Beloit College Chemistry
Beloit College > Chemistry > Weekly Newsletter
 Fall, 1999  Spring, 2000

September 8, 1999

September 15, 1999

September 22, 1999

September 30, 1999

October 7, 1999


October 7, 1999

SCOTLAND SEMINAR ABROAD, FALL, 2000

Interested in spending Fall, 2000 in Glasgow? Please join us for an informational session and slide show about Beloit's Scotland Semester on Tuesday, October 12, at 6:30 pm in the North Lounge (room 109) of WAC. For more information, contact Laura Parmentier or check out the website at: https://www.beloit.edu/chemistry/Scotland.html

THIS WEEK AT CHEMISTRY SEMINAR, 1PM, FRIDAY, ROOM 409 - EVERYONE WELCOME! REFRESHMENTS!

Mayowa Agbaje-Williams - Fats: Why we gotta have em Did you know that low fat diets are not necessarily the best thing for gaining energy and losing body fat especially if they are high in carbohydrates ? Fats are group of chemical compounds that contain fatty acids not synthesized by the body but essential for growth. There are good fats and bad fats. So to achieve optimal health, you need to have the right kind of fat in your diet.

Dakota Smith - Fats: What do food labels really tell us? I will compare that fat content of food that are marketed as "low-fat", "lite", "half the fat" etc. to see if the fat content is indeed lower and by what average percentage. I will also look to see which of the type of products has the essential amount of fat in them because we have a minimum requirement for fat in our diet.

Dave Atlas - Fats Are Our Friend!- Descriptions of different types of fat and why our bodies need them (cell wall, steroids, hormones, etc)

Dave Murray - Familial Hypercholesterolemia and the LDL receptor (Fats)

Familial Hypercholesterolemia is a genetic disease that affects 1 out of 500 people. In this disease, there are elevated levels of LDL cholesterol in the blood stream. This leads to atherosclerosis and other forms of heart disease. In this talk, I will discuss first how a normal LDL receptor functions and go through the steps of how LDL is internalized and processed in the cell to remove the cholesterol from its lipoprotein carrier. Lastly, I will discuss how the LDL receptor is mutated in a person with Familial Hypercholesterolemia.

The following schools have sent new information (on file in Chamberlin 409) regarding graduate studies:

1.Baylor College of Medicine Neuroscience Graduate Program.

2. University of California, Irvine. Department of Chemistry.

3. Vanderbilt University. Center of Molecular Toxicology. Graduate program in Toxicology.

4. University of New Mexico. Department of Chemistry.

5. University of Cincinnati. College of Medicine. Biomedical Sciences.

6. Texas A&M University. Department of Biochemistry and Biophysics.

7. Saint Louis University. School of Public Health.

8. University of Nebraska Lincoln. Department of Chemistry.

9. The University of Michigan. Department of Chemistry.

10. Miami University. Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry.

11. PennState. Department of Biotechnology.

12. St. George's University. + VIDEO TAPE !!! School of Medicine. School of Veterinary Medicine.

13. Miami University. Internships for 2000 year. General Research Areas: Animal Behavior, Animal and Plant Physiology, Biochemistry, Cell and Developmental Biology, Aquatic and Terrestrial Ecology, Neuroscience, Environmental Toxicology, Evolutionary Biology. Biomedical Research at either the Eli Lilly or the Procter & Gamble Company.

14. Procter & Gamble. Industrial Analytical Chemistry Short Course for students and teachers.

15. University of Missouri- Rolla. Seek candidates for the position of Chair and Professor of the Chemistry Department at the University of Missouri-Rolla.


September 30, 1999

SPECIAL CHEMISTRY SEMINAR ------>What can you do to prepare for the transition to graduate and medical school? How do you prepare to succeed after Beloit? What can you do now to make success easier to achieve? What can you expect to encounter after Beloit? In honor of Reunion Weekend, alumni will be discussing life after Beloit. Come hear alumni like Ian Schmitz discussing GREs, Preliminary Exams, classes, and daily living after Beloit. 4pm Friday, October 1st, Chamberlin 409. Free refreshments.

