Trinity College Names Class of 2020 Valedictorian and Salutatorian
Top 2020 graduates reflect on transformative experiences at Trinity
Top 2020 graduates reflect on transformative experiences at Trinity
The selective program identifies students with strong analytical skills and backgrounds in South Asian studies
The Hartford Courant recently published a profile story about Trinity College student Anes Gadun ’22, who has been serving his local community as an emergency medical technician and firefighter while at home in Clinton, Connecticut, during the coronavirus pandemic.
NBC Connecticut recently highlighted the efforts of the Trinity College field hockey team to set up a virtual race in support of coronavirus relief.
The Hartford Business Journal's first ranking of the region’s most powerful figures includes Trinity College President Joanne Berger-Sweeney and two prominent Trinity alumni: House Minority Leader Themis Klarides ’87 and Paul Mounds ’07, the chief of staff to Gov. Ned Lamont.
NBC Connecticut reporter Dominique Moody recently interviewed Trinity College President Joanne Berger-Sweeney about how the college is creating a stronger student body and bringing more students from every walk of life into the fields of science, technology, engineering, and math.
Trinity College is among 19 colleges and universities in the country to be named a Top Producer for both the Fulbright U.S. Student and Fulbright U.S. Scholar programs for 2019-2020. The Fulbright Program is the U.S. government's flagship international educational exchange program.
Social entrepreneur Jeffrey Devereux ’12 and film advocate and Trinity track and field coach John Michael Mason ’12, M’14 were named by Connecticut Magazine as two of the most influential up-and-comers in Connecticut under the age of 40.
A paper co-authored by Trinity College Professor of Biology Kent Dunlap and research students Josh Corbo ’19 and Margarita Vergara ’19 has been published in one of the world’s oldest scientific journals. Trinity students have the opportunity to begin research work early in their undergraduate careers and build strong connections with faculty members.
Throughout the fall semester, local and national media outlets featured Trinity community members’ perspectives and expertise on a variety of topics.
Community members of all backgrounds and beliefs participated in One Small Step, a national StoryCorps project that’s bringing together Americans with differing political views. Trinity is the first college to partner with StoryCorps on this initiative aimed at listening and finding common ground.
‘One Small Step’ Aims to Help People Move Beyond Differences, One Conversation at a Time