S&T Rugby Club recently competed in the Sweet 16 and Quarterfinals of the D2 Collegiate Men’s National Championships. S&T’s team won 13-10 against Illinois State. The team is moving on to the national championship in Charlotte, North Carolina, on Saturday, Dec. 7, and Sunday, Dec. 8.
Read More »The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) announced the 11 members of the Science Advisory Board (SAB) in October and invited Missouri S&T professor Dr. Joel Burken to serve another three-year term.
Read More »Dr. Kamal H. Khayat, Vernon and Maralee Jones Professor of Civil Engineering at Missouri S&T, was recently honored for his lifetime achievements in the field of self-consolidating concrete.
Read More »Dr. Francisca Oboh-Ikuenobe, professor of geology and biological sciences, has received the Albert Nelson Marquis Lifetime Achievement Award from Marquis Who’s Who.
Read More »The U.S. Department of State’s Bureau of Educational and Cultural Affairs and World Learning has named Dr. William Schonberg of Missouri S&T to the roster of Fulbright Specialists.
Read More »The Society of Petroleum Engineers (SPE) honored Dr. Baojun Bai with SPE distinguished membership at the society’s annual Technical Conference and Exhibition Sept. 30-Oct. 2 in Calgary, Canada.
Read More »Dr. Kelvin Erickson was named a fellow of the International Society of Automation (ISA) at the 2019 ISA Annual Leadership Conference in San Diego in October. The ISA is a professional group consisting of 40,000 automation professionals.
Read More »Dr. Patrick Huber’s book, A&R Pioneers: Architects of American Roots Music on Record, has won a Certificate of Merit in the 2019 Association for Recorded Sound Collections Award for Excellence in Historical Recorded Sound Research in Recorded Roots or World Music.
Read More »During the Missouri S&T 2019 Stueck Lecture last spring, Dr. Paul F. Boulos, a global water resources and wastewater industry expert, shared his successful leadership lessons with students, faculty and members of the S&T Academy of Civil Engineers.
Read More »On Nov. 4, 1922, British archaeologist Howard Carter’s water boy stumbled over some steps in Egypt. Those steps, it turns out, were 16 steps into the bedrock leading to King Tut’s tomb. Fast forward 97 years (and one day) to read the latest article by Egyptology scholar Dr. Kathleen Sheppard.
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