By Sean Dirscherl
Despite Hoboken’s reputation for restaurants and bars galore, that reputation tends to go significantly out the window once midnight rolls around.
By Sean Dirscherl
Despite Hoboken’s reputation for restaurants and bars galore, that reputation tends to go significantly out the window once midnight rolls around.
Recently there was a pretty huge gathering of people in New York City to march and rally together for the sake of climate change awareness.
Despite being a town with one of the highest number of restaurants serving brunch per capita, Hoboken is notoriously difficult for finding a place to actually have brunch.
I’ve realized how easy it is to fall into a routine. Having a set schedule is really great and it keeps you busy—but that’s if you’re an old person.
Microsoft bought the video game development studio Mojang, responsible for Minecraft, for $2.5 billion on Monday, September 15. Three of its founders, Carl Manneh, Jakob Porsér, and Markus “Notch” Persson, are leaving the company following the sale.
It’s 10:30 p.m. and you’re sitting at a table with an apple in your left hand and a glass of water to your right.
This editorial has been on my to-do list since Spring 2013.
It begins with my first term as a Co-op Student when I worked at Parsons Brinckerhoff.
If you are a regular reader of this column, you might know that I have something to do with the Center for Science Writings, or CSW, but you probably don’t know what the CSW is.
Sometimes, it is safe to say that the age of the “hermit inside and hogging your video cartridge for hours at a time” is gone.
In last week’s issue of The Stute, Joseph Brosnan, the Editor in Chief, wrote an editorial (Internet anonymity and lack of online etiquette) arguing against online anonymity.