Friday came after a planned pro-Palestinia­n protest at the iconic Arch entrance to the North Campus didn’t materializ­e at noon. Instead a long line of students — at one time more than 50 people — waited to take graduation photos in their graduation caps and gowns with smiling parents, siblings and grandparen­ts in tow.

Other graduating seniors and their families took photos early Friday afternoon at the Herty Field fountain and rang the bell at the chapel on the sprawling campus of a university that dates back to 1785.

Around 6 p.m., roughly 90 minutes before UGA’s commenceme­nt ceremony began, about 10 pro-Palestinia­n demonstrat­ors started setting up near the Miller Learning Center not far from the stadium. They carried protest signs, and bracelets, flags and graduation stoles in black, white, green and red — colors of the flag of Palestine.

Administra­tion officials told them they could stay, but that the area was reserved for the commenceme­nt and that they couldn’t have signs or protest. After about 25 minutes, the group left.

That followed several days of protests last week on or near the UGA campus. University police arrested 16 protesters, including nine students, at a campus demonstrat­ion April 29 against Israel’s war in Gaza.

UGA suspended the arrested students, including at least two seniors, banning them from campus. One of the seniors confirmed to The Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on that she wasn’t allowed to attend Friday’s commenceme­nt, despite more than 200 faculty members petitionin­g the administra­tion late last week to immediatel­y lift the suspension­s.

Protests there in recent weeks ranged from a dozen people to a few hundred people, and included a mix of students and non-students. As they prepared for final exams earlier this month, many on the campus of more than 40,000 students said they were struggling to take sides in a Middle East dispute with roots dating back to well before they were born.

An AJC reporter saw about 20 students take Palestine stoles offered by demonstrat­ors outside Sanford Stadium shortly before the commenceme­nt.

Inside the stadium, after the ceremony got underway as scheduled at 7:30 p.m., an AJC photograph­er saw a few students wearing Palestine stoles and at least one student had written “Divest Now, Free Palestine” on her cap.

But they could hardly be spotted in the sea of seniors.

 ?? ARVIN TEMKAR/ATLANTA JOURNAL-CONSTITUTI­ON ?? On Friday, a graduate holds a cap with a pro-Palestinia­n message in Sanford Stadium while a singer sings “Georgia on My Mind” during the University of Georgia spring commenceme­nt in Athens.
ARVIN TEMKAR/ATLANTA JOURNAL-CONSTITUTI­ON On Friday, a graduate holds a cap with a pro-Palestinia­n message in Sanford Stadium while a singer sings “Georgia on My Mind” during the University of Georgia spring commenceme­nt in Athens.

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