The goal of a corporation is to maximize profits. So, how should a business go about this? The fast food industry has an answer: replace its workers with technology.
The Stute
SASE and Society of Black Engineers hosted an Etiquette Dinner open to all undergraduates, this past Tuesday, Nov. 29 . The event featured the Career Center, mocktails, dinner, and two hours of advice centered around proper etiquette with a potential employer.
On Nov. 30, 2016, the Government Accountability Office (GAO) released an official report stating that students who have abided by their loan-repayment policies, as according to the current government administration, will be forgiven.
The island of Cuba was forever changed in the year 1959 when its former dictator, Fidel Castro, along with his brother Raúl, Argentinian Ernesto “Che” Guevara, and hundreds of other supporters, overthrew then-President Fulgencio Batista.
I begin this column before completing my mental return from Thanksgiving break, but the post-Thanksgiving shopping season is clearly already in full swing.
With the purpose of fostering an appreciation of poetry and the arts on a STEM dominated campus, the Poetry Club was recently approved as an RSO by the Subcommittee Head Council of the SGA.
“Music is dope,” Josh Pirog explains. “It’s the only inanimate thing that [can] completely brighten my day. It’s very powerful.” As a kid growing up, Josh enjoyed singing.

Campus Life Committee held a tree-lighting ceremony to celebrate the beginning of the holiday season, this past Thursday. The event included a raffle, free hot chocolate, and desserts, as well as entertainment, including Stevens’ very own student-run A cappella group, Quackappella.
The Polish American Cultural Society (PACS) hosted their annual Pierogi Party on Wednesday, Nov. 30. This year, PACS featured over 1,200 pierogi of all kinds, including sauerkraut and mushrooms, potato and cheese, meat, blueberry, and strawberry.
Two years ago when Maria De Abreu Pineda transferred to Stevens from Bergen Community College, she felt what every new transfer student feels – not being a freshman, yet being “fresh” to the school.





