In regenerative medicine, electrical sutures have emerged as a groundbreaking technique in muscle healing. They offer an innovative way to repair injuries faster and with less risk of complications.
Ever have one of those weeks where everything feels like it's spiraling, from exams and assignments to navigating social life and basic survival skills? Fear not; these pastimes are here to save the ...
It’s that time of year again. When the hallways are filled with coughs and sniffles, it means the frat flu is back. Especially during midterms, it’s important to stay on top of your health. To help ...
This past February, The Stute published “Stevens’ invisible threat to bird safety”, containing an interview with Hoboken ...
Açaí bowls have been on my mind all week; every time I ran into my friend, Vasilisa, she almost always carried a bag with her açaí bowl. It’s been a stressful week for many of us due to midterms, but ...
You guys know I love new music. I try to listen to new music radio stations and keep an ear out for what songs and artists are trending. Sometimes it is the artists that nobody knows yet who are the ...
Professor and Director of the Stevens Institute for Artificial Intelligence (SIAI) Brendan Englot has received a $1.9 million ...
In 1981, at California Institute of Technology, physicist John Hopfield worked with his colleagues Richard Feynman and Carer Mead to create a new course for students that would cover some of the most ...
I recently read a brief interview with Vicki Abeles, the director of the documentary Counted Out, to be released in 2025. Counted Out explains how mathematics plays a central role in many current issu ...
Eleanor Oliphant is Completely Fine by Gail Honeyman is a book that I read in high school, and the memory of it still follows me around to this day. It doesn’t linger all the time but rather lurks in ...
Unfortunately, I have a bit of an issue with scrolling on social media. It is something that has become a not-so-good habit that I need to break. However, the good part is that it keeps me informed ...
After 44 days at the Children’s National Hospital in Washington, D.C., Kendric Cromer has left the hospital free of sickle cell disease. Cromer is the first patient to undergo a recently approved gene ...