Missouri S&T will host eight summer camps in virtual settings for 2021, due to continuing COVID-19 safety precautions.
Read More »Dr. J. David Rogers, the Karl F. Hasselmann Missouri Chair in Geological Engineering, has studied major floods on every continent except Antarctica. No surprise, then, that media organizations seek him out for stories about the history of flood control.
Read More »Theater students in Missouri S&T’s arts, languages and philosophy department will perform “She Made Space,” a drama by Meredith Dayna Levy, in April. Previously, the event had been scheduled for mid-March.
Read More »The area Women in Business Group will host “The Mixup: A Networking Event” this April. The upcoming virtual event will feature icebreakers and networking opportunities and give participants the ability to make connections for personal and professional growth.
Read More »A new, cellular-level approach to removing plaque build-up in the arteries could eventually lead to a cure for the chronic disease known as atherosclerosis, according to a researcher at Missouri S&T. The method uses nanoparticles that can be designed to deliver plaque-busting drugs to specific cells in arteries. The nanoparticles have an average diameter of 150 nanometers, about 1/500th the diameter of a human hair.
Read More »Dr. David Enke, professor of engineering management and systems engineering at Missouri University of Science and Technology, has been named Curators’ Distinguished Teaching Professor at Missouri S&T.
Read More »Missouri S&T student Dylan Volland, a senior in chemical engineering from St. Louis, has been crowned the 2021 Queen of Love and Beauty for the 113th St. Pat’s celebration in Rolla. She was nominated by Phi Sigma Rho.
Read More »Until recently, Syscia sumnichti was just one of 10,000 to 30,000 nameless species of ants. Today, this inconspicuous little ant, native to Central America, has not only a name, but also a connection to Missouri S&T. Syscia sumnichti made its debut in a research paper published this month by Dr. John Longino, a professor of […]
Read More »When the COVID-19 pandemic sent colleges and universities across the county to online instruction and the public into lockdown, household supplies like toilet paper and hand soap and kitchen staples like rice and flour became hot commodities that were difficult to come by. College athletes faced a different kind of shortage. “Everyone knew gyms would […]
Read More »Missouri S&T plans to return to in-person classes beginning with the fall 2021 semester and will extend a test-optional policy for fall 2022 applicants.
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