The University of Virginia conferred the first of its 2019 degrees Saturday, to the joy of newly minted graduates of the College and Graduate School of Arts & Sciences and their families assembled on the Lawn on a warm, cloudy morning.
About 3,050 Arts & Sciences students received their degrees, about half of the 7,090 awarded this year. Those include 2,701 bachelor’s degrees, 219 master’s degrees and 130 doctorate degrees. One hundred and twenty students from the College of Arts & Sciences earned baccalaureate degrees in three years, and five more College students did so in only two. Students in the University’s 10 other schools and the Data Science Institute will receive degrees in a second ceremony on Sunday.
Parents, family members and friends began to fill the Lawn early Saturday. Alumnus Harold Mitchell and his wife Lisa were there to watch his daughter, Madeline, earn a bachelor’s degree in psychology, with a minor in French. Next year, Madeline Mitchell will teach English in France. She is the last of the Richmond couple’s children to graduate from college.
“It’s surreal,” Lisa Mitchell said. “I feel like she will be going back to class, it’s hard to believe.”
A few rows behind the Mitchells, Simachew Desta and Abebech Abebé were eagerly anticipating their daughter Helen’s walk down the Lawn.
The couple moved to the United States from Ethiopia 38 years ago and raised their daughter in Fairfax. She became a “Double Hoo” Saturday, earning a master’s degree in statistics one year after completing her bachelor’s degree here.
“We are so proud,” Abebé said, showing pictures of Helen with a NCAA National Championship T-shirt beneath her graduation robes. She was in the Cavalier Marching Band for four years, her mother said, and cried tears of joy when the team won in April.
“She has loved UVA,” Abebé said. “She doesn’t want to leave.”