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The Stute

T Thai

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.

Find your diner (or whatever works for you)

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.

Examining the “useless liberal arts major” myth

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.

The Freshman 15

Let’s get one thing straight: I didn’t gain 15 pounds at Stevens. I actually only gained 10 pounds when I got here.

Your style résumé

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?

A backdoor for “us” is a backdoor for “them”

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.”

16th annual VDAY: “We’re worried about vaginas”

On February 18, Stevens held its 16th annual VDAY as part of a global movement to protect and empower women. Members of the College of Arts and Letters’ Literature Faculty, the Women’s Fencing Team (who recently won their second straight conference title), and the DeBaun Performing Arts Center presented Eve Ensler’s The Vagina Monologues to an engaged audience.