UW-Madison medical school student India Anderson-Carter, right, learned Friday where she will spend her medical residency. The "Match Day" celebration took place virtually because of the COVID-19 pandemic. She celebrates with friends and family, including her sister, Lexus, left.
The years of studying and sleepless nights for the 2020 class of UW-Madison medical students culminated in a sanitizer-slathered celebration through computer screens.
Anderson-Carter stands next to a college graduation portrait of her late grandmother, Julia Anderson, whose urn is in the foreground. Her grandmother dreamed of when her granddaughter would become a doctor.
Anderson-Carter passes time with her sister, Lexus, left, before the Match Day at UW-Madison's School of Medicine and Public Health began. Folders from seventeen schools that Anderson-Carter interviewed with line the top of the pool table in her parents' basement, where she celebrated Match Day.
Anderson-Carter, with her mother, Nisa, at right, and miniature chihuahua, Zari, waits until it's time to announce where she will be doing her residency. The medical school tradition of Match Day was adjusted because of the COVID-19 pandemic to be an online ceremony.
UW-Madison medical school student India Anderson-Carter, right, learned Friday where she will spend her medical residency. The "Match Day" celebration took place virtually because of the COVID-19 pandemic. She celebrates with friends and family, including her sister, Lexus, left.
Anderson-Carter stands next to a college graduation portrait of her late grandmother, Julia Anderson, whose urn is in the foreground. Her grandmother dreamed of when her granddaughter would become a doctor.
Anderson-Carter, with her mother, Nisa, at right, and miniature chihuahua, Zari, waits until it's time to announce where she will be doing her residency. The medical school tradition of Match Day was adjusted because of the COVID-19 pandemic to be an online ceremony.
Anderson-Carter passes time with her sister, Lexus, left, before the Match Day at UW-Madison's School of Medicine and Public Health began. Folders from seventeen schools that Anderson-Carter interviewed with line the top of the pool table in her parents' basement, where she celebrated Match Day.