
Eastern graduate division confers 100 master's degrees
Degree recipients were given remarks from Connecticut Attorney General William Tong and were ceremonially hooded as they walked across the stage.
The degrees received were in accounting, education (early childhood, elementary and secondary education), management, applied data science, special education and educational studies/technology. The ages of the graduates ranged from 21 to 72.
Tong was the recipient of Eastern's inaugural Distinguished Public Service Award. In his address, Tong discussed the motivation behind his career.
'The reason why I do this work is because I know there are a lot of 'nobodies' in this world,' he said.
He then went on to refer to himself as a 'nobody' when referencing his upbringing. Tong grew up the son of Chinese immigrants and worked in his parents' Chinese restaurant in Wethersfield.
'There are a lot of people who feel invisible,' Tong said. 'I want to help them because I know what they're going through.'
Tong told his story as a call to action for the graduates: 'See the people who don't look exactly like you; they're your people too. Remember who you really are, recognize who your people are, and fight for them.'
Eastern President Karim Ismaili who for the first time at Eastern's graduation, delivered the congratulatory remarks.
'Earning a graduate degree is a tremendous achievement, one that requires discipline, perseverance, and an unwavering commitment to your goals,' Ismaili said. 'You embody the spirit of Eastern: purposeful, thoughtful, and ready to serve.'
Shellena Pitterson, a graduating member of the class and a drafter for facilities management and planning at Eastern, delivered the graduate student address.
'Grad school is like a rollercoaster: exciting at first, terrifying in the middle, and by the end, you're just holding on for dear life,' Pitterson said. 'We've navigated assignments, exams, late nights and let's be honest-the occasional existential crisis.'
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


New York Post
3 hours ago
- New York Post
FBI urged to probe NYC's seedy 'Market of Sweethearts'
Queens activists are demanding the FBI investigate the 'foreign national' crime syndicates turning seedy Roosevelt Avenue into a 'gangland' — claiming the criminals pose a national security threat. 'We request that you initiate an investigation into what we understand are gangs engaging in criminal enterprises including human trafficking, illegal narcotics sales and the mass distribution of fraudulent documents which poses a national security threat,' wrote Rosa Sanchez, head of the Restore Roosevelt Avenue Coalition, and Democratic district leader Hiram Monserrate in an Aug. 14 letter to FBI Director Kash Patel. Federal intervention is required because state and local laws are limited and inadequate to address the problem, the activists said. Advertisement 5 A suspected sex worker seen outside of a brothel on Roosevelt Avenue near 89th Street in Queens on Aug. 17, 2025. NY Post 5 Local activists are calling on the FBI to investigate 'foreign national' crime syndicates operating on Roosevelt Avenue. NY Post In their missive, Sanchez and Monserrate thanked the FBI and other agencies in the Trump administration for prosecuting members of migrant gangs — including the Venezuelan-based Tren de Aragua and the 18th Street gang, which regularly extort brothels, beat rivals and sell drugs and phony IDs to finance an illicit network based in El Salvador. Advertisement 'However, both gangs continue to operate in our community and we impress upon you that more needs to be done to keep our community safe,' they told the FBI director. They noted that the NYPD has made more than 500 prostitution-related arrests thus far this year along what is called 'The Market of Sweethearts,' but brothels continue to operate. 5 Suspected sex workers on the sidewalk in the 'Market of Sweethearts' on July 27, 2025. New York Post Many of them are controlled by Chinese gangs, Sanchez and Monserrate said. Advertisement 'According to our sources several locations are being operated and controlled by Chinese organized crime. … The information we have continued gathering is unsettling,' the Corona-Elmhurst neighborhood leaders said. Monserrate said the Triads are one of the Chinese groups involved in sex-trafficking. 5 Illegal street vendors seen on Roosevelt Avenue near 89th Street in Jackson Heights on Aug. 17, 2025. Gregory P. Mango 5 Vendors set up on the sidewalk in Jackson Heights near the 'Market of Sweethearts' on Aug. 17, 2025. Gregory P. Mango Advertisement The 18th Street Gang members are still selling fraudulent green cards, Social Security and driver's licenses on Roosevelt Avenue between 80th and 84th Streets, too, the letter writers said. 'Organized crime by both Latino and Chinese foreign nationals continues to wreak havoc in our community,' Sanchez and Monserrate said. 'We urge your agency to respond and rid our community of modern slavery and a dangerous criminal element that operates flagrantly.' They forwarded suspected addresses of brothels to the FBI. In the past year, The Post has exposed the seediness, crime, drug-peddling and illegal vending along the Roosevelt Avenue corridor. Gov. Kathy Hochul last year even dispatched state troopers to assist the NYPD to crack down the lawlessness.

