Dartmouth College conferred degrees on the Class of 2013 and bestowed on the new graduates a challenge to become the new Greatest Generation.

Under a brilliant spring sky, nearly 1,900 students marched along with faculty, trustees, deans, and honored guests at exercises on June 9, 2013.
Speaking from the grand podium to some 12,000 people gathered on the Green, , president and chief executive officer of Harlem Childrenâs Zone, reminded the 2013 graduates that they are receiving degrees from one of the most prestigious schools in the country.
He recalled his own graduation from the Harvard Graduate School of Education after growing up in poverty and despair in the South Bronx.

âI knew right out of college what many people still donât understand: Countries donât become great by themselvesâit takes heroic sacrifice. Our country was created, molded, and improved by men and women whose moral compass was not moved by the influence of wealth, prestige, and notoriety,â Canada said.
Canada, whose nonprofit supports children in Harlem from birth through college, said he looked to his motherâs peersâknown as the Greatest Generationâand vowed that his generation would do better. âI would challenge America to become a better place for its children.â
âI wish I could stand before you today and say that my generation is leaving you a country that is better than the one we inherited from our parents. Itâs not like we havenât done any good,â he said. âBut I am not worried about my promise to Americaâs children, because let me tell you what else my role models taught me: The best of America is yet to come.â
Now it is the 2013 graduates who must finish the work and fulfill the promises of those who came before, Canada said.
Interim President Carol Folt echoed these sentiments as she bid farewell to Dartmouth in her . Folt recalled when the graduates gathered for the first time, âwhen then-President Jim Yong Kim challenged you to develop skills and courage to turn your good intentions into great outcomes.
âFor four years, I have loved watching you take on that challenge. You have built an identity, you are a class that cares, you have strong voices, you seek truth, and you do not shy away from hard issues. You can have a profound impact in the world,â she said.
The first woman to lead Dartmouth, Folt, whose three decades at the College include service as provost, dean of faculty, and dean of graduate studies, becomes the 11th chancellor of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill on July 1.
âThank you for sharing your graduation with me. With my own move to UNC-Chapel Hill imminent, I feel as if I am graduating with you,â Folt said.
Foltâs address came at the end of a three-hour ceremony that included the presentation of eight honorary degreesâincluding one that came as a surprise to Folt.
She was presented with the honorary degree Doctor of Humane Letters. In bestowing the honor, Board of Trustees Chair Steve Mandel â78 said Folt showed âtremendous vision that will help shape Dartmouthâs future for years ahead.â
âYou encouraged an entire community to think about the future, but you also understood how important it is that we pay tribute to our past,â Mandel said. âYou set your sights high and inspired others to do the same, and helped identify strategic opportunities that will guide Dartmouth for decades to come.â
Also receiving honorary degrees were: ; , oncologist, biotech leader, and chancellor of the University of California, San Francisco; , former IBM chairman and CEO, and philanthropist; , dancer, choreographer, and Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater artistic director emerita; , litigator, civic leader, and former Trustee; , Canadian filmmaker, singer, and social activist; and , engineer, scientist, president elect of Carnegie Mellon University, and former director of the National Science Foundation.
The crowd also heard from five âall with perfect 4.0 grade point averages.
of Darien, Conn., recalled the words of Collis Cafe Manager Steve Edes after she complimented the food and service in the campus restaurant. âSteve smiled and replied, âWell, we try to hold ourselves to the highest possible standard here.ââ Farley recalled. âI think that Steveâs words are certainly worth remembering as we step outside of Dartmouth and rise to meet the new challenges that we will soon encounter.â
of Scottsdale, Ariz., who was commissioned as a second lieutenant in the Marine Corps in a ceremony on Saturday, thanked those who had made the success of his class possibleâthe faculty, staff, and alumni of Dartmouth. He also thanked the graduatesâ families.
âWe are here because others enabled us. Graduates, there are plenty of ceremonies and rituals commemorating our success this weekend. So please join me now in taking time to thank those who equipped us and made our success a possibility,â he said.
of Jericho, N.Y., called on his classmates to take an active role in âself-discovery and self-creation.â
âWhat we do every day shapes who we become. I hope that we live consciously with love unto ourselves and others, so that we end up discovering, creating, and becoming the people we want to be, more fully ourselves,â Kornberg said.
of Sudbury, Ontario, Canada, recalled the words of former President Kim.
âHe urged us to, in our four years at Dartmouth, remember the âFour Pâsâ: passion, persistence, pursuit of knowledge, and the planet,â she said. âAlthough President Kim is not here to see us graduate, each of our experiences has in unique ways been marked by these Four Pâs.â
of Tucson, Ariz., spoke about broadening her community beyond her socioeconomic background through a program called âTelling My Story.â Friends helped her see the importance of âhearing stories from people in person, not over the Internet or in the newspaper or in statistics. I believe in change happening at that levelâbetween two people talking and listening. Maybe itâs old-fashioned and simple, but it seems very, very real to meâa space for genuine empathy and enrichment of world views.â
Dartmouth awarded bachelors, masters, and doctoral degrees from its undergraduate and Arts & Sciences programs, , , and the The graduates received diplomas and greeted Folt with a hug or handshake.
At the request of Georgia Travers, president of the Class of 2013, a chair was left empty in the front row of the undergraduate seating section as a memorial for Crispin Scott â13, who died in Spain in 2011 while studying abroad. The Class Council had purchased a bouquet of flowers that adorned the chair.
The Commencement ceremony capped a weekend of events that included a baccalaureate multifaith service for graduates and guests on Saturday, featuring an address by the Rev. V. Gene Robinson, retired bishop of the Episcopal Diocese of New Hampshire.
Abraham Verghese, professor and senior associate chair for theory and practice of medicine, Department of Medicine, Stanford University, spoke at Geisel; and mining and banking investor and alumnus ZdenÄk Bakala, Tuck â89, spoke at Tuck, and Suresh spoke to engineering graduates at Thayer.
In addition, four Dartmouth graduates received as second lieutenants in Army and Marine Corps ceremonies on Saturday at the Dartmouth Outing Club House and Loew Auditorium, respectively.
Members of the Class of 1963, celebrating their 50th reunion, were recognized by Folt during Commencement. Wearing green caps, the returning classmates led the procession to begin the ceremony, marching onto the Green to long, enthusiastic applause. See more coverage and news from .