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Schedule of Events 29 to Oct
Sept. Schedule of events 29 to Oct. 9 Homecoming 5K 9 a.m., Sept. 29 Traditions Plaza Wear your favorite black and gold athletic Oct. gear to get in the spirit for Mizzou Homecoming. 11 Homecoming Headquarters Homecoming Blood Drive 10 a.m. to 4 p.m., Traditions Plaza 11 a.m. to 7 p.m., Sept. 30 to Oct. 3, Hearnes Center Grab some Homecoming merchandise, participate in MU is home to the largest blood drive in the state of giveaways and pick up some free kettle corn courtesy of the Missouri, collecting more than 3,000 units Bates County Mizzou Club. of blood annually. Campus Decorations — 6-9:30 p.m., Greektown Talent Show Hit the streets of Greektown to check out what the paired fraternities and Oct. 7-9, 6:30-9 p.m. sororities curated based on this year’s Homecoming theme. Stay to watch the Check out 12-minute Homecoming-themed skit they perform in front of the decorations. skits, dancers and singers during the three-day run of the Homecom- Taste of Columbia — 6-9 p.m., Greektown ing talent show. Sample a variety of offerings from food trucks, including The Big Cheeze, Big Daddy’s BBQ and Dippin’ Dots. Spirit Rally — 8:30 p.m., Traditions Plaza Get those vocal cords ready to cheer with Truman the Tiger, Marching Mizzou and the Mizzou Spirit Squads the eve before the big game. Decorate the District — Begins today, downtown Columbia Wander endlessly through downtown and check out the storefront paint- Oct. ings and decorations. Each spirited design is curated by a participating MU organization. -
Osher Lifelong Learning Center Spring 2019 Course Catalog
A Learning Community of Adults Aged 50 + Spring 2019 Course Catalog Registration opens February 26, 2019 Courses begin March 11, 2019 See Potpourri-- of the Arts - P. 23 version “Storied” with Larry Brown- P. 19 Archive extension.missouri.edu Master Pollinator Steward - P. 13 A UNIVERSITY OF MISSOURI EXTENSION PROGRAM 1 Stay Young. Stay Connected. Join Osher@Mizzou. IN THIS ISSUE 8 Course calendar 10 Courses 26 Special events 32 How to support Osher 36 Letter from Advisory Council OSHER@MIZZOU Chair 344 Hearnes Center Columbia, MO 65211 37 Enrollment form Phone: 39 Directions and parking 573-882-8189 Email: This program is brought to you by MU Extension and [email protected] the Bernard Osher Foundation. Website: osher.missouri.edu ABOUT MU EXTENSION Jennifer Erickson Using research-based knowledge, University of Senior Coordinator Missouri Extension engages people to help them understand change, solve problems and make Walker Perkins informed decisions. Educational Program Associate MU Extension makes university education and Osher@Mizzou Advisory Council information accessible to create Jack Wax, Chair Nan Wolf, Vice Chair • economic viability, Helen Washburn, Past Chair • empowered individuals, Sharon Kinden, Secretary • strong families and communities and Don Bay • healthy environments. Tom Bender John Blakemore MU Extension partners with the University of Missouri campuses, Lincoln University, the people of Karen Chandler Missouri through county extension councils, and the Barbara Churchill National Institute for Food and Agriculture -
2019 Homecoming Rulebook.Pdf
2019 TRADITIONS RULEBOOK UNIVERSITY OF MISSOURI HOMECOMING TRI-DIRECTORS 1 LEVELS OF INVOLVEMENT 2 SOCIAL MEDIA 3 IMPORTANT DATES 4 BLOOD DRIVE 5 CAMPUS DECORATIONS 12 OUTREACH 23 PARADE 25 SERVICE 30 SPECIAL EVENTS 34 TALENT 39 TRADITIONS 42 APPENDIX & FORMS 46 OVERALL POINT OVERVIEW 56 TABLE OF CONTENTS TABLE DIRECTOR’S LETTER The Homecoming Steering Committee and the Mizzou Alumni Association would like to thank you for your participation in Homecoming 2019. This year marks the 108th anniversary of Chester Brewer calling Tigers everywhere to “come home” to the University of Missouri, thus creating the very first Homecoming. Students, faculty, staff, alumni, and community members have been continuing the tradition ever since with a celebration