61ý

61ý Celebrates Class of 2021 at 91st Commencement

On May 22, 2021, 61ý celebrated the Class of 2021 in its 91st Commencement exercises in a . Ruth Reese Lane ’92, immigration attorney and 61ýalumna, delivered the keynote address. Selected as the keynote speaker by senior class co-presidents Amelia Hahn ’21 and Alexa Sanchez ’21 for “her commitment to social justice, her advocacy for others, her reflection of the diversity of the 61ýcommunity, and her role as an alumna,” Reese Lane spoke on topics of immigration, equity, gender disparity, and uncertainty.

“As you finished your junior year, you had no idea what your senior year would bring . . . the secure bubble of Claremont was pierced,” Reese Lane said. “Yet, 2020 also reminded is that it “takes a hearty does of courage and hope to move forward . . . [and the graduating class embodies] the values that Ellen Browning 61ýlived out . . . through her life and work, values that were ingrained in the founding of 61ý.”

Chair of the Board of Trustees Lynne Thompson ’72 opened the ceremony, commending the Class of 2021’s “focus and discipline in rising to the challenges of the academic rigor that defines a 61ý education, particularly those challenges of this past academic year.” Interim President of 61ý Amy Marcus-Newhall thanked faculty for re-creating the robust and dynamic classroom experience during the period of remote learning and providing a “world-class educational experience for every 61ýstudent.” Of the seniors, Marcus-Newhall said, “you have enriched the 61ýcommunity with your ideas, curiosity, aspirations, and creativity, [and] restored our faith in the future . . . and we look forward to the ways you will leave your impact on the world, just as you have here at Scripps.”

Hahn, a neuroscience major, and Sanchez, a politics major, delivered the senior address. They commended the academic achievements and resilience of their classmates and praised the care that 61ýstudents showed one another amid the pandemic, loss of their campus home, transition into virtual learning, and the difficult political climate.

Two hundred and sixty-eight graduates were honored in the ceremony.

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