University of Connecticut physical therapy professor Dr. Cristina Colón-Semenza aims to highlight physical therapists’ essential role in mental health at the school, state and national levels.
The story of New England’s abolitionists is often told in fragments — names, dates, movements — but rarely in full. That is what Gail Braccidiferro MacDonald set out to change with her new book, which focuses on Black abolitionists.
State officials want to identify towns interested in hosting new nuclear power plants. proponents believe nuclear power could solve anticipated energy demands from computer data centers as well as reduce greenhouse gas emissions.
At the University of Connecticut, Black students are finding community within innovative organizations that are designed to foster connections and a sense of belonging.
Bereavement leave policies – or the lack of them at colleges and universities – can force students to choose between academics and healing.
A proposed 20% cut in a state program that lets library patrons check out books from public libraries beyond their own town or city has been restored by the General Assembly’s Appropriations Committee.
UConn’s Paws to Relax program is one of several in Connecticut and many across the U.S. that are geared to college students who may be feeling the stress of taking exams or even living on campus away from their own pets.
Stronger storms and rising seas are reshaping Milford’s shoreline. As climate change fuels more intense hurricanes in the Northeast, residents face repeated flooding, while Connecticut lags in meeting emissions goals.
Environmental activists and lawmakers are looking to change the state constitution to grant Connecticut residents the right to a clean and healthy environment.
By Laura Mason | UConn Journalism Nov. 5, 2022 It was 2020 and UConn student Garrett McGlinchey had just turned 18 when he officially declared himself politically unaffiliated. With an increasingly polarized political atmosphere and an influential parent in each major party, McGlinchey had been certain for a while that he didn’t want to align
UConn Journalism major Christie Wang studied abroad in Australia during the Fall 2022 semester. She took this squid photo at Lady Elliot Island, the southernmost coral cay of the Great Barrier Reef. Christie stayed on the island for a week as part of a coral reefs conservation course. She studied marine life, corals, tidal circulation
By Laura Mason | UConn Journalism Oct. 30, 2022 STORRS, Conn. — It was the end of August 2022 and cars were whipping by Lisa’s Chocolates and Gifts on Route 195 in Mansfield again. Following renovations at Mansfield Elementary School and the subsequent removal of a traffic island, the widened road now allowed cars to accelerate
Kaitlyn Yearwood (8) shouts at her team during the UConn women’s hockey team’s match against the University of Maine on Oct. 28, 2022. A goal from Maine in the third period handed UConn their fourth loss of the season. Photo by Skyler Kim ’24
By Carson Swick | UConn JournalismOct. 22, 2022 Abortion. Inflation. The economy. Threats to democracy. In many ways, these simple yet charged terms characterize both Democrats’ and Republicans’ approaches to messaging ahead of the 2022 midterm elections: Hone in on specific “winning” issues while forgetting the inconvenient ones. In what is shaping up to be
Actor Jamie Lee Curtis holds back tears while holding a picture of her “Halloween” character at a New York Comic Con panel at the Jacob Javits Convention Center on October 8, 2022. The panel was dedicated to discussing Curtis’ four decades of experience with the “Halloween” film franchise. UConn Journalism student Sofia Sawchuk is associate
For a feature assignment in JOUR2065: Mobile Storytelling, UConn student Kelti Johnson photographed the bright colors of The Big E in Springfield, Massachusetts in September 2022. The Eastern States Exposition, as the fair is also known, is one of the top ten fairs in North America and the largest on the East Coast, representing all
Inside the managing editor’s office at The Daily Campus — UConn’s student run newspaper — a bulletin board with words of the First Amendment of the U.S. Constitution reminds the student journalists about the press’s the pivotal role in serving democracy. Photo by Sophia Dover
By Corina Wallenta | UConn JournalismApril 25, 2022
A student at the University of Connecticut relaxes on the lawn behind the Student Union in Spring 2022. Photo by Evan Rodriguez, Class of 2024