Fellowships for Study, Research, or Travel

*** PEO International Peace Scholarship Grant of $5000 towards graduate study in the United States or Canada, for women who are not U.S. or Canadian citizens. Contact: P.E.O. International Peace Scholarship Fund, 3700 Grand Avenue, Des Moines Iowa 50312-2899, Phone: (515) 255-3153, Fax: (515) 255-3820, Deadline: December 15

*** Rotary Ambassadorial Scholarships (a) Academic Year Ambassadorial Scholarship: financial support for one year of academic study abroad. (b) Multi-Year Ambassadorial Scholarship: $11,000 towards degree-oriented study abroad. (c) Cultural Ambassadorial Scholarship: financial aid for 3-6 months of language/cultural immersion in another country. Applicants must be 18-28 years of age and have a bachelors degree by the end of the current academic year. A good working knowledge of the country of intended study is required. Contact: Local rotary club. http://www.rotary.org/foundation/educational_programs/ambassadorial_scholarships/

*** AAUW International Fellowships $15,000 to support full-time graduate or post-graduate study or research in the U.S., for women who are not U.S. citizens or residents. Applicants are judged on professional potential and importance of their studies to womenand girls in country of origin. Deadline: late Nov/early Dec. Contact: AAUW Educational Foundation, 2201 N. Dodge Street, Dept. 67, Iowa City, Iowa 52243-4030, Phone: (319) 337-1716 x67

*** American-Scandinavian Foundation Grants and fellowships ($3,000-$15,000) for advanced study or research in Denmark, Finland, Iceland, Norway, and Sweden. Applicants must be U.S. citizens and have a well-defined research or study project that makes a stay in Scandinavia essential. The number of awards varies each year according to the total funds available by country. Deadline: November 1 Contact: The American Scandinavian Foundation, 725 Park Ave., New York, N.Y. 10021, Phone: (212) 879-9779, Fax: (212) 249-3444

*** Creativity Fellowships - The Northwood Institute, Alden B. Dow Creativity Center Travel, room, board, and stipend for an eight-week residency that allows each fellow the freedom to pursue his/her own concepts through independent non-scheduled study. All disciplines and areas of interest including both the arts and sciences. No specific requirements regarding age or academic experience. Deadline: December 31. Four awards available. Contact: Northwood Institute, Alden B. Dow Creativity Center, 3225 Cook Road, Midland, MI 48640, Phone: (517) 837-4478, Fax: (517) 837-4468, WWW: http://www.northwood.edu/abd/index.html

*** Ford Foundation Pre-Doctoral and Dissertation Fellowships for Minorities Awards for study in research based doctoral programs(behavioral and social sciences, humanities, engineering, mathematics, physical sciences, life sciences or for interdisciplinary programs composed of two or more eligible disciplines. Stipends of $14,000-18,000. U.S. citizens or nationals who are: native American, Alaskan native, Black/African American, Mexican American, native Pacific Islander, Puerto Rican. 50 predoctoral, 29 Dissertation Fellowships, Deadline: November 15. Contact: The Fellowship Office National Research Council, 2101 Constitution Avenue Washington DC 20418, (202) 334-2872, WWW: http://www2.nas.edu:80/fo/

*** Hertz Foundation Fellowships in the Applied Physical Sciences $20,000 in annual stipend to support graduate education in the applied physical sciences. GPA of 3.75 or above in last two years of undergraduate work, college seniors, U.S. citizens and must propose to complete a program of graduate study leading to an advanced degree. Deadline: The third Friday in October of the year preceding the academic year. Contact: Fannie and John Hertz Foundation, Box 5032, Livermore CA 94551-5032, Phone: (510) 373-1642, WWW: http://www.hertzfndn.org/index.html

*** Howard Hughes Predoctoral Fellowships in the Biological Sciences Annual stipend of $15,000 plus $15,000 educational allowance towards graduate study in the biological sciences. U.S. and foreign citizens. U.S. citizens may study abroad; non-U.S. citizens must study in the U.S. Number available per year: 80. Deadline: November 12. Contact: The Fellowships Office, National Research Council, 2101 Constitution Avenue, Washington DC, 20418, Phone: (202) 334-2872, WWW: http://fellowships.nas.edu

*** Jacob Javitts Fellows Program, U.S. Department of Education Up to $16,000 per year to pursue graduate study in the arts, humanities, or social sciences. Students of superior ability, demonstrated by achievements. Must be eligible to begin graduate study and express intent to obtain a doctoral degree. Deadline: February 1. Contact: U.S. Department of Education, Jacob K. Javitts Fellows Program, P.O. Box 84, Washington C 20044, Phone: (800) 4 FED AID, WWW: http://www.cooper.edu/admin/career_services/fellowships/javits.html

