Peyton Anderson, a senior in engineering management from St. Charles, Missouri, has been crowned the 2023 Queen of Love and Beauty as part of the 115th St. Pat’s celebration in Rolla.
Read More »In the 15 years since Dr. Douglas Carroll became the founding director of Missouri S&T’s cooperative engineering program with Missouri State University, he has seen hundreds of civil and electrical engineering students graduate with bachelor’s degrees. In May, he will see the first group of mechanical engineering students taking courses in Springfield graduate with degrees from Missouri S&T.
Read More »Missouri S&T’s Center for Creativity and Innovation will host two speakers Thursday, April 6, following the university’s second annual “trashion” show at noon in the atrium of the Havener Center. All events are free and open to the public.
Read More »Researchers from Missouri S&T were recently awarded funding from the Geospatial Institute Seed Grant Program to Stimulate Collaborative Research. This program is administered by the Taylor Geospatial Institute, which awarded a total of $1.7 million for projects throughout the TGI consortium.
Read More »It may still be decades before human organs can be successfully printed with 3D technology and transplanted, but Missouri S&T researchers are visionaries in the technology that will one day make this a reality.
Read More »Andrew Winingar, a senior in engineering management from Independence, Missouri, will portray St. Patrick during the 115th celebration of St. Pat’s at Missouri S&T.
Read More »The Missouri S&T St. Pat’s Board has announced the 2023 candidates for Queen of Love and Beauty as part of the preparations for the 115th “Best Ever” celebration of St. Pat’s at S&T.
Read More »Student Knights of St. Patrick have been selected to represent Missouri University of Science and Technology’s student organizations during the 115th St. Pat’s celebration in Rolla, Missouri.
Read More »Several countries are competing to develop the most advanced hypersonic vehicles, and a team of researchers at Missouri S&T recently received $2.6 million in funding to assist the U.S. in these efforts.
Read More »Fresh air, sunsets, and a night sky full of stars are a few of the benefits to country living that rural residents can claim. But access to medical specialists and customized cancer treatment? That often means a lengthy drive to a more urban area. Researchers at Missouri S&T are looking at a new way to deliver radiation therapy to cancer patients that eliminates the need to travel.
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