This article has multiple issues. Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page . (Learn how and when to remove these messages)
|
Type | Weekly student newspaper |
---|---|
Format | Tabloid |
Owner(s) | Trinity College |
Editor-in-chief | Olivia Silvey '25 |
Managing editor | Savannah Brooks '26, Jules Bourbeau '25 and Cornelia Ehlebracht '25 |
Founded | 1904 |
Headquarters | Jackson Dormitory Trinity College Hartford, Connecticut United States |
City | Hartford, CT |
Website | www |
The Trinity Tripod is the only student newspaper and student publication of Trinity College in Hartford, Connecticut. Since 2006, the Tripod has been arranged with five sections, in order, News, Opinions, Features, Arts and Sports. The Tripod also publishes editorials and letters to the editor on Page Two. A typical issue of the Tripod has 12 pages and is published weekly on Tuesdays when classes are in session.
The Trinity Tripod was first published by the students of Trinity College in Hartford, Connecticut in 1904, when it was primarily focused on publishing Trinity news and sports information for the alumni community. The first issue of the Tripod was published on September 23, 1904, The inaugural Editor-in-Chief was Malcolm C. Farrow '05. [1]
The Tripod is comparatively new among student publications in the NESCAC League, with only The (Connecticut) College Voice (1916) and The Middlebury Campus (1905) founded at later dates. Two student publications at Trinity preceded the Tripod: The Trinity Tablet, an early student review and literary magazine, was formed in 1868 and ran until 1908.
The Tripod's offices were first on the college's historic Long Walk. The offices later moved to the basement of Mather Hall and their current location in the basement of the Jackson dormitory.
The original price of the Tripod was five cents, with a yearly subscription costing $2.00. The paper was published twice weekly until 1917, when it assumed the now-familiar once-a-week format. At various points, including during the late 1960s, the Tripod reverted to twice weekly publication.
The Tripod's motto, "Now Then-Trinity," was coined by President of the College Flavel Sweeten Luther in his 1904 inauguration speech and remains in use today. [2] Early use of the paper covered a variety of contentious topics, including the founding of a Trinity socialist society, compulsory attendance at Episcopal Chapel services (which continued at the college until the mid-1960s), and student engagement. [3]
The Tripod also saw contention in the 1920s with declining student engagement. In 1927, then-Editor-in-Chief Malcom L. Stephenson '27 was suspended by the college administration after publishing an editorial critical of Dean Edward Troxwell. The ensuing controversy over freedom of speech was covered in national publications, including The Hartford Courant, The New York Times, and The Associated Press. The controversy also drew attention from The Harvard Crimson, which wrote in support of the Tripod and its beleaguered editor in an editorial.
Following the publication of Trinity's alumni magazine, the Reporter by the college in 1939, the Tripod shifted its focus to cover student affairs and conflict in greater detail. [4] In 1941, The Tripod published its first satirical issue—The Trinity Liepod—a tradition which has been maintained for much of the twentieth century. The publication struggled as a result of student enlistment under editor Stanley Kligfeld and ceased publication 1943-1944 as a result of World War II. It was briefly revived as a magazine in December 1944 under editor Harry Brand, but did not fully resume operations until 1946 under editor Tom Gorman. [5]
The Tripod celebrated 60 years of publication in 1964 and saw an editorial board increasingly critical of existing College institutions as the 1960s progressed. George Will '62, a Pulitzer-prize winning columnist at The Washington Post, and Peter Kilborn '61, a features editor at The New York Times, led the Tripod's charge against fraternities. Editorials of the 1960s resulted in the burning of copies of the Tripod by some irate students and also addressed Trinity's institutions and secret societies such as The Medusa Society.
The Tripod also covered the 1968 sit-in protests for diversity with the Board of Trustees, the 1969 decision by the Board to make the college coeducational, and the opening of the Trinity-in-Rome program. According to College Archivist Peter Knapp, faculty debate on the issue of the protests spilled into the pages of the Tripod, demonstrating the paper's increasing relevance as the forum of record on campus. [6]
Tripod editorials in the 1970s were critical of then-President Richard Nixon and the Vietnam War. The Tripod also covered local Connecticut news during this time in a special section and coverage was marked by ongoing concern over student involvement in administrative decisions. The 1980s also saw the brief return of competing student publications such as The Trinity Observer and the Questioner.Tripod editorials of the 1980s continued in their coverage of fraternity affairs and student concerns with fraternity actions and the implications of coeducation. [7]
The 1990s saw continued frustration around the same issues. An editorial described the issue thusly: "Trinity students and administrators are creatures of habit.... [E]very semester, the same issues arise. Drinking, Greek life, diversity, apathy, safety, dorm damage. These are not new topics, but each year there is a new twist on the old themes." [8]
The Tripod website was launched 2000 with the rise of the internet and saw other online venues, including The Daily Jolt, TrinTalk.com, and Facebook serve as outlets for student discourse. In 2004, the Tripod celebrated its centennial year of publication. [9]
The Tripod covered two significant controversies in the late 2000s and early 2010s, including the college administration's misappropriation of funds in 2009 from an account held under the Shelby Cullom Davis Foundation to support operations, first reported by The Wall Street Journal, and the 2012 "co-education fraternity mandate" that failed and resulted in the early retirement of then-Trinity President James F. Jones in 2013.
