Press "Enter" to skip to content

Posts published by “Frankie Guarini”

There we went (take care)

Entering the past weekend, I was prepared to begin my last five columns. At our penultimate executive board meeting, I suddenly realized that this was my last issue on the E-board and as editor-in-chief.

Forage ahead: you’ve got options

Whether it’s the pursuit of romance or fiscal stability, the knee-jerk promotion of one person or job to the status of “the one” is the most troublesome and difficult instinctual reaction to rewrite, especially because it can be so consuming and debilitating.

Find your diner (or whatever works for you)

With the anticipation of primary elections (discussed two columns down), the anxiety of obligations, and the imminence of graduation for some, there is a danger of getting swept up in a quickening torrent of work, practices, meetings — life.

The pursuit of truth begins at the Veritas Forum

In its third consecutive year, the Veritas Forum was hosted by Stevens Christian Fellowship (SCF), Philosophy Club, Newman Catholic Association, and the Engineers Without Borders chapter on February 24 to bring Professors Troy van Voorhis of Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) and Lee Vinsel of Stevens together to “discuss how to test your worldview,” according to the event’s official advertisement.

Responding to criticism

After I saw the DeBaun Performing Arts Center’s (DPAC) performance of William Shakespeare’s “A Midsummer Night’s Dream,” I was eager and excited to pen a review and include in the next issue of The Stute — and I did.

DPAC’s “A Midsummer Night’s Dream”: a late winter night’s delight

Uniting Stevens alumni and new talent alike, the Bethany Reeves-directed rendition of William Shakespeare’s “A Midsummer Night’s Dream” harmonized comedic modernization with respectful adherence to the original play for a memorable performance by all involved.

You ought to know: you bought it

Two weekends ago at the Leadership Connect summit, I received a text message from a friend and former writer/photographer for The Stute in the middle of a presentation by Chris Shemanski.

The “RSO summit” finally gets it right

I was fully prepared to attend the RSO summit this past Saturday, recently renamed Leadership Connect. My mindset entering Connect was entirely negative.

I’m forgetting something… (what really matters)

In the hubbub of classwork, part-time work, thesis preparation, club meetings, eating, and occasionally sometimes sleeping, valuing family and friends is one of many things that gets neglected.