of Mizzou and her impressive history of excellence. We celebrate with campus traditions old and new to showcase all facets of the university. Students and stories from every corner of campus come together to put on festivities that add to Mizzou’s rich history while collectively forging paths that will last for another 108 years. The Mizzou Alumni Association is proud to celebrate Homecoming with a wide variety of top-notch events that serve the community: we host the largest student-run blood drive in the nation; the Homecoming Food Drive benefits the Food Bank for Central and Northeast Missouri; Campus Decorations and the Homecoming Parade are unique experiences that provide creative entertainment for the entire Mizzou family. These and the numerous other events that spread the infectious Tiger spirit every Homecoming season would not be possible without the time and selfless devotion of our students. -
MU-Map-0118-Booklet.Pdf (7.205Mb)
visitors guide 2016–17 EVEN WHEN THEY’RE AWAY, MAKE IT FEEL LIKE HOME WHEN YOU STAY! welcome Stoney Creek Hotel and Conference Center is the perfect place to stay when you come to visit the MU Campus. With lodge-like amenities and accommodations, you’ll experience a stay that will feel and look like home. Enjoy our beautifully designed guest rooms, complimentary to mizzou! wi-f and hot breakfast. We look forward to your stay at Stoney Creek Hotel & Conference Center! FOOD AND DRINK LOCAL STOPS table of contents 18 Touring campus works up 30 Just outside of campus, an appetite. there's still more to do and see in mid-Missouri. CAMPUS SIGHTS SHOPPING 2 Hit the highlights of Mizzou’s 24 Downtown CoMo is a great BUSINESS INDEX scenic campus. place to buy that perfect gift. 32 SPIRIT ENTERTAINMENT MIZZOU CONTACTS 12 Catch a game at Mizzou’s 27 Whether audio, visual or both, 33 Phone numbers and websites top-notch athletics facilities. Columbia’s venues are memorable. to answer all your Mizzou-related questions. CAMPUS MAP FESTIVALS Find your way around Come back and visit during 16 29 our main campus. one of Columbia’s signature festivals. The 2016–17 MU Visitors Guide is produced by Mizzou Creative for the Ofce of Visitor Relations, 104 Jesse Hall, 2601 S. Providence Rd. Columbia, MO | 573.442.6400 | StoneyCreekHotels.com Columbia, MO 65211, 800-856-2181. To view a digital version of this guide, visit missouri.edu/visitors. To advertise in next year’s edition, contact Scott Reeter, 573-882-7358, [email protected]. -
@Mizzoubaseball
@MIZZOUBASEBALL 1 @MIZZOUBASEBALL TABLE OF CONTENTS MEDIA INFORMATION Quick Facts _________________________ 2 Mizzou Communications Staff ____________ 3 Roster - Numerical ____________________ 4 Roster - Alphabetical __________________ 5 University/Athletics Leadership __________6-8 MEET THE TIGERS Connor Brumfield / Cameron Dulle _________ 9 Paul Gomez / Jordan Gubelman __________ 10 Zach Hanna / Spencer Juergens _________ 11 Tyler LaPlante / Trevor Mallett ___________ 12 Tony Ortiz / Jacob Cantleberry ___________ 13 Chris Cornelius / Austin James __________ 14 Art Joven / Jake Matheny ______________ 15 Kameron Misner / TJ Sikkema ___________ 16 Lukas Veinbergs / Peter Zimmerman ______ 17 Luke Anderson / Konnor Ash ____________ 18 Ian Bedell / Thomas Broyles ____________ 19 Trey Dillard / Chad McDaniel ____________ 20 Alex Peterson / Clayton Peterson _________ 21 Cameron Pferrer / Mark Vierling _________ 22 Seth Halvorsen / Josh Holt Jr. ____________ 23 Nick Lommen / Luke Mann _____________ 23 Tre Morris / Ty Olejnik _________________ 24 Trae Robertson / Tommy Springer ________ 24 Cameron Swanger / Nick Swanson _______ 25 COACHES & STAFF Steve Bieser _____________________ 26-27 Lance Rhodes / Fred Corral _____________ 28 Jake Epstein / Jae Fadde ______________ 29 Austin Tribby / Brett Peel ______________ 30 Support Staff _______________________ 31 2018 SEASON IN REVIEW Season Stats _______________________ 32 SEC Only Stats ______________________ 33 Results Summary ____________________ 34 Miscellaneous Stats __________________ 35 PROGRAM -
