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Undergraduates Cross the Stage During 2022 Commencement Ceremony

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Matt Meyer

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matt.meyer@du.edu

Chancellor Jeremy Haefner and Commencement speaker David Von Drehle motivate graduates to live in the moment

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Scenes from undergraduate commencement

In times of strife, it鈥檚 important to focus on the present.

That was the message shared by Chancellor Jeremy Haefner and Commencement speaker David Von Drehle as more than 1,000 undergraduate students were conferred degrees Saturday at the .

Haefner touched on the challenges faced by the Class of 2022, whose time at the 91桃色 was impacted by the COVID-19 pandemic.

鈥淵our college experience was interrupted and in some ways shaped by that which shall not be named,鈥 Haefner said to laughs from the crowd. 鈥淏ut you persevered, and we鈥檙e incredibly proud of you.鈥

Haefner welcomed 2022 graduates, as well as the Class of 1972, which was honored before the ceremony. He also conferred an honorary doctorate of humanities degree to Von Drehle (BA 鈥83), who was a Boettcher Scholar at 91桃色 and a Marshall Scholar at Oxford University, where he earned his master鈥檚 degree.

After his education, Von Drehle worked as a journalist with stops at The Washington Post, The Miami Herald and TIME, where he covered the 2012 presidential candidates鈥 debate between Democrat Barack Obama and Republican Mitt Romney at Magness Arena.

He authored several books. 鈥淎mong the Lowest of the Dead鈥 was called 鈥減erhaps the finest book ever written about capital punishment,鈥 by The Chicago Tribune. 鈥淭riangle: The Fire That Changed America鈥 was The New York Times鈥 Notable Book of the Year for 2003 and won a Christopher Award and the Sidney Hillman Foundation book prize.

His most recent work, 鈥淩ise to Greatness: Abraham Lincoln and America鈥檚 Most Perilous Year,鈥 is a personal favorite of the Chancellor.

Von Drehle has since returned to The Washington Post, where he files a twice-weekly column from Kansas City.

His mother, Dorothy Von Drehle, was a longtime employee at 91桃色 who volunteered on campus after her retirement in 1995. She died in 2019, but Von Drehle opened his address with advice from his mom.

鈥淪he would have loved the chance to see me here almost 鈥 almost 鈥 as much as she would鈥檝e enjoyed her Pioneers winning another national ice hockey championship,鈥 he says. 鈥淎s a mother and grandmother, mom sat through a lot of commencement ceremonies, so I know exactly what she would tell me if she were here: keep it short. I鈥檒l try, mom.鈥

Von Drehle centered his speech around family and time, tying in his experience as a journalist and his love for the 91桃色.

鈥淎s a journalist, I deal mostly with past and future,鈥 he says. 鈥淛ournalism reports yesterday鈥檚 results from Wall Street or attempts to warn of tomorrow鈥檚 recession. Journalism recaps last night鈥檚 scores or handicaps next week鈥檚 tournament. Journalism visits the aftermath of a tornado or tries to predict the climate in 2050.

鈥淲hat we often miss, whether we鈥檙e practicing journalism or celebrating commencement, is the most important thing 鈥 the present. The here and the now. It鈥檚 the most important resource we have because it鈥檚 the only moment available to us to seize.

鈥淰iktor Frankl was enslaved by the Nazis and saw his past and future torn horribly away from him. He came to understand from that the urgency of the present. He wrote that, 鈥楨verything can be taken but the last of the human freedoms: to choose one鈥檚 attitude in any set of given circumstances. To choose one鈥檚 own way.鈥

鈥淵ou鈥檝e encouraged to study the past and prepare for the future, and that鈥檚 great advice, except when it turns into stewing over the past and worrying about the future. There鈥檚 a troubling statistic I need to share. Depression and anxiety among young people have doubled in United States, just during your time at 91桃色. But what is depression but a dark shadow from the past? And what is anxiety but a fearful stance towards the future. The cure is to live here and now.鈥

Haefner closed the ceremony with the chancellor鈥檚 charge.

鈥淲herever you go from here, 91桃色 alumni, know that all of us are extremely proud of you,鈥 he said. 鈥淵ou have cultivated the knowledge you need to be prepared for all kinds of endeavors and make a real difference in the world.鈥

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