The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Serenity of sunsets balances outlook

Activities, activism help student adjust to college life during pandemic.

- By Eric Stirgus eric.stirgus@ajc.com

The Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on is following the lives of faculty and students like Yara Manasrah at various colleges and universiti­es in Georgia throughout the first full academic year since the coronaviru­s pandemic began. We will publish periodic reports about them. This is the second of these articles.

ATHENS — Yara Manasrah needed to have an important talk with her parents.

She was accepted to her first college choice, the University of Georgia, but wondered if she should go.

The 18-year-old was born with an iron deficiency that makes it tougher to overcome a cold. She worried about staying healthy in the midst of the coronaviru­s pandemic. She also worried about burdening her parents financiall­y. Go, they said reassuring­ly. Manasrah recalled the conversati­on on a recent Friday, hours before the university celebrated its spring 2020 commenceme­nt that was delayed by five months because of the pandemic. The first-year student was astonished by the number of people on campus for the ceremony.

Manasrah found a quiet spot on a bench near a neatly manicured stretch of grass next to Reed Hall dormitory, where she has sunset picnics with her roommate. It is one of her favorite places on campus.

“It reminds me why I came,” Manasrah said of the serenity she feels when she is here.

Manasrah believes she made the right choice to attend UGA. She’s made friends and joined the Redcoat Band. Through her new friendship­s, her band participat­ion and campus activism, Manasrah has found her place on this campus of about 50,000 students and employees.

“I am a Georgia Bulldog,” she likes to say. Sarah Manley, a first-year student who’s become friends with Manasrah, has watched her change since they arrived on campus in August. Yara now seems less stressed, she’s more into football and is more “free flowing.”

“She’s happier,” said Manley, 19, who is also in the band.

But Manasrah isn’t completely content about life at UGA. She joined protests against some of the university’s COVID-19 plans and against racial discrimina­tion. Manasrah says she will work on efforts she believes will improve life for classmates and her siblings, whom she’s already trying to recruit to come here.

A difficult adjustment

Manasrah took some college courses at the University of West Georgia during much of her last two years at Chapel Hill High School in Douglas County. She was concerned that many high school classmates weren’t taking the pandemic seriously.

“I’ve viewed a few of my peers sneaking out to see their friends/significan­t others on social media websites (TikTok is a big one), but a vast majority are actually staying home, which is good,” she said in an interviewa­s part of a special AJC report in July on howa group of high school and college seniors adjusted to the pandemic.

The AJC decided to continue to followher educationa­l and personal journey, interviewi­ng her several times over the first three months of the semester, along with her friends, and meeting with Manasrah several times on campus.

Attending college this fall was a difficult decision for many other first-year students. The National Student Clearingho­use Research Center recently reported 16% fewer freshmen have enrolled this fall compared to last year. The university is collecting final data, but believes the number of first-year undergradu­ate students at UGA is similar to last year’s total of about 4,500.

Manley, who graduated from Gwinnett County’s Brookwood High, recalled the romanticiz­ed vision she and Manasrah had about college life before they arrived.

It hasn’t turned out that way.

UGA had several thousand positive COVID19 cases at the start of the fall semester. The New York Times in September reported UGA had more positive cases than any school in the nation since the pandemic began. The initial numbers — down significan­tly in recent weeks — troubled many students, faculty and university administra­tors.

Manasrah spends a lot of time in her room to avoid exposure. She takes a COVID-19 test on campus every otherweek. She hasn’t tested positive.

Most of her classes are online. Manasrah earned the HOPE Scholarshi­p, which helps pay about all of her tuition. She thinks she’s doing well academical­ly. Her toughest class is German.

Like any first-semester college student living away from home for the first time, Manasrah is experiment­ing. Her straight, black hair that was well below the shoulders in high school is now shorter, and sometimes blue, or purple, or most recently, pink.

She groused about one issue new students often talk about on college campuses. The cafeteria food, particular­ly the rice, was “problemati­c.”

“It needs more seasoning,” Manasrah said on the first day of classes.

New experience­s with her ‘homies’

UGA has several programs to engage first-year students. They’ve added new ideas to ease the transition in response to the pandemic. One is called Dawgs Together, a peer programtha­t connects first-year and transfer students with the veterans on campus for support and to help the new students “find their place,” said Beau Seagraves, the university’s associate dean of students and the director of Student Care and Outreach.

Mental health is another issue UGA has tried to address. The number of first-year undergradu­ate students seeking campus mental health services has increased from 77 at this point last year to 115 so far this year, UGA officials said. The uncertaint­y surroundin­g how classes will be taught, concerns about classmates diagnosed with COVID-19 and the lack of daily interactio­n for students taking online classes has heightened anxiety, experts say.

UGA-administra­tors are trying to keep students healthy and happy during a pandemic with online activities. There’s virtual yoga classes and online comedy shows. There’s also been a Zoom session with one of its most popular young alumna, ESPN analyst and reporter Maria Taylor.

“An integral part of the college experience is outside the classroom,” Seagraves said. “For us, we want to recognize that and anticipate what they need.”

For Manasrah, what she needed one night was Taco Bell. She contacted her friends and they made a midnight run to the fast-food spot.

Manasrah called friends she met during the summer through a GroupMe meeting organized by the university. She and 10 other incoming first-year students rented a spot near Lake Oconee in late July. They quarantine­d for two weeks beforehand. There, she kayaked for the first time and went hiking.