Coverage during the mid-2010s included ongoing Title VII litigation against Trinity and the college's continued response to diversity and equity and inclusion concerns. [10]
During the 2020 COVID-19 pandemic, the Tripod documented the college's ongoing response to the pandemic, which infected more than one hundred students, and investigated its quarantine practices and relationship with Hartford Healthcare. [11]
The Tripod is published every Tuesday during the academic year, usually resulting in 8-10 issues per semester. The current Editor-in-Chief of the Tripod is Olivia Silvey '25. [12]
The Tripod maintains an online presence on its website, where its weekly print content is available in full together with additional online materials. The Tripod also prints an annual satire issue, The Liepod, on April Fool's Day, and maintains active social media accounts on Instagram, Twitter, and Facebook.
The Tripod presently consists of five sections: News, Opinion, Features, Arts, and Sports and is generally twelve pages long. The Tripod also runs editorial content and letters to the editor on Page Two. In November 2020, the Tripod published a special commemorative issue documenting the thoughts of Trinity students during the 2020 United States presidential election.
Famous alumni in journalism include syndicated Washington Post columnist George F. Will '62, Los Angeles Times sportswriter Jim Murray '43, and Washington Post columnist Steven Pearlstein '73 – all three are Pulitzer Prize winners. New York Times features writer Peter Kilborn '61 was also an editor of the Tripod in the early 1960s.
Outside of journalism, Tripod editors have had notable careers in other fields: Chief Justice of the Michigan Supreme Court Bridget Mary McCormack '88 was an editor.
Theta Tau (ΘΤ) is a professional collegiate engineering fraternity. The fraternity has programs to promote the social, academic, and professional development of its members. Theta Tau is the oldest and largest professional engineering fraternity and has a membership of more than 50,000 men and women who study engineering in all its various branches on over 100 college campuses.
Trinity College is a private liberal arts college in Hartford, Connecticut, United States. Founded as Washington College in 1823, it is the second-oldest college in the state of Connecticut. Coeducational since 1969, the college enrolls 2,235 students. Trinity offers 41 majors and 28 interdisciplinary minors. The college is a member of the New England Small College Athletic Conference (NESCAC).
The Yale Daily News is an independent student newspaper published by Yale University students in New Haven, Connecticut, since January 28, 1878.
The Dartmouth Review is a conservative newspaper at Dartmouth College in Hanover, New Hampshire, United States. Founded in 1980 by a number of staffers from the college's daily newspaper, The Dartmouth, the paper is most famous for having spawned other politically conservative U.S. college newspapers that would come to include the Yale Free Press, Carolina Review, The Stanford Review, the Harvard Salient, The California Review, the Princeton Tory, and the Cornell Review.
St. Anthony Hall or the Fraternity of Delta Psi is an American fraternity and literary society. Its first chapter was founded at Columbia University on January 17, 1847, the feast day of Saint Anthony the Great. The fraternity is a non–religious, nonsectarian organization. In 1879, William Raimond Baird's American College Fraternities characterized the fraternity as having "the reputation of being the most secret of all the college societies." A 2015 writer for Vanity Fair says the fraternity is "a cross between Skull and Bones and a Princeton eating club, with a large heaping of Society and more than a dash of Animal House." Nearly all chapters of St. Anthony Hall are coed.
The Maneater is an official, editorially independent student news publication at the University of Missouri. The Maneater editorial and advertising staffs are composed entirely of students, with the exception of a professional business adviser. Financially, The Maneater is a non-profit publication funded by advertisers. The newspaper is distributed free of charge, and all aspects of its website remain accessible at no cost to readers. The editorial department of The Maneater remains independent from any student governments and organizations, as well as the Missouri School of Journalism and university itself.
The Independent Florida Alligator is the student newspaper of the University of Florida. The Alligator is one of the largest student-run newspapers in the United States, with a circulation of 14,000 and readership of more than 21,000. It is an affiliate of UWIRE, which distributes and promotes its content to their network.