*** James Madison Fellowship Maximum of $24,000 towards graduate study in American history, government and social studies. Future secondary teachers. Number: at least one award per year. Deadline: March 1. Contact: James Madison Fellowship Program, P.O. Box 4030 Iowa City, Iowa 52243-4030, Phone: (800) 525-6928, Email: recogprog@act.org, WWW: http://www.jamesmadison.com

*** National Physical Science Consortium Graduate Fellowships for Minorities and Women in the Physical Sciences Tuition and fees, plus stipend for each academic year at nationally recognized universities, paid summer employment and technical experience for at least two years, mentors on campus and at work site, and long-term commitment to each fellow of up to six years. Valued at $156,000-200,000. All qualified undergraduate seniors with emphasis on recruiting under represented minorities. U.S. citizens, GPA 3.0/4.0 or higher. Deadline: November 5. Contact: E. Gene Bailey Administrator National Physical Science Consortium, MSC 3NPS New Mexico State University, Box 30001, Las Cruces NM 88003-8001, Phone: (800) 952-4118, WWW: http://www.nmsu.edu/~npsc/

*** Morris K. Udall Foundation Scholarships 75 scholarships to outstanding students in two groups: (1) those who are college sophomores or juniors in the current academic year, have outstanding potential, and intend to pursue careers in environmental public policy; and (2) Native American and Alaskan native students who are college sophomores or juniors in the current academic year, have outstanding potential, and intend to pursue careers in health care or tribal public policy. Deadline March 31. Contact Morris K. Udall Foundation, 110 South Church Ave., Ste. 3350, Tucson, AZ 85701, 520-670-5529, FAX 520-670-5530, URL: http://udallfoundation.org/scholarships/scholarshipguidelines.html

*** George J. Mitchell Scholarships Will allow Americans to pursue one year of post-graduate study at institutions of higher learning in Ireland and Northern Ireland. Awarded to students who have shown both academic distinction and the potential for leadership. No restrictions as to academic field of study. Contact: Trina Vargo, President, US-Ireland Alliance, 1747 Pennsylvania Avenue, N.W., 12th Floor, Washington, DC 20006, email: vargo@us-irelandalliance.org, URL: http://www.mitchellscholar.org/

*** Internships Abroad The International Association for the Exchange of Students for Technical Experience (IAESTE) helps place students in summer or academic year internships in 60+ nations around the world in technical fields (sciences, math/cs, engineering) working in industry, research institutes, government laboratories, and universities. Their overall placement rate is 35-40%, but significantly higher if you do not have too specific requirments as to country. The internships include a salary or stipend sufficient to cover local food and housing while on the job. The program is open to current juniors and seniors. The deadline is January 1st. We have a chemistry alumnus who had a very successful experience in a small Italian company through this program. Information is posted outside 409 Chamberlin and is available at http://www.aipt.org/iaeste/html, or see Brock Spencer.

*** Tutors Needed. Greetings from the Outreach Center! We are writing you in regards to our current need for tutors for Beloit area kids who are struggling in math and science. As we get further into the semester, we are receiving a steady flow of requests for math and science tutors, especially for middle and high school aged kids. These spots are becoming increasingly harder to fill as our tutor list dwindles, and we are asking for your help in spreading the word to your math and science students. We know that lab classes require a lot of students' time. However, tutoring at the Outreach Center will only take up an hour a week, it's a great way to get involved on campus, and it looks good on a resume. And the rewards from helping out a kid are innumerable. If you have any interested students, please have them call the Outreach Center at x2045 and leave a message or email us at ccoc@www.beloit.edu. We REALLY appreciate your assistance in helping us find tutors! Thanks in advance!

The following schools have sent new information (on file in Chamberlin 409) regarding graduate studies:

1. University of Virginia Department of Chemistry. Department of Physics.

2. University of South Carolina Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry.

3. The University of Texas-Houston Department of Biomedical Sciences.

4. Washington University in St. Louis Department of Chemistry.

5. University of Pittsburgh Department of Chemistry.

6. Loyola University Chicago Department of Chemistry.

7. University of Wyoming Department of Chemistry.

8. Oregon State University College of Oceanic and Atmospheric Sciences.

9. Oklahoma State University Department of Chemistry.

10. The University of Tennessee, Knoxville Department of Chemistry.

11. University of Notre Dame Department of Engineering. Departments of Biological Sciences, Chemistry and Biochemistry, Molecular Biosciences. University of School of Medicine.