Politico
4 hours ago
- Politico
Poilievre's rural reboot
Poilievre didn't respond to POLITICO's request for an interview. Battle River — Crowfoot is an electoral district in eastern Alberta that is so vast it would take an entire day to drive through it. Fields of canola separate dozens of communities in the district. The district's producers have been hit by both Chinese tariffs on canola and Canada's retaliatory tariffs on U.S. goods in red states, which increase the cost of farming supplies. Pumpjacks peek out of the ground from gravel roads and highways. The area is a major hub for oil exporting, including through the Keystone pipeline which carries oil from Alberta to refineries in the U.S. Midwest. The district is also home to one of Canada's largest military bases and training grounds for the army and combat exercises with NATO allies. Poilievre has spent months learning about the district and the people who, unlike him, actually call it home. He's traded in his suit and Oxfords for a polo shirt, jeans and cowboy hat. He spent summer door-knocking in towns and villages smaller than the rallies he held just four months ago — crowds he once boasted about to the media. Now he meets people on their front porches and on coffee row, in town halls and local clubs. 'Having a leader of a political party as your local member of Parliament is a tradeoff,' Poilievre said during a candidate debate last month in Camrose, Alberta. 'The leader lives in low-budget hotel rooms across the country,' he said in reference to how much time he spends on the road. 'The other side is, that leader can bring a very powerful megaphone to the local issues of the community.' Those issues include scrapping environmental regulations — such as Canada's electric vehicle mandate — protecting gun rights, and expanding natural resource development. Pierre Poilievre spent summer door-knocking in towns and villages smaller than the rallies he held during the federal election campaign — crowds he once boasted about to the media. | AFP via Getty Images One porch at a time Although Poilievre was raised in Calgary, some still view him as an outsider. He moved to Ottawa in 2000 and stayed put. Unlike Damien Kurek, who stepped aside for the Conservative leader, Poilievre doesn't share the deep local roots that matter here — he wasn't raised on a family farm, he's not a familiar face at church on Sundays or at the local rink for kids' hockey games, and some wonder if he'd even show up for events honoring their veterans.


The Hill
5 hours ago
- The Hill
Trump's former NATO ambassador warns ‘Xi is watching' Trump approach to Russia
President Trump's first-term ambassador to NATO, Kay Bailey Hutchison, warned on Sunday that Chinese President Xi Jinping 'is watching' President Trump's approach to negotiations between Russia and Ukraine. In an interview on NewsNation's 'The Hill Sunday,' Hutchison said if the West appears weak against Russia — and if Russia doesn't face adequate repercussions for starting the war in Ukraine — Xi could see the current moment as an opening to take Taiwan. 'Xi is watching to see if the West will crater, if the West will just give up, will walk away from Ukraine — which we have said we would not do,' Hutchison said. 'And if we look weak or vacillating or give up the ability to have Western boundaries remain secure, then I think that means to Xi that maybe this is the time for him to do what he has wanted to do for a long time, which is start taking over Taiwan,' she continued. 'He certainly did enough damage in Hong Kong, and now his next feat would be Taiwan.' Trump will meet with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky and other European leaders on Monday to discuss the outcome of the Friday summit between Trump and Russian President Vladimir Putin. Hutchison said it's 'very good' that Trump is including European leaders in the meeting because 'security that is with the European allies is going to be part of this negotiation.' 'So having them at the table, I think, is very good, and also, they deserve to have input. This is their borders, and of course, NATO is part of all of this negotiation, but I think that it is going to be really important to have the Europeans understand what is at stake,' Hutchison said. 'Most assuredly, Ukraine has to have the final say,' she added.