“It was nice to say these are my homies,” Manasrah said.

Manasrah and Manley met afterward through a friend who thought they should connect because they’re in the band. They both play the sousaphone, and there are few first-year students who are women in that section. Manley thought she was outgoing and had a great sense of humor.

The two friends and others in their circle talk about boys, practice and home. They try to meet once aweek for lunch, dinner or towatch Georgia football games. The band is only playing at home games. Manasrah said her first performanc­e will be on Dec. 5, UGA’s final home game against Vanderbilt.

Manley said all of her classes are online, so the meetings bring much-needed social activity. Manasrah and her closest friends have agreed they will not meet if any of them do not follow social distancing guidelines.

Some of Manasrah’s friends are foreign-born students. She’s been particular­ly glad to meet them. Manasrah’s mother was born in Lebanon and grew up in Sweden, her father is from the Palestinia­n territorie­s. She credits her unfailing politeness to them.

Manasrah speaks glowingly of her parents, who left their homelands with no guarantees about their future. She misses her mother’s cooking. She’s the oldest of four siblings and the family got two puppies before she left for UGA. Sometimes, she’s homesick. The family uses FaceTime to catch up.

Finding her way

Her parents took her to protests when she was a child. Manasrah took her parents’ spirit of activism to Athens.

She wished UGA had required students be tested before arriving on campus. She attended a protest where students demanded more testing facilities and that the university release campus COVID-19 test results daily. A few friends on campus tested positive for the coronaviru­s.

During one September interview, as weekly COVID-19 case totals remained high, Manasrah suggested UGA send everyone home. Or stop all on-campus activities and shut down the bars and nightclubs near the north end of the university, where hundreds of students party onweekends, many not following social distancing recommenda­tions.

Manasrah said she’s not part of the party scene. She thought about joining a sorority, but changed her mind. The sorority she liked had a history of not being racially inclusive, she said.

“As I grow older, I want justice for everybody. Full stop. It doesn’t matter what your age, what your race is, what your sexual orientatio­n is, what your religion is. Nomatter what, you are a person and deserve the same life as everybody else. Period.”

Full stop. Manasrah says it frequently to emphasize a point.

“All the time,” Manley said laughing. A few weeks after the mid-September interview, Manasrah said she was feeling good. She’s completed one part of the university’s required First-Year Odyssey Program, several seminars designed to help students learn about UGA’s opportunit­ies and its academic culture in small settings.

She’s also picked a major: interdisci­plinary studies. Her goal is to continue her post-graduate studies in Sweden, where her mother once lived, and someday become a professor teaching about rhetoric and howit’s used in the mass media. She’s fascinated by how ideas are presented to people.

Additional­ly, Manasrah made another discovery that’s eased her adjustment to Athens.

“I’ve found out where the good food is on campus,” she said.

‘I’ve viewed a fewof myp eers sneaking out to see their friends/ significan­t others on socialmedi­a websites (TikTok is a bigone), but a vast majority are actually staying home, which is good.’

Yara Manasrah UGA student

 ?? CHRISTINA MATACOTTA FOR THE AJC ?? Yara Manasrah believes she made the right choice to attend the University of Georgia. She’s made friends and joined the Redcoat Band. Through those connection­s and campus activism, she feels she has found her place among the roughly 50,000 students and employees at UGA.
CHRISTINA MATACOTTA FOR THE AJC Yara Manasrah believes she made the right choice to attend the University of Georgia. She’s made friends and joined the Redcoat Band. Through those connection­s and campus activism, she feels she has found her place among the roughly 50,000 students and employees at UGA.
 ?? PHOTOS BY HYOSUB SHIN/HYOSUB.SHIN@AJC.COM ?? Yara Manasrah says she willwork on efforts she believes will improve life for classmates at University ofGeorgia inAthens and her siblings, whomshe’s already trying to recruit to become Bulldogs.
PHOTOS BY HYOSUB SHIN/HYOSUB.SHIN@AJC.COM Yara Manasrah says she willwork on efforts she believes will improve life for classmates at University ofGeorgia inAthens and her siblings, whomshe’s already trying to recruit to become Bulldogs.
 ??  ?? Aclass takes place outdoors on the UGA campus in September when the COVID-19 infection rate was high. Most of Yara Manasrah’s classes are online and she spends a lot of time in her roomto avoid exposure to the coronaviru­s. She takes a COVID-19 test on campus every otherweek and hasn’t tested positive. She wished UGA had required students be tested before arriving on campus.
Aclass takes place outdoors on the UGA campus in September when the COVID-19 infection rate was high. Most of Yara Manasrah’s classes are online and she spends a lot of time in her roomto avoid exposure to the coronaviru­s. She takes a COVID-19 test on campus every otherweek and hasn’t tested positive. She wished UGA had required students be tested before arriving on campus.
 ??  ?? Astudentwe­ars a facemask as she makes herway through the University of Georgia campus in Athens in September. UGAhad several thousand positive COVID-19 cases at the start of the fall semester. The initial numbers— down significan­tly in recentweek­s— troubledma­ny students.
Astudentwe­ars a facemask as she makes herway through the University of Georgia campus in Athens in September. UGAhad several thousand positive COVID-19 cases at the start of the fall semester. The initial numbers— down significan­tly in recentweek­s— troubledma­ny students.

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