Stevens students and Hoboken residents may have awoken to a strange sight on the morning of Sunday, September 18: A large red bird and massive candy cane rising above Stevens’ Dobbelaar Field.
Posts published by “Benjamin Knobloch”
Ben Knobloch is News Editor for The Stute and a senior at Stevens majoring in Software Engineering.
The Alexander House on the Stevens campus, which served as the old Student Center as well as a variety of other uses in earlier years, will be renamed Martha Bayard Stevens Hall, President Nariman Farvardin announced.
Signaling a landmark milestone in health science, geneticists have unveiled the first complete human genome map. Over 3,500 new human genes have been identified, some of which likely encode information critical to a greater understanding of human development.
After a several year-long hiatus, Student Philanthropy Week returned this month with campus activities, new initiatives, and ways for students to learn more about opportunities for philanthropy.
Although Snevets previously announced that it would be removing asbestos in the space previously occupied by Kernel Jan’s, it seems that the administration has had a change of heart.
On March 21, the Strategic Plan Steering Committee held a virtual town hall open to faculty, staff, and students. The Committee is in charge of the development of Stevens’ 2022-2023 strategic plan, with the meeting focusing on the presentation of draft goals for each of the University’s seven areas of focus.
On March 29, Hoboken will celebrate the 167th anniversary of its establishment as an independent municipality in 1855, but the city’s rich history stretches back even further.
10 student products involved with the Launchpad@Stevens program have been selected to receive a Thomas H. Scholl Award, Stevens has announced.
Access to a site license subscription to The Chronicle of Higher Education through the Samuel C. Williams Library is now available, Stevens has announced.
Stevens isn’t a large university, but the multifaceted student body can still feel vast. From students who write songs under their breaths to those who wake up at night in cold sweats from nightmares of differential equations, it can be hard at times to articulate what we share as a community.