It has beautiful exposed brick walls, complete with barn doors. It has extensive natural lighting, and trendy orange couches. The Gateway building is aesthetically pleasing, and has been my serene new study spot on campus ever since it opened its doors a month ago.
Posts published in “Science”
This past June, Stevens students James Furrer, Arjun Krishna, Nicholas Sorrentino, Jonathan Bobkov, Ann Collins, and Dana Roe participated in NASA’s RASC-AL (Revolutionary Aerospace Systems Concepts Academic Linkage), a collegiate aerospace design competition.
The Audio Engineering Society (AES), an “international organization that unites audio engineers, creative artists, scientists and students” (Aes.org), held their 147th annual Convention in New York City from October 16 to 19 at the Javitz Center.
Think for a second about the reasons you use your eyesight in a day. Maybe you use your sight to read a textbook or to navigate campus.
October is National Breast Cancer Awareness Month and, according to the World Cancer Research Foundation, 1 in 8 women will develop breast cancer within their lifetime.
Stevens, an NCAA Division III university, has a new connection to the NBA: computer scientist and assistant professor Xinchao Wang.
With a focus in computer vision and machine learning, Wang has been interested in artificial intelligence ever since his time as an undergraduate.
In case you didn’t know, green is the new black.
Oil-rich green microalgae could power cars, factories, buildings, and other technologies in the not-so-distant future, and Stevens researchers are finding out how.