FY 10 Gov Bd Manual Indd.Indd
On the occasion of the Mizzou Alumni Association’s sesquicentennial, the association asked a researcher to dig up its history. The story is one of loyal alumni and citizens acting on behalf of Mizzou. (Perhaps what says it best is the legend of how alumni and locals saw to it that the Columns became Mizzou’s foremost campus icon.) MU alumni and citizens gather at the base of the Columns in the days after a fi re that destroyed Academic Hall in 1892. Keep your hands off these Columns he Mizzou Alumni Association was founded in 1853, but perhaps the best story that encapsulates its meaning to MU comes from a tenuous time in the University’s history. It’s the story of loyal alumni Tand citizens acting on behalf of Mizzou and how the Alumni Association saw to it that the Columns became Mizzou’s foremost campus icon. The inferno that consumed Academic Hall in 1892 somehow spared the six limestone Columns. To many alumni and Columbians at the time, they quickly became an enduring symbol of all they held dear about the University. But to others, including the University’s Board of Curators, the Columns looked out of scale with the new University buildings they hoped to construct around them. They resolved that the Columns would have to come down. Few people now know – perhaps because it weakens the legend – that the board originally intended to leave the Columns in place or reposition them on campus. But the board changed its mind, and some alumni and locals didn’t like it. -
Who Are Columbia's Highest-Paid Nonprofit Organization Administrators? Home-Grown Data Center Sets Record Pace
Volume 13 Issue 33 November 3, 2007 $ 50 www.columbiabusinesstimes.com 1 R Flat Branch: Creek of dreams LE The Flat Branch area downtown has been the TT KE source of both inspiration and near-despera- R tion. It was the city’s first commercial area and its first light industrial area. It also was a blighted area subjected to urban renewal, JENNIFE BY and an area where grand development proj- otos H ects were shot down. In the first part of a P two-part series, Ray Beck looks at the history of Flat Branch. The transfor- mation of the Flat Branch area of downtown into a park is nearly com- plete, ameliorating the deterioration along the creek that had long been Beck a source of concern for the city. Historically, many cities have been organized along waterways. While it is certainly no Missouri River, Flat Branch Creek is where our city took root, and it was an important factor in locating the county seat in Columbia in 1821. While it may be a strange concept to today’s Columbians, who have known it Home-grown data as an ugly drainage ditch, the creek was a boon to the residents who abandoned the nearby town of Smithton, a half-mile center sets record pace to the west, to obtain potable water from Profile on Page 5. Carfax VP Gary Lee a well in the Flat Branch bottoms. The creek also served as a boundary for horse races on Broadway, which an early ordi- nance only allowed on Saturdays. (continued on Page 19) Who are Columbia’s highest-paid Proposition 1 Schuster, Wolverton weigh in on county sales tax issue. -
CVM News 2012
CVM News 2012 University Introduces MRI for Equine Athletes Bald Eagle Release Fulfills Dream for Hospice Patient Former CVM Faculty Member Passes Away Vet Med Colleges Hit Hard By Financial Cuts CVM Alumnus Awarded Merial Lifetime Achievement Award CVM’s Robert Miller named Veterinarian of the Year Niemeyer Lecture Series Presents Dr. Nicholas Jeffery 2012 MU Pfizer Dental CE Weekend MU Equine Veterinarians Solve Diagnostic Puzzle PET Scanner Helps Veterinarians Battle Cancer Storage Time for Transplant Tissue Doubled by Researchers Veteran Rancher and Veterinarian Joins CVM Pets Benefit Aging Adults’ Health, MU Researcher Says MU and Central Missouri Humane Society Join Forces MU Veterinarian Finds Effective Treatment Veterinarians Use Advanced