Recorder of Deeds Michael Butler presented Dr. Keshia Elder with an award for excellence in education at St. Louis City Hall on Feb. 21. (Photo by August Jennewein)
Several phrases can be used to describe Shelby Ply, a senior in environmental engineering at Missouri S&T, including: aspiring environmental engineer, accelerated master’s degree student, decorated collegiate athlete, proud alumna of Rolla High School and equestrian aficionado.
Associate Professors Aimee Dunlap and Nathan Muchhala are serving as interim co-directors of the Whitney R. Harris World Ecology Center. (Photos by August Jennewein)
Members of the Mars Rover Design Team test their 2022 rover at Fugitive Beach. The 2023 rover will be revealed on March 11. Michael Pierce/Missouri S&T
Elizabeth Petersen (center) joined longtime friends (from left) Joan Twillman, Jeanette Hencken, Sandra Mueller and Curators’ Distinguished Teaching Professor Charles Granger after receiving the inaugural Dr. Jane A. Miller Award at a celebration of life for the late UMSL chemistry professor, who died in March 2021. (Photo by Elisa Petersen Rollier)
The Missouri House today approved HB 154, an AIM-supported bill that would clarify the exemption of brain cancer treatment devices from state and local sales and use taxes.
On Monday, Associated Industries of Missouri (AIM) president/CEO Ray McCarty testified in favor of a bill that continues funding for programs within the Missouri Department of Natural Resources (MDNR) with an important caveat: AIM required the bill include important protections for regulated entities against punitive actions taken by MDNR based on guidance documents.
The Senate reconvened on Monday, February 20, 2023, while the House reconvened on Tuesday, February 21, 2023, for a shorter legislative week, following its observation of Presidents’ Day
Tyler Nguyen, a sophomore at Missouri S&T, says electrical engineers are vital when it comes to “Creating the Future,” which is the theme of National Engineers Week 2023.
The year is 1835. The setting is Springfield, and the subject is Milly Sawyers. Sawyers is an enslaved person, forced to work for and obey another and is considered to be their property.
An aspiring computer engineer at Missouri University of Science and Technology says it was a gaming system from the past that first inspired him to create technology for the future