By Billie Haas
There are seven students in Intro to Mathematical Reasoning, a math course reworked specifically for students in The College of Arts & Letters.
By Billie Haas
There are seven students in Intro to Mathematical Reasoning, a math course reworked specifically for students in The College of Arts & Letters.
by Susana Restrepo
In a lonely haze, and with a comfortable amount of money in my card, I made my way into New York City.
The Office of Innovation & Entrepreneurship collaborated with the Student Government Association to bring the student body two events that highlighted the entrepreneurial spirit of Stevens.
The pace of restaurant turnover in Hoboken is quite the phenomenon. One day, a restaurant is a thriving pillar of the Duckbills community, the next it closes for renovations and never reopens.
There are less than 24 days until WrestleMania. WrestleMania, for those who don’t know or who write off the professional wrestling industry entirely due to general dislike or irrational hatred, is the “Super Bowl of professional wrestling” — the biggest event in the wrestling industry, and a soon-to-be 31-year-old tradition for WWE.
There was an incredible amount of hidden talent revealed to the Stevens community at the Blueberry Jam in Babbio Atrium. The third of its kind, this collaboration by the Audio Engineering Club and the Art Club provided yet another opportunity for students to showcase their skills in areas such as vocal, instrumental, poetic, comedic and other artistic forms.
By Susana Restrepo
On Thursday February 26 at 9:15 p.m., the sorority Delta Phi Epsilon hosted a ANAD (National Association of Anorexia Nervosa and Associated Disorders) vigil in Babbio Atrium.
Regardless of the predominantly male population on campus, Women’s Programs strives to bring powerful, female speakers to campus. To celebrate Women’s History Month, the Women’s Program invited filmmaker, speaker, and gender equality advocate Jennifer Siebel Newsom to campus this past Tuesday.
Anyone at Stevens who has been using DuckBills for a while might agree that it gets difficult to remember who exactly in Hoboken accepts DuckBills now a days.
My last column outlined points I made in a February 18 debate at Stevens about religion and science. My “opponent,” Oxford mathematician John Lennox, a Christian, sent me the following response, which was originally published on my Scientific American blog, “Cross-check,” in a slightly longer form.