12. Marquette University Department of Chemistry. Colloquium Series.


September 22, 1999

MCW Information Day The Graduate School of Medical Sciences at the Medical College of Wisconsin in Milwaukee is having a program for prospective graduate students in biomedical sciences on Friday, October 8th, 8:30 AM - 2:00 PM. Information is posted outside 409 Chamberlin.

Pre-Health Professions Dinner -- Sunday, September 26, at 5 pm in WAC. Four Beloit Grads, Sarah Beirise, Jill Gettings, Mike Beins, and Chris Maeda, all presently students at Medical College of Wisconsin, will be here to talk about their experiences at Beloit, their transition to medical school, and the medical school experience. Jill, a senior medical student, has just returned from a summer doing research on AIDS at the CDC in Atlanta, and Mike took off a year before med school to research on Helicobacter Pylori, the bacteria which cause ulcers. Sarah is in her 2nd year, and Chris is in his 3rd year. Their talk will be followed by a FREE pizza dinner. RSVP to Marion Fass at fassm@beloit.edu, or to Nicole Burton at burtonn@stu.beloit.edu to make sure there is enough pizza, but do plan to come. It should be a great evening for students considering careers in the health professions. On Tuesday, September 28, Marc Roy will lead a discussion on Preparing for and Taking the MCAT Test. This will also be very useful for any student thinking about medical careers. More to follow on the time.

Chemistry Seminar Global Warming - is it really occurring? Fats in the diet - Why we gotta have them! These and other exciting topics will be covered at Chemistry Seminar, featuring Matt Watson, Elizabeth Lang, Carlo Giacomoni, and Mayowa Agbaje-Williams. Dynamite performances are expected. Come have an exciting time and refreshments. Chamberlin 409, 1pm Friday, September 24.

Internships We have a lead on possible summer or semester research internships at Sandia National Laboratory (Department of Energy) in Albequerque, New Mexico. If you are interested, please contact Brock Spencer.

The following schools have sent new information (on file in Chamberlin 409) regarding graduate studies:

1. University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. Department of Chemistry

2. Howard Hughes Medical Institute. Biological sciences.

3. University of Toledo. Department of Chemistry

4. Johns Hopkins University. Intercampus Program in Molecular Biophysics

5. Baylor College of Medicine. Graduate Program in Cell and Molecular Biology, Department of Molecular Physiology and Biophysics

6. Vanderbilt University. Interdisciplinary Graduate Program in Biomedical Sciences

7. University of Utah. Departments of Biological Chemistry and Molecular Biology

8. University of California, Irvine. Graduate study and research in Chemical and Materials Physics

9. University of Wisconsin- Madison. Medical Scientist Training Program

10. Emory University. Graduate program in Biochemistry, Cell and Developmental Biology

11. Medical College of Wisconsin. Medical Scientist training Program

12. PennState. Integrative Biosciences Degree Program.

13. Indiana University. Department of Chemistry


September 15,1999

CHEMISTRY SEMINAR

Friday, 1pm, Chamberlin 409 - Chemistry Seminar - This week we will be discussing global warming. Presentations by Glen Cronan, Mayowa Agbaje-Williams, Dave Atlas, and Dave Murray. Come learn about what is happening with global warming. Refreshments. Students who have had or are in Chemistry 117 are especially encouraged to attend.

The following schools have sent new information (on file in Chamberlin 409) regarding graduate studies:

1.University of Wisconsin-Madison Department of Chemistry.

2.Washington University in St. Louis Department of Biological and Biomedical Sciences.

3.University of Wisconsin-Madison. Department of Materials Science.

4.Johns Hopkins University Programs in Molecular Biophysics.

5.Carnegie Mellon Department of Chemistry

6.University of Virginia Department of Chemistry

7.Society of Toxicology Student Research Internships in Toxicology

8.Colorado State University Department of Chemistry.

9.University of Oklahoma Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry.

10.Baylor College of Medicine Graduate Program in Structural and Computational Biology, Molecular Biophysics and Biomedical Sciences.

12.Utah State University Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry

13.University of California Department of Chemistry.

