The month of November brought about many significant updates to the Supplemental Nutritional Assistance Program (SNAP). The month began with delays to funding being procured by those in the program due to the government shutdown and actions in the Supreme Court.
The Stute
As I was unpacking my stuff from Thanksgiving break, a thought crossed my mind. “How stupid is it that I am here for three weeks?”
The Artificial Intelligence (AI) race has only just begun, and companies, regardless of industry or size, are all working to adapt their systems and output new technologies.
I wasn’t ten minutes into Breakfast at Tiffany’s before realizing Holly Golightly had a name for a feeling many twenty-somethings know far too well: the mean reds.
Stevens Field Hockey fell 1-2 to Amherst College on November 12 in the first round of the NCAA Division III Championship to officially close out their 2025 season.
Basketball had a jam-packed three-game weekend, one game played each day. On Friday, November 14, the men’s team played in a home game against Chapman University.
James D. Watson’s death at 97 closes a chapter on one of the most influential and troubling lives in modern science.
Archaeological work in the Xingu territory of Brazil is rewriting assumptions about civilization in the Amazon. Through decades of partnership between the Kuikuro people and Western researchers, evidence of a large, complex civilization in the Brazilian territory has emerged.
Monte Sierpe, translated as the “serpent mountain,” is located in the Pisco Valley of Southern Peru. The “Serpent Mountain” is known for its thousands of precisely aligned holes to resemble the look of a snake.
The first test image from the telescope in the Vera C. Rubin Observatory has revealed a previously unnoticed trail of light that could give insight into both the history and abnormalities of the M61 galaxy.