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View Full Version : Cheering at Graduation = Arrested??



colleyvillesooner
6/13/2008, 08:46 AM
Think this will hold up in court?

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/25083792/?GT1=43001


7 busted after cheers erupt at S.C. graduations

It's an effort to reduce disruptions, but for some, it's 'like a funeral in there'

COLUMBIA, S.C. - When Rock Hill school officials tell commencement crowds to hold their applause until the end, they mean it — police arrested seven people after they were accused of loud cheering during the ceremonies.

Six people at Fort Mill High School's graduation were charged Saturday and a seventh at the graduation for York Comprehensive High School was charged Friday with disorderly conduct, authorities said. Police said the seven yelled after students' names were called.

"I just thought they were going to escort me out," Jonathan Orr told The Herald of Rock Hill, about 70 miles north of Columbia. "I had no idea they were going to put handcuffs on me and take me to jail."
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Orr, 21, spent two hours in jail after he was arrested when he yelled for his cousin at York's commencement at the Winthrop University Coliseum.

Rock Hill police began patrolling commencements several years ago at the request of school districts who complained of increasing disruption. Those attending commencements are told they can be prosecuted for bad behavior and letters are sent home with students, said Rock Hill police spokesman Lt. Jerry Waldrop.

All the cases, except for one that includes a resisting arrest charge, will be handled in city court and are punishable by a maximum of 30 days in jail and a $1,000 fine.

'Gave a little whoop'
Orr said he thinks people should be allowed to cheer.

"For some people, it might be the only member of their family to graduate high school, and it was like a funeral in there," Orr said.

William Massey, 19, was arrested but said he plans to fight the charge. He said he simply "clapped and gave a little whoop" when his fiancee's name was called. Massey said there were warnings before the ceremony but none that said he could be arrested.

He said not everyone who cheered was arrested.

"There's a lot more people that did it than six or seven," said Massey, who graduated from Fort Mill last year.

Fort Mill Principal Dee Christopher says school officials don't ask that offenders be arrested but that he plans to keep a police presence at future graduation ceremonies.

"We think it's important for every graduate's name to be heard and for every person in the arena to be able to see that student cross the stage. ... That's why we have disruptive guests removed," he said.

Last year in Galesburg, Ill., five students were denied diplomas from the city's lone public high school after enthusiastic friends or family members cheered for them during commencement. Students could get their diplomas after completing eight hours of public service for the school district.

yermom
6/13/2008, 09:06 AM
what a load of ****.

kinda reminds me of the Nazis in Owasso though :O

NormanPride
6/13/2008, 10:05 AM
What a joke. It's situations like these that make me wonder if public schooling even works.

mdklatt
6/13/2008, 10:08 AM
If you'd been at my sister's HS graduation you would have wished for some cops to shut up some of those braying jackasses in the crowd.

yermom
6/13/2008, 10:18 AM
more people should be braying jackasses about their friends/family getting an education ;)

StoopTroup
6/13/2008, 10:27 AM
I like those pocket airhorns. :D

Dshpi0MaYes

SteelClip49
6/13/2008, 10:43 AM
it is bullcrap for the arrests but I cannot stand when people cheer for more than 5 seconds in a building so small that the voices carry and others can't hear their son's or daughter's names being called. It was like that at my graduation in May at UCO.

mdklatt
6/13/2008, 10:49 AM
it is bullcrap for the arrests but I cannot stand when people cheer for more than 5 seconds in a building so small that the voices carry and others can't hear their son's or daughter's names being called. It was like that at my graduation in May at UCO.

Yeah, the arrests were probably too much. It's nothing a little tasering couldn't have taken care of with much less hassle.

12
6/13/2008, 11:11 AM
I always enjoy hearing the one lone voice breaking the silence, "WAY TO GO, BRO!!"

Seriously, I think it's great that family and friends show support. They do need to keep it brief, though.

mdklatt
6/13/2008, 11:43 AM
Seriously, I think it's great that family and friends show support. They do need to keep it brief, though.

Well there's the problem right there. If people could restrain themselves, it wouldn't be an issue. But no, you've got put people hooping and hollering for five minutes after their graduate sits down, and then there are the people that start carrying on BEFORE their person even gets to the stage.

soonermix
6/13/2008, 11:51 AM
just make everybody wear a shock collar that responds to decibel levels... problem solved.

12
6/13/2008, 12:41 PM
W...you've got put people hooping and hollering for five minutes after their graduate sits down, and then there are the people that start carrying on BEFORE their person even gets to the stage.

That's why the guy shouting, "WAY TO GO, BRO!!" is so cool. It isn't a production, he's just proud of his brother.

