Two Seniors Receive Military Commissions

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Dylan Griffith 鈥�25 and Justin Par茅 鈥�25 are sworn in as second lieutenants.

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Students singing military anthems
Justin Par茅 鈥�25, left, and Dylan Griffith 鈥�25 stand with others during the singing of military anthems at their military commissioning ceremony Saturday morning in Loew Auditorium. (Photo by Robert Gill)
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On the 250th anniversary of the founding of the U.S. Army, two graduating seniors received their military commissions on Saturday as second lieutenants in the Army and Marine Corps in a ceremony at Loew Auditorium attended by friends, family, and colleagues. 

Dylan Griffith 鈥�25, a government major from Cambridge, Mass., will commission into the Army鈥檚 Individual Ready Reserve while also attending American University Washington College of Law. 

Justin Par茅 鈥�25, a quantitative social sciences major from Bedford, Mass., will attend The Basic School in Quantico, Va., along with other newly commissioned second lieutenants in the Marine Corps.

Capt. Ian Short, the director of the , introduced the reading of the commissioning warrants and the administration of the oath of office. Robert Gray, Griffith鈥檚 middle school math teacher and who served in the Marines, administered the oath to his former student. First Lt. Tyler Corbin, a Marine Corps recruiter for New England, administered the oath to Par茅. 

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Justin Par茅 shaking Odette Harris' hand
Justin Par茅 鈥�25, newly commissioned as a Marine Corps second lieutenant, is congratulated by Trustee Odette Harris 鈥�91, who spoke at the ceremony. (Photo by Robert Gill)

Callum and Duncan Griffith then pinned second lieutenant bars on their brother鈥檚 uniform, while Par茅鈥檚 parents, Christina and Mark Par茅, performed the honor for their son. 

, a member of the Board of Trustees, spoke at the ceremony. Harris is a professor of neurosurgery at Stanford University School of Medicine, where she also directs the Brain Injury Program.

鈥淚t is a profound honor to be here today to recognize and celebrate an important moment in the lives of two exceptional Dartmouth cadets as they receive their commissions,鈥� she said.

As a neurosurgeon treating trauma patients, Harris said she has 鈥渨itnessed the physical and psychological burdens borne by those who serve. And I have also witnessed resilience, the kind of resilience forged by training, by bonds of comradeship, and by the profound sense of purpose.鈥�

The commissioning of the two cadets represents more than a ceremony, Harris said.

鈥淚t is a solemn commitment to serve, to lead, and to protect the values that sustain our nation. We gather at a juncture when global security is perhaps more precarious than it has been in decades.鈥�

Harris also paid tribute to the legacy of the late Dartmouth president Jim Wright, 鈥渨hose commitment to military students has shaped the support systems many of you have relied on,鈥� she said. 

Part of the legacy that Wright left behind, Harris said, was that the 鈥渏ourney of a military leader is not solitary. It is supported by family, mentors, institutions, and communities that value your service and your sacrifice. It is a journey that demands continuous learning and principled courage, often in circumstances of great challenge.鈥�

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Dylan Griffith receiveing his lieutenant bars
Dylan Griffith 鈥�25 stands at attention as his brothers Duncan, left, and Callum pin second lieutenant bars on his Army uniform during the commissioning ceremony. At right, Christina Par茅 does the same for her son Justin Par茅 鈥�25, a Marine Corps second lieutenant. (Photo by Robert Gill)

At the end of the ceremony the military officers and audience stood to sing The Army Song and The Marines鈥� Hymn, followed by a reception in the Black Family Visual Arts Center atrium.

Dylan Griffith 鈥�25鈥擲econd Lieutenant, U.S. Army

Born and raised in Cambridge, Mass., Griffith will commission into the Individual Ready Reserve while he attends law school. Following law school, Griffith plans to serve in the Judge General Advocate鈥檚 Corps. At Dartmouth, the government major and law and public policy minor was president of the Mock Trial Society and vice president of the Dartmouth Political Union. He also was a policy researcher for the Rockefeller Center and president of Beta Alpha Omega fraternity. 

Justin Par茅 鈥�25鈥擲econd Lieutenant, U.S. Marine Corps

Par茅, a Bedford, Mass., native, completed Officer Candidate School in Quantico, Va., last summer and is being commissioned as a second lieutenant in the Marine Corps. 

The Quantitative Social Sciences major also played on the Dartmouth Rugby Football Club and was awarded the Andrew Warden Edson Memorial Prize for academic excellence in government courses. He was also a rush chair for the Theta Delta Chi fraternity. Par茅 hopes to become an infantry officer and after his tour in the military is completed also plans to pursue a law degree.

Nicola Smith