The Villanovan | Volume 114, Issue 12: April 27, 2022

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WEDNESDAY APRIL 27, 2022 www.villanovan.com @thevillanovan

STUDENT-RUN SINCE 1916

VOLUME 114 | ISSUE 12

Villanova Fails Its Seniors

Villanova Commencement: No Feature Speaker, Set to Focus on Students

Jack Roberge Editor Emeritus

Commencement speeches are opportunities to leave one final, lasting impact on the graduating class before its members leave to take part in bigger things. Four years of education are difficult to pack into a singular speech, but often, the purpose of the speech is bigger than that. The goal may be to provide some levity at a point in the students’ lives that can be overwhelming and stressful, as Conan O’Brien’s did at Dartmouth in 2011. Or, the goal might be to provide advice that the graduates wouldn’t have heard inside the classroom, as David Foster Wallace delivered in his famous address to Kenyon College in 2005. Finally, the speaker themselves may hold such a position that they simply make the commencement feel all the more important by their very presence, as Jill Biden did for Villanova graduates in 2014 or James Earl Jones accomplished in 1996. Or, of course, a University could do away with all of that and simply let the students hear from no one at all. This last path is the one Villanova has elected to take. After four years of hard work, Villanova’s class of 2022 will become yet another Villanova class with no real commencement speaker. At a school with few traditions, the end of the era of commencement speakers feels disrespectful to seniors and their parents, all of whom deserve a well-earned moment of celebration and circumstance. Villanova has elected once again to have only internal speakers at the commencement ceremony, with a lineup that includes a current student, a current member of the faculty, and once again keynote speaker Rev. Peter M. Donohue, OSA, Ph.D., more widely known as Father Continued on p. 10

Rev. Peter M. Donohue, O.S.A., Ph.D. served as the commencement speaker for the class of 2021. Courtesy of Olivia Pasquale/Villanovan Photography

Vivi Melkonian Co-Editor-in-Chief

While other universities have names like Joe Biden, Taylor Swift and Anthony Fauci delivering their graduation addresses, Villanova has opted to make graduation this year all about the students. This year’s ceremony for the Class of 2022 will not feature a keynote commencement speaker. The commencement ceremony will take place on Friday, May 13 for the undergraduates, and Saturday, May 14 for graduate students. “The focus is on them,” Rev. Peter M. Donohue, OSA, PhD said about the graduating students.

Father Peter explained the absence of an outside keynote speaker for the Class of 2022. “We do not have a commencement speaker, someone from the outside, simply because it really takes so long to get those people,” Father Peter said. “We didn’t really know what it was going to be like [with COVID], or how many restrictions there would be.” Father Peter explained that the University wanted the focus to remain on the graduates, and the celebration will be about them. “Sometimes people look at it as who the person was and how famous the person was, and if the person was really famous they were

excited,” Father Peter said. “It was kind of bragging rights. The last two years though, it really hasn’t seemed to make a difference because I think the focus is on them. The focus in the last two years has really been on the graduates.” When asked if the students would receive this news well, Father Peter said he thinks they will be okay with it. “I think they will understand,” he said. “I hope they are all grateful that they’re here, and they got through this and got to stay on campus. Villanova did a lot to get them through this experience, and we got through this, we are not over it yet, but we got through the most difficult time of

COVID, and, I say it all the time, predominantly because our students wanted to be here. They followed protocols and did everything they needed to do and they made it work. Graduation should be about celebrating them.” When planning for commencement began back in the fall, the state of COVID on campus and in the region was uncertain. Father Peter acknowledged that was an issue. “Planning for commencement begins back in the fall, the dates are selected, and all of those things are done, but we were not sure where COVID would be,” Father Peter said. “We knew it was better than last year,

he said, when asked after his final press conference how he

wanted to be remembered. He went on, becoming emotional

thinking about how he was treated by the press during his time in charge. “Maybe it’s because you guys have been good,” Wright said, choking back tears. “Like it’s not like anybody’s killed me here. And I know I’m not perfect. If you show me some of my weaknesses, good, you guys were good about what we’ve done. It doesn’t affect me either way. “I kind of like sometimes when somebody picks apart, ‘yeah, but he didn’t do Continued on p. 13

Continued on p. 2

In Retirement, Wright’s Legacy Faces Biggest Test Colin Beazley

Co-Editor-in-Chief In the Broadway musical “Hamilton,” titular character and Founding Father Alexander Hamilton is tortured by how he will be remembered. “Legacy. What is a legacy?” he asks, before going on to answer his own question. “It’s planting seeds in a garden you never get to see.” Jay Wright? Not so much. “I really don’t care,”

If Wright’s successor struggles, Wright’s legacy may be hurt. Courtesy of Olivia Pasquale, Villanovan Photography

Father Peter Speaks On Wright’s Retirement p.3

Philadelphia Imposes Then Revokes Indoor Mask Mandate p.5

Privileged AdvocacyWho is Your Service Really Serving? p.7

Opinion: Believe in Kyle Neptune

The Villanovan’s Year in Review Spread

p.8

p.10-11

Villanovans Prepare For Finals Week p.12

Baseball Hands UConn First Conference Loss p.16

Brianna Herlihy Completes Six Year Career p.17

Recruits Whitmore and Armstrong Reaffirm Commitments p. 17

Trey Fourticq Completes Promising Freshman Season p.19


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