E-Board Column: Making the right choice
When I joined the Setonian as a news writer in Dec. 2022, I never imagined myself joining its editorial board, let alone its 100th editorial board. Mainly because I didn’t think I was cut out for it.
Use the fields below to perform an advanced search of The Setonian's archives. This will return articles, images, and multimedia relevant to your query.
7 items found for your search. If no results were found please broaden your search.
When I joined the Setonian as a news writer in Dec. 2022, I never imagined myself joining its editorial board, let alone its 100th editorial board. Mainly because I didn’t think I was cut out for it.
Gray boxes stacked in two separate piles on the large conference table in the Seton Hall Archives and Special Collections Center. One side had boxes filled with fragile Setonian newspapers, turning yellow with age, still containing the creases from where they used to be folded. The other side had boxes also filled with old yellow-brown Setonian newspapers, but these were different. These papers were in pristine condition, neatly tucked in individual labeled folders with not a single crease in sight.
AI has taken the internet by storm since its rise in popularity nearly a year ago, from generating images to writing essays in seconds. Today, AI seems to be embraced to a certain degree at Seton Hall, by being aware of some of its pros but also being aware of its cons.
As COVID cases start to slowly increase and new variants continue to emerge, the FDA has approved a new COVID-19 vaccine that will arrive just in time for seasonal flu shots, according to a New York Times article. The article said the FDA and other federal officials have preferred to refer to this new booster shot as “an annual immunization effort akin to the flu vaccine.”
“Nicky Blue.” That was the nickname given by loved ones to the Seton Hall undergraduate student who died on March 16, just six days after his 20th birthday.
Hundreds of students from across the country attended Seton Hall’s undergraduate open house event on Feb. 19, according to the senior vice president of enrollment management.
“Angry,” “disgusting,” and “frustrating.”