As graduation approaches, I’m faced head-on with the “lasts.” Last class, last critique, last assignment. These things come at the end of every semester, but this time feels unique.
Posts published by “Natalie Todaro”
Natalie Todaro was a member of The Stute during her four years at Stevens from 2018-2022. She served as Layout Editor in 2019 and Managing Editor in 2020, as well as Editor-in-Chief from November 2020 to February 2022.
After the pandemic hit Hoboken in March 2020, The Stute had no choice but to pause printing and publish digitally on thestute.com.
It’s been difficult to summarize everything I’ve wanted to say in what might be the last words I’ll ever write for The Stute, in my final editorial of the last issue of The Stute I will edit.
When Stevens announced that the first two weeks of the Spring 2022 semester would be remote instruction, I was anxious that in two weeks, we wouldn’t be returning to in-person operations, but continuing on remotely for the entirety of the semester.
The highly anticipated opening of the University Center Complex (UCC) is coming soon, as most students plan to go on break for the holiday season and will return in late-January 2022.
Welcome to my obligatory goodbye for the semester, as The Stute wraps up production and publishes the last issue until 2022.
Next week is Thanksgiving, my favorite holiday. The entire day (or week, if you’re like me) revolves around cooking, baking, spending time with family, eating way too much, sleeping, and watching A Charlie Brown Thanksgiving.
The Student Government Association (SGA) is proposing two amendments to their Constitution, requiring 1/3 of the student body to vote on them in order to pass.
The current office for The Stute, in the Student Center, is the third office I’ve been in as a member of The Stute, and it won’t be the last.
Around this time last year was the 2020 presidential election. My editorial from that time unsurprisingly indicated I was “glued to the TV from November 3 to November 8 […] my week of intense news watching and listening.”