14.The University of Arizona Graduate Program in Pharmacology and Toxicology.

15.University of Rochester Department of Health Sciences and Medical Research Internships Programs. Possible areas : Health Care Administration , Medical Research.

INTERNSHIP OPPORTUNITIES/EXPERIENCES

Shared at Chemistry Seminar, 1pm, Fridays, Chamberlin 409

Matt Watson - worked at Texas A&M with Dr. Dorothy Shippen on telomerase.

Matt Watson - also worked previously at the Indian Health Hospital in Sisseton, ND, on a Native American Reservation, sponsored by a HHMI venture grant

Elizabeth Lang - knows of internships at Monsanto Asgro, c/o DeKalb Soybean Genetics - pay is $550/week, for students interested in agricultural genetics

Dakota Smith - worked in the Bahamas with Dr. Nicholas Fox at a clinic providing home and hospital post-surgical care. Program is open to sophomore and above Bahamians, pay is $12,50/hr

Nicole Burton - worked at the Univ. of Chicago Dept. of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology with Dr. Carl Correl, doing X-ray crystallography of the ricin binding domain in rRNA, 12 conserved nt sequence. Pay is $3,000, find your own housing

Dave Murray - worked for Dr. Guido Fransosa on NF-kappaB, one of the originally evolved transcription factors involved in expression of about 100 genes. Pay is $8.53/hr

Tamara Lowe - worked at Rush Univ Dept. of Biochemistry with Prof. Cheryl Knudsen, studying the paracellular matrix formation in normal and cancer cells. She discovered that cancer cells quickly regrow their extracellular matrix, which is a key factor in resistance of cancer cells to chemotherapy.

Mayowa Agbaje-Williams worked at Rush Univ. Dept. of Biochemistry with Prof. Barb Schumacher on staining of superficial zone protein in from human tissue, isolated from human ankle tissues.

Carlo Giacomoni - worked at a residential treatment facility of Wediko Children's Services in Windsor, NH, headquarters in Boston, MA, with abused, neglected children. Room and board in a camp cabin provided while helping one-on-two with the kids.

Carlo Giacomoni - also worked at Univ. IL - Chicago with Dr. Dunn in Pharmacology synthesizing novel polycyclic compounds.


September 8, 1999

SUMMER RESEARCH OPPORTUNITIES (POSTED OUTSIDE 409 CHAMBERLIN)

In last Friday's Chemsitry Seminar, Dr. Brenda Waller (Beloit chemistry '93) described her current work as Education Outreach Coordinator for the Center on Polymer Interfaces and Macromolecular Assemblies (CPIMA) at Stanford University. She oversees a summer undergraduate internship program that typically brings 24 students from around the country to work on a wide variety of projects at Stanford, the nearby IBM Almaden Research Laborory, the University of California at Davis, the TECH Museum of Innovation in San Jose, Affymatrix (a nearby biotech company with Beloit connections), and at collaborating industrial groups in Germany and Japan. She left information about the CPIMA program and a related one nearby at IBM. Last summer's group was about equally liberal arts college and research university students, and included some freshmen who had completed a year of organic chemistry. It is open to current freshmen, sophomores, and juniors. For details, see the information posted outside 409 Chamberlin and the program web sites: Analytical and Surface Chemistry of Materials (http://www.almaden.ibm.com/st/nsfstudent) and Center for Polymer Interfaces and Macromolecular Assemblies (http://www-leland.stanford.edu/group/CPIMA). You can also contact Brenda with questions at waller@chemeng.stanford.edu.

OPPORTUNITIES IN ENGINEERING

UW-Madison is hosting it's 10th annual Opportunities in Engineering conference on November 3-7, 1999. They will cover all travel, food, and lodging expenses for current juniors and seniors majoring in science/mathematics who may be considering graduate work in biomedical, chemical, civil and environmental, electrical and computer, geological, industrial, or nuclear engineering, materials science, engineering mechanics and astronautics, and engineering physics. The program includes presentations on campus research, summer programs, internships, employment opportunities, tours of campus facilities, and panel discussions with current graduate students. Our students who have attended this in the past have found it most useful, and last year George Lisensky and a group of our students did a presentation there on materials chemistry. Details and application forms are posted outside 409 Chamberlin. Deadline for application is October 4th.

