As Public Radio KMST staff prepares for the Spring Membership Drive, new station manager John Francis is busy rolling out several new changes to the drive format.
Read More »A Missouri University of Science and Technology professor has shown that improving wastewater treatment and saving energy are not only essential, but they’re also compatible.
Read More »Dr. Kathryn Northcut, an associate professor of English and technical communication at Missouri University of Science and Technology, has earned the 2015 Best Original Collection of Essays in Technical or Scientific Communication Award from the Conference on College Composition and Communication (CCCC).
Read More »Undergraduates from Missouri University of Science and Technology will travel to Jefferson City, Missouri, to exhibit their latest research projects to the state’s top legislators on Tuesday, March 10.
Read More »Missouri University of Science and Technology is gearing up for the 107th annual “Best Ever” St. Pat’s celebration. The theme for this year’s celebration is “St. Pat’s on the High Seas.”
Read More »Dr. Melanie Mormile, professor of biological sciences at Missouri University of Science and Technology, was named special assistant to the provost for faculty affairs effective Feb. 9.
Read More »Researchers in Missouri University of Science and Technology’s Center for Statistical and Computational Modeling of Biological Complexity are using fruit flies to help unlock some of the secrets surrounding sleep and Alzheimer’s disease.
Read More »The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission has appointed a Missouri University of Science and Technology mining engineering professor to an academic fellowship in the Division of Corporation Finance in Washington, D.C.
Read More »Amateur artists and designers are invited to submit original designs for this year’s Celebration of Nations T-shirt by 4 p.m. Friday, Feb. 20. The winning submission will receive a $150 gift card to the Missouri S&T Bookstore.
Read More »Missouri University of Science and Technology seniors Austin Gantner, Max Huhman and Tim Karleskint are passionate about video games. And the three took what they learned in their Missouri S&T programming courses to create their own online single-player game, “Faded.”
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