Tue 16 Mar 2010
The Center was instrumental following the emergency landing of US Airways Flight 1549 and the August 2009 mid-air collision of a helicopter and small plane
Stevens Institute of Technology was in 2008 named by the US Department of Homeland Security as one of five national Centers of Excellence and was selected to lead a national research effort to address Port Security. Stevens was one of 11 universities to partner with the DHS in its efforts. The Department’s partners serve as important team members for conducting multi-disciplinary research and creating innovative learning environments for critical homeland security missions.
The Center for Secure and Resilient Maritime Commerce (CSR), along with the University of Hawaii’s National Center for Islands, Maritime, and Extreme Environments Security (CIMES), are the US Department of Homeland Security’s (DHS) National Center of Excellence for Maritime, Island and Extreme/Remote Environment Security.


Wireless devices are changing the way we communicate. Unfortunately, like army ants on the march, they are also devouring all the remaining space on the airwaves as they go. “Wireless applications are coming out of walls, and there’s just not enough broadband spectrum to go around,” said Joe Mitola, Vice President for the Research Enterprise at Stevens Institute of Technology.
As a boy growing up in Damascus, Syria, Khaldoun Khashanah found mathematics compelling. “What I liked best were the abstract patterns, and math’s ability to reveal the interrelations between the real and the abstract in unique ways. Math lets us look through that window,” Khashanah explained.
A durable landmark signifying a moment in Stevens, Hoboken and civil engineering history has disappeared from the famous waterfront that was once characterized by international cargo ships, drydocks and Marlon Brando’s hair-raising scenes from Elia Kazan’s 1954 classic film about mob corruption in the longshoremen’s unions.

The mission of the Onassis Foundation emphasizes disseminating information about Hellenic civilization throughout the United States. Stevens embraced this concept by coupling the study of core texts of Greek literature to the study of technology. 
Greg Morgan, an Associate Professor of Philosophy at Stevens Institute of Technology, was recently awarded the Derek Price/Rod Webster Prize for best paper of 2009 in History of Science by the History of Science Society.