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Attending a graduation? Keep your cheers to yourself
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Three people in Mississippi faced charges of disturbing the peace for shouting a graduate's name at a graduation program. School officials are pressing charges, arguing that disruption undermines the experiences of other graduates. - photo by Eric Schulzke
Three people in Mississippi faced charges of disturbing the peace, with possible $500 fines and even six months in jail for shouting a graduate's name at a Senatobia High School graduation last month.

We were instructed to remove anyone that cheered during the ceremony, which was done, Zabe Davis, the chief of the campus police and a Senatobia High alumnus, told the New York Times last week. And then Jay Foster, the superintendent, came and pressed charges against those people.

On Friday, Senatobia school Superintendent Jay Foster held his ground in a phone interview, reported by the Christian Science Monitor. His aim, he said, was to make sure that some people don't disturb the experience for others, noting that in past years shouting for graduates would prevent the name being heard for the next.

"I think graduation should be a solemn occasion," he said. "It should have some dignity and decorum, and at the end we'll celebrate together."

"The First Amendment of the United States Constitution clearly prohibits the making of any law that would impede the freedom of speech," Mississippi ACLU Legal Director Charles Irvin said in a statement, ABC reported. "Citizens should be able to enjoy the right of free speech, especially at a congratulatory event, like a high school graduation. The cheering by the family does not qualify as a disturbance of the peace and should not have elicited a criminal response."

It's on ongoing issue, as generations of students and families have been urged to hold cheering till the end of a ceremony, and a small number of people in each such ceremony have disregarded the plea.

In 2012, an Ohio School had an innovative approach. The school withheld the diploma of a student whose family cheered too loud, saying the would only release it after the student did 20 hours of community service.

"I will be holding your diploma in the main office due to the excessive cheering your guests displayed during the roll call," said principal Marlon Styles, Jr. in a letter to the student, as reported by Gawker.

The mother insisted that he would not be performing the service.

In South Carolina that same year, a mother was walked out of the ceremony in handcuffs after cheering too loudly for her daughter, the local ABC affiliate reported.
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Groups hand out scholarships
RH theater scholarship
Richmond Hill High School senior Jacey Shanholtzer shows her Dawn Harrington Berry Spotlight Award, which was awarded by the Richmond Hill Community Theatre and includes a $500 scholarship. With her are Tom Harris, Ashlee Farris, Brett Berry and Kim Diebold. The award was created in memory of Dawn Harrington Berry, a long time RHCT member and president who died in 2016. - photo by Photo provided.

Three reports recently presented scholarships

Richmond Hill High School senior Jacey Shanholtzer received the Dawn Harrington Berry Spotlight Award, which was awarded by the Richmond Hill Community Theatre and includes a $500 scholarship. The award was created in memory of Dawn Harrington Berry, a long time RHCT member and president who died in 2016.

Garden Club

The Richmond Hill Garden Club recently awarded a $1,000 scholarship to Katherine Wood and a $500 scholarship to Carly Vargas, both seniors graduating from Richmond Hill High School.

The awards were presented May 8 during Honors Night at RHHS.

Wood plans to attend Green Mountain College in Vermont and major in environmental studies.

Vargas plans to attend Tennessee Technological University in Cookeville, Tennessee, to pursue a degree in either environmental studies or biology.

The garden club awards a $1,000 scholarship annually to a local high school senior who plans to major in a field related to environmental concerns, plants and/or gardening.

This year, due to having two exceptional candidates, the garden club awarded an additional $500 scholarship.

Exchange Club

The Exchange Club of Richmond Hill recently named Caroline Odom as its student of the year.

The club each month during the school year names a student of the month, and the student of the year is chosen from among those winners.

Awards are based on academic performance, community involvement and leadership.

Monthly winners receive $100, with the annual winner getting a $1,000 scholarship.

The Exchange Club has been recognizing students for more than 30 years.

Odom will go on to compete in the Georgia District Exchange Club against students from across the state.

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