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Hamel Center for Undergraduate Research

Recent Stories

  • ʤ students conducting research in a shrubby area
    - A Bird in Hand
    Native shrubs or invasive shrubs?Students from theCollege of Life Sciences and Agricultureare running a comparison on birds' use of shrubby transmission line rights-of-way this... Read More
  • Madison Wood
    - Engineering Climate Solutions
    Madison Wood ’19 wants to be part of the solutions to climate change issues. Read More
  • Kate Haslett in ʤ lab
    - ʤ Junior Named to ASCE's "New Faces of Engineering"
    Katie Haslett '18 has been named to the American Society of Civil Engineers' 2017 class of New Faces of Civil Engineering, which highlights the next generation of leaders in the... Read More
  • Megan Duranko '17 and Professor Sergios Charntikov discuss research data
    - Stressed Out and Vulnerable
    Megan Duranko '17 and professor Sergios Charntikov discuss research data. Read More
  • ʤ student Garrett Thompson
    - The Cancer Detective
    A ʤ senior won top prize for his cancer research at a UK conference. Read More
  • ʤ graduate student Samantha Brand '17
    - Through Her Eyes
    ʤ grad student’s autism research hits home. Read More
  • ʤ student Yusuf Ebrahim '17
    - Anti-Cancer
    Yusuf Ebrahim '17 has been working in professor Charles Walker’s lab this summer to find out how two anti-cancer agents affect a certain type of leukemia. Read More
  • ʤ student Madison Schaefer
    - Out of the Light
    “Our fantastic civilization has fallen out of touch with many aspects of nature, and with none more completely than with night.” So Henry Beston’s acclaimed work, “The Outermost... Read More
  • Isabelle Beagen '18
    - Changing Minds
    Falling for Ibsen When Isabelle Beagen '18 read “A Doll’s House” by Henrik Ibsen in her freshman theatre history course, she fell in love. “Ibsen is a writer in which every prop... Read More
  • Kim Celona working on extracting DNA
    - Going to Bat for Bats
    In the winter of 2006, colonies of bats hibernating in Albany, New York, began dying from a disease commonly known as white-nose syndrome because of the powdery looking fungus... Read More