I always like to shout, "****IN' AAA!!" when someone I don't know is walking the stage.

mdklatt
6/13/2008, 12:47 PM
That's why the guy shouting, "WAY TO GO, BRO!!" is so cool. It isn't a production, he's just proud of his brother.


If it was just that, I don't think anybody would have a problem. But like always, a few yahoos have to spoil it for everybody. Yeah, we get it. You're excited. Congratulations. It's a momentous occasion. NOW STFU SO EVERYBODY ELSE CAN ENJOY THEIR OWN MOMENTOUS OCCASION.

Condescending Sooner
6/13/2008, 03:28 PM
Why do you cheer when someone graduates high school? It's really not that big of an achievement is it?

mdklatt
6/13/2008, 03:29 PM
Why do you cheer when someone graduates high school? It's really not that big of an achievement is it?

It is for some people.

:pop:

Curly Bill
6/13/2008, 03:32 PM
It is for some people.

:pop:

It is for the type of people that yell like idjits when someone manages to graduate high school. :D

mdklatt
6/13/2008, 03:38 PM
It is for the type of people that yell like idjits when someone manages to graduate high school. :D

Exactly. The first thing I think when I hear somebody getting cheered so loudly is, "wow, they must not be very bright." But then again, I'm a terrible person. Corky would get less adulation for graduating from high school.

Hamhock
6/13/2008, 03:44 PM
bottom line is...them's the rules.

announcement was made..letters sent home.

it's been several years since i went to a public school graduation and wish several of the fools would have been locked up.

this type of behavior isn't meant to draw attention to the person graduating but the person showing the rest of the audience that they don't care about the rules and society's norms.

Curly Bill
6/13/2008, 03:46 PM
Having been to a number of high school graduations I would proffer the opinion that the ones usually cheered like crazy were not among the best and brightest that class had to offer. Not saying that is always the case, but more often then not...

I guess I'm saying that in many of these instances you have proof that the apple doesn't fall too far from the tree. You get to say to yourself: yep, now I can see why Little Johnny is like he is.

Curly Bill
6/13/2008, 03:47 PM
bottom line is...them's the rules.

announcement was made..letters sent home.

it's been several years since i went to a public school graduation and wish several of the fools would have been locked up.

this type of behavior isn't meant to draw attention to the person graduating but the person showing the rest of the audience that they don't care about the rules and society's norms.

yep

12
6/13/2008, 03:56 PM
Hmm. I don't believe I've ever heard it at a high school graduation. I've only heard the celebration calls for college ceremonies.

yermom
6/13/2008, 04:08 PM
to be fair, in Owasso, there were people cheering/applauding when people's names were called at my graduation and other people in my family

they were Nazis about throwing your cap at the end :D

12
6/13/2008, 04:11 PM
When so many are cheered, what happens to the loser who has the silent walk of shame?

I'm thinking a short career in the post office.

Curly Bill
6/13/2008, 04:14 PM
I think some polite cheering/applause is perfectly OK, but like many things in society it's the ones that won't be restrained by societal norms, or just plain ol' good manners, that ruin it for everyone.

mdklatt
6/13/2008, 04:27 PM
to be fair, in Owasso, there were people cheering/applauding when people's names were called at my graduation and other people in my family


There's cheering and applauding, and then there's the over-the-top acting like you just won the lottery.

GottaHavePride
6/13/2008, 04:32 PM
When so many are cheered, what happens to the loser who has the silent walk of shame?


I usually give them the "one guy going WOOOOOOOO really loud" treatment so they don't feel bad.

mdklatt
6/13/2008, 04:40 PM
I usually give them the "one guy going WOOOOOOOO really loud" treatment so they don't feel bad.

Pity woo just makes it worse.

Hamhock
6/13/2008, 04:43 PM
Pity woo just makes it worse.

i'll take my woo wherever i can get it.

olevetonahill
6/13/2008, 05:09 PM
I yelled " Way to go baby " last Night at my Daughters ;)

CORNholio
6/13/2008, 07:01 PM
Talk about making a mountain out of a molehill. He cheered. Execute him.

BajaOklahoma
6/13/2008, 07:16 PM
My kids graduated high school with over 1300 other kids. It is a very precise production, with two speakers announcing the names (alternating, so it goes faster). It was still 2 1/2 to 3 hours long. A guick whoop or cheer would have been fine, but make it quick out of respect for the other people graduating and their families.
This is not a popularity contest. If your child doesn't already know you are proud of them by graduation day, you have bigger issues.
Fortunately, having a rude family doesn't mean the the graduate is rude.

For their college graduation ceremonies, I noticed that the families yelling the loudest and most obnoxiously were of an ethnic origin that usually is known for excellent manners.

12
6/13/2008, 07:31 PM
Mexicans?