A few steps from Washington Street is a no-frills, family-owned café serving up home-style Italian comfort food. Having passed Café Michelina on the corner of 5th and Bloomfield Street on multiple occasions, I finally decided the time had come to step through the beaded curtain into the dimly lit restaurant.
The Stute
On Wednesday, October 8 Stevens Club Lacrosse played against their longtime rivals, New Paltz. The game began at 8:30 p.m. on the DeBaun Athletic Complex.
On this past Wednesday, October 7th, DeBaun Auditorium was filled with a plethora of finance professionals and students all ready to listen attentively to the wise words of wisdom from an experienced Goldman Sachs executive.
Last Tuesday night at The Stute’s general body meeting, a couple of people were talking about the general state of Stevens, more specifically the lack of input students have in Stevens’ completely campus-altering 2012-2022 strategic plan.
The Office of Undergraduate Academics located on the first floor of the Edwin A. Stevens building is never quiet. Students in all disciplines, in all grades, with very different needs will most likely stop in EAS 119 before their time at Stevens comes to a close.
Diverging from my usual search for fine cuisine, I was craving good old Americanized Chinese takeout but not necessarily the unhealthy, bloated, “what did I just put in my body” feeling that usually accompanies such cuisine.
For many students, the online petition began by SGA senator Colin Aitken this past Wednesday was the first news of club sports no longer receiving physical education (P.E.)
The first photo I took visiting Stevens was of the iconic New York skyline outside of Howe, and in the foreground was another campus icon, our beloved cannon.
“We write Stevens history” is written on the top of this newspaper. I kept this in mind while attending last weeks’ Dean’s Seminar “Taylor’s World” last Thursday, featuring Simon Head, who examined the legacy of Fredrick Winslow Taylor.
Only three years ago we had “Return to Glory,” the modern publicity disaster that stemmed from advertising naivety and the misunderstandings of event promotion and management.






