UA in the News: May 28, 2008
Data mining to prevent dropouts – Using cadaver dogs – National Merit Scholars coming to UA – Sen. Sessions speaks on campus – UA students take part in Black Belt community service – and more…
Data mining to prevent dropouts – Using cadaver dogs – National Merit Scholars coming to UA – Sen. Sessions speaks on campus – UA students take part in Black Belt community service – and more…
UA students help make car seats safer – Tide baseball team heads to championships
UA faculty comment on Alabama auto industry, SIDS, Alabama real estate market, auto safety, global warming – Rick Bragg to read from new book at Carter Library – UA organist in Paris – and more…
A group of top students at The University of Alabama were inducted recently into Who’s Who Among Students in American Colleges and Universities, a national program that recognizes students who have demonstrated outstanding achievement during their college career in the areas of scholarship, leadership and service.
A group of some 12 students from The University of Alabama will be among a field of 50 contestants competing in Birmingham for the title of Miss Alabama June 4-7.
Michelle McGaha and Jack Trey Hayes, both seniors in industrial engineering at The University of Alabama, were recognized with the Institute of Industrial Engineers’ Student Award for Excellence during the IIE annual conference in Vancouver, British Columbia.
Dr. Paul S. Ray, professor of civil, construction and environmental engineering at The University of Alabama, was awarded the Institute of Industrial Engineers’ Fellow Award during the IIE annual conference in Vancouver.
UA Golfer named ESPN Academic All-America – Scientists at UA lead surge in fuel research
A participant in the Tuscaloosa Family Practice Residency Program and a student in the Rural Health Scholars Program, both arms of The University of Alabama’s College of Community Health Sciences, have won 2008 Rural Health Awards from the National Rural Health Association.
Science faculty members from historically black colleges and universities nationwide are visiting The University of Alabama campus to attend a three-week engineering workshop.