Alpha Chi Rho (ΑΧΡ), commonly known as Crows, Crow, or AXP, is an American men's collegiate fraternity founded on June 4, 1895, at Trinity College in Hartford, Connecticut, by the Reverend Paul Ziegler, his son Carl Ziegler, and Carl's friends William H. Rouse, Herbert T. Sherriff and Rev. William A.D. Eardeley. The fraternity was a charter member of the North American Interfraternity Conference. Its national headquarters is R.B. Stewart National Headquarters, located in Neptune, New Jersey.
The Hoya, founded in 1920, is the oldest and largest student newspaper of Georgetown University in Washington, D.C., serving as the university’s newspaper of record. The Hoya is a student-run paper that prints every Friday and publishes online daily throughout the year, with a print circulation of 4,000 during the academic year. The newspaper has four main editorial sections: News, Opinion, Science, Sports and The Guide, a weekly arts and lifestyle magazine. It also publishes several annual special issues including a New Student Guide, a basketball preview and a semesterly fashion issue.
The Yale Record is the campus humor magazine of Yale University. Founded in 1872, it is the oldest humor magazine in the United States.
The Daily Princetonian, originally known as The Princetonian and nicknamed the 'Prince', is the independent daily student newspaper of Princeton University. The newspaper is owned by The Daily Princetonian Publishing Co. and boasts a circulation of 2,000 in print and around 30,000 daily online hits as of 2021. Managed by approximately 200 undergraduate students, the newspaper covers a range of sections, including news, sports, and opinions.
The Philippine Collegian is the official weekly student publication of the University of the Philippines Diliman. It is also commonly known to the university's students as Kulê. It is known for its radical, national democratic, often anti-administration views, and gives critical views on the policies of the UP administration and the Philippine government.
Trinity News is Ireland's oldest student newspaper, published from Trinity College Dublin. It is an independent newspaper, funded by Trinity Publications, which reports on the news and views of the students and staff of Dublin University, and the broader Irish higher education sector. The newspaper was first published in 1953 and is using this date as the first volume that the volume numbers are currently derived.
The State News is the student newspaper of Michigan State University in East Lansing, Michigan. It is supported by a combination of advertising revenue and a $7.50 refundable tax that students pay at each semester's matriculation. Though The State News is supported by a student tax, the faculty and administration do not interfere in the paper's content. The State News is governed by a Board of Directors, which comprises journalism professionals, faculty and students. In 2010, the Princeton Review ranked The State News as the #8 best college newspaper in the country. And in 2015, the Society of Professional Journalists named TSN as the nation's best daily college newspaper for 2014.
The California Pelican was a college humor magazine founded in 1903 by Earle C. Anthony at the University of California, Berkeley. Lasting eighty years, it was the first successful student humor magazine in UC Berkeley, though it was preceded by Smiles in 1891 and Josh in 1895. It is succeeded by the Heuristic Squelch, which is still running.
CTNow is a free weekly newspaper in central and southwestern Connecticut, United States, published by the Hartford Courant.
James F. Jones Jr. is an American academic administrator and educator. He began his career as a professor of Romance languages and other humanities. His administrative posts have included being vice provost of Southern Methodist University and dean of its Dedman College of Humanities and Sciences; president of Kalamazoo College; president of Trinity College in Hartford, Connecticut; and interim president of Sweet Briar College.
The Cadet(Cadet Newspaper) is a bi-weekly student newspaper published by Virginia Military Institute Cadets. In May 2021, The Cadet was restarted by cadets who wanted a newspaper to coincide with their graduation ceremony. Since then, the cadet has been staffed by current VMI cadets, and is financially supported by donations. On October 29, 2021, The Cadet announced that it was a recognized IRS 501(c)(3). This was done to ensure that members of The Cadet staff maintain independence from VMI's Office of Communications and Marketing in order to afford The Cadet's Staff complete and total editorial control. In October 2021, The Cadet was accepted into the Virginia Press Association (VPA) and the cadets who operate the newspaper all carry Virginia State Police Press IDs. The Cadet is owned by The Cadet Foundation, INC and is published with the assistance of the Lexington News-Gazette.
An alumni magazine is a magazine published by a university, college, or other school or by an association of a school's alumni in order to keep alumni abreast of fellow alumni and news of their university, often with an implicit goal of fundraising.
The Medusa Society was an undergraduate secret society at Trinity College, Hartford, Connecticut. Though non-continuous in its presence on campus, it had a purported founding date of 1840. It went inactive in the 1970s.