 I am Deep Saini, Dalhousie University's President and Vice-Chancellor and I am so delighted to be celebrating our Class of 2020. This brings convocation ceremonies were to be my first as Dalhousie University's President. So I share your disappointment at not being able to be together here in person as we had planned. Although we are celebrating your graduation in this unusual untraditional way, I hope your educational achievements will still bring you a sense of great accomplishment. You're completing your degree in these unique circumstances so you have great reasons to be extremely proud. Convocation marks the culmination of years of hard work, the end of an important journey and the beginning of another. So please take time to mark this incredible milestone in your careers. Though you're leaving Dalhousie for your next chapter, Dalhousie does not leave you. Your instructors, your peers, your fellow alumni around the world, we all stand beside you rooting for you, excited to see what you would do next. Together, we are Dal. We are inspired by you and we are proud to have you as part of our community. So on behalf of all of us at Dalhousie, let me say congratulations. We wish you all the best as you begin your next adventure. As Chair of the Dalhousie Senate, it gives me great pleasure to congratulate all of our graduates. You've worked hard to turn the page on this crucial chapter in your educational journey. I encourage you to celebrate this milestone creatively. I also want to honor your accomplishments by marking the occasion with the traditional conferring of degrees. To make it all official, I now have the great pleasure of presenting all Spring 2020 graduates to you, Mr. Chancellor, so that you may confer degrees on those candidates whose names have been approved by Senate. By virtue of the authority vested in me and in Dalhousie University, I admit to their respective degrees and diplomas with all the rights, privileges and responsibilities appertaining thereto those candidates who have fulfilled the requirements of that degree and whose names have been approved by Senate. Admito vos agrado. Please accept my sincere congratulations on this incredible milestone. Class of 2020, I wish you the very best and I can't wait to see what you accomplish in the future. Hello everybody, all you members of the Class of 2020, it's Camille Cameron here, the Dean of Law, coming to you live from the Weldon Law Building. This is an opportunity for us to say virtually what unfortunately, due to circumstances, we haven't been able to say this year in person. It's a warm congratulations to every one of you. First to the law students, congratulations. You've made it. You've reached the end of three years. You're no longer law students. You're now law graduates. That's quite an achievement. You're leaving with a fantastic legal education and I'm confident you're going to do great things with it. And of course, to every member of the Class of 2020 graduating from Dalhousie, undergraduate and graduate, congratulations to you. You've done it. What a great achievement. We're very, very proud of you. Now all of you go out and do something fantastic with that great education you've received here. And as the signs in back of us say, congratulations. We're so proud of you. My name is Marty Leonard and I'm the Dean of the Faculty of Graduate Studies at Dalhousie. And on behalf of everyone at FGS, I want to wish each and every one of you our sincere congratulations on having been awarded your degree. It's truly a significant achievement. And I also want to mention that it's beyond my wildest imagination that I'd be speaking to you remotely rather than giving you a hug or a handshake on the stage of convocation. But nonetheless, it doesn't dampen my feeling at all that I'm so proud of all of you and excited for what the future holds. And maybe with some luck, we will meet on the stage of convocation. So congratulations again and all the best to you from FGS. My name is Brian Johnston and I am the President of the Dalhousie Alumni Association. Let me be the first to acknowledge that as your degree is conferred, you officially become part of a Dalhousie Alumni Network of more than 150,000 people worldwide. This is a tremendous asset and I hope you take advantage of the connection to the broader Dal community. We invite you to get involved and to stay involved. Congratulations again and welcome to the Dalhousie Alumni family. As Dalhousie's Provost and Vice President academic, let me also say congratulations to our Spring 2020 graduates. And I want to encourage all of you to return to campus at some point in the future for a future convocation. We are all really excited to get to see you walk across the stage in person with us. Last, I encourage you to share your celebratory messages, photos and videos with us on the social media channels available at dal.ca. We want to see how you celebrate it. So once more graduates, let me tell you, we are all so proud of your accomplishments. We are Dal. We are Dal. We are Dal.