Dr. Wooyang Kim has been appointed as a member of advisory committee of PSM program in KMAC.

Dr. Wooyang Kim, Assistant Professor in the Paseka School of Business, has been appointed as a leading member of advisory committee of PSM program in KMAC, known as the number one consulting company in South Korea. KMAC has worked with numerous Korean conglomerates and government organizations in education and business consulting.  Working with Korean government – Ministry of Science, ICT […]

Dr. Rhonda Ficek earned Quality Matters Certification

Dr. Rhonda Ficek, Computer Science & Information Systems, recently earned Quality Matters™ Certification for her online course CSIS 316: Ethics in the Information Age. QM Reviews are a rigorous peer review process. She has been recognized for this achievement at both the state and national level. Congratulations to Rhonda on this achievement.

Peg Bremer retires after 35 years at the MSUM Library

Peg Bremer has officially retired after 35 years from the MSUM Library. Peg was the Library’s Supervisor of Students and was in charge of student hiring, payroll, and stack maintenance. She was enthusiastic about MSUM and the Library and formed a strong bond with the students she supervised. The library will be hosting a small retirement party off-campus to honor […]

Konrad Czynski’s 11th CD as narrator now available

Konrad Czynski’s 11th CD as narrator in the STORIES IN MUSIC series (Maestro Classics) was made available in November 2015 – “Merry Pranks of Master Till.” The German folktale was adapted for English narration by Czynski’s late friend, the composer and organist/pianist Stephen Simon, conductor of the series with the London Philharmonic Orchestra. The original tone-poem, “Till Eulenspiegels lustige Streiche,” […]

Adam Stocker published in the peer-reviewed journal

Adam Stocker, Biosciences, had a paper published in the peer-reviewed journal eLife titled: “Genetic mechanisms control the linear scaling between related cortical primary and higher order sensory areas.” The published findings reveal a previously unknown relationship between the size of primary sensory areas and higher order areas controlled by gene expression during embryonic development.