Nineteen students and three alumni worked throughout the Caesars Superdome giving directions to fans, managing crowds and validating credentials.

Nineteen students and three alumni worked throughout the Caesars Superdome giving directions to fans, managing crowds and validating credentials.
Nineteen students and three alumni worked throughout the Caesars Superdome giving directions to fans, managing crowds and validating credentials.
Nineteen students and three alumni worked throughout the Caesars Superdome giving directions to fans, managing crowds and validating credentials.
Freshman Morgan Lint helped the women’s tennis team post victories against Illinois Springfield and Lewis to open the GLVC schedule.
Royer created an impressive portfolio of highly detailed Prismacolor pencil drawings titled, “My Colorful Stones Collection,” in the studio art program.
Royer created an impressive portfolio of highly detailed Prismacolor pencil drawings titled, “My Colorful Stones Collection,” in the studio art program.
Royer created an impressive portfolio of highly detailed Prismacolor pencil drawings titled, “My Colorful Stones Collection,” in the studio art program.
The National Board for Certified Counselors awarded King $12,000, and the organization will also provide access to mentors and professional development opportunities.
The National Board for Certified Counselors awarded King $12,000, and the organization will also provide access to mentors and professional development opportunities.
The National Board for Certified Counselors awarded King $12,000, and the organization will also provide access to mentors and professional development opportunities.
Look back at some of UMSL Daily’s top stories from the past year.
Look back at some of UMSL Daily’s top stories from the past year.
Look back at some of UMSL Daily’s top stories from the past year.
First grade teacher Wanicha Disharoon works hard to make science a fun learning experience for her students. That...
Kent Farnsworth, a longtime educator, decided last year that changes needed to be made in the way American children are educated.
“During a trip to Helena, Ark., I stopped at a charter school, Delta College Prep, that is doing extraordinary work with some of the most economically challenged students in the country,” Farnsworth said. “As I was driving back to St. Louis, I kept thinking, why can’t any school district do the same thing, even if it isn’t a charter school – and then (I) realized it could.”
Farnsworth recently retired as the Mary Ann Lee Endowed Professor for Community College Leadership Studies in the College of Education at the University of Missouri–St. Louis. He has published a new book, “Grassroots School Reform: A Community Guide to Developing Globally Competitive Students.” It argues that significant school reform in the United States will not happen if left to national or state policy makers, but must be a community-led initiative.
As a successful lawyer with Fortune 500 companies such as Brown Shoe, Emerson Electric and 7 Up, Thomas Knoten has...
The University of Missouri–St. Louis released the inaugural issue of UMSL Magazine on Thursday. Formerly UM St. Louis...
Cheryl Apperson, science teacher at Rockwood Summit High School in Fenton, Mo., received the 2010 Monsanto Outstanding...
At the UMSL Day Information Session on Saturday, prospective undergraduate students toured the University of...
Earlier this year, the Office of Creative Services at the University of Missouri–St. Louis launched an account on the...
Creating a lifetime connection to science is one of the goals of an innovative new grant program under way at the...