Thanksgiving From the Argives: Turkey, Tofu, and Miller’s Lite Over the Years

November 25, 2024, by Thomas Lyons, Assistant Features Editor. Leave a Comment

In this paper’s ink over the past month, students have described feelings of weariness, during election discussions, in dramatic performances, at parties—even the groundhogs have gone quiet. In the dimming winter light, it can feel like we’ve lost the knack for celebration. That’s why this week’s issue of the Argives, a retrospective column on The […]

Students Reflect on the Shapiro Center for Writing’s Summer Internship Program

November 25, 2024, by Janhavi Munde, Assistant Features Editor. Leave a Comment

In 2023, the Shapiro Center for Writing began an internship program for students at the University under Shapiro Center Director and Professor of Creative Writing Merve Emre. The program began with one internship for a student at The New York Review of Books and has quickly expanded to a broad range of media and publishing agencies, including […]

Yogurt Bowls: More Than a Meal

November 25, 2024, by Katherine Hernandez, Staff Writer. Leave a Comment

If you asked me what makes me happiest in this world, a yogurt bowl would be my first thought, although I would actually say something along the lines of “my family and friends, of course.” But I would still heavily consider saying a yogurt bowl. Greek yogurt was always somewhere in our fridge when I […]

WesCeleb: Sierra Van Wijk ’25 on Working Life, Three Majors in Three Years, and the Luck of It All

November 25, 2024, by Thomas Lyons, Assistant Features Editor. Leave a Comment

This week, The Argus sat down with Sierra Van Wijk ’25. As a triple major, tour guide, and longtime student worker, Van Wijk told us about managing the fullest schedule, making homes, and discovering the soul-y nature in things. The Argus: Why do you think you were nominated to be a WesCeleb? Sierra Van Wijk: Freshman year, […]

Women’s Club Basketball Hits the Court

November 21, 2024, by Sophie Jager, Features Editor. Leave a Comment

For the first time in University memory, we have a women’s club basketball team. Spearheaded by co-captain Audrey Nelson ’25, the team provides a space for women and non-cisgender men to engage in competitive basketball alongside other experienced players, breaking down gender barriers that historically kept them out of organized play. When Nelson arrived at […]

WesCeleb: McKenna Blackshire ’25 on Live Music, Film Culture, and the Serendipity of a Backyard Shed

November 21, 2024, by Sophie Jager, Features Editor. Leave a Comment

This week, The Argus sat down with writer-filmmaker-musician McKenna Blackshire ’25 to chat about the live music scene on campus, the implications of a career in the film industry, and what it means to be an artist. The Argus: Why do you think you were nominated to be a WesCeleb? McKenna Blackshire: I send a […]

From the Argives: Uncovering the Headlines From Our Birthdays

November 18, 2024, by Maggie Smith, Lara Anlar, Archivist, Staff Writer . Leave a Comment

Like many people, this week’s Argives columnists, Maggie Smith ’27 and Lara Anlar ’28, are particularly fond of celebrating our birthdays yearly. Thus, we decided to check out The Argus issues published on our birthdays. To our surprise, these issues reported on some especially interesting events. From Maggie: December 2004  Spurred by my looming 20th birthday, […]

WesCeleb: Ben Shifrel ’25 on Politics, Lifelong Friendships, and How to Buy an Alpaca

November 18, 2024, by Thomas Lyons, Assistant Features Editor. Leave a Comment

This week, The Argus sat down with Brooklyn native Ben Shifrel ’25. As Chair of the Student Budget Committee (SBC), a tour guide, and captain of both club tennis and club hockey, Shifrel told us about making important changes in student government, life on Middletown’s (very wide) Main Street, and the friends he made along […]

Office Hours With Professor Robert Kabacoff: Software Development, Finding Love Through Music, and Remembering the Early Internet

November 11, 2024, by Caleb Henning, Editor-in-Chief. Leave a Comment

Professor of the Practice in Quantitative Analysis Robert Kabacoff is well-known around the Quantitative Analysis Center (QAC) for his cheerful demeanor and deep knowledge of statistics and data analysis. As the author of three books and numerous websites, Professor Kabacoff has dedicated most of his professional life to educating people through technology. The Argus sat down […]

Decoding Barriers: Anan Afrida’s ’26 Quest to Empower Women in Tech

November 11, 2024, by Francisca Wijaya, Staff Writer. Leave a Comment

Anan Afrida ’26 is multilingual. A coding contest poster started her journey of talking with the binary machine: the computer. With just the knowledge of programming language C’s “if…else” statement, Afrida wrote her first line of code in the sixth grade. Over the years, she has built upon her vocabulary of syntaxes and algorithmic reasoning, […]

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