Media Type

NPR

Alex Jones Has Been Ordered to Pay $1 Billion Over His Sandy Hook Lies. Will He?

Rendering of the new Student-athlete Success Center

UConn Receives Historic Gift to Support New Student-athlete Success Center

Former Student-Athlete Trisha Bailey ’99 (CLAS) Commits Lead Gift for Major Renovation and Expansion Project

Fans at the first UConn women's basketball game at Gampel Pavilion, on Jan. 31, 1990.

Pioneering Athletics Administrator Reflects on Progress – and Goals Still to Be Reached

Pat Meiser, who spent 11 years as a top administrator for UConn Athletics, reflects on how Title IX changed college sports

Young Building

Two Majors Give Students More Options in Applied Resource Economics

Students will soon choose between majors in environmental and natural resource economics and economics of sustainable development and management to highlight unique skills gained at UConn

Biomedical engineer Liisa Kuhn holds the soft, breathable material that serves as an alternative to uncomfortable, unnatural-looking prosthetics.

3D Printing Technology Benefits Breast Cancer Survivors

'It's been a need for many, many years, and it takes someone like a biomedical engineer to say, "I can do this"'

Hearst Connecticut Media

Editorial: Drivers Are Often Distracted, but So Are Pedestrians

Star Tribune (Minneapolis)

FDA Proposes New Definition for ‘Healthy’ Food, But Will It Makes Us Healthier?

Newsweek

Kanye West Confused About Antisemitism and Racism, Professor Says

Graphic reading "UConn Women in Athletics' over a historic photo of UConn Athletic participants

Hallowed Ground

As part of the 50th anniversary of Title IX, a student-athlete from the 1981 NCAA Championship field hockey team and two current women’s basketball players compare and contrast their experiences on “Hallowed Ground.”

Students in motion along Route 195 in front of Whitney Hall.

UConn Participation in Fee-Free Application Day Underscores Commitment to Access, Affordability

A commitment to removing financial barriers that could dissuade talented students from applying