On a balmy Sunday morning, with the global pandemic finally in retreat, bagpipes and a brass quintet heralded a return to tradition as some 8,000 people gathered on the Green to celebrate commencement.
Dartmouth conferred more than 1,800 bachelor’s, master’s, and doctoral degrees in undergraduate and graduate programs from the College, the Geisel School of Medicine, Guarini School of Graduate and Advanced Studies, Thayer School of Engineering, and the Tuck School of Business.
Erin Bunner ’22, a member of the Muscogee Nation, and Mikaila Ng ’22, a Native Hawaiian, the co-presidents of Native Americans at Dartmouth, opened the ceremony by acknowledging that Dartmouth stands on “unceded and ancestral homelands of the Abenaki people.”
While Bunner said it took too many years to honor fully the founding mission advanced by Samson Occom to educate Indigenous students, she commended former president John Kemeny for rededicating the College to that purpose in the 1970s, and Dartmouth for repatriating Occom’s papers to his Mohegan tribe this year.
See video of Russell Wilson’s address
‘Why Not You?’
In a moving commencement address, NFL quarterback Russell Wilson vividly recalled life-changing conversations with his father, Harrison Wilson III ’77. One night, when Wilson was a short, teenaged football player competing for attention at Peyton Manning Passing Academy, his father asked the question that would become his guiding light:
“‘You know, you could play against the Manning brothers one day. You could play in the NFL,’” Wilson recalled. “And I was a confident kid, but I must have given him a look like, ‘Are you sure?’ Because he looked me right in the eye and said: ‘Why not you?’”
Years later, on his deathbed, Wilson’s father issued another challenge that still resonates with his son, who went on to win a Super Bowl and is known for his community activities.
“Tears are coming down his face. Tears are coming down my face. And then he says to me, through all that pain, he says to me, ‘Just remember. Your name carries weight.’”
But with that weight, Wilson said, comes responsibility.
“Because legacy isn’t just something you leave behind,” he told the graduates. “It’s something you build. Something you add to, every day.”
Wilson, whose wife, the entertainer Ciara, accompanied him to Hanover, has been building his own legacy, both on and off the field.
The couple are also entrepreneurs and are co-founders of the Why Not You Foundation, which is dedicated to education, children’s health, and fighting poverty.
Community service loomed large in the commendation he received from President Philip J. Hanlon ’77, who awarded Wilson, and seven others, honorary degrees.
Doctor of Humane Letters
- Shobhana Bhartia, chair and group editorial director of HT Media Ltd, India’s largest listed media company
- Shyam S. Bhartia, founder and chairman of the New Delhi-based Jubilant Bhartia Group
- Kul Chandra Gautam ’72, former deputy executive director of UNICEF and assistant secretary general of the United Nations
- Claudia Goldin, economist and co-director of the National Bureau of Economic Research’s Gender in the Economy group
- Charles “Ed” Haldeman ’70, former head of the Federal Loan Mortgage Corporation (Freddie Mac) and former chair of the Dartmouth Board of Trustees.
- Russell Wilson, Super Bowl champion, Denver Broncos quarterback, co-founder, Why Not You Foundation, entrepreneur
Doctor of Science
- Fiona Harrison ’85, physicist and principal investigator of NASA’s Nuclear Spectroscopic Telescope Array
- Dava J. Newman, director, Massachusetts Institute of Technology Media Lab
Ask the Right Questions, Seek Many Answers
In his farewell to the Class of 2022, President Hanlon acknowledged that, 18 months into their time at Dartmouth, they entered a difficult moment, when the global pandemic had “turned the world upside down,” and raised life-or-death questions.
See video of President Hanlon’s valedictory
“Who was most vulnerable and how do we protect them? How could we create vaccines to arm our immune systems? With questions in hand, we were able to gather evidence, apply reasoning, debate with those who disagreed, and ultimately determine a collective course of action.”
And, Hanlon said, equally daunting obstacles lie ahead.
“You are entering a world with some deep troubles. War. Inequity. Global warming. Gun violence. A mental health crisis exacerbated by the pandemic. These are thorny issues for which there are no easy answers. But with the right questions, you can see your way through.”
In actively seeking out answers, Hanlon urged the graduates to open their minds to alternative viewpoints.
“Class of 2022, you are mighty, and we are proud,” he told them.
A First-Gen Valedictorian: “My Voice Mattered”
One of the 13 valedictorians, Melissa Barales-Lopez, spoke in her address about how “terrified” she was about coming to Dartmouth when, at the Los Angeles airport, her parents and five younger siblings saw her off.
“I waved one last good-bye to my family from across the room, turned the corner, and promptly broke down into tears,” Barales-Lopez, the first in her family to attend college, recalled. But at Dartmouth, she said, she found community in the First-Generation Office, and in student groups working to meet the needs of undocumented community members and to increase bargaining power by student workers on campus.
See video of Melissa Barales-Lopez’s valedictory
Barales-Lopez also thanked faculty and staff for “endless support and guidance.”
“They encouraged me to pursue research, supported me as I wrote my thesis, and made me feel like my voice mattered as much as anyone else’s,” she said. “I am immensely grateful for the faculty and staff who prioritized my academic growth and that of my peers. They played a critical role in making Dartmouth my home.”
Coming Full Circle
After the names of 1,072 undergraduates were read, and the ceremony drew to a close with the singing of Alma Mater, two close friends said how happy they were to be able to celebrate together, in a place they love, with people they care about.
“I was giving my family and our family friends a tour of the library yesterday, through the Tower Room, through the stacks, and the reading room,” said Shera Bhala ’22, a Fulbright scholar. “There are places here that are so uniquely Dartmouth and literally couldn’t be any other college, and that’s why today is so important.”
Kelley Jiang ’22 agreed. “You know, when we got here on the first day, we kind of expected a linear journey, year by year, but it’s been kind of bumpy, at times, and circular. Now we’ve actually come full circle on the very last day, together.”
As always, commencement day capped a week packed with year-end activities and reunions.
Geisel held Class Day on May 28 and The Dartmouth Institute’s exercises followed on June 10.
On Saturday, June 11, at a multifaith baccalaureate, Christina Cleveland ’03, a social psychologist, public theologian, author, and activist, gave the keynote address, “Think and Wonder, Wonder and Think: On Cultivating a Rigorous and Fanciful Spiritual Imagination.”
Also on Saturday, the Guarini School, Thayer, and Tuck held their investiture ceremonies, and five graduating seniors received commissions as members of the U.S. military.