Redbird Scholar magazine spotlights a different research center at Illinois State University in every issue. This time we look at the Center for Renewable Energy.
Unit: College of Applied Science and Technology
Redbird media: News books by ISU scholars
The following summaries of books authored or edited by Illinois State faculty appear in the fall 2016 print issue of the Redbird Scholar.
CAST to host annual Homecoming tailgate, October 8
Please join fellow College of Applied Science and Technology alumni, faculty, staff, students, and friends at the annual tailgate.
Tom Fuller attends industrial hygiene, occupational safety conference in France
Professor Tom Fuller from Illinois State’s Department of Health Sciences was among nearly 70 professionals to attend a major conference in France this summer focused on industrial hygiene and occupational safety.
15 years later: FBI agent recalls nation’s greatest test
Most of us can appreciate that there was an America we knew before September 11, 2001, versus the country we know now. Two different places separated by a few short, horrific hours that changed everything.
A Day in the Life of a CAST Alum: Mike Bogle, Information Technology
The College of Applied Science and Technology’s “A Day in the Life of a CAST Alum” series is designed to shed some light on how CAST alumni spend their days.
Donor Spotlight: Joyce Kief, Kinesiology and Recreation
The Joyce Morton Kief Future Professional Award was established by the School of Kinesiology and Recreation to annually support a student.
ISU tech grad Ecaterina Dancenco goes global
Ecaterina Dancenco, M.S. ’16, an international graduate student in the Department of Technology, traveled to France to present at the International Research Meeting in Business and Management.
Sign up for Fresh FAVs by September 14
Open to students, faculty, staff, and retirees, Fresh FAVs offers low-cost, high-quality produce once a week for eight weeks.
Criminal Justice Sciences students study abroad in Dubrovnik, Croatia
A study abroad experience has the potential to be life-changing, and criminal justice sciences student Tony Crudup would agree with that statement.