The Stute
Two weekends ago at the Leadership Connect summit, I received a text message from a friend and former writer/photographer for The Stute in the middle of a presentation by Chris Shemanski.
One of the most telling bits of insight we got from Kanye West’s social media confrontation with rapper Wiz Khalifa in the past few weeks was a particular string of tweets referencing model and founder of eponymous not-for-profit organization, Amber Rose.
“Quite honestly that’s what we try to do here in the SSRC — we’re really trying to make sure that academia does not diminish passion,” says Carlos Alomar, Distinguished Artist in Residence, professor, and director of the Sound Synthesis Research Center (SSRC), as well as David Bowie’s former guitarist.
Physics, more than any other field, lured me into science journalism more than three decades ago. Physics represented a kind of scientific theology, an empirical, rational way of probing, if not solving, the mysteries of existence.
How many students constantly complain about the different minute hassles about Stevens, such as Pierce food or the ratio? Well, if this is students’ idea of a fun pastime, then they might want to listen to “Stevens My Life Is You” (if they haven’t already), written by Stevens’ own Hart Welles.
By Katie Brown
It’s not the end of fall finals period until I pick up a copy of The Stute and use the gloriously festive and free wrapping paper provided on the back pages.
If you’re familiar with the latest installments of the Final Fantasy franchise, you might be aware that a certain pink-haired heroine is the new face of Louis Vuitton’s Spring 2016 ready-to-wear collection.
Oozing in Italian/Italian-American references, Luca Brasi’s Deli at the intersection of Park Avenue and First Street is yet another café-meets-old-world-grocery that tells, or rather shouts, the tale of Hoboken’s heritage.




