Sitting on the second floor of the library, I sometimes find myself distracted by the goings-on around me. From people talking to each other to others walking by, for some reason I find it hard to focus.
The Stute
Coming back from the Path station, I’ve passed by T Thai countless times without realizing that it is actually a reputable and popular restaurant.
On Thursday afternoon, the Office of Residence Life offered Resident Assistant positions to 16 new individuals for the 2016-2017 academic year.
I recently gave a talk at Stevens about how I came to write The End of Science, which was published two decades ago and just reissued with a new preface.
With the anticipation of primary elections (discussed two columns down), the anxiety of obligations, and the imminence of graduation for some, there is a danger of getting swept up in a quickening torrent of work, practices, meetings — life.
As I am writing this, a proud student of the College of Arts and Letters (read: tour guide) at our historically engineering-focused school, there is a nationwide conversation on the importance of the humanities in STEM, or Science, Technology, Engineering, and Mathematics fields like the one we as Stevens students engage in.
Last summer, I looked forward to not having to commute to school anymore. My commute on the Long Island Railroad (LIRR) usually entailed taking the 6:08 a.m.
Let’s get one thing straight: I didn’t gain 15 pounds at Stevens. I actually only gained 10 pounds when I got here.
Finally, a useful article! No, but seriously, how many times have you walked passed Schaefer gym during a career fair only to see a long, winding line of identically dressed, white and navy worker ants?
Last March, China’s National People’s Congress wrote a draft for an anti-terrorism bill that required companies to implement encryption backdoors. A spokeswoman from the Chinese Foreign Ministry insisted that the bill was “a requirement for the government in combating terrorism.”

