With my job as food columnist for the year coming to close, I felt the pressure of time. Do I try to write a safe, legitimate article about It’s Greek To Me?
The Stute
Utopia gets a bad rap. If someone calls you or your idea “utopian,” they usually mean it as an insult, a synonym for naïve and unrealistic.
Stevens College Republicans organized Dinesh D’Souza, a former policy adviser to Ronald Reagan and prominent conservative commentator, to bring his “D’Souza Unchained” lecture series to campus this past Wednesday, April 26.
While it’s been a bit drizzly and gray, we’ve had some brighter days here and there, and what better way to prepare for summer break than with a new pair of sunglasses?
A recent stir within the Asian-American student body arose when a picture featuring Geoffrey Lim (a 4/5 undergraduate student here at Stevens) and his relatives (his two sisters and his cousin) surfaced in a group chat with Geoffrey and his friends.
One of the things I always hear technology credited for is how easy it makes it to spread information. Specifically, how the internet has promoted globalization.
With social sciences professor Dr. Susan Schept serving as moderator, the College of Arts and Letters hosted a forum focusing on “Islam in America” through a multi-faith lens this past Wednesday.
I started writing this column as a spur of the moment decision. I saw an ad on Facebook, and just wrote a short, 600-word essay about how I felt about starting college.
On Tuesday, April 25 in Babbio Atrium, the Chinese Student Association hosted their annual “International Dumpling Night”, in collaboration with SASE, FAST, KSA, IUA, and Nu Alpha Phi.
As we approach the end of the semester, I begin to realize how many important milestones people are reaching this time of year.




