Gov. Murphy Tells Graduates to Be 'Doers" Who Change the World

Atlantic City, N.J. _ New Jersey Gov. Phil Murphy told the more than 2,000 graduates at șÚÁÏÉçâs Commencement Friday to be the âdoersâ who will become the state and nationâs next leaders.
âIt is simply not enough to tweet and consider that as actual participation in our cultural, political and social dialogue,â he said to a crowd of some 13,000 graduates and guests in Jim Whelan Boardwalk Hall. âIn these times, perhaps more than ever in our history, we need doers of deeds, not people who take their comfort in lobbing memes from their smartphones.â
Friday was the second commencement in Boardwalk Hall and the first that combined the graduates from summer and fall 2017 as well as spring 2018.
Murphy said he welcomes this generation of graduates as they take their place of leadership. He said upheaval is part of change and moving forward, but they can all make a difference in their chosen careers.
âYour generation is showing that it is ready to lead,â he said, citing young people involved in gun safety, political campaigns and entrepreneurial business ventures.
âYour generation is not letting anyone tell you to sit and wait your turn,â he said. âI look forward to watching you change our world. â
șÚÁÏÉç President Harvey Kesselman paid tribute to the late Jim Whelan, a former Atlantic City mayor and state Senator who was last yearâs commencement speaker, and after whom Boardwalk Hall has been named. Whelanâs wife, Kathy, attended the ceremony.
Kesselman told the graduates that success is not a destination, but a journey, and they must have vision to stay on track.
âOn the road to achieving your dream, youâve got to see it before you live it,â he said. âVision is essential to keeping you on the path.â
He warned them that the path to success, the âin betweenâ time, may sometimes be ordinary, or even boring, but they need to use their vision to say on the path to success.
âMusicians donât start out playing Beethovenâs Fifth Symphony,â he said, as Professor of Music Beverly Vaughn began softly playing scales in the background. âMusicians go through a period of simply perfecting the scales. And thatâs pretty similar to the âin-betweenâ place youâll experience on your way to the extraordinary.â
As Vaughnâs music built to a crescendo, Kesselman said so to, would the Class of 2018 Ospreys lives build to reach their dreams.
âYouâve got loyalty and royalty in your șÚÁÏÉç DNA,â he said paraphrasing Pulitzer Prize winning musician Kendrick Lamar and earning a laugh from the graduates. âYour flight is about to begin,â he said.
Student speaker Brittney Welch, who received a BA in Communications, said she knows that it is overwhelming to be graduating into a world of protest and uncertainty.
âOur society seems to be both completely complacent and utterly in upheaval at the same time,â she said. âWe often see miles between us in our disagreements rather than the quirky connections we have with each other than make us human.â
Welch, who will attend law school in the fall, said șÚÁÏÉç has given the graduates the tools they need to bridge the gap and find the commonalities to work together toward a common vision. She likened the university to the fictional Hogwarts as a place âthat will always welcome you home.â
âMy experiences in the classroom and beyond have left me with the enduring belief that when the world around you does not live up to your expectations, you must set your expectations for yourself even higher,â she said.
She also addressed the journey that faces the graduations, quoting Indiana Jones saying âItâsnot the years, honey itâs the mileage.â
âIt doesnât matter how long it takes us to get to our dreams,â she said, âwhat matters is the mileage along the way, the laugh lines and friendships and new places and sometimes difficult lessons we have collected on our journey as we make room in our hearts for something bigger, something more than us.â
Two graduates participated in the program. Danielle Quinn sang the national anthem for the fourth year, and Luke Leifken sang the Alma Mater âOspreys on Parade.â
Quinn, of Mays Landing, who received a BA in Psychology, will work as a research assistant at the Children's Hospital of Philadelphia Center for Autism Research as she works toward a