It is mind-bogglingly easy to be misinformed about politics. In fact, there is often a direct incentive for people to be confused about what is going on and how the system works.
Posts published by “Madison Heller”
In the past three months the political landscape has changed so rapidly, and in no small part due to social media.
I, for one, am sick of science fiction. This is a bold claim for someone who attends an institute of technology, I know.
It is a well-known issue on campus that the weekends on-campus are almost always dead. From Monday to Friday, Stevens is bustling with activity, particularly with the attendance and interest that comes from the arrival of new students.
Recently, I have had a problem where the book I’ve bought and the book I read are completely different. This is not an issue of thievery but rather an intriguing description of overpromising and underdelivering consistently.
Since bustling crowds of students have returned to Hoboken, the campus has been a whirlwind of activity. Between new students adjusting to independence for the first time to past ones settling in for the year, there has been a lot to take in.
We often take for granted the ubiquitous things that we assume everyone has. Access to clean drinking water, access to food, and access to a warm place to sleep are things we are aware of that not everyone has access to.
With the unveiling of the new academic curriculum for incoming first-year students, Stevens hopes to prepare students for exactly what the name says: success — the Stevens Undergraduate Core Curriculum Essential Skills for Success (SUCCESS).
There is a deep-seated love for speculative fiction, which means stories where we can recognize ourselves, if not the world that we are in.
How much stuff do you have? Not in a hyperbolic, minimalist, painfully sad beige way. But in a ‘when was the last time you even wore that shirt you bought two months ago or used that new gadget you swore would change your life’ kinda way.