New Haven Register (New Haven, CT)

GRADUATION

- Chatwan.mongkol @hearstmedi­act.com

na in Bridgeport, with about 8,000 families in attendance.

Chang said she understood the graduates well, as a daughter of immigrants from South Korea who was “incredibly insecure” about her identity, thought her family’s food smelled funny and her face looked funny and believed she was meant to be “the other.”

Despite taking decades to overcome her insecuriti­es, that experience set her out to a career in journalism with a focus on social justice, said Chang, who landed a job at ABC 10 days after graduation, by following curiosity.

“Not generic curiosity, but like a deep-seated, open-ended, uncynical and, hopefully, evidence-based curiosity,” she said. “Notice I didn’t say passion.”

That’s because Chang said most people at 22, including her, don’t know what their passion is, but curiosity is what will lead them to a journey they didn’t think of.

For her, it was a journey of traveling through the country and the world to examine gender-based violence, extremism, terrorism, antisemiti­sim, migrant policies, opioid addiction and racial equity among other topics, as a journalist.

“You can use that kind of curiosity to guide your own lives,” she said. “What I would ask of you today is don’t turn away.

I’m asking you to care, to give a crap . ... I want you to care about the world in a way that helps make it better.”

The ABC journalist also touched on thinking critically before trusting everything on the internet because “facts matter,” being engaged citizens and providing acts of service to others.

But the bottom line, perhaps the most important thing as several speakers emphasized during the commenceme­nt is to maintain the personal ties and

relationsh­ips with friends, families and networks.

“Those relationsh­ips are what keep you mentally healthy and sound will actually help you live longer,” Chang said. “They are the key to happiness.”

The ceremony Friday also marked university President Joe Bertolino’s last after his seven years in New Haven. He’s stepping down next month to lead Stockton University in New Jersey.

“Somebody just said, ‘Jersey?’

You’re not getting your degree,” he joked.

“As a Southern alum, you are prepared and we ask you to do one thing: go out and do good for yourself and for others,” said Bertolino, “That is your job.”

In attendance was U.S. Sen. Richard Blumenthal, D-Conn., who said this graduating class was unique because they have lived through the entirety of the pandemic as a student on top of what he called “epidemics” of gun violence, loneliness and

opioid addiction.

“You’ve done it,” Blumenthal said.

The university awarded an honorary doctorate degree of humane letters to former state senator and former New Haven Mayor Toni Harp, the city’s first female mayor who was a key player in creating the BioPath program.

Bertolino said the university saw a new business school, a science building and a major renovation of Buley Library during Harp’s tenure as a state senator between 1993-2013.

 ?? Arnold Gold/Hearst Connecticu­t Media ?? Edward Smith waves to family as the Southern Connecticu­t State University undergradu­ate commenceme­nt begins at the Total Mortgage Arena in Bridgeport Friday.
Arnold Gold/Hearst Connecticu­t Media Edward Smith waves to family as the Southern Connecticu­t State University undergradu­ate commenceme­nt begins at the Total Mortgage Arena in Bridgeport Friday.
 ?? ?? Southern Connecticu­t State University President Joe Bertolino shows off a memento he was given at the undergradu­ate commenceme­nt at the Total Mortgage Arena in Bridgeport Friday.
Southern Connecticu­t State University President Joe Bertolino shows off a memento he was given at the undergradu­ate commenceme­nt at the Total Mortgage Arena in Bridgeport Friday.

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