By John Adams, From Bastogne to Texas, Inc. Editor’s note: Dr. Tarlow will be available to media at 1 p.m. ahead of his presentation. A longtime staple of the Texas A&M community is returning to campus, and he’s bringing remarkable stories of Texans who helped free thousands of people…
By Shana K. Hutchins, Texas A&M University College of Science As an expert in statistical forensics and bullet lead analysis, Texas A&M University statistician Clifford H. Spiegelman has done his fair share of testifying in courtrooms across the country and in front of legislative bodies. In a new…
By Texas A&M University Bush School of Government and Public Service The Bush School of Government and Public Service at Texas A&M University will celebrate its 20th anniversary with a conversation with the authors of “Called to Serve: The 20-Year History of the Bush School” on Wednesday, Oct.
Marvin Arthington is the second Aggie KIA from Vietnam to be buried at Arlington National Cemetery this year. By Scot Walker, The Association of Former Students A Texas A&M graduate and U.S. Air Force pilot was interred at Arlington National Cemetery on Oct. 5, 2017, almost 47 years after…
The east entrance of the Jack K. Williams Building on the campus of Texas A&M features the combination of a honeysuckle ornament with a pineapple to welcome visitors. The photograph, taken by Carolyn Brown, is among more than 200 others featured in, “Architecture That Speaks,” by Nancy McCoy and…
Texas General Land Office Commissioner George P. Bush addresses the crowd at the Alamo in San Antonio during Cannon Fest, where the announcement was made that the cannons were being conserved by the Conservation Research Laboratory at Texas A&M University. By Elena Watts, Texas A&M Marketing and Communications The…
Former President George H.W. Bush wears a Texas A&M jacket for College Colors Day 2016. By David Anaya, George Bush Presidential Library and Museum This year marks the 20th Anniversary of the George H.W. Bush Presidential Center and a special Bush Library exhibit will celebrate the three entities of…
Preserved maize cobs from the El Gigante rockshelter, Honduras, directly dated by AMS 14C. (Penn State photo) By Keith Randall, Texas A&M Marketing and Communications A team of researchers that includes a Texas A&M University anthropologist has analyzed a trove of ancient maize and their findings cast new light…
Around the time this canoe glided over the Red River in what is now northwestern Louisiana, which was most likely the 14th century, the harsh weather of the Little Ice Age was beginning and a Great Famine was ravaging Europe.