Dr. Stephen Waring Professor Emeritus 20th Century United States Contact 1310 Ben Graves DriveMorton HallRoom 217Huntsville, AL 35899 Campus Map 256.824.6310stephen.waring@uah.edu Biography Stephen Waring grew up innocently on the Nebraska prairie in the Village of Bloomington. He traveled across the Big Blue River to the woodlands of Crete to attend Doane College and learn about civilization. For his graduate education, he continued toward the corrupt East and studied in Iowa City at the University of Iowa. Waring took courses in European and American history and began to learn cynicism and irony as he studied the history of modern governance and bureaucratic organizations. One day, while working in his basement, he received a call from a woman with a Southern accent, asking him to come to Huntsville, Alabama to teach history to the natives and to research spacemen. Waring had to investigate where Huntsville was, but decided to come anyway. At UAH, the young man studied and taught and lost his innocence and learned the attractions of corruption and civilization. As an old man, he received awards for teaching and research, but wondered what he should do when he grew up. Meanwhile, Waring works, concocts martinis, plays tennis, and obeys his dogs; his two darling daughters are companions in adventure. He still keeps some prairie in his heart. Curriculum Vitae Education Ph.D., University of Iowa M.A., University of Iowa B.A., Doane College Expertise Twentieth-Century U. S. History of Technology U.S. Labor and Business Recent Publications The Challenger Investigations (in progress). Waring and Brian C. Odom. NASA and the Long Civil Rights Movement, eds. (Gainesville: University Press of Florida, 2019). Waring and Andrew J. Dunar. Power to Explore: A History of Marshall Space Flight Center 1960-1990. Washington, DC: NASA SP-4313, 1999. Winner of the 2001 American Association of Aeronautics and Astronautics History Manuscript Award. Taylorism Transformed: Scientific Management Theory Since 1945. (Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 1991.