Last week was challenging for officials at βThe Meccaβ of HBCUs. The administration had been busy at the start of the school year trying to calm nerves over violent incidents on and near campus, only to have a student pistol-whipped and robbed during the holidays.
And as fury over student housing conditions faded, fresh controversy exploded, forcing the university to make amends to its 2024 nursing class on Saturday with a special graduation ceremony at Capital One Arena.
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Days before the rescheduled ceremony, an uprising with broken glass and angry family members shaking their fists forced Howard University to cancel Thursdayβs original ceremony.
Hereβs what happened. The Cramton Auditorium, where the ceremony was scheduled to begin at 6 p.m., reached capacity before all the family and friends of the 280 College of Nursing and Allied Health Sciences graduating students could enter the facility, according to The Hilltop, Howardsβ student newspaper.
About 100 fuming guests stood outside the auditorium when security closed the second set of foyer doors.
They began chanting, βLet us in,β as anger and frustration reached a boiling point. TikTok user @destinymarilynn posted a video of the chaotic scene.
βWowwww @Howard Universty do F*CKING better. Im student here and can plan a graduation ceremony better that your unprofessional faculty. Yall have a whole field that can be utilized, why would you try to cramp everyone in one auditorium,β @destinymarilynn wrote.
Someone broke the glass door in the foyer during the commotion, which folks inside the auditorium could hear. Keynote speaker Dwain N. Esmond was asked to pause his speech.
βBecause of the size of the room, and because our relatives sometimes do not know how to act, the fire department is now here to shut us down,β Dean Gina Spivey-Brown told the seated audience, who booed her.
However, D.C. Fire and EMS denied shutting down the ceremony, saying that an emergency team responded to a medical call from the campus police.
Students and families were heartbroken. βI didnβt even get to walk. I didnβt get to walk. I graduated magna cum laude and I didnβt even get to walk, Halle Ragoonanan told NBC News Washington, adding that she experienced similar heartbreak during the pandemic.
βIβm the (high school) class of 2020,β she continued. βI didnβt get to walk for my high school graduation and I didnβt get to walk for my college graduation.β
Fortunately, Brown had a plan B, according to WUSA. Howard held a special graduation ceremony for the nursing students on Saturday.
βI told you Thursday night that you were unstoppable, did I not?β Brown at Saturdayβs ceremony. βWe prepared so many students of excellence, you all, that there was an overwhelming support of family, friends and loved ones. They wanted to get in so bad that they were breaking down the doors because thatβs what we do at Howard.β
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