Under a sweltering August sun, two and a half years after COVID-19 moved their commencement ceremony online, more than 800 graduatesâwell over half the Class of 2020âwere back on campus today, finally wearing their caps and gowns, marching to the Green to the tunes of bagpipes and a brass quintet. More than 2,000 guests cheered them on.
âWe assured the â20s that we would welcome them home to Dartmouth as soon as possible for a traditional celebration,â says Vice President for Alumni Relations . âIâm thrilled so many have comeâsome from across the globeâto reunite and get re-acquainted with each other.â

Graduating Into a âStrangeâ but âAwesomeâ World
Keynote speaker , a Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist and author and dean of the University of California at Berkeley Âé¶čÊÓÆ” School of Journalism, acknowledged the âstrange, scaryâbut also incredibly awesome worldâ the graduates have been navigating since receiving their degrees.
âStrange because the global pandemic that derailed your graduation plans continues to disrupt and destabilize our lives. Stranger still because months after we all witnessed the attempted coup against our government, nearly half of the country continues to believe the falsehood that the election was stolen.â
Political wrangling has also dangerously slowed the response to climate change, said Anand. Yet, as she expressed confidence that a resilient Class of 2020 will meet unprecedented challenges, she gave a piece of advice rarely heard in a commencement speech.
âAs a person who is deeply committed to the fight for change, I am going to talk to you today about the importance of quittingâof saying thatâs it, Iâm done,â she said.
Anandâs journalism career has indeed taken sharp twists and turns. After finishing The Cure, a book based on her Wall Street Journal stories about John and Aileen Crowley, who launched a biotech company to save their children from a rare, possibly fatal genetic disease, Anand left her âdream jobâ with the Journalâs investigative team and moved with her husband and two small children to Mumbai, her hometown, becoming a foreign correspondent for The New York Times. She left that job to care for her ailing father. After he died, she shifted gears again. Leading a school of journalism, she said, âis the most meaningful job I have had in my entire life.â
âQuitting will, at times, be scary,â Anand said. âBut if you are paying close attention, you will know when to close one chapter in order to open up new opportunities to experience greater meaning, joyâand yes, to experience the incredible awesomeness of life.â
âUnwavering Resilience, Bold Actionâ
Class President Tim Holman â20 began his remarks with sweet memories of early days on campus.
âWe canoed on the tranquil rivers of New Hampshire, played frisbee on an abandoned airstrip, freestyle rapped, talked late into the night, and even saw a bald eagle soar above us,â he recalled about his first-year trip in 2016.

But that sense of calm was soon shattered, off campus, by turmoil. A consequential presidential election. A worldwide pandemic. The killing of George Floyd and attacks on Asian-Americans, âsparking a racial reckoning.â Through it all, Holman said, the Class of 2020 not only persevered; they madeâand continue to makeâpositive impacts: , providing emergency medical care, fighting hunger, advocating for the rights of people with disabilities, developing a mobile app for mental health, even running for local elective office.
âI ask of you this,â Holman said. âFight the fight and lead the way when future conflicts, injustices, and challenges arise on our lifetimes.â

Transforming Minds
Although degrees were officially conferred at the virtual ceremony in 2020, class members had to wait until today to hear their names ring out from loudspeakers, and to receive congratulatory handshakes and a valedictory address from .

âAt a typical commencement, my job as president is to offer one nugget of advice to new graduates just moments after they officially become alumni. Today is a little different. You come to this moment having the benefit of two full years of experience in the real world. Two years to reflect on the value of your liberal arts education. If we did our jobs well, your Dartmouth education literally transformed your minds,â Hanlon said. âWe equipped you with broad knowledge of the world and a recognition of what piques your curiosity.â
For Junatt Anwar â20, who majored in applied mathematics and now works in finance at Goldman Sachs in Boston, the ceremony was a chance to satisfy a different kind of curiosity, about what her classmates have been up to since they abruptly left campus near the end of their senior year.
âItâs a special feeling, being back here, that you canât get at a reunion in Boston or New York,â she said. âCrossing the bridge over the river reminds me of sophomore summer, and hearing Baker Bellsâeach spot has a different memory attached to it,â she said.
The celebration held special meaning for Karla Rosas â20, who came to Dartmouth after serving as a senior airman in the U.S. Air Force and, as a veteran, carried the eagle staff in the procession. Although she works in consulting in Washington, D.C., she says Hanover still feels like home.
âAs an older student who at first felt out of place, I definitely found my community here,â she says. âItâs like a big family.â