Alumna Honored at White House Correspondents' Dinner
¼ø»ÆÊ¦app alumna Emiliana Molina recently received the Deborah Orin Scholarship from the White House Correspondents' Association.
NSF Grant Supports Research Computing Infrastructure at ¼ø»ÆÊ¦app
A $500,000 grant from the National Science Foundation will enable ¼ø»ÆÊ¦app to install networking infrastructure to amplify its ability to conduct data-intensive science and engineering research.
Renowned Neuroscientist to Lead ¼ø»ÆÊ¦app's New Brain Institute
Randy D. Blakely, Ph.D., a renowned neuroscientist and leading expert in synaptic pharmacology, neurotransmitter transporters, and neurogenetics, is at the helm of the newly-formed ¼ø»ÆÊ¦app Brain Institute.
¼ø»ÆÊ¦app Graduate Shares War Experiences Through Writing
After five deployments overseas with the United States Army, Patrick Martin, 30, turned to writing as an outlet from his war experiences.
¼ø»ÆÊ¦app Celebrates Spring 2016 Commencement
¼ø»ÆÊ¦app will confer more than 3,190 degrees today and tomorrow during six commencement ceremonies in the Carole and Barry Kaye Performing Arts Auditorium.
¼ø»ÆÊ¦app Honors Brent Burns as 2016 Hall of Fame Inductee
Alumni from eight of ¼ø»ÆÊ¦app's colleges were honored for their career accomplishments, and Brent Burns, B.B.A. '81, was introduced as the 2016 inductee into the ¼ø»ÆÊ¦appAA Hall of Fame.
First Graduate of ¼ø»ÆÊ¦app-Max Planck Degree Program
Brati Das, 32, recently became the first student approved to graduate with ¼ø»ÆÊ¦app's Integrative Biology and Neuroscience (IBAN) degree.
Eight ¼ø»ÆÊ¦app High Students to Also Earn College Degrees
¼ø»ÆÊ¦app's spring commencement ceremonies highlights the accomplishments of eight ¼ø»ÆÊ¦app High School ¼ø»ÆÊ¦app.
State Farm Grant to Provide Financial Literacy Education
¼ø»ÆÊ¦app's Center for Economic Education within the College of Business has received $5,000 from State Farm to supply financial literacy educational materials and workshops for local area educators.
Words To Assure Protection for Whistleblowers Can Evoke Fear
New study finds that vivid language intended to assure potential whistleblowers they will be protected from retaliation is instead likely to evoke fear and make them less likely to report misconduct.