Category: FEATURES
Trinity Offers Study Away in Berlin for Summer 2019
Amanda Scopelitti ’20 Features Editor Trinity students have the opportunity to take classes in Berlin, Germany this summer through the College’s new five-week Summer in […]
Trinity Celebrates 50 Years of Coeducation
Gillian Reinhard ’20 Editor-in-Chief On Jan. 11, 1969, Trinity celebrated its fiftieth anniversary of coeducation. On this date, the Board of Trustees voted unanimously to […]
Puerto Rican Culture at in Hartford and at Trinity
Amanda Scopelliti ’20 Features Editor The Commonwealth of Puerto Rico is an archipelago located about 1,000 miles from Miami, Florida. Although Puerto Rico is a […]
Trinity Has Its Own Composer? Yes, Since 1979
BEN GAMBUZZA ’20 EDITOR-IN-CHIEF Did you know that Trinity had a Composer-in-Residence? Me neither. Since, 1979 Robert Edward Smith has been the College’s go-to composer […]
A Day in the Life of a Peter B's Barista
SOPHIA GOURLEY ’19 SENIOR EDITOR The Trinity Tripod sat down with Amber Stevenson ’19 to learn what it is like to be a Peter B’s […]
Club Spotlight: Shorinji Kan Jiu Jitsu
MARISA BERNER ’21 STAFF WRITER Around three times a week, a bunch of people congregate in the wrestling room on campus to practice and learn […]
Another Editor Abroad, This Time in Florence
AMANDA SCOPELLITI ’20 CONTRIBUTING WRITER I decided that I wanted to spend a semester abroad because I believe that traveling the world and experiencing new […]
Prof. Katherine Lahti and the Dithyramb of Russia
BEN GAMBUZZA ’20 EDITOR-IN-CHIEF Sitting across from me in an office filled with books on Vladimir Nabokov, Dostoevsky, Myakovksy, and Anna Akhmatova, is Prof. Katherine […]
Cleo of Alpha Chi: Three Decades of Spooky Science
MARISA BERNER ’21 STAFF WRITER For around 26 years, Trinity College has been hosting Halloween on Vernon, a yearly event where children go around to […]
WGRAC and YDSA Encourage Students to Vote
RAKAN ALZAGHA ’22 CONTRIBUTING WRITER July 4, 1776, is the day this country was founded and declared sovereign from the oppressive nature of its former […]