RESEARCH OPPORTUNITY

We have been contacted by a person locally who is allergic to nickel and suspects that she is reacting to some of the products she uses in her business. She is interested in having the products tested. This could make a nice small student research project, which could be taken on as a partial unit Special Project. Contact Brock Spencer if you are interested.

The following schools have sent new information (on file in Chamberlin 409) regarding graduate studies:

1. Lehigh University
Center for Polymer Science and Engineering. Possible areas: Chemistry, Chemical Engineering, Materials Science and Engineering, Physics, Mechanical Engineering or interdisciplinary M.S or Ph.D in Polymer Science and Engineering.

2. PennState
Department of Chemistry. Program options: Biomolecular Transport Dynamics, Cell and Developmental Biology, Cellular and Molecular Mechanisms of Toxicity, Chemical Biology, Ecological and Molecular Plant Physiology, Immunobiology, Molecular Medicine, Neuroscience, Nutrition Sciences.

3. Purdue University
Department of Biochemistry. Research areas: Gene Regulation, Plant Genetics and Biochemistry, Signal Transduction, Yeast Molecular Biology, DNA-Protein Interactions, Protein Structure-Function, Enzyme Mechanisms, Chromosome Structure, Molecular Parasitology, Nucleic Parasitology, Nucleic Acid Structure-Function, Immune Regulation.

4. The University of Tennessee, Knoxville Academic programs leading to M.S. and Ph.D. degrees in: Analytical, Inorganic, Organic, Physical, Polymer.
Cross-Discipline Areas of Research: Synthesis, Environmental Chemistry, Chemistry in the Life Sciences, Materials Chemistry, Theoretical and Computational Chemistry, Neutron Sciences.

5. University of Illinois at Chicago
Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology. Possible areas: Signal Transduction, Oncogenes, Neuroscience, Gene Expression, Molecular Genetics, Protein Targeting, Structural Biology, Molecular Medicine, Developmental Biology.

6. Oregon State University
Department of Chemistry. Possible areas: Analytical Chemistry, Inorganic Chemistry, Organic Chemistry, Physical Chemistry, Nuclear and Radiation Chemistry.

7. Oregon Health Sciences University
Program in Molecular and Cellular Biosciences. Possible areas: Biochemistry, Cancer Biology, Cell Biology, Developmental Biology, Gene Regulation, Genetics, Immunology, Microbiology, Molecular Biology, Molecular Pathogenesis, Signal Transduction, Structural Biology, Virology.

8. Baylor College of Medicine
Programs in Molecular Physiology and Biophysics. Major Research interests: Biophysics of DNA Structure, Pulmonary Pharmacology, Ion Channels and Membrane Protein Structure and Function.

9. University of Wisconsin- Madison
Department of Biomolecular Chemistry offer opportunities for rigorous studies in biochemical sciences, as well as clinical translational research studies in: Signal transduction, hormones, cell growth and differentiation, Regulation of gene expression, Nucleic acid structure and function, Protein folding, assembly and targeting, Protein structure and enzymology, Biochemical basis of human disease, Lower eukaryotic molecular genetics, Response to environmental stress, Membrane and cell surface protein, Bioenergetics.

10. University of Southern California
Department of Chemistry. Possible areas: Biological Chemistry, Chemical Physics, Inorganic Chemistry, Organic Chemistry, Physical Chemistry, Polymer Chemistry, Surface Science, Theoretical Chemstry.

11. University of Michigan
Department of Pharmacology. Possible areas: Signal Transduction / Neuropharmacology, Drug Distribution and Metabolism and Regulation of Gene Expression, Cancer Pharmacology, Cardiovascular Pharmacology, Addiction Research.

12. Johns Hopkins University
Department of Biophysics. Current research in the Department focuses on: Protein and nucleic acid structure determination, Macromolecular energetics and folding, Macromolecular complexes, allostery, and regulation, Molecular mechanisms of pathogenicity and defense.

13. University of Michigan
Program in Biomedical Science. Graduate programs: Biological Chemistry, Biophysics, Cell, Developmental and Neural Biology, Cellular and Molecular Biology, Human Genetics, Immunology, Microbiology and Immunology, Neurosciences, Pathology, Pharmacology, Physiology.

14. Michigan Technological University
Department of Chemistry. Programs of study: Analytical Chemistry, Organic Chemistry, Physical Chemistry, Inorganic Chemistry, Polymers, Interdepartmental programs.


Back