X-Nico

6 unusual facts about Stevens Institute of Technology


Carlos Alomar

In 2005, Alomar joined the teaching staff of Stevens Institute of Technology (Hoboken, New Jersey) as an adjunct professor of Music & Technology, producing several tracks for the inaugural release of the school's Castle Point Records label's Delusions of Grandeur (2006).

Horace Greely Prettyman

The trip consisted of four road games in eight days at Wesleyan and Yale in Connecticut, Harvard in Massachusetts, and Stevens Institute in Hoboken, New Jersey.

Igor Bensen

He began studies at age 17 while in Belgium and was awarded a Bachelor of Science degree in mechanical engineering from Stevens Institute of Technology in Hoboken, New Jersey in 1940, later becoming a Registered Professional Engineer.

John W. Lieb

During the summer of 1875, Lieb went to the prep school for Stevens Institute of Technology.

St. John Fisher College

St. John Fisher College is a founding member of the Empire 8 Athletic Association and competes with other full member schools: Alfred University, Elmira College, Hartwick College, Ithaca College, Nazareth College, Rochester Institute of Technology, Stevens Institute of Technology, and Utica College.

Utica College

Teams are known as the Pioneers and compete in the Empire 8 Athletic Conference along with Elmira, Alfred, Hartwick, Ithaca, Nazareth, Stevens Institute of Technology and St. John Fisher.


James Creese

James Creese (June 19, 1896 in Leetsdale, Pennsylvania – February 8, 1966) was the vice president of Stevens Institute of Technology and the president of the Drexel Institute of Technology.

John Forrest Kelly

He was educated in Stevens Institute of Technology, Hoboken, New Jersey, received the degree of B. L. in 1878 and that of Ph. D. in 1881 (at age 22).

Lawrence Babbio, Jr.

On September 17, 2009 Attorney General Anne Milgram announced charges against Lawrence Babbio and Stevens Institute of Technology president Harold J. Raveché.

León Febres Cordero

His father sent him to study in the United States, where he first attended Charlotte Hall Military Academy in Maryland, then Mercersburg Academy in Pennsylvania for high school, and then graduated as an engineer from the Stevens Institute of Technology in Hoboken, New Jersey.

O. Milton Gossett

Before joining Compton Advertising as a copywriter in 1949, Gossett served in the United States Naval Reserve from 1943–1946, received a degree in mechanical engineering at Stevens Institute of Technology in 1944, and attended the Northwestern University Midshipman School from 1947–1948.


see also

Neutrodyne

The circuit was developed in the early 1920s by Harold Wheeler who worked in Alan Hazeltine's lab at Stevens Institute of Technology, so Hazeltine is usually given the credit.