Technology to Locate Tumor Dr. Cott Awarded for Out‐of‐Classroom Contributions Laboratory Named in Honor of Carsons Honor Societies Tap Three from CVM Phi Zeta Day Celebrates Research New Biomarker Test Predicts Arthritis Breast Cancer Effectively Treated with Chemical... Students and Faculty Honored During Annual Honors Banquet ‘CVM Mom’ Named Deaver Award Finalist CVM Graduates 70 New Veterinarians Veterinary Clinic’s Team of Greyhounds Saves Pets Once‐Injured Race Horse Climbs Back Into... Motion Sensors Detect Horse Lameness Earlier Alumnus to Serve as Veterinary Delegate for Olympics Gene Therapy Treatment Extends Lives of Mice... CVM Alumnus Named to Arizona Hall of Fame CVM Alumnus Selected as AVMA Future Leader Raptor Rehab Project Will Return Bald Eagle to the Wild Clark Fobian Elected AVMA President‐elect Drought Conditions Make Corn Dangerous Stent Opens up Research Progress Three Preceptorships One Veterinary Clinic Former CVM Patient on the Track to Victory Longtime CVM Librarian Takes on New Duties Early Diagnosis, Attentive Owner Keep Disease in Check CVM's Dr. -
2016 Front.Indd
2016 INTRODUCTION Allie Hess ............................................21 MIZZOU HISTORY Media Information .................................2 Jessica Johnson .................................22 2014 in Review ..............................48-49 Quick Facts ...........................................3 Savannah Trujillo ................................23 Career Records .............................50-51 Schedule ............................................... 4 Lauren Gaston ....................................24 Season Records ............................52-53 Bethany Coons ...................................25 Team Records ...............................54-55 COACHING STAFF Kelsey Dossey ....................................26 Year-by-Year Leaders ....................56-57 Bryan Blitz .........................................6-7 Rachel Hise ........................................27 Individual Honors ...........................58-61 Don Trentham / Molly Schneider ..........8 Natalie McDonough ............................38 All-Time Letterwinners ........................62 Support Staff ....................................9-10 Amanda Shaw ....................................29 All-Time Roster ...................................63 Payton Goulding / Erin Jones .............30 NCAA History .................................64-67 2016 TIGERS Madison Lewis / Izzy Coulter ..............31 Program History .............................68-77 2016 Tigers .........................................12 Anna Frick / Peyton Joseph ................32 Year-by-Year -
Mstylebook 2012-13
MSTYLEBOOK 2012-13 INSIDE THe book FIRST EDITION HISTORY Winter 1998 by Editor-in-Chief Jennifer Dlouhy and Managing Editor Kelly Wiese The Maneater stylebook was first printed in February 1998, revised SECOND EDITION by Editor-in-Chief Jennifer Dlouhy and Managing Editor Kelly Wiese. Summer Session 1998 by For this, the 14th edition, revisions were made in Summer 2012 by Editor-in-Chief John Roby Copy Chiefs Tony Puricelli and Katie Yaeger. THIRD EDITION Fall Semester 1999 by Managing Editor Julie Bykowitz INSIDE FOURTH EDITION Winter Semester 2001 by Managing Editor The first portion of the stylebook is dedicated to general policies and Chris Heisel and Copy Chief Kristen Cox administrative guidelines for the newspaper. FIFTH EDITION The second portion is dedicated to entries much like one would find Summer 2002 by Managing in the AP Stylebook. These are guidelines for copy-editing decisions at Editor Stephanie Grasmick SIXTH EDITION The Maneater for the newspaper, MOVE Magazine, themaneater.com Summer 2004 by Copy Chief Amy Rainey and move.themaneater.com. Editors, writers, designers, photographers SEVENTH EDITION and online staff should be familiar with these. Winter 2006 by Copy Chiefs Aaron Richter The third section is geared to accommodate the specific styles of and Sarah Larimer, Managing Editor Coulter cutlines and crime and sports copy. Jones and Editor-in-Chief Jenna Youngs EIGHTH EDITION The fourth section is devoted to style for Arts & Entertainment copy Fall 2006 by Copy Chiefs Jenn Amur and and content for MOVE Magazine. Courtney French, Managing Editor Maggie This is followed by the National Lesbian and Gay Journalists Asso- Creamer and Editor-in-Chief Lee Logan ciation supplement of gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgender terminology. -
