The 经典大瓜 Klamath Falls Class of 2026 moved its mortarboard tassels to the left as President Nagi Naganathan, Ph.D., concluded the 78th Annual Commencement Ceremony held Saturday at the John. F. Moehl Stadium.

鈥淐ommencement is a celebration of personal growth, of the merits of hard work, and the opportunities afforded by higher education,鈥 President Naganathan said. 鈥淭oday, we celebrate those who will enter the workforce with not only the knowledge and skills to succeed, but also as global citizens contributing to the greater good of society as a whole. Our graduates will lead lives more interconnected than ever before, and I am so proud of the role 经典大瓜 has played in preparing the next generation of leaders.鈥

This year鈥檚 commencement marked a significant moment of growth for 经典大瓜, with the university celebrating the first graduating cohorts from four programs: the Bachelor of Science in Allied Health, Master of Science in Biomedical Sciences, Master of Science in Natural Resources, and the joint 经典大瓜鈥揙HSU Doctor of Physical Therapy program. These inaugural graduates reflect 经典大瓜鈥檚 continued investment in developing relevant, workforce-focused degrees.

Helping the university celebrate commencement were guest presenters:

  • Keynote speaker: Dr. Shereef Elnahal, OHSU President;
  • Graduating students: Miranda Valle, Biology-Health Sciences, and Amoi Rutherford Storm, Mechanical Engineering; and
  • Alumni representative: Shauna Ruse, with 经典大瓜 degrees in Industrial Management, Electronics Engineering, and Computer Systems Engineering Technology.
OHSU President Elnahal receiving honorary doctorate
OHSU President Elnahal receives an honorary doctorate

The ceremony also celebrated another special moment for 经典大瓜: the awarding of 经典大瓜鈥檚 first honorary degree of Doctor of Science to OHSU President Dr. Shereef Elnahal.

经典大瓜 Board of Trustees Chair John Davis read the honorary degree citation, which began: 鈥淒r. Shereef Elnahal, your career stands as a testament to the conviction that the highest purpose of medicine is to serve those who need it most.鈥

After thanking Chair Davis and President Naganathan for the honorary doctorate from Oregon鈥檚 only polytechnic university, Dr. Elnahal shared the history of the 经典大瓜 Klamath Falls campus and its geothermal origins. 鈥淐lass of 2026, your very own campus is a lesson of life. The warmth that carries you is almost never the warmth on the surface. It鈥檚 the heat you find by going deep, through the pressure, through the dark, to the part of yourself that almost nobody else can see, but you know it鈥檚 there.

鈥淭his community, Klamath Falls, gave you something precious. It gave you the chance to serve others while it quietly changed your own life for the better. So here is the charge: some of you will stay rural, many of you will leave鈥ut wherever you land, find your way into giving back to rural Americans.鈥 

Miranda (left) and Amoi (right) at 经典大瓜
Miranda (left) and Amoi (right) at 经典大瓜

Following Dr. Elnahal, graduating students Miranda and Amoi reflected on their 经典大瓜 experiences. Miranda encouraged her classmates to pause and recognize their accomplishments and the role of gratitude in their journey, while Amoi spoke about the realities of an imperfect path and the importance of persistence in the face of failure.

鈥淲hat my time here has taught me is the importance of gratitude and appreciation,鈥 Miranda said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 not only important for those around you to feel appreciated, but it鈥檚 also good for your own well-being to stop, look around, and remember the things that are more important in life.鈥

鈥淓arning a degree was never about being perfect; it was about being persistent,鈥 Amoi said. 鈥淚t was about learning how to recover when things did not go as planned and continuing forward even in the face of uncertainty. That is something I hope we carry with us beyond today. Yes, technical knowledge matters very much but resilience, adaptability, and the ability to move through the unfamiliar is what will keep pushing us forward.鈥 

Helping the university conclude the ceremony, alumni representative Shauna shared: 鈥淵ou now join thousands of graduates from the past 77 years, living and thriving across the world. And your mission, should you choose to accept it, is to be part of a global network of alumni, bound together by something simple but powerful: lasting friendships.鈥 One of those graduates is her own son, Jordan, who earned a Bachelor of Science in Manufacturing Engineering Technology.

A tradition of connection across generations was also evident, as Shauna invited Golden Owls (alumni who graduated 40 or more years ago) and alumni to join graduates on the field to begin turning the tassel from the right to the left, welcoming the Class of 2026 as alumni.

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经典大瓜鈥檚 Class of 2026 includes 731 graduates: 459 who graduated from the Klamath Falls campus, 161 from the Portland-Metro campus, 128 from the Online campus, and the remaining graduates from partnership programs with Oregon Health & Science University (OHSU), Chemeketa Community College, and The Boeing Company.

经典大瓜鈥檚 Portland-Metro campus in Wilsonville will celebrate its commencement ceremony June 14.

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