If there’s one thing we Ducks pride ourselves on here at Stevens, it’s innovation. To help students show off their creativity and ingenuity, and also celebrate the school’s 150th anniversary, the Schaefer School of Engineering has put together the Duck and Cover: Make Your Fellow Students Duck and Cover Competition.
The Stute
As students mill about the same old hallways to get to their classes, other students have chosen to get a taste of the nine-to-five life.
The spring semester is here and with that comes recruitment. At Stevens, recruitment is a four-day process for women planning on joining one of five Panhellenic sororities that takes place during the last weekend of winter break.
At the beginning of the semester, I met up at Starbucks to grab coffee with one of my friends. We chatted for a bit — talked about our breaks, what’s going on, and general Stevens stuff.
Over the past two months, trade has been a hot issue in American politics. Politicians running for the Democratic ticket have been trying to find flaws in the soaring Trump economy, and the most obvious of those flaws came in the form of trade.
Braving the cold, windy evening on Tuesday, December 10 at 6 p.m., approximately 80 students protested at the ribbon cutting ceremony for the Gateway Academic Center as a push for student wellness, administrative transparency, and improving the campus climate at Stevens.
Given the national trend in suicide among college students, to which Stevens is not immune, administrators outlined goals that Stevens should meet to properly address our mental health crisis, according to an email sent out by Marybeth Murphy, the Vice President of Student Affairs and Enrollment Management, on November 19.
Recent fire-related incidents on campus provide an opportunity to remind the Stevens community about the importance of fire safety as well as efforts being made to protect the community from fire.
I probably say this in every editorial, but The Stute is more than just a club.