Gov Bd Manual-Final Indd.Indd
Governing Board Resource Guide 2008-2009 ThankThank YouYou To our Association Leadership, Since 1853, the Mizzou Alumni Association has carried the torch of alumni support for the University of Missouri. From our fi rst president, Gen. Odon Guitar, until today we have been blessed with extraordinary volunteer leadership. Thanks in large part to that leadership, the Association has been a proud and prominent resource for the University and its alumni for 155 years. This resource guide is the product of our commitment to communicate effi ciently and effectively with our volunteer leaders. We are hopeful the enclosed information is a useful tool for you as you serve on our Governing Board. It is critical that you know and share the story of how the Association proudly serves the best interests and traditions of Missouri’s fl agship university. We are proud to serve a worldwide network of 250,000 Mizzou alumni. Your volunteer leadership represents a portion of our diverse, vibrant and loyal membership base. While Mizzou has many cherished traditions, the tradition of alumni support is one that we foster by our actions and commitment to the Asso- ciation and the University. Thank you for your selfl ess service to MU and the Association. With your involvement and engage- ment, I am confi dent we will reach our vision of becoming the preeminent resource for the University of Missouri. Our staff and I look forward to working with you in 2008 - 2009. Go Mizzou! Todd A. McCubbin, M Ed ‘95 Executive Director Mizzou Alumni Association Table of Contents -
University of Missouri Strategic Plan | Table of Contents | Printed: Jan
Mission Our distinct mission, as Missouri’s only state-supported member of the Association of American Universities, is to provide all Missourians the benefits of a world-class research university. We are stewards and builders of a priceless state resource, a unique physical infrastructure and scholarly environment in which our tightly interlocked missions of teaching, research, service and economic development work together on behalf of all citizens. Students work side by side with some of the world’s best faculty to advance the arts and humanities, the sciences, and the professions. Scholarship and teaching are daily driven by a sense of public service — the obligation to produce and disseminate knowledge that will improve the quality of life in the state, the nation and the world. Table of Contents 2 Mission 5 Looking to 2020 6 Executive Summary 7 Goal 1: Expand and strengthen programs that improve the lives of the citizens of Missouri, the nation and the world 8 Educational Objectives & Actions 17 Research Objectives & Actions 22 Outreach Objectives & Actions 32 Economic Development Objectives & Actions 35 Goal 2: Build the Mizzou Advantage, a set of focused, interdisciplinary initiatives that capitalize on existing strengths and bring new international distinction to MU 37 Educational Objectives & Actions 39 Research Objectives & Actions 44 Outreach Objectives & Actions 45 Economic Development Objectives & Actions 48 Goal 3: Ensure that MU has the infrastructure and human and financial resources necessary to support innovation and excellence in teaching, research, outreach and economic development 49 Human Resources Objectives & Actions 54 Resource Generation & Allocation Objectives & Actions 62 Policy Objectives & Actions 3 University of Missouri Strategic Plan | Table of Contents | Printed: Jan.