Stevens is a relatively small school in a relatively dense and expensive town, so in a recent issue of The Stute, an article was published detailing the many ways housing options have changed for students.
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All over Hoboken are seemingly innocuous red-lettered paper signs reading “TEMPORARY POLICE ORDINANCE NO PARKING.” The majority of passersby likely don’t even notice the signs, let alone think anything of them.
Stevens is a relatively small school in a relatively dense and expensive town, so student housing has always been a key concern for those unable to commute to campus.
Early in September of every year, the Office of Residential Education hosts a dodgeball tournament, pitting each of the freshman dorms against each other in a color-coded, ball-dodging blast.
Every spring, the Entertainment Committee hosts what is arguably the biggest event of the semester: TechFest.
Picking a Senior Design project and team can be a stressful experience for everyone involved. It takes weeks of looking through possible projects, consulting professors, deciding on team members, finding sponsors, and much more.
For most of last week, a very unique Stevens exhibition was open to the public in Jersey City.
It was hosted in a factory complex slightly outside of the denser parts of Jersey City, a structure of brick and glass surrounded by steel wire fencing with the air of an old textile mill.
In a small, innocuous lab on the fourth floor of Burchard, Professor Ronald Besser and his students are doing very exciting research on hydrogen fuel cells.
The University Towers project has been pushed back roughly six months, and the towers are now slated to be completed in Spring 2022.
Monday, April 1 was the first day that the new rules about priority registration impacted the course scheduling process at Stevens.