Awesome! That's the department I went through. Let's see.. My research advisor was Dr. Wu. Other profs I remember are Drewniak, Stanick, Borquin... well that's all that I can remember. I dormed in the Quad (I think it's torn down), then lived in a house near Kroeger. In grad school I had an apt in a building just off campus...conveniently close to the Grotto (is that still in business?) The apartment building was torn down and turned into a fraternity's parking lot several years ago.
I acquired a BSEE and MSEE. My last undergrad elective was a classic optics course, and it captured my fascination. I ended up sticking around for grad school to take optics and photonics courses...most of those were taught in the EE dept at the time, so I stayed there. I focused on electromagnetics and photonics, with a minor in history. They didn't really teach lens design. The Navy hired me right out of college (I chose China Lake over Boeing St. Louis), and I essentially taught myself lens design On-The-Job, as well as assembly, lens fabrication, etc. At some point the Navy gave me funding to take grad courses through University of Arizona to "backfill" the fundamentals.
My thesis is still filed away at UMR's (MIST?) library. Your daughter could probably look it up:
http://scholarsmine.mst.edu/masters_theses/1970/ Something about cellular automata and its application for optical computing.
I try every so often to get a copy, but they refuse to release one beyond the bounds of the campus... not even a PDF. Kind of weird. My hard copy was destroyed in a moving van fire when we moved from CA to NH back in '10.
Best of luck to her. Rolla's EE dept has -- or had -- a *very* good reputation in the professional world. If she's going EE, suggest she not skimp on analog design (they will push her towards digital). It's all important.
-Jason