
A new military engineering course offered by Mississippi State University’s Bagley College of Engineering serves to introduce students to the history and development of military engineering. Military Engineering (GE 8303) functions as an introductory course for the college’s Master of Engineering – Military Engineering degree which kicked off last year. Students in the GE 8303…

Aerospace engineering professor Rani Sullivan has been chosen as the 2019 recipient of the Hermann Oberth Award by the Greater Huntsville Section of the American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics. The award is presented each year to a section member in recognition of outstanding individual scientific achievement or for the promotion and advancement of the…

Experiencing Germany wasn’t in Ryan A. Shoemake’s plans when he transferred to Mississippi State in 2015 from Jones County Junior College. However, an encounter with a foreign language class sparked a new interest—living abroad.

“If at first you don’t succeed, try, try again.” The words of this centuries-old adage are engrained in the mind and the life of Wes Lowe.

In 2019, Jeannette Booth will turn 80 and celebrate two major, 60-year milestones: employment with MSU and marriage to her husband, Marion Booth. One thing she won’t do is retire.
Vemitra White, director of educational outreach and support programs for K-12 outreach, was just 12 staff members selected to receive the 2019 Donald W. Zacharias Distinguished Staff Awards.

Fifteen Mississippi State graduate students are completing a program designed to help ready them for future faculty careers.

The Tau Beta Pi engineering honor society recently inducted 34 new members into its Mississippi State University chapter. Membership in Tau Beta Pi is by invitation only. New members are selected each semester based on grade point average as well as major-specific requirements. Students must demonstrate distinguished scholarship and exemplary character. The list of Bagley…

From The Commercial Dispatch: A stack of papers sits on a desk beside Bill Jones’ laptop in his Greensboro Street home in Starkville. The final exams for his 70 mechanical engineering students at Mississippi State University represent, by Jones’ estimate, about 15 hours of meticulous grading work he knocked out between Friday afternoon and Sunday…