February 3rd, 2016
Chemistry professor receives NSF CAREER Award
Chemistry professor at Oregon State University is granted a five-year $530,000 National Science Foundation CAREER Award
Chemistry professor at Oregon State University is granted a five-year $530,000 National Science Foundation CAREER Award
May Nyman, chemistry professor and mother of three, juggles teaching, research and service that extend widely beyond 40 hours a week.
Katherine Dziedzic travelled to Panama for coral research this summer after winning a College of Science COSSTA scholarship.
Natalie Hambalek was one of just four students nationwide to be awarded the Ecological Society of America Graduate Student Policy Award.
Ryan Mehl has received two NSF and NIH grants to explore using genetic code expansion to change how we can use and study proteins.
Chemistry professor Mas Subramanian and his team will embark on highly significant scientific research and discovery after receiving two prestigious NSF grants totalling nearly $800K.
We welcome Distinguished University Professor P. Andrew Karplus as the new Head of the Department of Biochemistry and Biophysics
Elisar Barbar and her team were recently awarded $1.3 million by the National Institutes of Health (NIH) and another $504,000 from M.J. Murdock Charitable Trust
We caught up with several of our graduates as they approach graduation and asked them to reflect on their experiences in the College of Science
In collaboration with Oregon State University and PISCO, Rogue Ales and Spirits has released the Wasted Sea Star Purple Ale.
In the last two years, the College of Science has focused on augmenting its expertise in data and life sciences with strategic hires
Shining the light on arthropods
Originally, a nursing major, Stephanie Pleasant worked in a Chemistry research lab one summer and was hooked.
The College of Science invites the campus and local community to join us for the 2015 F.A. Gilfillan Memorial Lecture
Everyone from Google and Netflix to Walmart, Gap and the federal government are hiring people with statistical skills and expertise.
Physics Professor Janet Tate has been named the first Dr. Russ and Dolores Gorman Faculty Scholar.