May 22nd, 2014
Faculty excellence: Promotions and tenure spring 2014
Your efforts are instrumental in advancing the College.
Your efforts are instrumental in advancing the College.
Top high school math students from across the state visited campus to take exams and participate in math activities.
College of Science Dean Sastry Pantula spoke to the Women in Statistics conference in Cary, North Carolina, via video on May 16, 2014.
Inorganic, molecular materials can effectively degrade dangerous chemical warfare agents.
Discovery Days is an annual outreach program that encourages K-12 students to explore the world around them in a creative way.
The associate dean supports graduate and faculty research endeavors by identifying and facilitating academic research.
Oregon State University Chemistry alumna Dr. Karen Nickel discussed the many uses of a science degree from clinical chemistry and biochemical genetics to molecular diagnostics.
The medal is awarded to individuals for exceptional service to the IMS.
Former National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) Administrator Jane Lubchenco is back.
The Glenn T. Seaborg Award for Nuclear Chemistry recognizes and encourages research in nuclear and radiochemistry or their applications.
Trees may soon play a major role in making high-tech energy storage devices.
College of Science Chemistry Professor Mas Subramanian is the 2013 recipient of the F.A. Gilfillan Award for Distinguished Scholarship in Science.
The College of Science has partnered with ARCS Foundation Portland Chapter to recruit top applicants to PhD programs.
The American Association for the Advancement of Science announced former OSU Statistics Department Chair Robert Smythe as a 2013 fellow.
The College of Science recognizes Joel Peterson (’69) the 2013 Distinguished Alumni Achievement Award.
Sastry Pantula has demonstrated his ability to help develop outstanding opportunities for undergraduate and graduate students and collaborative research.
There is so much data being generated out there. How do we access it? How do we get information out of it?
I’ve always had a deep interest in the environment and in environmental toxins and pollution.
The proteins in our bodies fight infection, carry messages, ferry oxygen and build tissue. But then they can betray us.
There’s nothing like a new pair of eyeglasses to bring fine details into sharp relief.