Through education, celebration, creativity, artifact reclamation, land preservation and community engagement, Connecticut's five recognized tribes—Mashantucket Pequot Mohegan, Golden Hill Paugussett, Paucatuck Eastern Pequot and Schaghticoke—are reclaiming their history and culture.
A UConn startup hopes to reduce litter by using kelp and other foods as a wrapper rather than plastic. Atlantic Sea Solutions is developing a new food packaging method based off of the common sea plant kelp with a $175,000 grant. By Dannan Page, UConn JournalismDecember 3, 2025
The UConn Senate voted to delay the requirement that all undergraduates take a course on anti-Black racism amid concerns that requiring the course would be considered discriminatory by the Trump administration.
The Connecticut Treasurer’s office is scheduled to meet this week with one of its investment funds to discuss its involvement in deportation flights run by federal ICE.
When Connecticut’s flagship resettlement agency lost $4 million in federal funding due to a Trump administration executive order, it closed offices in Hartford and New Haven.
With on-campus beds falling far short of student demand, many UConn students were forced into expensive off-campus housing, and for some, the financial and emotional burden is overwhelming.
As a journalist, some stories will be more challenging than others, but that never stops Tatiana Flowers, a young reporter and Hearst Journalism Fellow at The Hour in Norwalk. Flowers found her passion for journalism during college despite her initial desire to become a veterinarian. Writing came naturally, and eventually, she perfected her multimedia skills, including in video
By Jason Jiang and Neel Razdan. Produced as part of Prof. Steve Smith's advanced visual journalism course, Dec. 2017.
Every Wednesday at noon, UConn senior Elaisa Laureta hosts a music program entitled “Elaisa Rocks” and invites friends to join her in the studio. On October 24, she danced and laughed as music aired, alongside close friends Daniela Doncel and Alexis Krantz, both also UConn Seniors. The three have been friends since high school and
By RYAN KIM November 9, 2018 With UConn basketball season picking up this weekend, we take you around the horn with a local Connecticut journalist who knows a thing or two about championships here at the basketball capital of the world. His experience comes from right here in Storrs as a 2010 UConn graduate. Chris
By Gino DeAngelis, UConn Journalism November 1, 2018 Chris Keating has been reporting on politics in Connecticut for nearly 30 years. Since joining the Hartford Courant in 1990, Keating has reported on every governor’s race since then. He even met Soviet Premier Mikhail Gorbachev during a head-of-state meeting with President George H.W. Bush. “I’ve been [in
By Camila Vallejo, UConn Journalism October 19, 2018 Meet Kaitlyn Krasselt, a multi-talented reporter for Hearst Connecticut Media, an Idaho native and a trivia night host. Krasselt was recently promoted to cover the gubernatorial race as a political reporter after three and a half years at Hearst. Overall, Krasselt’s work revolves around holding public officials accountable. Krasselt
By RYAN KIM October 12, 2018 Meet Sean Patrick Bowley, a do-it-all sports journalist who is the editor and producer of GameTime CT, Connecticut’s premiere site for high school sports. Bowley said he didn’t develop an interest in sports until the inception of Madden NFL for the PC. Nowadays, his day job involves a constant stream of high school sports.
Vanessa de la Torre, a reporter for Hartford's public radio station WNPR, covers race and culture as part of a radio collaborative called “Sharing America.”
Molly Qerim is the co-host of ESPN's 'First Take.' Sportswriter and author Karen Crouse works at The New York Times. Gabby Lucivero is a sports reporter at NBC Connecticut. These three women journalists talked with UConn Journalism students about how they found success covering the male-dominated world of sports.
In this episode of UConn Journalism’s Behind the Stories podcast, the team talked to political reporters about the challenges in covering Connecticut’s 2018 gubernatorial race. Senior journalism major Gracie Enright spoke to NBC Connecticut’s Max Reiss who explained the state’s electoral process and hurdles ahead of electing a new governor come November. Senior journalism major Caio Goncalves interviewed