Archive

  • At home

    The Engineering Living Learning Community offers academic support and social connection for first-year students.

  • Fast Facts on first-year graduate, professional students

    This fall, more than 1,100 students arrived on campus to pursue graduate and professional degrees at Marquette University in the Graduate School, Graduate School of Management, College of Health Sciences, School of Dentistry and the Marquette Law School. Learn more about the makeup of each college and the students who traveled to Milwaukee from around…

  • Collective discovery

    Fitting innovative solutions to tomorrow’s problems starts with collaborative industry relationships.

  • Living their calling

    Two alumni started at Marquette as engineering students. Now they are on a faith-inspired journey as Jesuits.

  • Defenders of Water

    Supported by Marquette’s largest-ever federal award for water research, a new multidisciplinary collaboration addresses water quality challenges and promotes healthier environments for troops and civilians.

  • Pooling resources for better solutions

    Opus College of Engineering researchers team up with collaborators beyond the university to tackle global concerns.

  • Doubling down on building leaders

    Marquette’s Excellence in Leadership program experiences exponential growth that includes a new dedicated innovation space.

  • Startup strives to solve stormwater surge problems

    Research from Marquette graduate student Paige Peters turns into a tech solution to prevent basement backups and untreated water discharges after storms.

  • Cybersecurity networking event on ethical hacking, Oct. 6

    Join the Center for Data, Ethics, and Society and the Center for Cyber Security Awareness and Cyber Defense for a symposium on ethical hacking on Thursday, Oct. 6, from 8:30 a.m. to noon as part of October Cybersecurity Awareness Month. The event, hosted in the AMU’s Lunda Room, will feature a morning of conversations and…

  • English professor co-organizes disability studies conference at UCLA, Oct. 7-8

    Dr. Jason Farr, associate professor of English in the Klingler College of Arts and Sciences, has co-organized a conference titled “Archive and Theory: The Future of Anglo-American Disability Studies” at The Clark Library and UCLA next month.   The two-day conference, which explores disability in the contexts of history, literature, philosophy and archival research, takes…