Search
Now showing items 441-450 of 450
Tiger athletes : Where are they now?
(MU Alumni Association, University of Missouri, 2009)
MIZZOU magazine tracked down five former Tiger athletes and found out about their lives after college.
Missouri's finest fiddlers
(MU Alumni Association, University of Missouri, 2009)
Howard Marshall, an expert in the traditional musical culture of Missouri, recently re-released a book and CDs tracing the history of old-time fiddling in the Show-Me State.
A Matter of Life and Death : "Reading" a Funerary Relief
(University of Missouri--Columbia. Museum of Art and Archaeology, 2009)
"Funerary monuments from the eastern Roman Empire are both numerous and varied. The Museum of Art and Archaeology at the university of Missouri has a particularly interesting one -- a relief that commemorates a woman named ...
Obsidian Procurement at Pecica S ?an ?tul Mare, Romania
(University of Missouri--Columbia. Museum of Art and Archaeology, 2009)
"Since its founding the Museum of Art and Archaeology has actively pursued archaeological field research projects and reported the results in Muse. Here we present the initial results of characterization studies on obsidian ...
An Eighteenth-Century French Snuffbox as an Object of Social Status
(University of Missouri--Columbia. Museum of Art and Archaeology, 2009)
Desire to acquire
(MU Alumni Association, University of Missouri, 2009)
Researcher Marsha Richins thinks we're still hunter-gatherers at heart.
Embracing higher education
(MU Alumni Association, University of Missouri, 2009)
Jay "B.J." Spann gets a chance at college, thanks in part to an MU Extension program.
Blue-collar basketball
(MU Alumni Association, University of Missouri, 2009)
A Coach Mike Anderson prepares to start his third season, he talks about how the team is shaping up.
Fresh faces
(MU Alumni Association, University of Missouri, 2009)
Students enroll in record numbers.
Evolution revolution
(MU Alumni Association, University of Missouri, 2009)
By observing generations upon generations of a tiny worm, MU alumnus Dee Denver could pave the way toward new treatments for cancer.