Love, envy, life, and death, all in song form! Twelve students performed twelve incredible pieces of music under the direction of Dr.
The Stute
This is a response to the Letter to the Editor provided to us last week: while I may not agree with your consistent reference to the Wizard of Oz, I wholehearted agree with your disposition against the Registrar.
For yet another week, my efforts to visit the establishment which I have been craving go unfulfilled due to a combination of my own schedule and hours that don’t exactly line up with co-op.
Stevens student Marques Brownlee, perhaps better known as “MKBHD” on YouTube, has had a hugely successful multi-year run with videos he shoots and produces himself from his apartment in Hoboken, culminating to a subscriber base today of nearly 2 million viewers.
It’s no question that ideas, concepts, and trends change throughout the generations, and the changes can be drastic. And music and theater are certainly no exceptions.
I met Stephen Hawking in the summer of 1990, when I spent five days in northern Sweden at a conference attended by 30 or so leading cosmologists.
With the advent of music streaming services such as Spotify and Google Play Music All Access, companies saw fit to forgo high-bitrate audio files in favor of lossy 256- and 320-kbps MP3s to conserve users’ mobile bandwidth and allow for less buffering time.
Stevens is changing the way I think about entrepreneurship.
I am still very apprehensive about entrepreneurs and their startup businesses. I just hate the risk involved and the uncertainty moving forward with a startup.
You have just graduated. Graduation has come and gone, and it is time to go out into the corporate world to acquire a job.
If you’re interested in reading something spooky about Stevens, put this paper down and go find last week’s issue of The Stute.