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The Villanovan | Volume 115, Issue 11: May 3, 2023

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WEDNESDAY MAY 3, 2023 www.villanovan.com @thevillanovan VOLUME 115 | ISSUE 11

STUDENT-RUN SINCE 1916

Senior Column: It’s Cool to Care

Students Share Summer Plans and End of Year Sentiments

Rachel Reiniger Former Digital Editor

College teaches you a lot. Everyone knows the cliches: self-discovery, independence, career opportunities, the list goes on. But the lesson that truly changed my college experience is not as widely talked about: the best thing you can do in life is care more. We start out life knowing this and somehow lose it along the way. In elementary school, the harder you tried, the more you were rewarded. You add more stickers to your classmates’ Valentines, sign longer notes in the back of your neighbor’s yearbook and make your best friend a matching friendship bracelet. Middle school slowly introduces the concept of perception. Cliques ran rampant and cattiness followed suit. Suddenly you enter high school learning it is no longer cool to care. Then college comes, and you’re told, “Put yourself out there!” “Say yes to everything!” and “Leave your door open and chat with anyone that passes by!” I quickly learned freshman year would be much easier if I had been thrown in as a first grader. No guards up, wearing my heart on my sleeve, probably in a sequin High School Musical t-shirt. Instead, I, like many others, let the stress of being perceived as “too much” hold me back freshman and sophomore year. I was too scared to ask the same person to dinner two nights in a row or send a text afterwards saying how much fun I had. There comes a point in college when you realize it may not be about Continued on p. 10

Lauren Armstrong Staff Writer

It is hard to believe that yet another academic year has come to an end; students at Villanova are beginning to pack their bags and say their goodbyes, longing for the warm summer days again, yet secretly counting down the days until coming back to campus in August. While the campus may be emptying out for the summer, ‘Nova students are staying just as busy with their summer plans and starting to prepare for their final exams. Students such as

junior Bella Lentini will be “studying abroad in Florence for the first half ” of the summer. “[I will] most likely be working as an assistant teacher in a special needs class like I did last summer,” Lentini said. “There aren’t really many internships for what I want to do [speech pathology], so this experience is good.” Villanova hosts a variety of summer study abroad programs, the most popular ranging from 10 weeks abroad in Ireland to the joint, 10-week internship and class study abroad at the London School of Economics. “[I am] excited

Students look forward to summer as spring blooms around campus. Graydon Paul / Villanovan Photography

for [my] classes abroad,” junior Katelyn Dougherty said. “The one is taught by a Villanova professor arranging the trip abroad and the other is at the London School of economics and should be a fun experience.” In addition to studying abroad, a large number of students will be participating in internships this summer. Sophomore Jane Maleady shared that she will be interning in investment banking. Maleady is very excited to be working in New York City this summer and is “super excited to gain exposure within the industry.” Junior Megan Moore will be in-

terning and “teaching at a summer school as part of a student teaching program.” Moore is also excited to have the summer to “destress and enjoy time with [her] hometown family and friends.” Freshman Emma Thomas is excited for her summer plans, which include “[attending a] Taylor Swift concert [and] shadowing in the Pediatric emergency department.” While the countdown to summer is gaining the attention of all the returning students, for the Class of 2023, graduation is on the horizon. Senior Shannon Kauber is a political science and communications double major with

Continued on p. 2

‘Nova Takes the 4 by Mile Championship Jacob Artz

Staff Writer The Villanova men’s track and field team ended the Penn Relays with a finish to remember. Junior Liam Murphy closed from ninth place to first place during his anchor run to help the team claim the 4-bymile Championship of America with a time of 16:14.08 at Franklin Field in Philadelphia on a wet Saturday afternoon. The other three

runners who preceded Murphy in the team effort were sophomore Sean Donoghue, who ran a 4:01.24, graduate student Charlie O’Donovan,

who clocked in at 4:01.80 and senior Sean Dolan, who had a time of 4:00.80. The fashion in which the team won and the stage in

Members of the track team celebrate their win. Courtesy of Villanova Athletics.

which it accomplished it made the victory special. “This will never get old,” Dolan said via Villanova Athletics. “This is my favorite meet, and it is the best track meet in the world in my opinion. Nothing beats Franklin Field this weekend. It is a big deal for us, and to bring home a wheel where it belongs is a huge honor.” Murphy avenged the distance medley race in which the Wisconsin runner overtook him in the last 100 meters of Continued on p. 16

Villanova Program at SCI Phoenix Prison p. 3

University Receives $20m Grant for Posse Partnership p. 3

Satire: Hell Week is Worth Savoring p. 5

Senior Columns: Meghann Morhardt, AJ Fezza, Tina Aron p. 6-7

Letter From The Editors: Your Mental Health Matters p. 9

The Villanovan’s Year in Review Spread p. 12-13

Villanova Buildings as Taylor Swift Songs p. 15

Women’s 4x800 Impresses at Penn Relays p. 17

Full Page of Ask The Villanovan p. 21

BACKPAGE: Crossword and Series Finale of Mr Wildcat! p. 15


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