Seton Hall, get us out of the closet
By Sofia Kasbo | April 28“To inform, to serve.” These four words run The Setonian newsroom as we strive to publish our finest work, all from a room the size of a walk-in closet in the University Center.
“To inform, to serve.” These four words run The Setonian newsroom as we strive to publish our finest work, all from a room the size of a walk-in closet in the University Center.
The Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests (SNAP) held a press conference on Tuesday in front of Seton Hall’s Ward Gate to announce the filing of a formal complaint against Cardinal Joseph Tobin, the Archbishop of Newark and the president of SHU’s Board of Regents and chair of the Board of Trustees, urging a Vatican investigation.
An undergraduate student died after being struck by an NJ Transit train at Rutherford station on Feb. 26.
“Skibidi toilet rizz” may sound like a secret code or gibberish to some, but for Generation Alpha, this is part of their everyday vocabulary.
New Jersey lawmakers continue to call on Seton Hall to confront allegations surrounding SHU’s president, Msgr. Joseph Reilly.
On Tuesday, Feb. 25, Seton Hall students were face-to-face with their newest obsession: Ross Lynch.
Seton Hall students are juggling academics, internships, and extracurriculars, but for some, another major concern looms: the controversy surrounding the leader of their university.
Growing up, I was always considered “bigger” just because my thighs were big and my female features developed before everyone else’s.
A former Newark priest protested outside Seton Hall’s Farinella Gate and the Health Services building on South Orange Ave. on Tuesday, Feb. 11.
The polls have closed, the votes have been counted, and the next U.S. president has been chosen—SHU students now must come to terms with the results of the 2024 presidential election. But the question remains: is this the outcome students wanted?